Destash
August 21st, 2010 at 3:15 pm (Progress Posts)
Just in case anyone still looks at this page, I’m having a destash of good stuff (including Rowan, Blue Moon, Handmaiden & Sundara)
On the rav
August 21st, 2010 at 3:15 pm (Progress Posts)
Just in case anyone still looks at this page, I’m having a destash of good stuff (including Rowan, Blue Moon, Handmaiden & Sundara)
On the rav
June 10th, 2009 at 8:39 pm (Progress Posts)
Wow, I sure have been hiding for awhile now. I haven’t really been doing anything exciting like assuming a new identity or eluding the police as I have been hiding….still just knitting and working and eating and living. It doesn’t sound like all that when I write it that way, but, personally, I’m a big fan of it.
But really, if you are still reading this, you just want to know what I’ve been knitting and probably aren’t so interested in my work or eating. So here goes:
I made some Luminosity Bubbles.
I was starting to lose a little bit of knitting steam, when this yarn from the Luminosity Club from Pigeonroof Studios arrived. I had to use it right away, and I had just seen Cherry Fizz in the then new issue of Twist Collective. Ten days later, I had this.
Pattern: Cherry Fizz by Kate Gilbert, Twist Collective Spring ‘09 (rav)
Yarn: Pigeonroof Studios 50 Merino/ 50 Silk Ruby Rose
Needles: US 8
Now, on the opposite side. I made this.
I love it, and it is very wearable. However, I have to admit that it was a bit of a slog to knit, especially compared to the rediscovered love of knitting with the Pigeonroof. I love the subtle shades in the yarn I used for Whisper, but I whole lot of lace weight stockinette becomes a bit….oh, I don’t know….BORing.
Pattern: Whisper by Hannah Fettig, Interweave Spring ‘09
Yarn: Abundant Yarn & Dyeworks Naturally Dyed Lace, Stumptown Brown (the sweater is hanging as a store sample at Abundant currently)
Needles: US4 and US2 (I had to decrease a few needle sizes to get gauge)
mods: I knit with the yarn held doubled, still making a nice squishy lightweight sweater. I cannot claim some great reason for this mod. Honestly, I misread it when making my swatch, thinking that it told me to hold the yarn doubled, and I did not go back and reread when starting the pattern.
pattern notes: The pattern is well written, however it appears that some of the numbers are wrong in the pattern. If you look at the gauge, it is 6st per inch. It has the bicep circumference listed as 10”, which would be 60st. However, you have 76st around. (It looks like the mistake is because they based the numbers on the st count after you bind off for the under arm. Then you have 60st left, but that is not the bicep circumference.) I’m not sure if anyone has fixed this yet, or which way (10” or around 13”) is the original intent of the designer. Basically, it works well if you have thicker upper arms like myself, but if yours are more slender, you probably want to have fewer stitches.
Next up: some socks
February 7th, 2009 at 11:50 am (Progress Posts)
Okay, so this first one is cheating because I finished spinning it in January, but I am so proud of it:
Papaya 50 merino/ 50 soysilk from Pigeonroof Studios
Then I started on a lovely batt from Funky Carolina. This was one of my first attempts at spinning for certain project, and I was really worried for awhile that I had spun it too thick.
However, it ended up pairing up perfectly with the Shetland DK I have, and I have started making a striped vest with the two yarns.
This last one has been a bit more of a process (and it is still going):
I was aiming for a worsted weight, and I didn’t realize how off I was until I ended up with a 3ply fingering weight. Ami and Kelly gave me good recommendations to cable-ply it for a worsted. It worked fairly well for me, but it ate up a lot of yarn. I finally had to admit to myself that I would not have enough for the Habitat that I wished to make.
I could switch to a Turn a Square hat paired with some other handspun, but cables really pop in this yarn so I’m not sure I want to do stockinette with it. Although I forced it on a US8 for Habitat, it is really more of a chunky yarn that wants to be on a US9 or US10. Any ideas for a cabled hat with chunky yarn?
I know I can always design my own, but I do love pattern browsing.
Come join us for more Handspun February goodness.
January 31st, 2009 at 12:19 pm (Progress Posts)
Thanks for all your kind words about my mom’s tablecloth; she really appreciated the gift.
I have one last set of Christmas gifts which segue nicely into the title of this post.I made a couple of gifts for my niece that weren’t originally meant to be a set, but definitely went together well in her mind.
First, this colored pencil roll from Last Minute Quilted Gifts:
This thing was insanely fun to make. It was also well-received, which was great since you never really know with gifts for a four year old.
I also made her a beret from my handspun:
This was spun from Pigeonroof Studios SW Merino in Pink Lady. The pattern was just made up as I went along. It definitely needs some elastic in the ribbing.
When my dad joked like he was putting on the hat, my niece responded in an exasperated tone “No, Papu, it’s for my artist.”*
Good thing we train them in stereotypes early
This leads me into Handspun February. I started a group over on Flickr to concentrate on working with handspun this February. Fight off that winter ennui with some fluffy fibery goodness. The group is for spinners and non-spinners alike. Make yourself some goals for February, whether it is knitting with handspun, spinning more, or concentrating on spinning for particular projects, and come join us.
*She later told me the hat was stinky. This seemed odd at first until I remembered that I had wetblocked it at my in-laws house where the water smells like sulphur. I love how young ‘uns tell you the truth.
January 11th, 2009 at 3:47 pm (Progress Posts)
This was the main gift that I wanted to make this year. My grandma passed away last summer, and one of the things I requested from the house was linens. This was with the intention of making this tablecloth for my mom.
My mom has spent most of the last five years taking care of, first, both her parents and then her mom.
My mother is also such a good hearted person that whenever she felt any tinge of stress or annoyance resulting from this responsibility she would feel bad about having that feeling.
I think she definitely deserved something special for all the love and care that she showed her parents over the last years of their lives.
Pattern: Hannah’s Tablecloth by Annie Modesitt in Handknit Holidays
Yarn: Louet Euroflax 3 skeins (really more like 2.5)
Needles: Addi US 4
The napkins I used were 16″ as opposed to the 21″ called for in the pattern. I went down a needle size, and it worked out perfectly. It is about 36″x54″.