Stickar en tröja

När jag fyllde år (i augusti) fick jag ett presentkort på garnaffären Litet Nystan vid Mariatorget. De har massa fina garner, mestadels tunna. Jag är egentligen mer förtjust i lite tjockare garner men föll ändå för färgerna i Färgkrafts Pälsblend. Det är rätt dyrt om man jämför med de stora märkena, men det är spunnet av ull från Finullsfår och Gotlandsfår och handfärgat i små serier så det blir helt unikt.

Efter att ha klurat en stund på vad jag skulle göra med det (har ju stickat halsdukar och scarves en masse redan)  kom jag fram till att en lätt och luftig sommartröja får det bli. en som är skön att ta på sig när solen går ner men det fortfarande är ganska mysigt ute om kvällen. Om inte annat känns det skönt att drömma sig till sommaren så här års när termomtern rasslar kring tio minus.

Tröjan ska bli lös och ledig, med ganska stor halsringing, men jag har egentligen inte hittat något mönster som jag följer, har tittat lite på en modell på garnstudio, http://www.garnstudio.com/lang/se/visoppskrift.php?d_nr=95&d_id=30&lang=se, men eftersom jag inte har samma garn blir det en del omräkningar, men det ska nog inte vara helt oöverkomligt.

Än så länge har jag en bit kvar på bakstycket så vi får se hur lång tid det tar…

Den lilla väskan, egentligen en mobilväska, kommer från Studio Cat B‘s shop på Etsy.

The Red Beret

or the hat that got frogged not once, not twice, but 4 times….!

In the beginning, there was the yarn. I found this at Ullcentrum‘s stand at the Syfestivalen fair in february 2011. It had my friend K’s name all over it. I wasn’t sure what I was going to make from it, but I was certain it would be something for K. 

Round about August, she told me she needed a woolly hat for the coming winter.
Great, I said, I got just the yarn for it, and started to look for a pattern. I wanted something that was knitted with cables, and also was a bit slouchy, so went crawling through Ravelry for berets and tams and suchlike.

I found the Flavia. It was just what I wanted, with its little serpentine cables weaving in and out, enough slouch but not really a beret.

I cast on for the first time and immediately got it wrong, there is a lot of counting to do with the pattern from the beginning, if you forget to use markers, like I did. Knitted the whole of the brim and was just about to start on the cabling when I realised my mistakes.

Rip it up, start again.

This time I used markers for each section of the pattern to simplify counting each stitch to match up with the cabling in the body of the hat. All went well, it is a fun knit with all the little cables swirling around, in and out of eachother.
About half way I started getting suspicious that the hat was getting to big. I knitted on in the belief it would be alright on the night. Until I was almost 3/4 done, then it was becoming quite obvious that the hat was going to fall down around my ears and neck if I tried it on. And it did.

Rip it up, start again.

I gave up the yarn.  By now there had been another Syfestival fair, and I had found some more delicious yarns, this time from Islandsgarn.
Lett-LopiIt is called Léttlopi, and is a wonderfully squishy aran-weight Icelandish wool yarn that was sold really cheap at the fair. I bought red, blue, a heathery pink and a lilac purple, completely without projects in mind.

Since this yarn was thicker, I needed a new pattern. I had previously favved The Druidess Beret when I was looking for patterns and decided to give it a try. This time I used markers from the beginning, even if this one wasn’t quite so dependent on counting in the rim. I also bought new needles to fit gauge. I thought.

The thicker yarn, and slightly simpler pattern made this hat a really fast and fun knit. About half way into the body of the hat I realised I hade made a serious mis-thinking in needle size and had knit with the wrong size needles all the way.

Rip it up, start again.

Started again with the right size needles ( 4 & 5mm). Knitted all the way to the end. Blocked. Too big.

Rip it up, start again.

Getting desperate, and time starting to be a factor since it was now November, I decided to simply cut one section of the repeating pattern. Knit 5 sections instead of 6. And that finally did the trick! It felt better even as I was knitting, and was even able to try the hat on K before I finished it to make sure. Then I was able to finish it, block it and wrap it up for K for Christmas. Luckily we have had a quite mild winter so far so she hasn’t been freezing her ears off in waiting.

I believe she was really happy with it, but last I saw,  her daughter has hi-jacked it for herself.

Me in the finished hat, but before blocking. Awful pic but there you go. 

What I learned from this hat: The Importance Of Knitting Swatches. Gauge may not be vitally important in every thing I ever knit,  but, in things that should fit something specific, like a head, it really is important to take the time to knit that little square up before you start on the project itself.

 

 

African flowers

Image by pinkypigs@flickr

Got to learn how to make these!

http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/african-flower-hexagon

http://heidibearscreative.blogspot.com/2010/05/african-flower-hexagon-crochet-tutorial.html

beautifully handled in potholders by Crochet with Raymond http://crochethealingandraymond.wordpress.com/2010/10/29/ornamental-pot-holders/

Something borrowed….

Beautiful knitting site  www.laylock.org sent this poem excerpt out in their latest newsletter. While I may not be quite so focused on my knitting to lock out all others, I did smile when I read it… :)
An excerpt from “Machinery Doesn’t Answer Either, but You Aren’t Married to It” by Ogden Nash

Life will teach you many things, chief of which is that every man who talks to himself isn’t necessarily out of his wits;
He may have a wife who knits.
 
Probably only he and his Maker
Know how many evenings he has spent trying to raise a conversationwhile his beloved created sweaters by the acre.
Ah, my inquiring offspring, you must learn that life can be very bitter,
But never quite so much so as when trying to pry a word out of a knitter.
 
Sometimes she knits and sits,
Sometimes she sits and knits,
 
And you tell her what you have been doing all day and you ask what she has been doing all day and nothing happens, and you tell her what you would like to do this evening and ask her what she would like to do this evening and nothing happens, and you think you will disintegrate if you don’t get some response, and you speak tenderly of your courtship and your bridal,
 
And you might just as well try to get a response out of an Oriental idol,
 
And you notice a spasmodic movement of her lips,
And you think she is going to say something but she is only counting the number of stitches it takes to surround the hips;
 
And she furrows her beautiful brow, which is a sign that something is wrong somewhere and you keep on talking, and disregard the sign,
And she casts a lethal glance, as one who purls before swine…

The fisherman rib stitch scarf

fisherman rib stitchMy boyfriend chose this yarn himself when I dragged him into my most recent yarn shop find.

He wanted a long warm scarf for the upcoming winter cold.
The fisherman rib stitch (from purlbee) in the pattern made for a very thick and cosy scarf that will keep him warm all winter, and he is also very happy about how the colouring came out.

:-)

Cable pattern creation


I got into my head to make a specific cable pattern for a pair of longsleeved, fingerless mitts I’m planning to knit. I made a drawing, and sketched it out on grid paper. I wanted the cables to be single stitch,  but wasn’t sure how to get it out on my needles.

I took out Alice Starmore’s Aran Knitting, that I bought but haven’t knitted anything from yet. In it, she has some useful pattern swatches, that was a great help. In particular, there was a stitch that ran “slip 2 st to cn, k1, sl p st back to left needle, purl, k1 from cn” that was exactly the stitch I need for my crossing cables. I knit a swatch and it turned out just as wanted it. Then to chart it I had to go on knitting so I could write down the stitches in the chart as I was knitting them.

Different pattern authors seem to use their own individual symbols for cable stitching patterns so I feel no shame in having invented a few symbols of my own. Some of them look like little elephants on the page.

I am particularly pleased that something that was only in my head a few days ago turned out  so beautiful when swatched. The yarn is Studio Donegals Donegal Aran Tweed, in lavender. Colour of the yarn is seen better here.

The little cardie

So what happened to the little cardie I wrote about earlier? My godson got it for his birthday in september! :)

Green cardi

Just when I had started it I got the idea to make a throw for a wedding present, so it had to go into hibernation for a bit. When I got back to it, there was something wrong about it, don’t remember what now, but I ripped it up and started over. After that it was a really fast knit.  The pattern is from Garnstudio – found here - and I used yarn from Garnstudio as well, the Drops Karisma superwash.

I made some changes compared to pattern.

Front: reversed one of the side cables to mirror the one on the other side.

Back: I changed a bit more than just reversing one of the cables for symmetry. I put the middle back cables just next to each other, and put the extra stitches from that into the garter area, as one twisted knit stitch on each side.

I also let the cables continue up over the hood in this manner:
I kept the 5-knit edge, then i put in the 3-cable pattern from the body, and made the rest seed stitch, as it turned out I really liked the seed stitching more than I had expected.
so, pattern went, k5, p2, M1(pattern), p2, seed stitching, p2, M2 (pattern), p2, k5.

It was a fun knit, but as it turns out I still need to learn a bit more about gauge, and to swatch, as my little godson will probably have to grow a bit until it will fit him. :)

Fabulous freeform!

A friend sent me a link to knotjustknitting.com. And I fell in love. The most amazing colors and shapes spring out from the pictures in the gallery.
Challenge scrumble 1

Artwork & Photo by Prudence Mapstone

http://www.prudencemapstone.com/

More pictures on Prudence’s flickr-page http://www.flickr.com/photos/prudencemapstone/

I can see handbags forming before my inner eye…. This bag by Renate Kirkpatrick, find her website here and her  Etsy shop here

Frustrating to be a noob

I’m going to take a spinning class in 2 weeks time. As of this moment, I can’t wait! I feel such noob. I pieced together the Fidelis with no problems.
But as to actually using it, I’m having so many problems. Treadling evenly and clockwise, for a start. Getting the actual wool on the actual bobbin? It just twists and twists but doesnt seem to roll up on the bobbin. Some site said i had to increase the tension, but i dont see how I can screw that flap on any tighter. As for getting some kind of flow in the distribution of wool into the machine , I havent even started. Lucky I got some cheap wool on a sale recently. Maybe that’s the problem, the wool is too old and dry? How do I know?