Saturday, September 14, 2013

A Sweater and a Show

Hey guys!  Last night I was in an art show!

It isn't a huge deal or anything, but the Sewickley Gallery Walk IS pretty cool.  Sewickley is this neat upper-class town near mine which has a fantastic yarn store, a candy shop with the largest selection of root beer in the state (I hate root beer but my boyfriend loves it) and tons of small businesses and art galleries.  A couple times a year, they have the gallery walk with tons of art displayed all throughout ton and there's snacks and wine.

This year, I'm in it.  When I was in high school, I took private art lessons and now help out my old teacher as a guest instructor at her summer art camps.  She has a huge gallery space for herself, her students, and some of her friends and I get a little room all of my own!!  I spent quite a bit of time this week selecting and framing photographs and setting everything up.  I also brought two pieces from when I was a student and some knitting - a few stuffed animals, cool hats, baby hats from my handspun, a couple skeins of handdyed yarn, etc.

I was also really excited to get to wear my new cardigan to the show.  I just finished knitting it a couple days ago and am freaking stoked.  It's gorgeous.  It is.  It's so wonderful and pretty and comfy and I am so so proud of it.  Anyone who realized I made it was quite impressed, as well they should be.

Check it out:  It's the Simple Summer Tweed Top Down V-Neck by Heidi Kirrmaier and it's seriously awesome.  I'd never knit a raglan sweater before (my sweater experiences are fairly limited) and I LOVE it.  All my sweaters will be raglan from now on.  Ok, probably not, but I definitely prefer top-down and raglan rocks.  Can I get a button that says this?  I'll need to talk to my button guy....  Anyway, definitely make sure you read the instructions because there's a lot going on at once here and you need to pay attention to all of it.

Instead of making this a sweater, however, I opted to create a cardigan by continuing to work straight after the neck instead of joining like the instructions say.  I had no issue following the pattern with this change.  I also added an argyle pattern at the bottom and ribbing at the bottom and the wrists.  I had intended to create a button band afterwards but instead made an I-cord loop to fasten one button.  This was decided because I liked that one button and my hips are really wide so it would have looked a bit awkward.  I'm still debating adding a crocheted edge later to keep the edges from curling but don't mind it much at the moment.

For my main yarn, I used JerryLee Farms Two-Ply Natural.  I found half a dozen balls of this amazing stuff at a thrift store (!!!right?!) a year or so ago and have been hoarding it for the perfect project.  It isn't a commercial yarn; hell, the labels have had hand written notes on them saying that it's wool from his farm in Iowa taken to be spun in Vermont.  The wool still has the lanolin in it so my hands were wonderfully soft.  I did occasionally have to pull a small piece of straw out, but that's part of the charm of using farm yarn.

Argyle was new to me, though I was familiar with stranded work and generally dislike it.  It was worth the trouble though and turned out amazing.  The diamonds were made from Wensleydale Longwool Sheep Shop yarn, which is an English wool I got specifically for this project while in London in July.  It's a deep purple that's almost black.  I was a bit worried it wouldn't show up against the brown main color but it turned out quite nicely.  For my diamond lines I used a bit of yarn which I handspun from some Romney wool the Butler Spinners and Weavers gave me at the Farm Show last month.  Spinning Romney is completely different from alpaca, which is what I normally spin, but very nice.  I wasn't as consistent as I know I can be, but am pleased with the result and it looks great in the cardigan, which is really all that matters.


Friday, August 23, 2013

The Helix Scarf (Cast On!)

On Wednesday, I read about the Helix Scarf in a copy of SpinOff magazine I got on my trip to London a few weeks back.  I realize that I'm a bit late to the party and this was published nearly 3 years ago, but 3 back issues for £5 at a little yarn shop meant I got stuff to read during our 5 hour layover on the way home.  Of course, I didn't read all 6 magazines I bought, and the other day sitting at the desk at the bowling alley seemed like the perfect time to catch up.

I read about some color techniques and eventually got to the Helix Scarf.  It looked fantastic, just my type.  It's simple, yet elegant.  No crazy cables or frustrating lace.  Don't get me wrong, I have nothing against cables and lace, they're great and all, but if I can make something gorgeous and avoid them, I will.  Definitely more of a stockinette kind of girl.

Before casting on, I had to split the yarn I want to use.  It was recycled from a bright orange thrift store sweater, which I unraveled and then dyed over with Cushing's burgundy to get these gorgeous dark orange/burgundy/burnt umber sort of colors.  However, the yarn was all double stranded and I only wanted to use one strand for this project.  So I had to spend an hour or two splitting one big ball of yarn into two balls of a smaller weight.  That was boring.  But finally, I got to cast on!

The Helix Scarf is pretty fantastic.  It's all garter stitch, and short rows, which are fun.  It isn't boring and watching it evolve is awesome.  I got about an inch in and considered binding off to turn it into a bow tie.  Bow ties are cool.  I'm only at about 4 inches right now, but it's starting to look like something exciting.  Using a light weight and  #3 needles (is this size 3 American?  I don't actually know, they're old vintage ones I got somewhere and forgot to measure them) means it takes a long time though, especially with all the short rows.  As I mentioned before, they're fun, but you feel like you're getting farther than you actually are, which can be a little annoying.

To make myself feel better, I cast on a second project.  Yes, I cast on two scarves in two hours, I live on the wild side.  It wasn't another Helix, instead I decided to make a drop stitch scarf for my grandmother for her birthday party this weekend (she'll be 85 in two weeks, but family will be in, etc etc, so the party is early this year).  Double stranding two different, yet complementary yarns meant I could knit on nice big 12.75mm needles and using drop stitches meant it went even faster.  Which translates into: in the amount of time I got 2 inches on the Helix, I got 4 feet on the drop stitch.

Which is ok.  They're two very different projects and I love them both.  The Helix Scarf I can (currently) take to work with me.  The drop stitch not so much.  I'm hoping to finish it tonight or tomorrow so I can give it to Gramma on Sunday.  I considered making her gloves, but think those can wait til Christmas, when I have more time to plan.

Anyway, back to the Helix.  I love it.  Partly because I love this yarn, it's the first I ever over-dyed and I'm proud of it.  Partly because I love this pattern for it's simplicity and elegance.  Partly because I really want to try it on some handspun (and might have to spin some just for this project).  Also, it's going to look amazing in the fall.


Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Baby Bonnets (a rant and a pattern)

I love knitting hats.  They are my favorite of favorite things to knit.  They don't use much yarn, they're fairly quick, you can try different stitch patterns or techniques, and they make great gifts.  Well, once you get the hang of it.  When I first learned to knit I didn't quite get stranding or increasing/decreasing and the bloody zombie brain hat I made my friend Kevin for Christmas ended up looking more like a floppy vagina.  He will never let me live it down.

Anyway.  Hats are awesome and I love making them.  Baby hats are even better.  Being (obviously) smaller than adult sized hats, they use even less yarn (great for stash-busting) and take no time at to make.  Provided I don't get too caught up in the storyline, I can make a basic baby hat during an episode of Doctor Who.  As compared to "I need to finish the front of this sweater and oops watched an entire season of Torchwood" like I did earlier this week.  Long projects do that to you.

For example, sometimes you have this really pretty mohair/silk blend that you got on sale and meant to make a shawl with but instead just got pissed off at, so there is not only 7 inches of shawl shoved in a bag and ignored for the last year, there is also half a dozen balls of that really pretty mohair/silk blend that you kind of hate.  But love.  Because despite its tendency to fall off my needles, despite the fact that if you mess up and try to frog it turns into an absolute mess, despite the little fuzzies that get everywhere and that the expensive yarn (that was totally on sale!) is the cat's favorite to get her claws stuck in, it is gorgeous.  It's soft and silky and light and airy and I love it.  But I seriously can't work with this stuff for more than an hour without wanting to throw something (usually the cat).

I have discovered the perfect thing to make with gorgeous obnoxious mohair/silk blends:  baby bonnets.  They take exactly the amount of time I can tolerate using this yarn (and looks great with other, easier to use ones as well), are pretty much non-functional, and babies really look kind of silly and just want to rip at them and totally don't appreciate the expensive (but on sale) yarn.  But they are SO CUTE.  You guys it's so silly and ridiculous but super super adorable.  Therefore: perfect for dressing up newborns and taking cute pictures.  Except that I don't have a baby, so wool is a good substitute, right?





THE PATTERN:

Yarn: Rowan KidSilk Haze (or similar)
Needles: 4mm straight, 3.5mm DPNS.

CO (loosely): 40 with larger, straight needles
K2, P2 for 3 inches

(variation: CO 50, and k/p2tog the first and last two stitches until 40 stitches remain, using garter stitch instead of ribbing)

After 3 inches, divide evenly onto smaller DPNS, and work stockinette stitch in the round.  After 1 inch, begin decreasing, working alternate rounds even.

K8, k2tog*
K7, k2tog*
etc until 8 stitches are left.  Break yarn, leaving a tail.  Thread excess into a tapestry needle and pull through remaining stitches.  I usually do this twice for reinforcement before weaving in the end.

You then measure and cut a dozen 6-8 inch pieces of yarn, and use half on each side of the CO edge as tassels.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Quick Customizable HandWarmers (Crocus)


I recently knit a sweater with a beautiful white wool.  It took over 3 months and I ended up having some yarn left (not quite 3 balls of it), so I kept the not quite a ball just in case and the other 2 decided to dye.  The first yarn is purples and green and called Crocus.  Despite my best intentions to sell my handdyed yarn, this skein wanted to be pretty spring handwarmers.  Who am I to deny?  The first pattern I tried ended up being one that depended more on texture than color and it didn't work out.  It needed to be something simple, that showed off the yarn, the colors.  So I whipped up this quick pattern, very simple and easy to customize to suit your liking.  Only took me about an hour per warmer.  Add a mitten top, if you'd like, or fingers to make gloves if you're so inclined.  Put in a cable or fair isle pattern.  What is written is merely what I used, if the amount of stitches or weight of yarn isn't what you like or need, change it up.  Numbers and gauge are not so important here.  Have fun!




Quick Customizable Handwarmers

4.5mm DPNS
Worsted weight yarn

Loosely CO 24 stitches. (You can change this to fit, depending the size of your wrist)  Divide evenly onto DPNS and join in the round.  TIP:  At the end of the first round, slip the last stitch.
1x1 ribbing for 2 inches or desired length.
Knit all stitches, increasing 1 at the beginning of each needle.  When you finish the last needle, instead of continuing in the round, turn work, slip first stich and work back to beginning of row.  Continue working flat in stockinette (or desired stitch pattern) for 3 inches, slipping the first stitch of each row.
On RS, join back into the round and work in ribbing for 2 inches and BO loosely in pattern.  Cut yarn and pull through last stitch.

THUMB:
Tie yarn to top of thumb opening.  Pick up stitches along right side, then with a new needle, pick up an equal amount along the left.
Round 1: knit. 
Round 2: knit to last 2 stitches of first needle and k2tog.  On 2nd needle, ssk and knit rest of the needle. 
Repeat rounds 1 and 2 three more times (or until it fits ).  Knit until thumb measures 2 inches, then BO.  Weave in ends.