Christmas has come and gone, and I have just about recovered from my crazy knitting spree. In the middle of the scheduled Christmas knitting, my husband threw me for a loop by asking for a new hat because his was itchy. I dutifully knit him a new hat in non-scratchy yarn but it bumped my mother's birthday socks out by a few days, and she ended up receiving only one sock for her birthday. No matter, she was happy with them, when I managed to get her the other one five days after her actual day:
The pattern is called Winter Wheat by Donna Seex. This is the women's version -I found it in the Love of Knitting Winter 2011 issue. Check out the pattern either on Ravelry or by Googling it - the photo accompanying the pattern shows a beautiful raspberry color yarn, which shows the pattern off much better. However, my mother was very taken with this yarn - it's called "Dream in Color Starry" and it has little silver threads running through it, which you can just about see in the photo. There's also a men's version that is, you guessed it, "too fancy" for Himself but I'm rather intrigued by, so I might knit myself that version as something different. It has just a little bit of patterning in a 1/4" stripe up one side of the sock. Scandalous!
Speaking of knitting for myself, I had started a pair of socks before Christmas but had to abandon them due to the accelerated holiday knitting schedule. I finished them just last Friday, and happily wore them over to my volunteer job on Saturday inside a pair of slip-on shoes so I could show them off:
It promptly snowed an unscheduled 6" of heavy wet snow. Probably because I was tempting fate with those shoes. Sorry, fellow New Englanders!
To take a break from all the sock knitting, I made myself some pint-sized pines, which are little knit tress you stick on wine corks (or the top of an unopened bottle of wine as a hostess gift.) I found them on my friend Dorothy's Ravelry page (she of the, "If you buy the alpacas, I will bring them home in my mini-van if you agree to get it cleaned afterwards.") I think they are really cute. I asked a few friends to save wine corks so I can make a lot more for next year, and I have discovered my friends are drinkers. Which might be why I love them. Anyway, my little trees on the kitchen windowsill:
So cute. They take about 30 minutes to make when I am distracted while knitting, and they use just a few yards of yarn - the perfect amount for when you have no other use for that last scrap of yarn. I am experimenting with making them in a variety of colors.
I also wove a scarf for my close friend and favorite food blogger, Stella Caroline, using a hand-dyed sock yarn as a base. (That's the stripe on the bottom as well.) I also used a coordinating light blue and light lavender to create wide stripes in the weft. I love how it came out:
Stella Caroline is a petite woman, something I did not consider as I warped the loom and made an extra-long scarf. When I took it off, Himself looked and me and said, "Are you trying to smother her?" I prefer to think that I am guaranteeing she will not have any exposed skin in this vile winter weather. Or she can wrap herself and the children up all at the same time.
I love your mini forest!!!!
ReplyDeleteAnd what are friends for if not to transport your impulse large animal purchases?