Friday, April 28, 2017

A year and a bit and a whole lot of projects

It's been quite a while since I've posted any crafting updates though I have certainly been busy with my crafting.

I ended up making a total of FOUR of those little llama cowls as a friend of my sister loved it and wanted one for her son's girlfriend (I think) and then loved the one that I had made and my sister asked me to make another one like that for her friend to surprise her.

After that, I finished off a scarf for a friend as a surprise birthday present. It was also a test knit and my friend absolutely loved it. The color ended up being exactly what she wanted and she wears it a lot, though more as a head scarf than a neck scarf.

 
 

It was fun to see the difference between pre- and post-blocking. It was another reminder of how important it is to block. 

After that, I worked on a project that took about 7 months to complete. I made two double knit scarves for friends who were getting married. Husband gave me an initial design to work with (which I had to modify a few times because gauge in double knit is different than in normal knitting and if I had been using my entire brain, I would have remembered that stitches are wider than they are tall and the letters in the scarves would have looked less...squished) and I modified as I went along. My mom dyed the yarn for me and it was a lot of fun to work with though I did get tired of the project because it was taking forever. In fact, I was finishing it at the local reception three months after their wedding ceremony. For that reason, I don't have any photos of either scarf finished because I was working past every deadline that was set. The original plan was to have them done in time for the wedding but that wasn't going to work as it was taking much longer than I thought it would and when it came to opera week at work, I didn't knit the entire week. To be fair, it was a very physically demanding show and my hands ached from some of the set-up. Then it was to have them finished over the 4th of July weekend when I flew out to Colorado and back but my flights got canceled due to bad weather and Husband and I drove out to Colorado (I did most of the driving) and I ended up losing some (a lot) of knitting time. There was also project fatigue. I have experienced this before and it's usually in socks as I'm on the feet because it takes forever to knit the feet of my socks. If it wasn't for the fact that the yarn wasn't crinkly, I would swear that the socks were frogging themselves overnight so I would have to keep working on them.


Luckily the bride took lots of pictures. Here's one of her holding up her husband's scarf.

Image may contain: 1 person, standing 

When Husband first asked if I would knit something for the couple, he wanted me to do intarsia for the letters and the fish. I believe I told him that double knitting would be easier. Perhaps it would have been more accurate to say that double knitting would have a more finished look to it. It was definitely not easy but there was a rhythm to it. When I finished, I said I was going to take at least a few days off from knitting as these were the only things I had worked on for such a long time (almost true; I did try to do a test knit of some double knit finger less mitts but I got confused with the pattern and then the deadline came and went before I could puzzle it out). This wasn't what I intended my first double knit project to be. In fact, Mom had bought me yarn and a pattern for a MKAL but I got sucked into these scarves instead. Probably for the best as they ate my soul or at least felt like it.

I managed to not knit anything for nearly two months. I believe that is the longest I have ever gone without knitting. In fact, I probably would have gone longer except the conference I was working was so...full of itself, that I couldn't focus on reading. (Seriously, I think there was some sort of competition to see who could say the most words and make the least amount of sense.) I went home after the first day and cast on the Owlie Mitts that I was going to make for a friend. I had completely meant to get around to them and hadn't. See the bit about the scarves above. At the time, she really didn't like knitting. Since then, she's gotten into it. I felt like I was in a bit of a race to finish the mitts before she decided to try her hand at them. I didn't take many pictures and haven't done a whole lot of documentation lately but I did manage to snap one photo before I mailed them off to her.


They were a lot of fun to work with and I got to use up some of the beads that I bought forever ago to make faire favors to hand out. I made a few shortly after I got them and gave them out for a season or two and have never gotten around to making more. There are also quite a few beads still left. The best part is that my friend got them as a complete surprise and her son thought that they were for him! I should ask if she's learned how to knit in the round yet...

While having friends over for dinner, I showed off my handy work (not sure if pun is intended this late), wanting to gauge the interest of one friend who has a thing for owls. She gave some nice comments about the contrast between the beads and the yarn, which I knew wasn't the best but I wanted to use what I had on hand. She then offered to buy a pair from me in an orange tone. I finished those much faster than the first pair but failed to get a photo of them. Eventually I'll get a photo as I hope that she'll be wearing them out at the Renaissance Festival once it gets colder. In fact, we met when I had stopped by to visit with other friends in the dance troupe she performs in and she ran up to me asking if she could take a picture of my fore panel because she loved the color. She was happy with her pair once I got them into her hands.

I have also managed to pick up the All Shook Up socks that I started back in 2015.  While I have marked them as finished, I believe I still need to weave in the ends but I got a little into the Disney Planning Mind and haven't gotten around to that yet.

 

My sister asked me to make her another Christmas gift. The last time she asked me to knit something for her,  it took a few years. This time, it only took a few months. The biggest issue was/is her head size. I ended up doubling the yarn and adding stitches so that I knew it would fit her head unlike the last hat I made for her. So even though I had planned to work on it while at DisneyWorld, I ended up not having large enough needles to work with the doubled yarn. At least I was at DisneyWorld, so I couldn't pout. That seems to happen mostly to children who have very few coping skills and don't know when to stop.


 She ended up loving it even though she didn't get it until February. It was a faster turn around time than with the cowl I promised and eventually made for her. It also fit her head much better than it fit the dog's head.



I also joined the Heroes of Yarnia MKAL in January after returning from our family trip to DisneyWorld. I put myself on a yarn fast because, well, Disney is expensive and worth it and well, I should use some of the yarn I have. The problem became that I didn't have enough of two colors to make into a double knit scarf that would have enough contrast. So my mom helped me dye some yarn when I visited her in January for her Fiber to Shawl competition. (When I say my mom helped me, what I really mean is that my mom dyed me the colors that I wanted; I only gave opinions while she did the actual work).



When I got back home, I made a mess of winding the skeins (they were larger than my swift, I eventually used the backs of chairs instead). This scarf is going even slower than the previous double knit scarves. Not only is this one out of sock weight yarn, but the charts are far more complicated.

Clue 1
As you can see, there are a lot of little charts within each clue. It's been fun to pull out my dice and roll to determine which chart I would knit. I also purchased the Knit Companion App so that I could keep track of where I was in the pattern.

I haven't had nearly as much knitting time as I would like as I have to sit and focus on the chart so I can't just mindlessly knit in front of the TV. I've also  not been traveling with this project in hopes of keeping the yarns from getting too tangled.

Clue 2
It wasn't until I got through the first clue that I realize that the colors are the ones usually associated with boys and girls. I had decided on the colors completely independent of each other, simply picking ones that I would want to wear. This is the second time this has ended up happening. The last time was in a lighting design for a show that dealt with gender (parents bring home a new baby and the baby won't tell them if they are a boy or a girl and the parents are too polite to look, so they decide the baby is a girl). I ended up lighting show with blue and pink from the front to mix it to look white and cast crazy shadows. It was a fun show to do and it was kind of nice to have a pleasant memory come up while knitting.

All of the clues have been released and I'm still on clue 3. It'll eventually get done but I've been working on a couple of other projects that are nearly finished.









Before the yarn was dyed, I took one of the yarns I tried to do the Yarnia scarf with and finally cast on the Cookie A Tulip socks that I had the yarn for to begin with. I saw the yarn and thought it would be perfect for the sock pattern. I was very right and will eventually have patterns. These are also technically finished, but I still need to weave in the ends.

With those socks finished, I decided I had to cast on this cravat pattern from the Minnesota Yarn Shop Hop. This year was my favorite year so far because everything was inspired by music. Each shop played music tied into their theme and it was delightful to visit every shop. It was a lot of fun. This pattern has also been a lot of fun to knit though I'm feeling grumpy about the last four rows because they are taking forever. Of course, there are probably about 800 stitches or so in the row.

Sunday, November 22, 2015

YOP 3 Week 21 Update

The world may be ending as I'm actually writing and posting a new blog post on Sunday, which is Year-Of-Progress Blog-along day.  In reality, I'm waiting for the pumpkin bread to finish baking so I can go to bed (why did I start baking it so late? Because that's when Husband insisted I start it after I got home from work and ate something first) and as I've already washed the dishes, it made sense to sit down and blog.




First things first. My sister posted a picture of her in her new cowl, which arrived in a timely fashion. Not only has it gotten cold up where she lives but it got there just in time for her birthday. Before you offer congrats on getting a gift out before the intended owner's celebration, I should note that I was going to make this as a birthday/Christmas gift about 2 years ago.... It apparently just took me that long to find the perfect pattern. She has reported that it's nice and warm though, so it was worth the wait.





I did eventually get a new project cast-on. I wouldn't say it's exactly an easy pattern as it does have a chart but it's not lacework and there is a strange rhythm to the pattern. It's one of this October's Cookie A patterns. I'm using the club yarn, which is this wonderfully soft yarn with camel in it. I would like to just bury my head in it and let the world zoom by for a day or so. It's yarn like this that makes me wonder how some people can't feel the difference in types of fiber. I'm 2/3 of the way done with the first leg. The problem is going to be the feet. While my feet are proportionate to my body, they sure are long when it comes to knitting socks. At least it's a short week for work and then a short vacation to somewhere warm for the holiday! Of course, there will be knitting but the odds aren't good that I'll get anything worked on.

Finished Projects 

Works in Progress

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

YOP 3 Update, about a month later

And what a month it has been. It seems that I'm just keeping my head above water in some ways. I'm managing to usually sticky the new forum thread and lock the old one. It seems I'm currently the only active moderator and by active, I mean, maintaining the board. I'm certainly not active when it comes to writing. Somehow I have also become the moderator of a group for the recreational roller derby league I'm in while volunteering for the greater league and still working a full time job and serving at church. At least I have decent knitting time during all of that or I would be very batty.

I still haven't taken pictures of Apollonia. Perhaps next week when things slow down (or the end of the week; that may also work).

Thank you to everyone who commented on Husband's sweater. He's been getting a lot of compliments for it as well. One of his friends told him that it looked store bought (which, in Firefly, would be an insult at a fancy shindig) and several others haven't necessarily believed him when he said I had made it. The cooler weather up in Minnesota means it's been getting a lot of love too. Most days when I get home from work and he's been out, he tells me of yet another person who has been impressed with the sweater.

In the meantime, I finished one test knit (twice actually and both before the deadline; apparently my sister has an ENORMOUS head according to our mother. I imagine she would know best) which was a wonderful, semi-mindless knit. My sister and her vet assistant will now be twinsies.

The first one. I make the dog model most cowls.

 










































































The 2nd one just before shipping, so no dog photo.

I've also started another test knit. It's a lovely, lacy scarf.  Of course, it needs to be frogged as I dropped at least one stitch while hiding from the teenagers last night.

I had hoped to cast on some socks today which is funny because it's the load-in for the fall opera. If I had something already cast-on, I might be able to work on it while programming, but there's definitely not time to do the casting on while there. All the projects I have on needles (a total of one, which is weird) require me

Sunday, October 18, 2015

YOP 3 Week....something....

I've started several posts in my head over the last few weeks but have yet to manage to write any of them down. So today, while I still have energy, I'm making a post.

The most exciting thing is that I finished my socks! I really enjoyed working with this pattern and yarn. The dark yarn wasn't always the best when working backstage but it felt amazing in my hands. I haven't snapped a picture of them yet. In fact, I didn't even block them. I wove in the ends and wore them the next day! They were so comfortable and lovely.

I did finally snap some photos of Husband's sweater. He was being very silly but it meant I got to get some fun photos of him. As you can see in this picture, the sleeves are a little short. Technically, the cuff is a little short. He had me end it early. And now I'm adding to it because he realized that it is indeed a little too short. One was really easy to pull apart but I wove the end of the other one in so well that it was a struggle to find it! I plan on finishing that tonight before I go to sleep. Only a few more rounds to add and then to once again cast-off. End weaving may not happen right away though! It is getting cooler though and I do like that he has a sweater made by me to wear.

With the socks done, I decided to work on a new project. It's probably been a couple of years now, but I had asked my sister what she might want and if she'd be interested in a cowl. Once she discovered what this would look like, she got really excited. She lives the in the Middle of Nowhere (also known as North-east Montana) and it gets cold there. I'm finally getting around to doing it (she doesn't seem to mind or to have remembered that I said I'd make it). I sent her this picture asking if it was an okay color combination. She replied enthusiastically in favor of them. It's also a test knit, which I enjoy doing. It also holds me to a time table. This way she'll actually get it before it becomes too cold up there.

There is potentially more but those are the main things I want to write about at the moment. Sundays are hard days for me to decide to sit in front of a computer as I have roller derby practice in the afternoon. If I was truly wise, I would write this before then but that makes too much sense!
 

  Finished Projects 

Works in Progress

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

Homemade Yuen-Yang Beef

Preface:
Last night, Husband picked me up from work to go get my car after repairs. As part of the deal, I had to help him with dinner. I was instructed to look up a recipe for this dish but wasn't able to, so instead was asked to find a recipe for a basic Chinese brown sauce. We decided to start with this one and then modified it for what he had in mind. He wrote most of this post. I only wrote down the sauce ingredients and instructions.

Introduction:
This recipe was inspired by a signature dish served at Bamboo Restaurant in Bedford, MA.   I enjoyed it enough to want to share it with my family. 

On the Heat:
It is tamed down from the chili peppers due to being a recipe for mixed palates.  The slices of ginger do add some heat without it being pepper-hot.   Due to the overall volume of food involved, the pepper, peppercorns, and chili powder spread out the heat more evenly than having whole chili peppers. 

On the Ginger:
Ginger is, like most spices, intangibly healthy for you.  It belongs in your diet, and calms your stomach.  This is definitely the main draw of the dish for me.

On the Meat:
Chuck roast is a cheap, stewing meat.  It is difficult to create a meal with an inexpensive cut of beef.  Paying for ribeye steaks isn't always in everyone's weekly dinner budget, so this was a surprisingly enjoyable meal for 1/4 the cost per pound for beef.  It could certainly be made with more expensive cuts of beef, however. 

Ingredients

2 pounds chuck roast
1/2 tablespoon sesame seeds

2 bell peppers
1/2 large sweet onion
1/2 cup thinly sliced fresh ginger
2-4 tbsp vegetable or peanut oil
1/4 tsp sesame oil

2 pounds green beans

rice

Sauce
1/3 cup soy sauce
1/2 cup chicken broth
1/3 cup cooking sherry
4 1/2 tablespoons brown sugar
1 tablespoon sesame oil
1/4 teaspoon white pepper
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
1/2 teaspoon chili powder
2 tablespoon cooking oil
1 tablespoon minced garlic
1/3 to 1/2 cup finely chopped fresh ginger
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1/4 cup water

To make the sauce:
  • Heat cooking oil and add garlic and ginger for about 30 seconds.
  • Combine soy sauce, chicken broth, cooking sherry, brown sugar, sesame oil, white pepper, peppercorns and chili powder in a separate container. Add this mixture to the cooking oil after briefly mixing.
  • While this mixture is cooking, combine the cornstarch and water in a separate container.
  • Once the sauce is boiling, stir in the cornstarch mixture.
Meat preparation:
  • Slice into thin strips, aim for the length of your green beans.  Under 1/4 inch in thickness
  • When working with chuck roast, if there are fibrous portions in it, since you're slicing it up anyway, make sure you cut the tough bits out ahead of time.   
  • Add the meat to the sauce and simmer for perhaps 20 minutes.  
  • Make sure to stir the meat occasionally to ensure even cooking.
  • Once the meat is cooked, add the sesame seeds

Vegetable preparation:
  • Slice the ginger to 1/8th inch medallions.  
  • Chop the bell pepper into short strips.
  • Chop the onion similarly to the bell pepper.
  • Heat a wok to high and add vegetable or peanut oil enough to stir-fry, and 1/4 tsp of sesame oil.  At these temperatures, some oils will smoke. 
  • Cook the ginger and onion together and first for about seven minutes
  • Add the green beans* and bell peppers and cook together for another ten minutes.  
  • The onion should be translucent, the green beans a brighter green and swollen, and the ginger should be tender, having soaked up some of the liquid from the onion.  The bell pepper should be shiny and somewhat firm.  
Serve this with the green beans and vegetables on the bottom and the meat on the top.  Serve the meat with a ladle so the sauce involves the vegetables.  Optionally serve with brown rice.

*Adding the green beans to this isn't what happened the first time this was cooked. This is a modification to help in the future. The green beans were unsuccessfully steamed when they needed to be stir-fried.

Monday, September 14, 2015

YOP 3 Weeks 9, 10 and 11 Updates

Two Three weeks have managed to slip by before I've had the chance to write about what I'm knitting! Between the internet being a little screwy and wanting to spend more time with people than on the computer, it's no surprise really. (I started this last week and just never got around to finishing it. The internet has been fussy but I guess that means I have more to write about now!)

I have had plenty of time on my Apollonia socks. Everyone loves the color. The first one is done and I'm moving right along on the second one. The leg is nearly finished. It would be amazing (and actually might be possible) if I got it finished by next Sunday. I won't hold my breath too long though.

The first sock. The purple is so much more amazing than it appears here.

I've decided I need to learn how to double knit. Husband has requested I make a gift for a mutual friend and he'd like it to be multi-colored. This means double knitting in my mind so that both sides are finished. I picked up some yarn at Goodwill last week to work on this project because there's no way I'm going to teach myself on full price yarn. I got two yarns that are close in size and contrasting in color. It's been an interesting process. Not my favorite yarn to knit with and tension has been awkward. I knit in the English style, so I'm struggling to keep even tension between the colors. I have seen tools out there that can help with this when using multiple colors but I'm not sure it's worth the price. I did remember after the first few rows that I needed to twist the yarns so that I wouldn't end up with a gap/hole on the sides. There are definitely holes on the sides for the first few rows. The entertaining part of this was examining someone's sweater and determining that part of it was double knit. He quickly took off the sweater as it got a little weird and we were at church.

Netflix has recently released NCIS on its streaming service, so between loads of laundry, I watched that and worked on Browncoat. The shoulders are seamed! I actually had no idea how to do it, so finally looked it up. Much easier than I thought it would be. There are going to be so many ends to weave in.... One armhole is almost finished (5 rounds are worked to finish the edge) and the other one should go just as smoothly (I hope). A couple of more things and then I block it. The more I look at it, the more I wonder if this is really meant for someone else. I have a friend that I think it would be perfect for though it would end up being bigger on her as I used the pattern sized for myself. I guess blocking will tell.

Finished Projects 

Works in Progress

Friday, August 28, 2015

YOP 3 Week 8 Update

This past week has been strangely productive. I think it was due to a visiting friend but I got the urge to spin again! My wheel came out one evening and I finished up some green fiber I got as part of a spinning class I took....last year? There's some more green that's a lighter shade that still needs to be spun and then they'll be plied together. Brilliant move on the instructor's part to give two colors. It really helps you see what you're doing.

It's Renaissance Festival season again. I see people with their knitting out there and I wonder how they do it. Not because they are knitting in public but because of how dirty it is out there.

Exhibit A: He's wearing a white shirt.
This is a friend of mine out at Fest. That shirt started out white. And I'm sure the head covering thing was really black and not that dusty gray color. I can't think about bringing out my knitting to Fest. My taste in yarn is too expensive.

But I had a visiting friend, remember? She learned how to spin on a drop spindle. I own a drop spindle and have attempted to use it a few times but haven't been very successful with it. I decided that I would bring that out to Fest (with some basic sheep wool) because it was okay if those got dusty.

While sitting with some friends, I decided my hands were feeling too twitchy, so I attempted to work on the spindle. And I had success! It wasn't perfect but it was progress. I eventually saw my friend and she learned that she spins (at least on spindle) in the opposite direction than I. This was really funny actually as she would start the spindle and everything would untwist and it would fall. As we were watching a stage show, she briefly "kidnapped" (spindle-napped?) my spindle to play with it. I think it's the first time I've seen her spin. And while I have another friend who has been spinning for ages longer than either of us, it was fun to learn from this visiting friend who I don't get to see very often. I like to think that it's possible to learn from anyone and I definitely picked up some new things to try.

We had also met earlier in the week for tea. She showed me All the Projects. Or, at least the things she's made recently (including a shawl for her oldest daughter) as well as a dragon that she's working on. It was at this point that she pointed out how she had learned that when seaming something, you seam loose and then tighten the stitches! Wow! I'm glad I hadn't started on the shoulders yet! I had no idea that you should do that instead!

After tea, she came over briefly and I gave her a gift I've been meaning to mail for months. Yarn! Three lovely skeins left my house!

So I spun, had stash-ish yarn leave the house *and* learned a new technique for a current WIP. I think that makes the week a win.

Finished Projects 

Works in Progress