8.30.2015

Baby Blanket: Honey

For this blanket I went through my huge and varied boxes of yarn and pulled out yellow, neutral, and white tones.  I ended up paring together six yarns: three Red Heart SuperSaver (white, yellow and buttercup) and three Lion Brand Homespun (cream, rococo, and a yellow white dapple that I don't know the name for).

The picture below is of the blanket folded in half and being held by a helpful hand.  As you can see the width of the stripes varied depending on my mood and it is done entirely in seed/moss stitch (k1, p1, each row opposite).  The order of the colors changed as well but i think the piece has a nice balance and charm.

Needles: 9 US
CO 105 st
Row 1: *k1, p1* repeat to end
Row 2: *k1, p1* repeat to end
Change colors at will and bind off when desired length is reached.  Remember that you want to stay on odd numbers so that you don't accidentally slip into a rib pattern rather than a seed stitch.

8.29.2015

Yarn Buster Blanket

So if you're like me you have a huge amount of yarn you have passingly bought, been given as friends and family clean out their own space, and the dribs and drabs of left overs once a project is complete.  This can grow to be a large pile of boxes at the foot of your bed--if you're me that is.  One great way I have discovered to start getting rid of these various bits is thanks to the supernova of infants being born into my life (none of which are mine).

Baby blanket after baby blanket left me with half used colorful and fluffy skeins and I began to see a lovely mixture emerging from the pile of yarn growing on my couch.  And so I decided that the next baby blanket would only use these bits.

I knocked off eight yarn remnants with this act of infant directed altruism/shameless baby pandering. EIGHT!  That's half the space of the stash I inherited from a friend who is moving to California.  A victory in anyone's book.

It's hard to see the navy trim on dark gray upholstery.
I used garter stitch on the bias, increasing with a k1fb on the last stitch of every row and once the edge was the right size for my purposes (30"), started k2tog at the end of every row.  Then I stitched on an i-cord trim (my first ever and I really like the way it turned out).


I used each color until it was completely gone, which is why there are such short stripes of certain colors.  I thought I would have enough with the yellows and neutrals left over from the honey themed blanket I made but I didn't and I really wanted to put a nave trim on those bright yellows so I went for the left over blue bits I had about.  I think it worked out really well and I am excited to see the little Belgian who will be born in December wrapped up in it.

One issue I did have in the beginning was remembering to increase on every row.  As you will see in some of the pictures one corner is more acute than right angled.  Such is life.  Before I ship the blanket off to Belgium I will attempt to block it, but, as I have said before, I don't generally have a lot of success with blocking.

Nevertheless, this sucker is pretty cool and the little lady who will be bundled in it come the new year will be even cooler!

Return of the Mack

Not just a pop song from the 90's! It is also a delicious mac and cheese dish at a restaurant in my neighborhood that I frequent.

Things have changed a lol since my last blog post and I would apologize but I am pretty sure no one reading this now was reading this then (except maybe Ian [waves at Ian]).

I don't get a lot of opportunity to knit these days, but, as summer draws to a close, I am wrapping up a serious bout of knitting (sweaters, baby blankets, and scarves; oh, my). My intention is to post some pictures and basic (very basic) patterns for what I have done.

My general goal has been to cut down hugely on the amount of yarn I have just chilling in boxes at the foot of my bed. I am determined to get my apartment in order and somehow corral my craft materials into one book shelf in the library (yes, I live in an apartment and I have a library; if you knew my address and my rent you would want to do away with me and assume my identity).

So, there may be actual stuff posted here again before I return to the mind and soul consuming work of educating the next generation (you're welcome for that, by the way).

And also, PODCASTS.

3.30.2010

For Sale

I have updated my Etsy.com shop with some new items.

They are scarves based on the design of something my sister brough back from Argentina. They are warm, snuggly, and much shorter than typical scarves because one end feeds through a slit in the other. I make them in several patterns and yarns, and can stitch names and such onto them if a buyer desires.

This is a base for the scarf:


Please check out the store in My Links to the right or go directly to The Argentina Short Scarf.

3.27.2010

Discussion Topic and Anecdote: Pom Poms


I've never seen a pom disintegrate in one washing before.

Seen it happen slowly over the lifetime of the item, sure. I have a winter cap that was knitted by my grandmother for my mother when she was in college. This hat is nearly 15 years older than me and 85% of its pom pom has left for parts unknown slowly, one string at a time, when necessity has dictated washing it or a puppy has thought it was a chew toy or a toddler a puzzle.

It is definitely a first for one of my poms. My sister—who recently had her first child—washed the hat and blanket I’d made for the new little bundle (pictured above) and reported the complete vaporization of the pom. I am perplexed. And sincerely hoping that this is not a facet of the yarn I used (A TLC Baby Amore and the first time I’d used it) because replacing the pom—which is not that difficult—won’t fix the problem long term.

Any advice from the masses?

3.14.2010

A Learning Process

Oddly, one of the hardest and best things to learn when knitting is when NOT to knit.

Seriously.

It took me years to accept and even now I don't always follow my own advice.

The main reason for me not to knit is tiredness. If I'm overly tired I do much more harm to my piece than good. Sometimes I have to start over, rip out whole sections, back up several inches, and--in a few cases--chuck it completely. The number of mistakes is not worth any ground I might gain even on something as straightforward as a stockinette stitch scarf.

As a knitter--no matter how casually you work--I would encourage you to accept whatever your particular quirk of when not to knit might be. It could be when you are under the weather or the worse for the wine. Whatever it is, it's best to figure it out early and save yourself a lot of pain.

3.06.2010

Case History

A friend of mine asked me a question I've been asked several dozen times and I realized that this was a very appropriate topic for the blog (something I’ve been struggling with ideas for while I finish up my two projects).

"How long have you been knitting?" Or the usual companying variation, "How did you start knitting?"

Many eons ago, when I was a young thing about eight to nine years, give or take), two of my best friends—Simone and Kyx—were learning how to knit along with a growing trend of celebrities. They would chat about it or bring their knitting when we'd hang out. I guess I felt like a bit of a rube. I wanted to be able to participate with them.

One day the weatherman said a snowstorm was going to hit town and I sat back to watch the populace scramble in fear for toilet paper, milk, and rock salt as people in that area tend to do. My mother however grew up in Wisconsin and snow—feet or inches—didn’t bother her as long as she had someone to help her shovel. She put my little sister and I in the car and took us to the local craft store. Given the area’s history with snow she was pretty sure school would be out for a week or longer and she didn’t want any bored sibling infighting (my mom did this whenever we had enough warning on the storm, I actually learned how to build model cars just this way several years earlier; it didn’t stick quite the same though).

I picked up a beginner’s starting kit for knitting and some soft red yarn.

By the time the snow was all melted I had a nice, fringed, incredibly long scarf. It was the first thing I ever made and I still have it and wear it. It’s hanging on the back of my door right now.

My little sister, Tresa, likes to put into the story here the number of times I ripped out all or part of this scarf in the process.

It was a lot. I admit it. But mostly it was because I don’t really use gauges the way you are supposed to. I read that section of the little starter booklet but it seemed like a lot of unnecessary fuss then and I still feel that way now. So I still do a lot of ripping out in the first two to three rows and my work isn’t as precise as most serious knitters. Doesn’t bother me and I still think what comes out of it in the end is rather good regardless.

I learned a lot in that first piece. For one: Curling vs. Blocking. I still can’t get blocking to work. I’ve tried and tried and tried. So I just add features to my work when I know it will curl and I don’t want it to, ribbing, fridge, stockinette stitch.

That’s how I tend to look at knitting, how I tend to teach knitting. It’s a process and how you do it doesn’t have to conform, doesn’t have to be just like the starter book.

This was very hard for Laurie—a girl I was friendly with who wanted me to teach her. She’d look at the diagram of the book to see how she was supposed to hold the string to cast-on. And then she’d look at how I cast-on and see it was different and freak-out. My mother does it a third way and my grandmother did it another way completely. To each their own.

There is no right way, no definitive process.

To get all zen on you, knitting is like taking your clothes off. No two guys do it alike.

That all said, of the three of us (Simone, Kyx, and I), I'm the only one who still really knits...trends being what they are.

3.03.2010

Mission of Knitterliness

One of the things that has always kept me from being A Knitter is the girliness… and the focus on sweaters. None of that stops me from conversing with strangers about my knitting or theirs. One of the things I want this blog to focus on is not being about cute, girl stuff—given all the baby hats I make, that might be difficult. Still, I don’t want this to be all flowers and potpourri. Potpourri gives me a headache.

As a less than skilled knitter who has been trying to make new and interesting things over the years (not always with the aid of a pattern or an understanding of the pattern) I’ve made some great discoveries that I wish somebody had shared with me. Resources I wish I’d known about earlier, things I struggled to understand on my own and do, great ideas gleaned from others.

Of course there are still things I want to know, techniques I still can’t do, and projects I can’t make. It’s a learning process and I hope somebody out there is with me so that we can help each other.

3.02.2010

Being Green

Today was day two of my green knitting experiment. I'm exited for the results to be in so I can share my observations about the process.

So far I'm enjoying most of it and learning a hell of a lot.

Tomorrow and the next few days are mostly waiting and then I'll be able to knit something concrete up out of my new bunch of yarn.

In the mean time I'm working on completing my hedge maze blanket. It's a baby blanket. I do a lot of those. The fun thing about it is it's a maze made out of knits and purls that--for the most part--I've made up as I go along. It's great fun and I get a kick out of planning what twist I'm going to work in next to confuse the travelers. I doubt anybody will ever sit down and try and find there way through my maze. Ok, anybody but me. I'm half way done and with every row the rest of the blanket--which started as a personal brain teaser--gets easier.

I've started trying to decide how I want to work the corresponding hat (99% of my baby blankets have a corresponding hat or two--a baby needs options). Do I want the maze to run around the hat in a never ending loop or do I want it to lead from the base or brim to the top? And if it leads to the top, should I work it so that it can lead back down the other side (meaning no top gathering and no pom)? This is promising to be a brain teaser as well.

Look at All the Shiny



This post is mostly to start to play with all the capabilities here on Blogger--my new spot to play.

There seems to be a lot here that I'm not used to. I can upload my own pictures rather than have to save them to some photobucket type deal and then <> them here--time consuming and not un-annoying. It even seems I can upload video which will be awesome for some of the ideas that I have for things here.

Getting into that, I want to build this space as a knitter--something I do a lot of but have never defined myself as. I knit all the time or not at all. In the last few years it has gone from hardly ever to constantly. I've even recently started to give-in and read some of the knitting books people have been giving me over the years. I've even--gasp--started to research them and check them out of the library. I'm much more knitting-centric than I ever have been in the past. Part of me in a little bewildered by this new zeal for an old interest and part of me is thrilled. Hopefully this little endeavour won't be temporary or half-assed.

For those of you who find it I hope it is interesting, helpful, and moderately well edited (about the best any realistic perfectionist can hope for).

I think this is about all I can test out in this run so... [off to see how it turns out].