Do you knitters out there ever feel like you’re entering a knitting time warp? I’m talking about a space of time where suddenly you have accomplished a huge chunk of your project and you’re just not sure how it happened! Last night I sat down to work on the koigu sock. At the time I was still working my way down the leg. See this picture? I put the needle at yesterday’s starting point. By the time I put the sock down for the night I had finished the leg, knit the heel flap, turned the heel, picked up the gusset stitches, finished the gusset decreases and knit a few rounds of the foot. I’m not the world’s fastest knitter (nor am I a particularly slow knitter) but I think my accomplishment last night was pretty cool. Especially since it took a month to finish the first sock. I’m already seeing the light at the end of the tunnel with this one and I only started it last Wed.
So now the possibilities of new socks are running around in my head. There’s the purple self-striping yarn I bought ages ago to go with my purple fleece top, there’s the unidentified handpainted sock yarn I bought at Knit Wits last month, there’s several different colors of Sock It To Me that I bought from elann and there’s some Lang Jawoll Sock Yarn in a blue stipe and that has reinforcement thread which I’ve never used before. Then there are the patterns I’ve been wanting to try, like the mismatched striped socks from Knitting on the Road by Nancy Bush and the Best Foot Forward pattern from Knit Socks! by Betsy McCarthy. Oh my, such possibilities, I don’t know how I’ll choose!
I will definitely be inspired to knit on!
A week’s worth of knitting in one short post
I have been lax about posting, but I do have knitting to report. I finished sock #1 of the koigu socks last Wed. It’s quite nice, but suddenly Mason has taken an interest in this yarn. I have to hide the bag from him or he pulls the finished sock and ball of yarn right out of the bag and throws it around the room. Not good.
Last Tuesday I made another buttonhole bag, this one for my stepdaughter, Jessica, as an Easter present. It came out really cute – of course, I forgot to take a picture of it – and I put Jessie’s and Hannah’s Easter candy in their bags and gave them to them on Saturday. They were very excited and Jessie was going to use her bag when she went out Saturday night. Success in knitting is a good thing.
The Charlotte Bronte Shawl is coming along, but one row takes almost 15 minutes to complete. Sigh. And, I don’t think I have enough yarn, even though I bought what the pattern calls for. I’m going to have to try and get more but I don’t know if I can order it with the same dye lot. Sigh again.
Saturday was the knitting group at the Bridgewater Public Library. This is a great group and everyone was working on something different and fun. We all gabbed about everything under the sun and the time just flew by! I was told that the yarn shop in Mansfield is moving and she’s having a sale. Gee, I need to go to Mansfield, I think.
It’s a rainy day and perfect for curling up on the couch with knitting. Too bad I have to work for a living!
Knit on!
A Feltful Occurence
Last Thursday I started the Fiber Trends “Flowers on the Go” Felted Bag. I finished it on Saturday, surprisingly enough. I used Filatura di Crosa 127 Print yarn, a very soft and pleasant yarn to work with. I did not make a felted gauge swatch. Me, living dangerously. Hunh.
I felted the bag on Sunday morning while making breakfast. After one cycle it was still not felted enough, so I set it again. I sort of forgot about it and didn’t check it until I heard the buzzer on the washing machine sound. Whoops. It’s very felted now and much smaller than I wanted it to be. I think my cell phone will fit in there but not much else. See what happens when I live dangerously? This, my friends, is why Carole likes rules and shouldn’t try for the devil-may-care approach to knitting. It’s cute and I like it but I’m a tad disappointed in the size. Size really does matter. And the very subtle striping becomes just too subtle once it’s felted. It almost looks grubby not striped. Ah well.
Last night I started the Charlotte Bronte Shawl and I can tell already that this is going to be a long fezzle. This yarn, Peruvian Collection Baby Silk from elann is beautiful – very soft and the color is called “Mocha Cream.” But, lotsa tiny stitches don’t make for instant gratification. I may just have to make another buttonhole bag to satisfy my need for finished objects!
Knit on!
Buttonhole Bag Bliss
The buttonhole bag is done and felted and it is absolutely the cutest thing going! The stripes of yellow and lime green are really bright and the purple on the bottom will keep it from getting grungy and it looks just like an Easter egg! If Spring ever arrives in cold Massachusetts this bag will be just the thing! I can see how this little object could be addicting, I’m already contemplating color combos for the next one.
So, not that anyone needs to hear another cat story, but, Mason and his obsession with my knitting is getting wilder all the time. Yesterday, I put the buttonhole bag on the kitchen table to take this “before” picture.
The thing wasn’t on the table for more than 2 seconds and along comes Mason, plopping himself right down in the middle of the darn thing. It’s like he knows I have this blog and he insists on being a part of it! So I obligingly took a picture to satisfy him, but no one needs to see another picture of Mason lying on my knitting. (if you really can’t resist seeing him, click here) He didn’t sit there for long, just long enough to make his point that he is far more beautiful than anything I might possibly be knitting. The truly ironic thing is that I would happily knit him his very own [substitute something cat-appropriate here] but he would probably ignore the heck out of it! You know cats – if it’s not mine, I want it, if it’s mine, I will ignore it. But I digress . . . so, I snapped the photo and threw the bag in the washing machine with 3 pairs of old jeans. Two cycles later it was nicely felted and very fuzzy and I just love it!
Dale came home yesterday morning just as I was finishing said bag and he was shocked that it was already done. It is cool to start a project on a Tuesday and finish it on a Wednesday, doncha think? Nothing like instant gratification to make a knitter’s day! Anyway, I love that my husband is so easily impressed and I’m sure not going to tell him that double strands of Lamb’s Pride knit up wicked fast! He thinks I’m a genuis and why spoil a good thing like that? I also love that he is so totally clueless about the prices of knitting needles and thinks that Addi Turbos are a great deal. Hey, don’t ask, don’t tell, right?
I have good news and bad news on the Charlotte Bronte Shawl. The bad news is, I knitted a gauge swatch last night and it came out too small. The good news is, I need size 3 needles and, shucks, I don’t have that size so I’m going to have to buy some. Hunh. Might as well buy Addis as it will make my first lace-y shawl type thing so satisfying. And, at least according to Dale, they are so fairly and reasonably priced. Sigh. The sacrifices I make for my craft.
Since I have nothing else on the needles right now (except for the long-suffering, boring as hell to knit Einstein coat) other than the koigu socks, I picked them up and worked pretty far down the toe. The first sock should be done soon and I’m not loving the koigu as much as I thought I would. It’s okay, the colors are pretty and all, but I don’t understand why people are so crazy about it. It feels more like cotton than wool and it’s not all that soft. I’ll save my final judgment for when I actually wear the socks but I can’t picture making another pair out of this yarn.
The Plymouth Country Cranberry Quilters meet at the library and today they were doing a Civil War reproduction fabric swap. They thought it would be interesting to hear me speak about reenacting so they invited me to talk to them this morning. I brought a couple of dresses that Wendy made, my Quilted Winter bonnet that Sarah made, my slat bonnet, my corset, the knitted sontag and socks that I made, Dale’s CDV, some books, things like that. It was really fun! The ladies seemed to enjoy themselves and they laughed a lot so I guess I was funny. At least I hope that’s why they were laughing. Talking about reenacting made me realize how much I miss it in the Winter. I am sooo ready for the season to start! There’s lots of time for knitting at reenactments and so I’ll just say,
Knit on – Civil War Style!
Another Addi Addict
I cast on the felted Button Hole bag from the Mason-Dixon Knitting Blog on my brandy-new size 15 Addi Turbos this morning. This was after I divided up each skein of my Brown Sheep Lamb’s Pride worsted weight in the vibrant colors of purple, yellow and lime green into 2 equal balls for each skein so that I could knit this project with 2 strands of the same color yarn. By the time this was done I was quite eager to get on with the knitting show, if you know what I mean. Well . . .I knew I would like Addi Turbos. I knew they would be exceptionally smooth and slick and super-fast. I knew I would feel oh-so-special when I used them. Here’s what I didn’t know: that I would want to immediately replace every circular needle I own with an Addi Turbo! Geez-oh-man but these needles are amazing!!
I restrained myself (slightly) and only ordered 3 new addis from Knit Witts. I need these to start the felted bag from Fiber Trends and also to knit any future booga bags. Good-bye, forever, Clover Bamboo Circulars with the sticky spot where the join is. To quote a line from one of my favorite movies, this is the start of a beautiful friendship.
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 821
- 822
- 823
- 824
- 825
- …
- 827
- Next Page »