Sunday, February 2, 2014

YOP #31 or 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5

Yesterday, I finished my fifth project of 2014. I'm ridiculously excited about this. My knitting skills have definitely leveled up. Since last week, I've finished my sister's hat and the knitted dog. Last week I wanted to have both of these finished and I did it! I set a goal and it was actually achievable. There are two more dogs to knit but I'm very excited that I've finished one. It probably helped that I had a big show on Thursday. It was a crazy morning but once the show started (two performances), I literally had nothing to do but sit there and make sure the building didn't fall apart. So I sat there backstage and worked on the hat. I finished the hat within 15 minutes of the second performance.

I then pulled out the Newton socks. Almost a year ago I got this pattern. I remember being completely intimidated by it. It's lacy and there was a chart. How could anyone make these socks? Well, a year later, and less than a week after starting them, I'm already at the heel. And instead of doing the heel flap, I'm using Ann Budd's short row heel. The Sweet Georgia yarn is so soft and lovely. I can't wait to get them onto my feet.

Tomorrow I should have the newest Cookie A yarn and I will definitely have the patterns. I'm excited about getting it. I've been a little "meh" the last few months as I didn't feel very inspired by the patterns. I'm hoping that I'm back on my sock knitting kick though.

Finished Objects

Works in Progress

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Fuzzy Pattern

Now that Fuzzy is off needles and in the arms of a toddler to be loved, here is the pattern. It hasn't been tested by anyone, so I'm sure there's something that doesn't make sense. I also purled my stitches backwards, which I don't recommend. Gauge really doesn't matter. I knit with needles 4 or 5 sizes larger than the recommended needle size on the yarn. The final blanket was about 2 feet wide and 3 feet long and had 21 repeats of the 6 row pattern.

Cast on 113 stitches.

Knit 20 rows.

Repeat following pattern to desired length.

Rows 1, 2, 5 & 6: K10, [P5, (K1, P1)x6]x2, P25, [(K1, P1)x6, P5]x2, K10
Row 3: K10, [K1(M1, K1)x2 (K1, P1)x6]x2, K1, (M1, K1)x12, [(K1, P1)x6, K1(M1, K1)x2], K10
Row 4: K10, (P5, 12-st LC)x2, P25, (12-st LC, P5)x2, K10

When the blanket is at a length you like, knit 20 more rows and bind off.


Key:

K=Knit
P=Purl
M=Make a stitch by placing a backwards loop on the right needle
12-st LC=Slip first 6 stitches onto cable needle and hold in front, work next 6 stitches in pattern, work 6 stitches from cable needle

Wednesday, January 29, 2014

YOP #30 or Insert Clever Title Here

This past week has been ridiculous in it's temperatures. You would think with extra time off from work (it was so cold that the University I work for canceled all classes, so my late night rehearsal wasn't happening) that I would have time to update my blog in a timely manner. Instead, I was trying hard to keep warm. It did mean that I had extra time to work on things. There was progress this past week.

The dog is coming along nicely. All of the parts are made and the sides are sewn together. I need to finish sewing it up and then I can stuff it. I had to buy stuffing as my friend didn't manage to but on the scale of things, that's a little thing. Besides, I was able to buy 20 ounces of stuffing for the same price as a smaller bag. I should have the little guy done by next week. I had hoped to have it done by now but I needed to take a break from it. So many ends to sew in! On top of that, the method to sew things together is frustrating for me. It does make a seamless connection but it's fussy on something so small. Alas, at the moment, I can't seem to remember what it's called but it is on the list of things I don't really like.

My sister's hat is starting it decrease. She was going to leave Montana and move to Texas so I thought she'd get a little more use out of the hat as it's lighter weight than something to wear up north. Then some of her clients (she's a vet) made her an offer she couldn't refuse (not in a creepy way) to get her to stay. So while she may not be able to wear it in sub-zero weather, at least she'll look girly when she can wear it in the fall. My plan is to finish it up before the end of the week as it will mean I will have finished four projects this month! If I manage to finish the dog as well, then it will be a grand total of five projects! When I mentioned my finish rate to Husband last night and asked him to imagine what it would be like if I finished 4 projects every month, he quipped that it would mean I would stay on top of my yarn buying habit.

I did finish the scarfowl, which was another test pattern. The yarn is lovely. I purchased it at StevenBe's back in May. On Saturday, there was an open house, so I of course brought it with me to show off. (Note: I went into the shop and managed to not buy a single thing; the world may be ending.) Now I'll have to go back and show off the finished object. I made mine smaller than the original one so that it will sit up close to my face. I took it to a crafting night on Thursday and there was much ooohing and ahhing over it. Husband asked if I could wear it like a crown (this is how he wears his cowl at times) in hopes that it will replace my troll hat, though that is unlikely.

Monday I started an old Cookie A pattern. It's the second one from last February. I apparently couldn't wait until this coming Monday to start a Cookie A sock. I've been wanting to work on a Cookie A sock for a few weeks now. I'm using the yarn we got in the June shipment so the socks are Blood Orange Newtons. The cuff is almost finished and I'm loving the yarn. It's the second skein of club yarn I've used now. I keep finding other yarn that I want to use on the patterns.

I love how my Finished Objects list is growing. It feels really nice to see it there every week and I love moving an item from the lower list up to the other one. It feels like progress.


Finished Objects

Works in Progress

Monday, January 20, 2014

YOP #25-#29 or Funny How Not Posting for a Month Allows for More FO Pictures

The last month has been....interesting. Not completely an "oh, God, oh God, we're all going to die!" sort of way but there were moments that certainly felt like that. Work, travel and home life all took their toll on my desire to write. I'm going to lay all the blame squarely on the ballet I worked just before Christmas. My last post was just before that headache. (I love ballet and I love the Nutcracker but the company that rented our hall were anything but professional; it made for a difficult week.)

But now, onto my knitting!

First, I finished Here Fishy, Fishy.

My sister was very excited for it. I brilliantly left all my tapestry needles at home and we were in Colorado visiting family. Mom brought me one of hers and I finished the hat in front of my sister. I tried to be sneaky but I'm about as sneaky as a kitten wiggling it's butt before pouncing. Unfortunately, my sister's head is larger than I realized. So I told her I had enough yarn to make this hat again if she was okay with that. This means I'm making the same hat with the same yarn and have simply added two horizontal repeats of the pattern. I'm even calling it the same thing and have simply added a "II" to the end of it. Of course, now that my sister is moving to Texas (it's sock yarn, so I doubt it would have been warm enough for her in North East Montana) and there is no impending holiday visit, I've slacked on finishing the second one.

Her head is also taller than I realized, so I'm adding a vertical repeat as well. It's a lovely pattern (a Cookie A one) and I love the yarn. Mom gave it to me after the Yarn Along the Rockies this fall. It's from a shop called Stash and it's simply called Sock Yarn. There is no colorway name but Husband has dubbed it "OMG Pony Pink".



Husband tried to convince me that I shouldn't cast on any new projects before the end of the year. That didn't happen because we were about to have a polar vortex and I had no gloves. I "stole" a pair of Husband's gloves but they didn't fit right. Since I took two weeks off from work (one week in Colorado), I had plenty of time to make myself a pair of mittens. A bigger challenge was to have them be finished before the New Year. I started them on December 29th and finished them, including weaving in ends, on the 31st. My first pair of mittens took months to finish and were also huge.

The first mitten
I knew nothing about gauge at the time. It was the first project I did in the round. The yarn had originally been bought to make a normal scarf for the guy I was dating at the time for those times when the 18-foot long scarf was just excessive. Shortly after I bought the yarn, I broke up with him so I eventually decided to make something for myself. The pattern was taught to me and had a lot of "about like" steps to it. Kind of like when cooking without a recipe and you just put in a bit of this and some of that. The pair to this mitten was an inverse of the colors. They were a lovely pair and I was very sad to lose the one. I looked everywhere for it. One day, when I had about an hour to kill before work, I learned that there was a yarn shop a block away from where I park. I had driven past Depth of Field countless times and never realized that it was there as it was just part of the scenery. I stepped inside and wandered around, touching and petting the yarn. Eventually I realized I needed to go to work and I wanted to buy something. Knowing that I didn't have much of a stash at the time, I asked for a suggestion for a good mitten yarn. Not only did the woman help me find some nice bulky yarn, but she also showed me a wonderful pattern by a local designer. It's an amazingly simple pattern though it does involve some math, and the woman told me that she uses the formula on other mitten patterns she likes so that they are a perfect fit. The pattern is called "Fittin' Mitts: Mitts That Fit". I love these mittens more than my first pair. I could probably have added a little room in the hand so it isn't so tight but I don't mind too much.

Gingy
I had originally called them "Ginger Mitts" as the yarn colorway is called "Spiced Gingerbread" but after watching Shrek the Musical 2.5 times in the last week (don't judge), I've renamed them "Gingy". Husband insisted I add some sort of loop so I don't lose them, which I did and then made little bows out of the tails. I don't think the bows are going to last much longer. They are starting to fray a little bit. Even during our polar vortex, my hands were getting sweaty in these mitts. Definitely a success!

Next up, after some personal drama, I found I had a lot of time on my hands and that I needed some mindless knitting. In this time, I managed to finish Fuzzy!



The best part was that Husband was going to be seeing his cousin the week after it was finished. I wrote a little card and asked him to take a picture of his cousin's daughter with it. I didn't get a picture. Instead, he took a short video on his phone. The little girl had taken the blanket and draped it on her head and wrapped the ends around her hands. In the video, she is bouncing her hands and herself in a happy little dance. That makes Fuzzy a huge success! I was happy with how it had turned out though I was nervous on how it would be received. You never know with young ones especially young ones that you've never met. My hope is that this blanket becomes worn and treasured for decades. I have a feeling that this might just happen.

This week we have a visiting Japanese student. Part of the deal of my bonus son getting to go to Japan for free was that we would have to host a student ourselves. As it is January and it's going to get stupid cold again while the student is visiting, I offered to make him a scarf as a gift. Husband agreed and said I could make a scarf similar to the one I made back in July. I used the same yarn but didn't cast on as many stitches. It's a little longer than the first one and much narrower. I also slipped each first stitch of all the rows with the yarn in front and then knitted the rest of the row. The edges have this nice look to them.

Full scarf
Close up of one edge

I've recently started a couple of new projects even though there are a few more on needles that need to get finished. I may be waiting for the Ravellenic Winter Games 2014 to begin...

After I made Husband a cowl, I thought it wouldn't be a bad idea for me to have one. I started a test knit to make one. It's a "scarfowl" as it can be a scarf or a cowl. There are 3 possibilities in the pattern: a buttoned cowl, a loop cowl and a scarf. I decided to do the loop cowl.


The yarn is hand painted and suffers from what Husband calls "radio static" where it isn't stripping or showing a pattern. In this pattern, he does like it because there's a consistency with where the colors are landing. It does move as the cowl progresses but it looks lovely. I believe it's the cabling that makes the coloring "acceptable" because the cables are more than just a knitted pattern. The stitches are raised up and give depth to the pattern. A flat pattern would probably disappear in this colorway.

The other new project is long overdue and is for a friend. She asked through facebook if someone would be willing to knit some dogs for her. Payment would be the book the patterns are in and whatever else we could agree on. I messaged her as I'd been eyeing this book and agreed. She bought the supplies and sent them to me through campus mail (we both work at the same University; my co-workers were amused). Last Friday I finally started the first dog, Gillian.

The gauge is completely off and this is going to be a larger dog but my friend doesn't mind at all. I'd read some reviews of the first book saying that it wasn't very clear or easy. So far, I've found this pattern to be both. Husband and I enjoyed a movie while I whipped the legs out. I'm nearly done with half of the body. This is definitely a sit at home and work on project. You can see a little bit of yellow paper sticking out of the bottom of the book. This is my pattern marker. I do wish pattern language was the same universally. The authors are British. I'm use to seeing kfb instead of inc for knitting two stitches in one. It's small things like that which make me grateful that books include abbreviation keys. I hope to have a new progress picture for next week!





  Finished Objects

Works in Progress

Monday, December 16, 2013

YOP #24 or Failing at Online Interactions

It's been 5 days since my last YOP post. Not much has changed. I frogged the hat, twice, and have it finally on needles that I think will work. And if it's too big, well, my sister has a big head. I went down in needle size instead of up. I blame my head cold for that making sense.

On a completely different front, but still related, I feel like I'm failing at communicating through Ravelry. So often, it seems, I make a comment on a thread and it dies. I use to be really good at forums and following blogs (mostly because those blogs were all on livejournal, so had an easy to read feed). Now, I struggle reading the other blog posts about people's YOPs. I rarely comment because I don't know how to see any potential responses to my comments without either checking the post obsessively or getting emailed every time anyone comments on the post.

I use to have a large community of online friends. That's been replaced by...I'm not really sure. It's not as though I have more friends around me than I did before. I don't like spending the hours in front of the computer these days. I often find that a thread I'm following on a forum has hundreds of new posts from the last time I looked at it and I just don't want to wade through all of it. So I miss out. A lot of these people (probably all women to be honest) seem really cool and interesting but I don't know how to connect to people online anymore. I think part of me was hoping that by doing this blog experiment (really it is an experiment; I have a hard time committing to anything but sleep on a daily basis and that's only because my body wins sometimes), I would find a new online community. I want to geek out over yarn and jokes and be included with something that my Husband finds a bit silly. I know that there are local people, including many friends, who are also knitters but I want to connect with people in the yarn clubs I'm in and who are blogging as well. I just don't know how.

Friday, December 13, 2013

A year later: Looking back at my knitting

It's now been just over a year since I feel I could truly call myself a knitter instead of someone who would occasionally (and quite randomly) knit something. The mental marker for me is Chicago TARDIS. Last year, I was working on my first pair of socks, which won me a Ponds button for being able to talk about something that isn't cool as though it is cool. I believe Husband was trying to hide his face in embarrassment at that point. I've done a lot since then and feel it would be good to recount it as a way to remind myself that I have actually done a lot.

First Socks
This was the first pair. I had bought this yarn years ago with the purpose of  making arm warmers. That was a thing for me for a while. With how stupid cold it's gotten again, it may become a thing again. October 2012 found me wanting to knit something. Apparently I was bored. I didn't want to make arm warmers though. I pulled out this yarn and decided since it was sock yarn, maybe I should make socks with it. A year later, I see little things that I could have done differently but I'm still happy with how these turned out. They were the gateway into becoming a "serious" knitter. This was one of my last projects made on cheaper yarn. The yarn had been bought at a Jo-Ann Fabrics. When I was first starting, I couldn't tell the difference in how things knit up. I certainly can tell the difference now. And I know it won't be the last project. Some things call for cheaper yarn, like knitted toys.

Purple and Blue Socks
I started these socks at the end of the year with the high ambition of being able to finish them before the year was out. The ball of yarn, which came with a sock knitting kit, wasn't enough to make the pair of socks, so I purchased more yarn (from Jo-Ann Fabrics again; I didn't know any better at the time!) to finish them off. With a bum ankle from some wall running, I wasn't going to be doing much for New Year's Eve. The plan was to stay up all night to finish these socks. It didn't happen. I have learned after these socks, to be much pickier about my yarn choices. Thankfully, my oldest bonus kids bought me some yarn for Christmas and Husband gave me a gift card to a local yarn shop. He also gave me a book on Derby inspired knitting.

Hat Knitting
In January, I went to a local yarn shop to join in with some Minnesota Rollergirl skaters who were making hats for charity. I brought Husband along to get him out of the house. He sat over in a corner and worked on a drawing. I worked on making my first ever hat. I had received a bunch of smaller double pointed needles and interchangeable circular needles for Christmas, so I was very excited to try them out. The skaters had patterns and yarn, so I picked some out and started the hat. This was an amazingly frustrating process. I was trying to figure out gauge and it was a mess. The first hat was enormous! I made another hat with the same pattern, which ended up being toddler sized (no photo of it though I did gift it to friends with a young boy who was going through a phase of loving hats).




I used up more of this gray yarn from Husband (left over from another project) to make another hat that was actually decent sized. An adult could actually wear it. It was also my first time contacting a designer because I didn't understand the pattern. I still managed to drop a few stitches and screw it up a little but I was overall happy with how it turned out.


Derby Leg Socks
Once again casting on with Jo-Ann Fabrics yarn, I knit these leg socks using the magic loop method. It was a fun and quick project and I really enjoyed making them. I loved having all my derby friends ask me about them. This does remind me that I need to get back onto my skates soon....












Cookie A Socks
 Knowing that I had enjoyed my sock knitting experience, my mom signed me up for the Cookie A Sock Club, which she had already joined. I had no idea what I was getting myself into so I was excited. I remember an early post about it on facebook and having friends who have knit for much longer than I have responding in awe that I was going to tackle her patterns. It's probably good that I didn't know what I was getting into. I have learned a lot from these projects though.

Things I've specifically learned from the Sock Club
  • How to pick up dropped stitches in a pattern after a needle breaks and you loose a bunch of stitches.
  • How to read charts. How to follow a chart when there's also a decrease in the chart.
  • How to let a project sit after messing it up instead of continuing to work on it and making it worse.
  • How to dye yarn (I wanted to have my Tiberius socks in the "right" color for Kirk).
  • How to do a short-row heel.
  • How to knit two socks at a time using magic loop.
  • How to become addicted to really, really nice yarn.
  • How to make all kinds of cookies.
I gifted one pair of socks to my mom. She's made me tons of socks but she's never received socks before, so that was special for her. I entered one pair of socks into the state fair and scored a 94/100. Of the 12 sock patterns we've received this year (though let's be fair, I only just got the last 2 this past Monday), I've completed 3 pairs. I've been distracted with other projects lately. The patterns from August didn't really jump out at me and I wasn't up to the complexity of either of the October patterns. And I had a space suit to make.

Gifts
 I appear to have made quite a few gifts this year. I made, in less than a week, an alpaca scarf to send with my bonus son to Japan as a gift to his host family. It turns out that the father of the family was a ski instructor in Europe... Good thing I (really Husband did it) convinced my bonus son to take the scarf with him...
 My youngest bonus daughter likes things that she can put other things into. Boxes, bags, nut shells.... So back in April, I bought a kit to make a beaded bag for her. This was my first time incorporating beading into a project. The best part was that the kit included the needle to get the beads onto the yarn. They really did think of everything. I then placed an old heart-shaped silver box into it to give to her as well. She does like her containers. She was so happy and surprised by it that she was actually silent when she opened her eyes.
 Last January-ish, I posted a facebook pay-it-forward gift thing. The requirement was that the first 5 commenters would receive something handmade by me during the yarn. I'd tried to do something like this once before and pretty much failed. To be fair, so did the person I had commented on to receive something from. The thing is that if you comment on someone else's status, you then post this on your own wall. This year, I've managed to gift 2 of the 5, which is better than in the past. One was to my mom (her socks) and the other was to a friend who I don't see very often. It was the first time I did a test knit and that I made socks for someone that I didn't have there with me to have them try them on. She loved them when she got them and they fit perfectly! 

My husband asked me to make a pair of socks for a friend of his as he knew she would appreciate them. I pointed out that she was more of a shawl/scarf person and I should make her one of those. We don't get to see her very often these days but earlier in the yarn when she was visiting, I showed off my yarn collection to her. It wasn't very sneaky of me but I managed to find one that she really loved the color and the texture of without giving away what I was doing. She just received the shawl last week and she loves it. She really loves unique things. I told her that this scarf has several unique things to it.

  • Every purl stitch and yarnover was done incorrectly but it was off the needles so I wasn't going to redo it, especially since Husband told me I was done. This means it's different than the others out there.
  • The yarn is a limited edition color, club member only color from Indigodragonfly.
  • The yarn is a merino, seacel blend which I haven't found very often.
Husband asked me to make him a pair of socks to walk on the wire. I made them out of yarn from a yarn exchange and it's an acrylic and wool blend but knowing how hard he's going to be on them, I though that this was the best option. As much grief as he's given me on my sock obsession, he was amazed with how well these socks fit and with how much it improved his wire jumping. He's had classmates notice the socks and ask him about them. I'm sure he beams when he tells them that his wife made them for him.

And his recently finished cowl. I was going to surprise him with it but he saw the supplies in the car one day when I went to bring him a lunch at work. I love that he tells me that I don't have to knit him anything. I know that I don't have to knit him anything. I enjoy making things for him. He takes care of them, appreciates them and tells everyone I made them for him.



The Tally
In the last 12-ish months, I've made:
  • 2 pairs of vanilla socks
  • 3 hats
  • 3 pairs of Cookie A socks
  • 1 pair of wire walking socks
  • 1 pair of test knit socks
  • 1 pair of leg socks
  • 1 beaded bag
  • 1 scarf
  • 1 shawl
  • 1 cowl
for a grand total of  15 finished objects. Not too shabby for only getting into this a little over a year ago!

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

YOP #21-23 or Goodness, is it already that time of year?

It seems I've gone several more weeks without blogging. This whole blogging once a week thing is still as hard as I remember it to be back in college. As it was back in college, this time of year always seems to be busy for me. In college, it was mostly filled with exams and year end concerts. Now, it's mostly filled with year end concerts. Even with all the insanity of the past few weeks, I have managed to finish a project. I didn't get two projects finished by the end of November as I had hoped to but apparently I needed sleep. And to make a spacesuit.

I made everything but the climbing harness, boots and gloves. He picked out the fabric and convinced me to let it be entered in the Masquerade. We won our class!
I will be writing more about the spacesuit in it's own post. I need to take some close-up photos to finish the documentation phase. In case, you know, I want to make another one. And, like any artist I know, I not only can point out all the things that are wrong with but I also have ideas on how to improve it. I am very happy with it though. But first, more knitting things in the post.

I'm still working on the Angels Have the Policebox Socks. I keep redesigning what they are going to look like in my head. While I was at Chicago TARDIS, I pulled them out a lot not only to work on (though not as often as I would have liked) but to show them off to people. There were those who were also knitters, so I was working on introducing them to the awesomeness of Indigodragonfly. The rest were simply Whovians who I knew would understand the humor of the name. These were originally going to be socks for me but with how stretchy they are feeling, I decided that Husband should have them even though he thinks sock knitting is a bit silly. He works from home often and it will be nice for him to have nice, warm socks.Now I just need to finish the second sock. The cuff is mostly done. The horizontal cabling looks really cool but that whole having to seam it together before making the rest of the sock makes me a little angsty.

No real progress on Fuzzy or the TARDIS shawl.

I did finish my first colorwork project ever.
It was meant as a Christmas present but Husband as already been given it. It's been stupid, gross cold out for over a week now (we seem to be lucky if we break 10 degrees F right now) and would have had it sooner if I'd not put off weaving in ends and connecting the tube. And there was the ever present spacesuit that needed to be worked on. Of course, Husband likes to wear it as a hat/crown accessory instead of around his neck but he loves it so I'm happy. And I seem to have impressed at least one friend with the fact that I've made it. She's not fond of colorwork but she makes amazing things.

It also looks good on the dog.
 
Finally, I've cast on a hat for my younger sister. She's a vet in the northeastern part of Montana, where it gets even stupider cold than here. She needs/wants a new hat that is girly, so I'm making her one. It's OMG Pony Pink color (in Husband's words) and I'm using a Cookie A sock pattern that someone else had already turned into a hat because I've not been knitting enough Cookie A this half of the year. I've called the hat Here Fishy Fishy because at some point, my sister posted that as a facebook status update and now it comes up every time she calls me. It's quite a stretchy pattern but I will admit that I'm worried that it's going to be too small and I won't know until it's nearly finished.

It looks like it will stretch to about 24", which is larger than my head (I think; I did measure my head but that was last week before a head cold decided my sinuses would be a fun place to vacation). I'm hoping for the best. There was the gauge of the original pattern, which I believe I'm getting, but none on the blog post with the modification. Gauge still makes my head feel funny if I think about it too hard.

I'm hoping that this project will kick me back into knitting Cookie  socks. Of the 12 designs we've received this year, I've made a total of 3 of them. I know it's not a race to complete them and that I shouldn't feel bad if I don't because even the ones I have finished had led me to doing new things which is exciting. Husband also thinks I should finish all my WIPs by the end of the year. We'll see if that happens. Between concerts and being stupid sick (I did a little knitting today on my day off but I've barely touched it because I don't feel like knitting; I may be dying), I'll be happy to finish any project at this point.

Finished Objects

Works in Progress