I finished my Gretel yesterday, and she's quite pretty, although I didn't think I would have enough yarn to make the slouchy version, as I was hoping to, so I settled for the regular. Looking at the yarn I have left over, I probably made the right choice.
The most interesting thing about Gretel is that I can wear her either as a beanie or a snood, depending on what I feel like. She works both ways, which means I'll probably skip the blocking, which would put her more firmly in the snood camp. Now I like snoods, but I made the band slightly too loose for it to stay on my head without lots of bobbypin assistance, so no blocking. The next Gretel I'll make'll be the slouchy kind. I think it I make it on 5s and 7s instead of fat 6s and 8s, I can squeeze a slouchy out of Malabrigo. Possibly the Sealing Wax.
The pattern was fun, as all of Ysolda's are, and I'm glad I finally got around to making myself one of these, which I've wanted to do for ages. It's one of those patterns where I needed to find yarn that was perfect, so I kept putting it off and putting it off until finally I decided that it was going to be done in the Emerald and if it wasn't perfect, I could just make another until it was.
Pattern: Gretel by Ysolda Teague
Yarn: Malabrigo Worsted in Emerald, a bit under one skein
Needles: Fat 6 dpns (4.25 mm), US 8 16 inch Addi Turbo, US 8 Clover Takumi DPNs
Modifications: None
Started: June 2008
Finished June 2008
June 28, 2008
June 25, 2008
Evangelines
I finished my Evangelines yesterday, and they are lovely. I'm so happy with my knitting these days.
These were definitely an exercise in finicky perfectionism, though. Every time I decided something was not quite right about the pattern, I figured out how to make it better and then fixed it. The ribbing in the pattern as written doesn't line up with the cables, so I ripped back and adjusted it. The pattern has you use the same cable for both gloves, but I wanted them to be symmetrical, so I tweaked it. 3/4 of the way through the second glove, I decided that the cable should only be framed by two purl stitches, rather than three, so I dropped the stitches all the way down and reworked them back up as knit stitches with a crochet hook. Then I decided that the cable on the right glove would be better suited to being the left glove, so I ripped back to the thumb hole and put it on the other side. Then, the thumbs were too tight, so I ripped them out and made them 14 stitches instead of twelve. And even with all the fixing, I still loved making them. It's an interesting cable, and the yarn works beautifully with it. Plus the back of the gloves are just a little bit stripy, which is fun.
I made most of them on the flight out to Colorado. I love that the Madison airport security people never ever give me trouble about my needles. Especially because this time I had an entire week worth's of projects in my carry on. I brought a bunch of little projects. These, my daisy stitch armwarmers I started, the Rose armwarmers that I'll be making in Silky, Gretel, and then my Cherie Amour, which I'm restarting. The armwarmers are going faster than I expected them too. I'm about half done with the second daisy stitch one, which is surprising, because the first one took me forever. And, just in case that's not enough, I bought more yarn off of Eat.Sleep.Knit. God I love that site. They got in a new shipment of Malabrigo, and they carry Shibui Knits now, so I'm finally gonna get to try it, which I am super excited about.
Pattern: Evangeline by Michelle Szeghalmi
Yarn: Malabrigo Worsted in Applewood, a bit under one skein
Needles: US 7 Brittany DPNs
Modifications: I adjusted the placement of the ribbing, framed the cables with two purl stitches instead of three, and made the cables symmetrical.
Started: June 2008
Finished: June 2008
These were definitely an exercise in finicky perfectionism, though. Every time I decided something was not quite right about the pattern, I figured out how to make it better and then fixed it. The ribbing in the pattern as written doesn't line up with the cables, so I ripped back and adjusted it. The pattern has you use the same cable for both gloves, but I wanted them to be symmetrical, so I tweaked it. 3/4 of the way through the second glove, I decided that the cable should only be framed by two purl stitches, rather than three, so I dropped the stitches all the way down and reworked them back up as knit stitches with a crochet hook. Then I decided that the cable on the right glove would be better suited to being the left glove, so I ripped back to the thumb hole and put it on the other side. Then, the thumbs were too tight, so I ripped them out and made them 14 stitches instead of twelve. And even with all the fixing, I still loved making them. It's an interesting cable, and the yarn works beautifully with it. Plus the back of the gloves are just a little bit stripy, which is fun.
I made most of them on the flight out to Colorado. I love that the Madison airport security people never ever give me trouble about my needles. Especially because this time I had an entire week worth's of projects in my carry on. I brought a bunch of little projects. These, my daisy stitch armwarmers I started, the Rose armwarmers that I'll be making in Silky, Gretel, and then my Cherie Amour, which I'm restarting. The armwarmers are going faster than I expected them too. I'm about half done with the second daisy stitch one, which is surprising, because the first one took me forever. And, just in case that's not enough, I bought more yarn off of Eat.Sleep.Knit. God I love that site. They got in a new shipment of Malabrigo, and they carry Shibui Knits now, so I'm finally gonna get to try it, which I am super excited about.
Pattern: Evangeline by Michelle Szeghalmi
Yarn: Malabrigo Worsted in Applewood, a bit under one skein
Needles: US 7 Brittany DPNs
Modifications: I adjusted the placement of the ribbing, framed the cables with two purl stitches instead of three, and made the cables symmetrical.
Started: June 2008
Finished: June 2008
June 22, 2008
Elijah!
He is so cute! I love him oodles and oodles.He's all floppy and adorable. And now that he's got eyes, he's all finished. If I were to make him again, I would probably stuff him a bit fuller, but as it is I find his floppiness quite lovable. I was originally planning on making him as a gift for a to be determined recipient, but I think I might keep him and make baby clothes for the babies who might have gotten him.
All in all, the pattern (as with all of Ysolda's designs) was really lovely. Clear and easy to follow. There's a lot of picked up stitches, and occasionally it got a little bit finicky (sock size dpns made a big difference here), but no seams and no sewing on pieces. He was fun and quick to make. I'm quite happy.
He even reads my blog!
Pattern: Elijah by Ysolda Teague
Yarn: Knit One Crochet Too Babyboo in Bright Aqua, just over 1 skein
Needles: US 2 1/2 Crystal Palace Bamboo dpns
Started: May 2008
Finished: June 2008
All in all, the pattern (as with all of Ysolda's designs) was really lovely. Clear and easy to follow. There's a lot of picked up stitches, and occasionally it got a little bit finicky (sock size dpns made a big difference here), but no seams and no sewing on pieces. He was fun and quick to make. I'm quite happy.
He even reads my blog!
Pattern: Elijah by Ysolda Teague
Yarn: Knit One Crochet Too Babyboo in Bright Aqua, just over 1 skein
Needles: US 2 1/2 Crystal Palace Bamboo dpns
Started: May 2008
Finished: June 2008
June 21, 2008
Mrs. Darcy
So after this languished on my needles twice when I tried to knit it flat, I decided to work it out to knit seamlessly and it totally flew by, despite the fact that I was working out the numbers as I went along. But now it's done and it's beautiful.
I'm particularly happy with the shoulders. I knit the sleeves in the round, and joined them as if it had been a bottom up raglan, but then only decreased on one side to keep the look of set in shoulders. And it worked.
I also knit the neck edging onto the top of the back so I didn't have to seam anything at all when I was done. A bit of grafting, underneath the arms and when I connected the two sides of the neck edging and a three needle bind off for the shoulders, but nothing else.
Pattern: Mrs. Darcy Cardigan by Mary Weaver
Yarn: Lamb's Pride Worsted in Mulberry, 5 skeins
Needles: Size 9 24 inch Addi Turbos
Modifications: A gazillion. I don't think I kept a single number the same as the original pattern. They're all laid out here.
Started: January 2008, but frogged and restarted June 2008
Finished June 2008
I'm particularly happy with the shoulders. I knit the sleeves in the round, and joined them as if it had been a bottom up raglan, but then only decreased on one side to keep the look of set in shoulders. And it worked.
I also knit the neck edging onto the top of the back so I didn't have to seam anything at all when I was done. A bit of grafting, underneath the arms and when I connected the two sides of the neck edging and a three needle bind off for the shoulders, but nothing else.
Pattern: Mrs. Darcy Cardigan by Mary Weaver
Yarn: Lamb's Pride Worsted in Mulberry, 5 skeins
Needles: Size 9 24 inch Addi Turbos
Modifications: A gazillion. I don't think I kept a single number the same as the original pattern. They're all laid out here.
Started: January 2008, but frogged and restarted June 2008
Finished June 2008
June 5, 2008
Yarn!
I just got a box of yarn in the mail!
I ordered it on Sunday night, it was mailed on Monday morning, and it got here today. It's all Malabrigo, from Eat.Sleep.Knit, and I love it. I have four skeins of Loro Barranquero, to make a Cherie Amour, five skeins of worsted in various colors (Applewood, Sealing Wax, Glazed Carrot, Jewel Blue and Emerald) and my first ever skein of silky, in Evening Violet. I don't quite know what I'm going to do with all of it, but I'm excited to play with it. I think the Applewood will probably turn into the Evangelines I've been meaning to make forever, and the Emerald will probably become a Gretel.
And I got fun stuff for buying over a mile of yarn. There's a shawl pattern, cards of all the yarn that Eat.Sleep.Knit carries, two buttons and a little purple ruler. Plus a Yarn Lotto card that I enjoyed scratching, even though I didn't win anything on it. I'd never bough yarn off the internet before, and it was very exciting. It was like getting presents in the mail, and since I used Grandma's birthday money to get it, I suppose that's actually kind of true. I throughly stalked all of the colors I was considering on Ravelry first, to see what they might look like knitted up, and it was much fun. Really, the whole thing was delightful and I highly recommend the store.
Also, I finally devised an effective way of keeping my yarn still while I wind it into a ball, since I don't have a swift and ballwinder. If I loop the yarn around two cans of tomatoes, I can keep it from tangling. The 28-oz cans are both heavy enough to stay still and short enough that it's not too cumbersome to lift the yarn over them. I'm really very pleased, because for the first time winding my yarn into balls myself isn't a hassle.
I've also been knitting oodles and oodles. I'm nearly done with my first cardigan and I'm well into the hat I started yesterday. I love how much knitting time I have now that it's summer!
I ordered it on Sunday night, it was mailed on Monday morning, and it got here today. It's all Malabrigo, from Eat.Sleep.Knit, and I love it. I have four skeins of Loro Barranquero, to make a Cherie Amour, five skeins of worsted in various colors (Applewood, Sealing Wax, Glazed Carrot, Jewel Blue and Emerald) and my first ever skein of silky, in Evening Violet. I don't quite know what I'm going to do with all of it, but I'm excited to play with it. I think the Applewood will probably turn into the Evangelines I've been meaning to make forever, and the Emerald will probably become a Gretel.
And I got fun stuff for buying over a mile of yarn. There's a shawl pattern, cards of all the yarn that Eat.Sleep.Knit carries, two buttons and a little purple ruler. Plus a Yarn Lotto card that I enjoyed scratching, even though I didn't win anything on it. I'd never bough yarn off the internet before, and it was very exciting. It was like getting presents in the mail, and since I used Grandma's birthday money to get it, I suppose that's actually kind of true. I throughly stalked all of the colors I was considering on Ravelry first, to see what they might look like knitted up, and it was much fun. Really, the whole thing was delightful and I highly recommend the store.
Also, I finally devised an effective way of keeping my yarn still while I wind it into a ball, since I don't have a swift and ballwinder. If I loop the yarn around two cans of tomatoes, I can keep it from tangling. The 28-oz cans are both heavy enough to stay still and short enough that it's not too cumbersome to lift the yarn over them. I'm really very pleased, because for the first time winding my yarn into balls myself isn't a hassle.
I've also been knitting oodles and oodles. I'm nearly done with my first cardigan and I'm well into the hat I started yesterday. I love how much knitting time I have now that it's summer!
June 4, 2008
The London Knitting Round Up.
So, I've been back in the US for a couple weeks now, and I did a horrible job of keeping this updated with all my London knitting, but I did an awful lot of it while I was there. And I visited quite a few yarn stores too.
Final Count of FOs: 12
Final Count of WiPs: 4
Balls of Yarn Bought and Knit: 15
Balls of Yarn Brought Home Unknit: 12
Yarn Stores Visited: 6
It was good. I made eight hats, one bag, a shrug, a cowl and a sweater. FO posts about them will come. For now, be patient.
Final Count of FOs: 12
Final Count of WiPs: 4
Balls of Yarn Bought and Knit: 15
Balls of Yarn Brought Home Unknit: 12
Yarn Stores Visited: 6
It was good. I made eight hats, one bag, a shrug, a cowl and a sweater. FO posts about them will come. For now, be patient.
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