Tag Archive for 'knitting'

Fine and Fancy

Fancy Fullness detail
I’m inordinately proud of this bit of lace — it was the only knit-along that I’ve actually kept up with! Birgit’s Ravelinkdesigns are always lovely, and the projects she designs for the Knitting-Delight yahoo group seem to generally be on the smallish side, scarves as opposed to very large stoles or shawls. I love this group and the way Birgit has set it up. It’s like making your way through a lace workbook. She starts each section with a basic technique complete with a very simple sample and a page to attach the sample or a photo to. Each new technique introduced in a project has it’s own instruction set. She began last fall with the very basics (I missed a couple before I signed up) and is working slowly up in difficulty. I’m not an absolute beginner in lace, but I’m close enough that I really appreciate her lessons, both in structure and presentation. If she decides to publish it as a workbook or lesson set, I will definitely recommend it.
Fancy Fullness Shawl
I’m not terribly fond of the yarn, though. It’s Knit Picks’ Shadow in the (now discontinued) Campfire Heather colourway. I like the yarn itself fine, I’ve used it before and will definitely use it again, but the colours in this particular heather make my stomach wobbly. It’s got lots of bright orange, some reddish bits, and a dark green in it. The contrast of the orange/red and the green is just too much for my tender sensibilities ;) Seriously, though, the first evening I worked on it I kept having to look away. I seem to have gotten accustomed to it, though and my mother loves it so I kept at it. I gave it to her as a belated Mother’s Day present (the final clue didn’t come out until the week after) and she’s already worn it twice. It actually came out quite a good size. I blocked the bejeebers out of it, and apparently I knit a lot looser than I thought.
Fancy Fullness Shawl

pattern: Fancy FullnessRavelink by Birgit Freyer
yarn: KnitPick’s Shadow, Campfire Heather
needles: 3.25mm circular, Knitpick’s Harnomy
mods: Even though I crochet, I really didn’t want it on the edge of this shawl. I added an extra eyelet row to match the inner border and bound off with my new favorite bind-off for lace: k, k, k2togTBL, then k, k2tog TBL to the end.

If I had finished it as Birgit wrote it, I probably would have used only one skein of yarn, but since I wanted to add a row I did get into the second skein. I spit-spliced the joins so they’re pretty much invisible and no lumpy bits.

So, Mum finally has a knit shawl, I have a finished project I’m very happy with, and though she doesn’t know it yet, Kelly’s got some yarn. All 400+ yards of orange and green, which I never want to knit with again!

So Nice I Knit It Twice

 auntyl_scarf.jpg

Mirasol Sulka. Divinely soft, unbelievably smooth, serenity in a skein. I could knit with this yarn forever.

Simple mistake rib scarf for my Aunty L, knit the first time on 6mm needles. It wasn’t as soft as it could be, plus it seemed a little short, so I frogged and reknit the whole thing on 7mm needles. In the usual run of things having to do something twice would bug the hell out of me and, in fact, I would have stopped and restarted at a much earlier stage. But I was very reluctant to stop knitting with that dreamy strip of cloud.

I really want to make something big out of this. Big Girl Knits advises that a person my size should not wear garments made of chunky yarn, but I don’t really care. I want a complete set of garments, including underwear, all made of Sulka.

I’m thinking everybody I know needs some of this stuff in their life.
And I’m the girl to knit it for them :D

Booties, Baby!

With new cousins popping up all over the place I have decided I need to knit some baby things. My mother bought a little outfit for a new little girl in our family and I figured that was the perfect chance to try out Saartje’s Booties, especially after seeing Kelly’s. I went with Fleegle’s seamless version, and by the third bootie I managed to achieve something decent looking.

I have a propensity to dive into patterns without fully reading them, and this time was no different. I managed the Turkish cast-on just fine. In fact, it’s easier than Judy’s Magic Cast-on since there are no twisted stitches. But, somehow, whenever I came to an increase or decrease I chose to knit the wrong type. Not just on one bootie, but two!. Finally I set the yarn and needles aside and really read the pattern. By this time I had picked up on a couple of other things that needed tweaking as I knit — I kept getting a gap where I cast on the new stitches for the straps, so I tightened that up, and finally got a nice little crocheted button hole (I discovered that I’m an even lazier knitter than I thought; I put off the button holes for two days before I finally went and dug out a crochet hook :P). So the third little bootie came out very well, and the mate knit up in no time.

Then came the button selection (yay! I love buttons!). I was warned away from the gumdrop looking ones — experinced mothers told me never to use something that looks edible :). The pink buttons were too pink and the purple buttons were too purple, except for one set that was the perfect colour, but too small (can you say Goldilocks?). I found some that looked okay, but they really aren’t what I wanted, which was little round pearl puttons. The ones I finally went with are flat. They’re cute enough, though, so on they went.

bambooties1.jpg

Yesterday they got a little wash and tomorrow they go in the mail. C’est tout fini!

Of course, baby booties are like potato chips so I had to try a few other patterns.singlebooties2.jpg

The green one is Bev’s Stay On Knit Bootie. Super easy. I used a 3-needle bind off for the front of the ankle to eliminate one seam, You could use a turkish cast-on, purling the first row and working back and forth after that to make a truly seamless bootie, but I don’t mind that single 2-1/2″ seam.

The little variegated slipper is SockPixie’s Magic Slipper. These ones are seamless, with a sole knit flat and stitches picked up and worked in the round. Cute and easy and a nice way to use up leftover sock yarn.

The light blue one is a variation of the magical bootie-from-3-squares (Susan B. Anderson has a free pattern for those on her blog). I wanted to see if I could avoid some of the seaming on these, so I made one square, then, leaving the stiches live, picked up the stitches from another edge of the square and worked a mitred triangle. It functions, and creates some interesting directional patterns too. I think I might play with the form a little more.

As for mates for these little fellas, who knows? I kinda just like them hanging on my bulletin board.

bambooties2.jpg

Bam-Booties for Jenna
pattern: Sartje’s Booties, Fleegleized. (Ravelry links)
yarn: Sirdar Snuggly Baby Bamboo, Babe
needles: 2 KnitPick’s 2.5mm circ’s

I really have to say I love this yarn. It is so soft and knits up like a dream. The stitches seem to even themselves out before you even get near to blocking. I used a much smaller than recommended-needle-size. I wanted a fairly close-knit fabric for booties, but I imagine working with a 4mm needle would give you something incedibly drapey. I found myself wanting to knit a bathrobe with it! Not likely to happen. I’m a big girl and that would take way more patience that I have. Since it is so reasonbly priced, about $6 Canadian, I expect I will knit a lot more little baby things with it and maybe even a summer top or two for me.

bambooties3.jpg

Warm Hands, Cool Colours

Graple Glovelets

I love these mitts! Soft and scrunchy and warm. I’ve been wearing them everywhere. I forget to take them off in shops though, since my fingers are free, and I only notice when I get really hot. And they match pretty well with my flower petal shawlette which I wear as a scarf.I’ve been noticing changes in my colour palette again. For a while I was gravitating towards earthy tones, especially deep rich browns. Now I seem to want more colour, either bright shiny colours or softer somewhat pastel-ish hues.

bright colours
For quite awhile I pushed myself away from the bright pinks, jewel purples and cool vivid reds which I used to love, just to try and expand my personal palette. It was actually uncomfortable to consider these colours since I have been avoiding them for so long, but they just make me so cheerful when I work with them. I really owe this release to the vagaries of computer monitors. I ordered what I thought would be a plum-coloured yarn which turned out to be the purple of these mitts, and a dusky pink lace yarn which, when it arrived, was shades of bubblegum. And I love them both!

pastel hues
As for the pastels, I’ve been drawn to clear mid-tones like sky blue, spring green, butter yellow and coral; or dusky colours: orchid pinks with a touch of gray, celadon and not-quite seafoam, antiqued alice blue. Everything I brought home last weekend was a pastel shade.I think I’ll be enjoying these colours for some time to come but who knows what’ll strike my fancy next!

Graple Glovelets

Graple Glovelets
yarn: Elann Peruvian Highland Silk (alas, no longer available), heavy dk weight
needles: 4mm Brittany birch dpns
pattern: an adaptation of Cozy Cable Socks by Terry Morris (Ravelry link)
I used the medallion cable flanked by 2 4-st cables, and used a 2/2 rib around the rest of the mitt, worked from the wrist upwards. I started the thumb gusset at the bottom of the 2nd medallion, in a purl section a couple of stitches towards the back from the side center. It would have been better if I’d started it farther down as it sort of pouches outward instead of flowing smoothly.

Considering the Tunic

Cabled yoke sweater from Sandra magazine
While in Moncton on Saturday Kelly and I each got a different issue of Sandra. I love this magazine; it’s full of beautiful patterns and cheap to boot. I’ve got one from several years ago and there are sweaters in it that I would happily make and wear today. This issue, Dec. 2007, is a mixed bag with some great pieces and some rather odd ones. Here’s a variation on the cabled yoke sweater that we’ve been seeing everywhere. There are a lot of cables in this issue, over half the designs have cables or twisted-stitch/ faux-cable patterns. Most of the rest have some other sort of deep texture, too.

green tunic with fair-isle cuffs
There’s also a goodly portion of tunics with bell-like sleeves. This green one really caught my eye. I like the idea of the cables and colourwork combined, the contrast of colour and texture. I don’t know as if I’d make this exact sweater but I’m certainly inspired by it. I can never stick to a pattern anyway. And I would definitely make it shorter. The line where the cables stop is more the length I like, about the top of the hips. I’m too short to really be a tunic person.

80sswtr.jpg
Speaking of oversized: I thnk it was totally appropos that I found this one while in a store I visited a lot in my teen years, because this design is straight out of the 80’s. Even the sunglasses on her head mimic the scarf that would have been tied around her head back then. Mind you, a real 80’s girl would have had her collar turned up, giant poofy bangs, leggings instead of slacks and a double-wrap belt full of grommets. And even though this gal has some broad shoulders, shoulder pads would have been de rigeur.

Ah, the days of my youth. Like, totally ;)

Doin’ the Amanda, part 2: Done!

I finished this hat several days ago but just got some photos last night. K graciously donned the chapeau and smiled real purty for me.the Amanda hat

If the edge looks a little stretched out, that’s because it is. This shape of hat really doesn’t suit me so I was trying different ways of wearing it, widening the brim, folding up part of the brim. I think I’d like to make another  with  more garter stitch at the edge so I can fold it up in the front and wear it like a ’30’s cloche.

another shot of the Amanda hat

I used Handpaintedyarn.com’s Handspun Buky in the Trienty Tres colourway, on 5mm needles. The colours are gorgeous and rich and the yarn really softens up with handling. The fabric is very flexible and stretchy. I had several people try it on and none of them felt it was too small or too big, including me with my humungo-noggin.