The yarn market was much smaller than I was anticipating, but there were quite a few local and regional yarn shops there promoting their items. My friend and I shopped around for about an hour, purchasing a few things from Fiberworks. I had meant to buy some yarn that had copper in it...not the color of copper, but ACTUAL copper! It was very different and quite beautiful. I wish I could remember the name of the seller, but I don't. Will have to find that out.
Painted Desert yarn that I bought at the Yarn Market. |
My friend told me of a new fiber store in Lebanon, OH and asked if I wanted to do a little road trip over there to check it out. Of course!
Lebanon, OH is a quite little town. Reminds me a little of Madison, IN in the way the storefronts are done, but no river. Lebanon is about 40 minutes away from Beavercreek, OH.
We had lunch at the Golden Lamb Restaurant & Inn, which apparently is famous. According to Wikipedia, it is the oldest hotel in Ohio, dating back to 1803. Many famous people have visited this Inn...
Because of Lebanon's position on the highway between Cincinnati andColumbus, many notables have visited the inn. The Golden Lamb has been visited by twelve American Presidents: William Henry Harrison,Benjamin Harrison, John Quincy Adams, Martin Van Buren, Ulysses S. Grant, Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, William McKinley,Warren G. Harding, William Howard Taft, Ronald Reagan, and George W. Bush.
Other famous guests to visit the Golden Lamb include Charles Dickens,Mark Twain, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Daniel Webster, Bill McIntire,Thomas Corwin, Clement Vallandigham, Cordell Hull (who went to school in Lebanon), Robert A. Taft, Dewitt Clinton, and Lord Stanley, who later became prime minister of the United Kingdom. Most recently on September 8, 2008 Republican presidential and vice-presidential candidates senator John McCain and Alaska governor Sarah Palin dined and spoke at the Golden Lamb and on October 13, 2012 Mitt Romneyspoke at and toured the hotel. ~Wikipedia entry on Golden Lamb Inn.The restaurant was on the first floor. The menu had a variety of brunch and lunch items to choose from. My friend had the vanilla bean pancakes and I had the chicken salad sandwich. Our waiter told us of the free museum upstairs that we could visit along with some of the previous visitors to the Inn and even mentioned the two ghosts that reside there. We didn't meet any ghosts on our visit there.
The rooms upstairs were dedicated to those who had visited in the past. Here was the door to Ulysses S. Grant's room.
Here's a peek inside the room. Forgive my blurry pics, as I was using my iPhone camera.
Throughout the museum, we saw fun fiber items from the past. This is an old skein winder.
An ornament on a tree with a skein winder.
Gorgeous walking spinning wheel in the hallway.
Yarn swift in one of the rooms.
The rooms were gorgeous! Here's a canopy bed with a crocheted canopy.
Beautiful headboard and foot board on this bed.
The fireplace in the main entry. Wish this picture had turned out better.
Our next stop was Stringtopia, a new fiber shop in Lebanon. The owner is the author of "Respect the Spindle." The store offers spinning classes, wheels and spindles galore (you can even take them for test drives), and fibers ranging from organic cotton to merino to camel. I think my favorite thing there is the "Batt Bar." You get a red tray, as seen in the photo below, and then you go through all kinds of fiber samples and leftovers from previous classes and workshops. In the tubs, you can find silk, alpaca, merino, nylon, bamboo, and so much more! Only a few things are labeled, so you basically just go for what colors and texture you like.
Once you fill up your red tray with fiber lovelies, you hand it over to the ladies and they use their industrial drum carder to make a spinning batt for you. Only $10 too! While waiting for my batt to be made, I couldn't resist taking a picture of this lovely wheel.
I really enjoyed watching all the colors blend together on the drum carder. I had no idea how my batt was going to turn out in the end!
Pulling my batt from the drum carder.
Abby (the author of Respect the Spindle) made this batt for me. She ran half of it through the carder once, and the other half through twice. That way both pieces would be a bit different when plied together.
And this was a free sample I was given. Not sure what it is, but it's SUPER soft. 0.14 oz.
It was a lovely Fiber Saturday with my friend! Now to find some empty bobbins for my new fiber goodies!
So much fun! You captured the day perfectly.
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