For more than a year, I have been completely enamoured with this pattern designer named Susie Johns who has a series of books on knitting fruit and vegetables.
I am not making this up. Either the books, or my long-standing infatuation with the idea of knitting food. A few weeks ago, extremely tired of socks, I decided to order both books for myself. The vegetable book arrived first, and I immediately bought the yarn to knit some peas:
Cute, right? I made three peas/pea pods in just a couple of hours (the peas are stuffed with beads purchased at a local craft store) and can tell you I don't have any left. Everyone I have showed them to has been completely dazzled by them and did not refuse the gift. The first one went to my goddaughter E, the two in the photo above went to my good friend Stella Caroline yesterday. She has small children, though, so I'm thinking about making another set and stuffing them with fiberfill, rather than beads, just in case. I am also looking forward to making her some other vegetables - perhaps a leek or an eggplant or my personal favorite, corn.
There is also has a knitted alien book by a different designer, Fiona Macdonald. That is less symbiotic than my knitting/gardening connection, but I do adore Halloween......
Monday, April 22, 2013
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
It's Still Wool Weather
So this is the view out my back deck today:
I am using my classic sock pattern, because time is of the essence (these socks are a suprise) and I'm using Regia Design Line "Random Stripe" yarn. It tangles. A lot. Still, the socks are turning out nicely, but I'm under the gun at this point since there are only 13 days until her birthday, and because we ride the train together, I am losing some of my most valuable knitting time because I can't do it in front of her. I am a little nervous about this one. I have just finished the cuff on the second sock. It will be close.
Also on the needles, those long-delayed socks for Himself:
.....which may or may not be clear enough for you to see that it is snowing. HARD. Sigh. First day of spring is tomorrow. Most of us in New England think that's a joke. On the upside, it is cold enough that I have an excuse to wear my fingerless gloves in the house (because it's far cheaper than turning up the heat) and I am still enthusiastic about any project involving wool.
Currently I am working on a couple of pairs of socks. Shocking, I know - you had no idea I knit socks. (More likely, you had no idea I knit anything but socks.) Currently on the needles, a pair of socks for my friend Holly's birthday, coming up April 1st:
I am using my classic sock pattern, because time is of the essence (these socks are a suprise) and I'm using Regia Design Line "Random Stripe" yarn. It tangles. A lot. Still, the socks are turning out nicely, but I'm under the gun at this point since there are only 13 days until her birthday, and because we ride the train together, I am losing some of my most valuable knitting time because I can't do it in front of her. I am a little nervous about this one. I have just finished the cuff on the second sock. It will be close.
Also on the needles, those long-delayed socks for Himself:
It is an olive green/gray blend, also Regia but Jet Set Color this time, and it ALSO tangles. A lot. I'm thinking maybe it's the yarn. (Fool me once......) I am using a new pattern called Macho Socks, which does something of an architectural design in the sock. Mine is coming out differently from what is photographed on that blog, mostly because I am doing top-down socks and decided not to reverse the pattern from the bottom up. I knit these on the train, so they will be a surprise for Himself, and while they are not quite as snooze-inducing as the last pair I made him, they are up there. Hence the thinking to go with a new pattern - it might be just interesting enough to keep me awake.
Finally, I managed to get a good daylight shot of the shawl that's being woven:
I am still struggling with warping as it looks crooked in this photo. When I unwind the tension at the end, it straightens out. I will have to ask my friend L, who got me into weaving, what I am doing wrong. Still, it should look fine when finished. It will likely be something I only wear in the house anyway - in New England, you are pretty much either in a parka or short sleeves when you leave the house. And it would be a little fancy to wear while out gardening.
Finally, I managed to get a good daylight shot of the shawl that's being woven:
I am still struggling with warping as it looks crooked in this photo. When I unwind the tension at the end, it straightens out. I will have to ask my friend L, who got me into weaving, what I am doing wrong. Still, it should look fine when finished. It will likely be something I only wear in the house anyway - in New England, you are pretty much either in a parka or short sleeves when you leave the house. And it would be a little fancy to wear while out gardening.
Labels:
family,
friends,
gifts,
Macho socks,
projects for me,
Regia,
socks,
weaving
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Unexpected outcomes
So, I started weaving a blanket for my living room. For several years now I have been saying that I was going to knit a blanket for the couch - because my couch is so long, (120"), I had extended the pattern I found to be the same length as the couch. So far I've gotten one segment (out of three) of the basketweave pattern done, and none of the two cable pattern segments, never mind stitching all five panels together. So I decided to use the yarn to weave a throw for the couch:
I was using the same color for the warp and the weft, but I really should have used a bigger dpi for this project, because the yarn is sticky & tends to attach back upon itself, making the weaving complicated and separating out the two levels of warps difficult. It started out going slower than previous weaving projects, but far faster than the planned knit version of the blanket.
And then......disaster struck. Somehow when I was warping the loom some of the skeins slid down to the sides, reducing the tension. By the time I got about 20" woven - which took forever - the warp was all off, tensions were different and the blanket was looking like a big mess. Sometimes when a project is not fun I have to keep going, but since this was for me, well, I cut my losses. Literally. I cut it off the loom, saved the warp threads for another project, and tossed the piece I had been working on, which resembled a very small area rug.
Last Wednesday I warped a modified version of the throw I had planned to make for my mother, similar to the "neck warmer" (her words) I gave her for Christmas:
Windsor Button in Boston is going out of business, so I had done some hunting in the store to find compatable colors of yarn to make the throw. Because these are not a large-volume discounted Pound of Yarn, I knew this sucker was going to be expensive so any opportunity to purchase the supplies for less was welcomed. So I asked mom if she still wanted the throw, and she said.......no. And promptly went off on a two-week vacation, out of cell phone range. Ok then, looks like I'm making myself a shawl! Or a table runner. Or maybe I'll use it as both - if I get cold I'll just yank it off the table in the middle of dinner, like a chilly, demented magician. That might give my husband pause. I should have it finished by this weekend, which will be a good morale booster after the last weaving failure.
Labels:
disasters,
problems,
projects for me,
weaving
Friday, March 1, 2013
Knitting for new arrivals
I don't knit as many baby blankets as I used to, as many of my friends and family have completed their families and now need hats and sweaters rather than blankets for newborns. But I am always in search of an interesting knitting pattern for babies, particularly ones that look much harder than they are.
My cousin J had a baby on February 11. L is her third son (she has 5-year-old fraternal twins) and bless his little heart, he stayed put until almost his due date, giving his cousin the knitter enough time to get his new blanket done just after he arrived. Those were some dark days, though, right around his birth, where I was committed to knitting 10 rows a night in order to be able to meet my own self-imposed deadline to send out his blanket via post to Chicago. I pondered calling in sick, but then we had a huge blizzard (Feb 8-9) so I had plenty of time to work on it while I watched meteorologists and television news reporters scurry about, looking for yard sticks long enough to measure the snow that arrived. (It was about 27" where I live.)
The pattern is Knit Teddy Bear by Barbara Breiter, which I found for free on the web and really liked. The pattern comes with a teddy bear chart, but I have found it easier to write out the pattern by row rather than count, lose my place, recount the chart, recount my stitches, lose my place, count again, lose my place again, give up and pour myself a glass of wine and watch Mad Men instead. A good friend of mine, a much more expert knitter, double-checked my counts and I was good to go:
Now, the yarn for this is Merino 5 by Crystal Palace Yarns and calls for 5 skeins of 2 colors held together, for a total of 10 skeins. The best price I found on it was $7.90 a skein, so the blanket was looking to run me about.....$79. Before tax & shipping on the yarn, and shipping to send the blanket to the baby. I would be better off writing him a check for $100 for college at that point and making myself something nice. Still, third baby and I didn't want him to be treated any differently than his older brothers, and I did love the pattern, so I went to my favorite local yarn shop with the pattern & asked for some advice. I was steered towards some Plymouth Encore DK yarn, which retails for $5.99. Already I was liking this better. Based on the weight, they were recommending a single strand for knitting, rather than doubling up. Things were looking up even more. And when they said I would need 4 skeins as opposed to 10 because of the yardage difference, I had my credit card out so fast it would have made your head spin. I am really pleased with the way it came out, and would make it again. It's nice to have a blanket over my knees while knitting in January & February. I am less inclined to knit baby blankets in the summer; it is just too hot.
The other thing that I love is that I'm getting much faster at knitting patterned baby blankets. It used to be that as soon as I found out someone was having a baby I had to start the blanket, in a gender-neutral color, if I had any hope of being done when the baby was born. Whipped this one off the needles in about 6 weeks, a new record. It is just knit and purl, though, which helps. A lot.
My cousin J had a baby on February 11. L is her third son (she has 5-year-old fraternal twins) and bless his little heart, he stayed put until almost his due date, giving his cousin the knitter enough time to get his new blanket done just after he arrived. Those were some dark days, though, right around his birth, where I was committed to knitting 10 rows a night in order to be able to meet my own self-imposed deadline to send out his blanket via post to Chicago. I pondered calling in sick, but then we had a huge blizzard (Feb 8-9) so I had plenty of time to work on it while I watched meteorologists and television news reporters scurry about, looking for yard sticks long enough to measure the snow that arrived. (It was about 27" where I live.)
The pattern is Knit Teddy Bear by Barbara Breiter, which I found for free on the web and really liked. The pattern comes with a teddy bear chart, but I have found it easier to write out the pattern by row rather than count, lose my place, recount the chart, recount my stitches, lose my place, count again, lose my place again, give up and pour myself a glass of wine and watch Mad Men instead. A good friend of mine, a much more expert knitter, double-checked my counts and I was good to go:
Now, the yarn for this is Merino 5 by Crystal Palace Yarns and calls for 5 skeins of 2 colors held together, for a total of 10 skeins. The best price I found on it was $7.90 a skein, so the blanket was looking to run me about.....$79. Before tax & shipping on the yarn, and shipping to send the blanket to the baby. I would be better off writing him a check for $100 for college at that point and making myself something nice. Still, third baby and I didn't want him to be treated any differently than his older brothers, and I did love the pattern, so I went to my favorite local yarn shop with the pattern & asked for some advice. I was steered towards some Plymouth Encore DK yarn, which retails for $5.99. Already I was liking this better. Based on the weight, they were recommending a single strand for knitting, rather than doubling up. Things were looking up even more. And when they said I would need 4 skeins as opposed to 10 because of the yardage difference, I had my credit card out so fast it would have made your head spin. I am really pleased with the way it came out, and would make it again. It's nice to have a blanket over my knees while knitting in January & February. I am less inclined to knit baby blankets in the summer; it is just too hot.
The other thing that I love is that I'm getting much faster at knitting patterned baby blankets. It used to be that as soon as I found out someone was having a baby I had to start the blanket, in a gender-neutral color, if I had any hope of being done when the baby was born. Whipped this one off the needles in about 6 weeks, a new record. It is just knit and purl, though, which helps. A lot.
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
The Gift that Keeps on Giving
It occured to me the other day that I don't really talk about the process of starting a project. Most of my yarn comes in skein form:
This is the best kind because it means I can pull from the center of the ball, find the end, and begin my project. Some people prefer to wind their yarn in a ball, but I'm really against doing extra work. Sometimes, the yarn comes twisted together, like this:
I see this most often with hand-dyed and hand-painted yarns. The downside of this is that sometimes while storing it, you end up with this:
I love hand-dyed and hand-painted yarns, but in order to use it properly, you must wind it into a ball. I've accomplished this at home by asking my beloved husband to hold his arms up like football uprights while I drape the yarn around both arms, find the end, and begin rolling the ball. This is tedious for everyone involved. Particularly him, who often gets stuck figuring out where the jam is on the yarn and wiggling his arms around to help straighten out the jam. He does this out of a deep & abiding sense of love, since it is so boring. (Even I hate it, and I love yarn.)
So for Christmas, I decided to give us both a gift and ask for a yarn swift:
Instead of Himself being trapped on the couch for half an hour (or more), I can set this one to fit whatever skein of yarn I want to roll into a ball and leave him out of it completely. Plus, it's a new knitting toy so it hasn't lost its attractiveness to me yet so I now find winding yarn fun. Go figure.
He also bought me Vogue Knitting, a book on techniques, terminology & all things knitting. It's ten years old but is considered The Bible of knitting by serious knitters. Also, it's the only thing with "Vogue" in the title that will be found in our house, ever.
Pre-sock |
This is the best kind because it means I can pull from the center of the ball, find the end, and begin my project. Some people prefer to wind their yarn in a ball, but I'm really against doing extra work. Sometimes, the yarn comes twisted together, like this:
Mmm, Madeline Tosh sock yarn - the BMW of sock yarns |
I see this most often with hand-dyed and hand-painted yarns. The downside of this is that sometimes while storing it, you end up with this:
Sock yarn purchased in 2011 in Watkins Glen, NY - beautiful, but oh, what a mess |
So for Christmas, I decided to give us both a gift and ask for a yarn swift:
Instead of Himself being trapped on the couch for half an hour (or more), I can set this one to fit whatever skein of yarn I want to roll into a ball and leave him out of it completely. Plus, it's a new knitting toy so it hasn't lost its attractiveness to me yet so I now find winding yarn fun. Go figure.
He also bought me Vogue Knitting, a book on techniques, terminology & all things knitting. It's ten years old but is considered The Bible of knitting by serious knitters. Also, it's the only thing with "Vogue" in the title that will be found in our house, ever.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Birthday Socks
January & February are big birthday months on my calendar - almost every day for both months I know someone who is having a birthday. Sometimes I know more than one person on a particular day. Very few people get birthday socks, however. That's because I am so fried from Christmas and because Facebook makes it easy for me to zip off a quick post and call it done. I had three pairs go out in the first 34 days of 2013 - a pair of socks for my mother (Jan. 2), my toddler cousin M (Jan. 4) and M's big sister A (Feb 3.) That's a lot of socks in a short time span. Of course, I only remembered to photograph my mother's:
This is the Vorticity pattern that I have used on my own socks & the pair I did for my MIL for her birthday back in November. The original book pattern uses a darker colorway for the socks than I had previously used, and is very simliar to the yarn I chose for this (Regia Blitz Color - gray) so I was happy to see that the pattern still shows well. Of course the Sock Mon....I mean, Mom, loves the socks. She keeps raving about how warm they are. Which they are, but that's the yarn, not the pattern. My pair is made out of a bamboo/rayon blend, and they are as cool and breezy as a fan blowing on your feet. Not really, but that paints a nice picture, doesn't it?
Currently on the needles are socks for Goddaughter E's birthday, March 21. I picked a Lorna's Laces hand-dyed yarn in Girly Stripe, which I though would make thicker bands of color, but instead does alternating pink and purple stripes by row:
I am using Classic Socks for the Family as the pattern, which is what I use for all the childrens' socks I make. I like variegated yarns (as do the kids - "Look ma, wild socks!") so I don't put the effort in of following a chart for a sock pattern because they are going to outgrow whatever I make them anyway. I do hope the socks are being saved somewhere, or handed down to another family, because it would kill me to think they were just being tossed when they didn't fit. (If anyone is doing that, stop it. You're killing me.)
Can I just tell you how much my wrists ache these days? And how sick I am of socks? And yet there are more to come. I am going to switch everyone over to woven throws. Bet that will be real popular with the kids.
Accurate color of the socks, but no visible pattern |
Hello, Vorticity! |
This is the Vorticity pattern that I have used on my own socks & the pair I did for my MIL for her birthday back in November. The original book pattern uses a darker colorway for the socks than I had previously used, and is very simliar to the yarn I chose for this (Regia Blitz Color - gray) so I was happy to see that the pattern still shows well. Of course the Sock Mon....I mean, Mom, loves the socks. She keeps raving about how warm they are. Which they are, but that's the yarn, not the pattern. My pair is made out of a bamboo/rayon blend, and they are as cool and breezy as a fan blowing on your feet. Not really, but that paints a nice picture, doesn't it?
Currently on the needles are socks for Goddaughter E's birthday, March 21. I picked a Lorna's Laces hand-dyed yarn in Girly Stripe, which I though would make thicker bands of color, but instead does alternating pink and purple stripes by row:
I am using Classic Socks for the Family as the pattern, which is what I use for all the childrens' socks I make. I like variegated yarns (as do the kids - "Look ma, wild socks!") so I don't put the effort in of following a chart for a sock pattern because they are going to outgrow whatever I make them anyway. I do hope the socks are being saved somewhere, or handed down to another family, because it would kill me to think they were just being tossed when they didn't fit. (If anyone is doing that, stop it. You're killing me.)
Can I just tell you how much my wrists ache these days? And how sick I am of socks? And yet there are more to come. I am going to switch everyone over to woven throws. Bet that will be real popular with the kids.
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Holiday 2013 Roundup
Apparently I've been doing more crafting than blogging for the last couple of months. I finished a slew of projects in the days leading up to Christmas. A couple of children's hats:
These hats were for two of my favorite children, Super G and Marvelous M. Sadly, the designated hats did not fit their intended recipients, but their mother is not rigid in her observation of colors for genders, so she put the cupcake hat on her son and the Viking hat on her daughter. Both children immediately yanked them off. But in their defense, we were inside at the time. And they're toddlers.
I also wove a scarf for my mother for Christmas:
My mother has been referring to it as a "neck warmer" because it is apparently shorter than she would like. She also mentioned that she'd like a throw for the couch made from the same yarn next year. I don't have the heart to tell her what the yarn for the "neck warmer" cost, but suffice to say I'll be using a base color purchased in 1 pound bulk from Michael's or Joann Fabrics for that throw.
Dad got a hat:
I feel guilty because my father's never gotten anything hand-knit from me - by the time his birthday rolls around in May I'm burned out from the holidays & late winter birthdays and all I want to do is knit stuff for myself. Plus, he's not a scarf or sweater guy (just like my husband) and who wants a knit item for a May birthday? (Besides my mother, the Sock Monster.) I had started this hat last year but never finished it. He was very pleased with the hat - he apparently needed a new one. I figured he would wear it out around the yard, shoveling the driveway, etc., but he's been wearing it out everywhere, according to mom. And now my guilt is lessened. J has the same hat style, in gray. He got his last year.
Goddaughter E got some socks:
I love the colors, but I am sad I had to adjust the sizing from child's large to a modified ladies' small when I knit this pair. Stop growing up, damn it! Only 8 more years until college. Her mother shrieks when I mention that.
And once again, J got the shaft on the handknit gifts and received....nothing. Which is worse than last year, when he got one sock for his birthday. I intended to knit him a new pair of socks - I even special ordered two yarns I felt would match nicely to the 12,432 pairs of khakis in shades of green-grey that currently populate his section of the closet. He's been muttering that he would like socks that coordinated better than tan or black and he's still muttering. The road to hell, good intentions and all that. Ah well, our anniversary is coming up in April.
Mmm, cupcakes |
This hat looks better on a small person. |
These hats were for two of my favorite children, Super G and Marvelous M. Sadly, the designated hats did not fit their intended recipients, but their mother is not rigid in her observation of colors for genders, so she put the cupcake hat on her son and the Viking hat on her daughter. Both children immediately yanked them off. But in their defense, we were inside at the time. And they're toddlers.
I also wove a scarf for my mother for Christmas:
My mother has been referring to it as a "neck warmer" because it is apparently shorter than she would like. She also mentioned that she'd like a throw for the couch made from the same yarn next year. I don't have the heart to tell her what the yarn for the "neck warmer" cost, but suffice to say I'll be using a base color purchased in 1 pound bulk from Michael's or Joann Fabrics for that throw.
Dad got a hat:
I feel guilty because my father's never gotten anything hand-knit from me - by the time his birthday rolls around in May I'm burned out from the holidays & late winter birthdays and all I want to do is knit stuff for myself. Plus, he's not a scarf or sweater guy (just like my husband) and who wants a knit item for a May birthday? (Besides my mother, the Sock Monster.) I had started this hat last year but never finished it. He was very pleased with the hat - he apparently needed a new one. I figured he would wear it out around the yard, shoveling the driveway, etc., but he's been wearing it out everywhere, according to mom. And now my guilt is lessened. J has the same hat style, in gray. He got his last year.
Goddaughter E got some socks:
I love the colors, but I am sad I had to adjust the sizing from child's large to a modified ladies' small when I knit this pair. Stop growing up, damn it! Only 8 more years until college. Her mother shrieks when I mention that.
And once again, J got the shaft on the handknit gifts and received....nothing. Which is worse than last year, when he got one sock for his birthday. I intended to knit him a new pair of socks - I even special ordered two yarns I felt would match nicely to the 12,432 pairs of khakis in shades of green-grey that currently populate his section of the closet. He's been muttering that he would like socks that coordinated better than tan or black and he's still muttering. The road to hell, good intentions and all that. Ah well, our anniversary is coming up in April.
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