Friday, June 11, 2010

Some Amendments and Some Awesome


I know I gave my summer knitting list, but it has since experienced some reordering. I was going to knit some Slippery socks out of the yarn I bought at the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival. Then, along came the Knitmore Girls and their ridiculously addictive Knit Alongs. 
When I first looked at the Brandywine Shawl by Rosemary Hill, I will admit to being a little unimpressed. I am not usually a triangle shawl girl, and it involved paying for the pattern. I am very picky about what I choose to make, and I am even more persnickety if I have to pay for the pattern.  Still, the more I looked at it, the more I began to think it might be pretty, perhaps even beautiful. Everyone was raving about how great the pattern was, and with my intention to knit a complex shawl later (Tree of Light) I began thinking it might be wise to get back into the groove of lace knitting with something a little less intense. The final straw was when I realized that the majority of what I paid for the pattern was going to Help for Hati. I love designers who use their patterns to benefit people other than themselves. I knew that I would use the Festival sock yarn because it was just too perfect to hide in shoes. It screamed to be worn about my neck in all its lacy glory.
 I am happy to say this is the quickest knit I have done in a while, and it came out beautifully as evidenced by the picture. Not only did everyone in the KAL give me lovely compliments on it, but there was an extra surprise. The Knitmore Girls did a random surprise giveaway of the designer's new ebook 7 Small Shawls. This is an awesome prize, gifted generously by the designer herself. For more information on this awesome ebook,  you can go here 7 Small Shawls.  I was so happy to find that out I actually squealed like a two year old. As for the shawl itself, I am so happy that this beauty is finished, and I can wear it to a sad event so that it will comfort and bolster me with all its orangey goodness.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Summer Knitting!

I am so happy it's summer. Usually, I approach summer with some slight distaste because I really hate hot weather and I don't like being away from school so long. Knittingwise, I am not much of a lightweight yarn person. I like warm sweaters, thick scarves, and wool socks. While socks work out well for summer knitting, the other two do not always handle themselves well in this season. However, this summer is proving very different in terms of my attitude. I am absolutely exhausted, and I am beyond grateful to be resting for the next month before I start work. I am also looking forward to knitting much more than I usually do. I have some lovely projects that just scream to happen this summer. On with the list then?

-Finishing my man's sweater is a huge priority. I know I just talked about the silliness of knitting thick sweaters in summer, but that is what basements and AC are for, no?

-Finishing my Mondo Cable Cardigan for my Knit More Along. It is pretty close to finished, and if I keep it off my lap it should not make me terribly overheated.

-Finishing my Tranquility Socks in the Twisted pattern by Jodie Gordon Lucas (Knitty Spring+Summer 2010). I am knitting these bad boys out of thepaintedsheep Painted Sock Too in the Tranquility colorway. I am blazing through this awesome pattern, and I can't wait to have the socks!

-Finishing a prayer shawl for my Aunt's birthday in October. She oggled my mother's when they came for Thanksgiving so I coerced my mom into buying the yarn and we could give it as a combined gift. Very easy knitting, and I should be done with it by the end of the month.

-My Ocean Spray Top. I have been working on this for a very long time, but it is truly a pattern I want to chew slowly. It is the Sea Tangles pattern from Knitty's Summer 08 issue. The pattern is not difficult, just labor intensive, and I am knitting out of the most beautiful yarn in the world (thepaintedsheep's Jasmine in By the Sea colorway).

-Roxy and Her Cubs Knit Picks kit. This kit includes the yarn and pattern to make the most adorable little fox family ever! It also uses intarsia which is a technique I have always wanted to try. The foxes knit up in a fuzzy Knit Picks Suri Dream.

-Knitting my way through however many patterns I can manage from the Amigurumi Knits book by Hansi Singh. This book is full of some of the most fantastic critters and vegetables that I have ever encountered. Everything from tomatoes to a Loch Ness monster. Best part is that I am using odds and ends from my stash to make these awesome squishies.

- Slippery Socks by Olivia M. from Knitty Winter 2007. The yarn is a delicious hand paint that I got at the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival. It is called Dizzie Lizzie's Superwash Sock, and the colorway is Sunkist. A truly gorgeous mix of rich oranges and golden yellows.

-The Tree of Light Shawl by Cordula Surmann-Schmitt (that is an awesome name by the way.) I have not done lace in a while, and I have had this lovely Jojoland Harmony sitting in my stash for a while. It is a soft variegation of lavenders, and it is perfect for hazy summer days.

-Sourwood Mountain Fingerless Mitts by Erica Jackofsky (she is also known as Fiddle Knits.) I have been dying to knit these and have had the perfect yarn for them sitting in my stash since last summer. Fibranatura Cottonwood is this unbelievably soft 100% organic cotton that I snagged last summer from my LYS. It is this perfect white/lavender (noticing a trend?) that I truly can't wait to see knit in this pattern.

-Lace-Up Opera gloves by Ysolda Teague. Again with the stash shopping, I am using Dive Zenith in a really dark turquoise, and I am pairing it with some fantastic ribbon using the same color mixed with purple.

-Finally (did not realize the list was this long) Green Cabled Armwarmers by Elizabeth Martin. I am working these up in some stash yarn by the name of Jojoland Melody. Yet again, I appear to be about green and purple with this stuff.

My goodness I am rather ambitious aren't I? Perhaps slightly delusional, but that is the fun of summer heat. Hobey ho!


Monday, May 17, 2010

Bumble Bee Tuna Blankie



"I love Bumble Bee, Bumble Bee Tuna
Yum, yum, Bumble Bee, Bumble Bee Tuna."
(proceed up a half step and keep singing)

So goes the vocal warm up that inspired the name for this project. This blankie is going to the new son of a co-worker of mine. You see, I saw this blanket on Ravelry and thought it was so awesome looking that I racked my brains to think of a baby worthy enough to wrap in its spectacular self. Then it hit me. Greg is a man who is genuinely cool and his wife is just as lovely. Greg was very kind to me last summer, and since it was my first time working at that job it was nice to be treated so well. Plus, he is a very good friend of my sister so why not make it a combined gift (i.e. "hey Meg, why don't you buy the yarn and I will make it ;). Anyway, the title has multiple meanings. I was gazing at the work in progress in the mirror at one point, and I thought, "huh, kind of looks like a bumble bee." Immediately the above tune popped into my head. I smiled. That warm up is one Greg used for his vocal intensive that he taught at the camp, and it always made me smile when I heard it. So, the blanket was dubbed thus. Hopefully, both parental units enjoy it, because I truly love the finished product.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

My first Handspun



It is officially carded, spun, plied, and washed! This is 100% alpaca yarn spun fairly bulky and the colorway is Echo (named properly after the owner of the fleece.) I was not able to spin a great deal of yardage, but it turned out beautifully none the less. I can honestly say that it was a unique pleasure to hold this completely raw creation in my hand and just squishhhhh it with my fingers. Hopefully, it knits up nicely.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

The Curse

My co-blogger and I agree on many things, but when it comes to knitting we are experiencing a disagreement of the most interesting sort. I am knitting a sweater for my boyfriend. It was originally going to be his Christmas gift, but it has since turned into a 1 year anniversary gift. Whenever the thing comes up my dear partner in blogging purses her lips and mentally sends the "don't say I didn't warn you" with a mere look. You see she believes in the curse that is supposedly tied to knitting a sweater for your significant other, especially if you are not married or unionized. I will not pretend that I did not consider this factor when I started thinking about making this sweater. After all there is a reason that such legends occur, and I am perfectly aware that there is an uncanny number of stories of people knitting a sweater for their partner and having the relationship go up in smoke. Am I so arrogant that I think I can make this work and not be affected by this insidious threat? The answer is that it has nothing to do with arrogance. I believe that such a curse is not the sweater itself, but in the energy one invests in it. I know full and well I could be knitting for a man who might leave me, but that is a fact that will exist whether I make the sweater or not. Secondly I believe that God is stronger than curses. I pray fervently when I knit and this sweater is so thickly covered in them that I believe it is quite saturated. Thirdly, I chose a pattern type that has a history of being knit for lovers and important men in the lives of knitters. I chose a gansey pattern, and they were originally created by women who knit for the fishermen in their lives. I would be very surprised to discover that some women did not make such things for their sweethearts whether married or not. Granted my man is not going out on the stormy seas any time soon, but the desire to give him something beautiful and special is the same. The bottom line is that even if he and I break up the day after I give him this sweater (highly unlikely, I would give it at least two :), I would not regret a single stitch I spent on him. He will always be special in my heart no matter what the future dictates. This is how I have chosen to express my feelings for him and I will say that it is the curse that is arrogant to think that it can harm something created in love.

Sunday, December 6, 2009

The Cardigan Refused to Be Finished Part 4



The final installment in the saga. When last we left the tale I began knitting on the dreadful thing. I tried to be optimistic because I could tell the work would not cooperate with me if it knew my dislike. So I took it with me to my summer job every day and pretty much knit on it with every spare moment I had. As first, nothing extremely bad occurred. I worked my way through the back finding it to be meditative if a little boring. Then I began the front pieces. That is when I noticed my hands were not happy. I was very careful to keep them relaxed and not knit too tight. I even cut down the amount of time I knit to add more time of hand rest. Still, I was cramping very easily. I finally decided it had to be the yarn. Cottons do not slide through my hands as easily as the natural wool fibers or the nylon sock yarn I am used to working with. On top of the monotonous pattern, the ugly color, and a deadline, I now had to deal with the fact that my hands were being ripped apart! Plus, it just never seemed to end. The cardigan was worked in pieces so that involved a back, two front panels, two sleeves, and a button band. Not to mention that I was mortified it would not fit my pixie stick of a sister. She is incredibly thin, and after the near fiasco of my first sweater I did not want a repeat performance. Granted I had done a swatch and accounted for my idiosyncrasies, but it never left me that I could be going through all this for naught. By the end of July, all the pieces were knit. Seaming is usually not a big deal for me. However, cotton is not nearly as forgiving as a fuzzy wool or acrylic. Any little mess up in your seaming process will show as a glaring error which I knew could not occur in this sweater. As a result, the process took twice as long as usual simply because I was being so flipping careful to make the seams look clean. When I was finally through with that, I had to move on to the buttons. My sister had insisted on some lackluster light beige buttons, and they absolutely refused to cooperate! How hard is it just to stay where I put the initial tacking thread? How come they could not just work on this cardigan that I needed TO JUST BE FINISHED DAMNIT! But low and behold some hours later, the thing was finally ready. I gave it to my sister some weeks later fairly biting my nails with nervousness. I need not have worried for the cardigan fit beautifully. She had to roll up the sleeves, but other than that she was smitten. I was proud and relieved that I would never have to touch the stupid thing ever again!

Sunday, November 15, 2009

A Day Steeped in Fiber


Some times, the Lord shows his love in ways we can least expect. At some points in life the Lord provides a beautiful opportunity that never entered into our thoughts. Such an event has occurred in my life in the form of a completely unexpected connection to a person whose family raises alpacas. This girl stopped me in class one day with a query as to where I got my yarn. Before I could even begin to go into detail she told me that her mother raises alpacas and they are willing to sell me the fiber for extremely cheap. I could barely contain my ecstasy as she continued to explain that her family had far too much fleece and nothing to do with it. What providence that I just learned to spin this summer! How could I not jump at the opportunity to own oodles of my favorite fiber for so little cost. I eagerly agreed to some terms of a deal, and we arranged a visit for me to pick out the fiber I desired. So that is what I did yesterday dear co-blogger, and here are some lovely shots of my adventure and its fruits. 


 
These are the views that met my eyes from the back patio. My friend's step-father built that barn. 


The interior of the barn was just as beautiful as the outside. Every edge routed to perfection, and full of light as well as the smell of animal. Not the manure smell that can clog the nostrils just hay, fur, and wood. The white cutie is the baby alpaca that is the newest member of the herd. She got curious first, and she looks so boldly at the camera. She is simply called Baby. The other is the alpaca that has my favorite fleece that I purchased. I know the picture is shadowy, but you can see the softness of her coat. Her name is Bambi. 
The farm has three females counting Baby, and all the others are males. The second picture is of the three females (Amber is the front and mother of Baby in back. Bambi is the other female.) The dark man in the top picture is the lover boy of the farm. He is Baby's father, and the only male to successfully convince a female to mate. His name is Echo, and I think that his coat is the most beautiful color of the entire bunch. I don't know if it translates well, but it is this amazing maroon brown like the color of cherry juice on a black forest cake. I did not actually buy Echo's fleece. However, the family proposed an even bigger discount if I agreed to knit scarves from the fiber. My friend's mother picked Echo's fleece for the project. The fiber I bought for myself was from Bambi (the tawny female behind Amber) and a male named Sundance. I did not get a good close up of Sundance. However, there are pictures of his fleece below. His is actually award winning, and I liked the touch of it more than Echo's. Still, after playing with Echo's fleece when I brought it home I have decided that I must get some for myself next time I visit. (The order of the fleece below from top down is Bambi, Sundance, and Echo). 


I know this post is long, but I cannot help but wax poetic about this stuff. It needs some cleaning. It needs to be carded. It still smells of animal. But, there are few pleasures as tactfully beautiful as dipping your arms elbow deep in clouds. I will need another post to talk about each fleece specifically so for now I leave you to gaze at my treasures.