Vendors for February 14th

REMEMBER! The market can now accept credit and debit cards!

MUSIC THIS WEEK is Tom’s Blues.

Vendor Space
Norton Creek Farm 1
My Pharm 2
Filberts R Us 3
La Mariposa LLC 4
The Bread Board 5
Earth and Sea Salts 6
Gathering Together Farms 7&8
Buster’s Treats & Auja’s Beaded Jewelry 9
Rasmussen Farms 10
Denison Farms 11&31
Krazy Woman Ranch 12&13
Slippery G Family Farm 12&13
Wood Family Farm 14
Crooked Furrow Farm 15
Harcombe Farm 15
Mama & Me 16
Specially Made 17
Greengable Farms 18&19
Claude Winter 20
Northwest Natural Beef LLC 21
The Mushroomery 22
Nibblin’ Nuthatch Bakery 23
Oregon Handcrafted Pine Needle Baskets 24
Deb Coddington’s Tobacco Road Hat Works 25
Mudmom 26
4 Generation Crafts 27
Spiral Designz 28
Honey TreeApiaries 29
Timberwolf Farm 30
Heritage Farms Northwest LLC 32
Beene Farm 33
CSC Youth House Garden 35
Earth Rising 38
Zia Southwest Cuisine 36&37
Goodfoot Farm 39&40
Cliffs Creations 43
Misty Hills Farms 41

Vendor list is always subject to last minute change.

Tobacco Road Hat Works Specials for April 12

This Saturday is the final one this year for the Corvallis Indoor Winter Market, and this will be Tobacco Road Hat Works last Corvallis appearance until after summer.

It’s been a great winter season for me
and I am offering sale items!

For the first time,

  • selected hats will be on sale at 20% off (regular price $60 to $80)
  • all mittens and fingerless mittens will also be on sale at 20% off
  • buy a hatpin at regular price and you can get a hat for an additional 10% off even if it’s already 20% off

This Week’s Special from Tobacco Road Hat Works

To celebrate spring and all the Saturday’s I spent at the Corvallis Indoor Winter Market this year, I will be offering specials.

March 29 Special (booth #23)

Felted Wool Fingerless Mittens at 20% off
(regularly $30 to $35, now $24 to $28)

 

About Tobacco Road Hat Works…

Deb Coddington’s Tobacco Road Hat Works grew out of my sometimes annoying and constant need to create and produce. I love to knit!

Three years ago I discovered the felting process (known as boiled wool in the past) and I was instantly hooked. The process is to knit with wool yarn and then shrink in hot water with agitation and detergent in a washing machine. I started by making purses but soon tried a wide-brimmed hat and found my niche.

I took the first few hats I produced to a small family gathering and sold four of them! This made me realize that maybe I had something. I spent a year building an inventory and working on perfecting my patterns while I set up a booth at various weekend craft fairs in the area.

I created other styles of hats with different brims as well. I began to play with color and putting many colors together in one hat. I like to create variations of color within the hat often with an unexpected or contrasting color in a knitted-in band or just throughout the piece.

This year I am also offering felted wool mittens and fingerless mittens. One of the advantages of felted wool hats and mittens is their water resistant properties. I try to make them as dense as possible so that the hats tend to allow water to bead up and roll off. The mittens stay dry longer, and even wet are still warm as they are wool.