As always, apologies for not posting. I’ve been doing a LOT of crafty
things and not allocating myself a lot of time for blogging about them.
I have designs on changing that in the new year, but we shall see, I
suppose.
I know I promised a photo tutorial of how I made a project bag for my swap partner back in September,
and honestly, putting together the photo tutorial is what’s been
hanging up my blogging, since I never seem to have time to sit down and
actually put that together. I still have plans of doing it someday, but
I’m going to try to move forward without it and get it in when I can get
it in. Hopefully that’s okay.
I’m going to skip forward in time a
bit and then try to remember to backfill you with all the things that
went on since September until now as I’m able. I feel like this is
slightly more time relevant (although it should have been posted last
week) so I’m moving on.
Okay. Now that the administrative work is out of the way, let’s jump in with a story about my first ever participation in NaKniSweMo. It was accidental. It wasn’t challenging. I have knitted myself my FOURTH properly fitting sweater.
Here’s the story:
If
you were reading back in May, you might remember that I attended a
local fibre festival. While there, I bought some yarn (okay, I bought a
lot of yarn), specifically I bought what I referred to then as “beautiful variegated organic wool yarn in just the right colours to finally make myself the Hobbit dress
before the third movie premieres in December”. So, round about the end
of October I’d finished all the hats I’d committed to (you didn’t hear
about those, but hopefully you will later) and I thought . . . if I’m
going to get this done by the time I see the Hobbit movie, I’d better
start now.
So I wound the yarn and I swatched and the yarn was
lovely and all was well. I did the math and cast on for the sweater and
was happily knitting my very long rows of reverse stockinette stitch in
the flat with zero trouble at all. I knit on it all day during a local podcast retreat
I attended on November first and had made about 20 cm of progress on it
and all was well. Except that I was nearly out of the first ball of
yarn. I had three total balls of yarn. This is supposed to be a knee
length cardigan with a hood. And I hadn’t even made it to my hip yet and
I was nearly through a third of my yarn. The pattern claims that at the
largest I will need 895 yards (818 m of yarn). I had 990 yds (905.3m).
Before I even got close to an eighth of the way through the pattern I
was out of a third of my yarn. At this point, it became immensely
obvious to me that I did not have enough yarn for this project.
It
saddened me, because I’d bought this yarn specifically for this project
because the colours reminded me of the Shire and everything was very
hobbit and lovely and I was really looking forward to having a new
sweater for the movie (I’ve never made myself an item specifically to go
see a film before so I wanted to get in on the hype). But! I had this
lovely yarn and I didn’t want it to go to waste, so I took to Ravelry. I
have many Hobbit and Lord of the Rings inspired patterns in my queue
and I tried to match up what I had with one of them, but nothing worked
out. So I decided that I could still make myself a sweater out of this
yarn and wear it to the film even if it’s not specifically Hobbit themed
because the yarn still reminds me of the Shire and it’s lovely and it
will still make me happy.
So . . . on November 1, I ripped out all
of the knitting I’d done on the Hobbit dress, rewound the yarn, and
picked a new pattern. And I felt good about it.
On November 2, I cast on Trilobita by Annamária Ötvös.
It’s a beautiful yoked sweater pattern with raglan sleeve increases
knit from the top down and it has these cute little details on the
neckline and the cuff that look like little trilobite fossils if you
look at them close enough and know what to look for. Most of it’s just
stockinette in the round with short row shaping for the yoke and
decreases and increases for the waistline. The pattern is incredibly
well written and comes in a good range of sizes. It was easy to knit yet
still interesting. I’m not incredibly proficient at short rows yet, so I
had to rip out the short row shaping once because I wasn’t doing the
wrap and turns correctly, but I worked it out and continued on.
The yarn is a sport weight Falkland dyed by Dyenamic Duo
(who are so indie they don’t have a website I could find). I’ve never
knit with Falkland before but I enjoyed it. It’s not a super fine micron
like Merino, but it’s also not as scratchy as Shetland. I found it to
be just a good, warm, somewhat rustic wool that I loved knitting and I
loved wearing. I hope to find myself some more Falkland someday soon and
highly recommend it.
It’s a substantial amount of knitting,
certainly, and it’s not for beginners, but I had a great time knitting
this sweater and completed it within the time frame very easily. Then
again, I’m not sure I’m the sort of person for whom an event like this
is supposed to be a challenge. You may know by now that I’m a very
monogamous knitter. I have a good amount of time to knit and I only work
on one thing from start to finish, so even with a few setbacks it’s
realistic for me to plan on getting a sweater done in a month.
So,
my participation in NaKniSweMo 2014 was EXTREMELY incidental and not
challenging in the least, but I did it and I submitted it and I have a
sweater I love and the day I wore it three people complimented it and
that’s what matters.
Here's a photo taken with the timer feature
on my phone in the very terrible lighting of my living room in a grey
Minnesota winter.
So, now that it’s over and the recipient has received all their
things, I can talk about the most recent yarn/knitting/crafting swap I
got myself into on Ravelry.
There’s a group called the Odd Duck Swaps of Ravelry,
and they organize thematic swaps every single month of the year. The
way it works is you generally have about a month to sign up, two months
to actually craft/shop/mail the swap package, and then you post a thank
you when you’ve received your package and the swap is completed. After
hearing about how much fun people were having doing this, I decided to
scope out the group. On my first visit there, I found out they were just
starting sign-ups for a video game swap.
Now, (without getting
into the whole ri-fuckin-diculous gamergate situation) I’m not the sort
of person who has ever considered myself a “gamer”. I mean, I usually
(but not always) enjoy games when I play them, but I didn’t grow up with
video games and I don’t keep up with the latest releases and I don’t
have a steam account or any of that. It’s just that it so happens that
my first “real” fandom, and the fandom that just won’t quit and I never
want to, is for a series of video games. So I’m basically SUPER into one
video game and have played a few more and have a general knowledge of
even more than that. But still, I thought the swap would be fun and I
felt like I was comfortable enough with video games to be able to
participate. So I signed up. And it was fun. And I will do more of them
in the future, because it turns out I really like making things for
someone else and the excitement of seeing their virtual excitement over
receiving the items I crafted them.
This post is going to be the
first of a two-parter on two of the new(ish) undertakings I began with
this swap package. I included more than these things (I knitted this Zelda Triforce Scarf
that was easy enough to make, but still deserves mention, for one
thing), but these are the two things that really stretched into the
crafting me of the future, if you will (and I will . . . sorry, that’s a
reflexive inside joke that zero of you reading this will understand.)
Without further ado . . . yarn dyeing!
My
recipient mentioned that their favourite game was Baten Kaitos, which
is a Dreamcast (I think) game that I had never heard of, but my far more
knowledgeable gamer husband and his college roommate had spent time
playing. Because this game is old and I think it has a pretty small
fanbase, there isn’t any merchandise out there for it AT ALL. This is
okay, since my recipient also mentioned that they like Zelda and
Skylanders and all sorts of things that have way more popularity than
Baten Kaitos, but as a person who’s only into video games that have
next-to-no crafting fanbase (as in, there aren’t indie dyed yarns or
fabrics or patterns or any of that) I sort of knew how excited the
recipient would be if something from a fandom you don’t expect to see
anything from showed up in the package. So, since I’m newly immersed in a
commitment to yarn dyeing, I decided to make my first real yarn dyeing
adventure something inspired by my recipient’s favourite charater in
Baten Kaitos, Kalas.
So,
going off the photos I could find online, it seems like the character
wears a light blue and darker blue armour set offset with brown leather
strappings, so I decided that my yarn was going to be the dark blue
transitioning into brighter blue and then the leathery brown. The bare
yarn I selected to dye was a fingering weight 75% superwash wool, 25%
nylon yarn. I had three 50g skeins, but this was my first time dyeing
and I didn’t want to screw up three skeins of yarn in the event that
everything went horribly wrong, so I only dyed one of them. I knew this
would mean that I was giving the recipient barely enough yarn to do
anything with and really it would be better if I could dye two skeins at
once and at least give 100g, but I was really afraid of messing it up.
Turns out I had no need, because this yarn is one of the best I’ve made
to date. That could be because I’m a sucker for the blue/brown
variegation, but all reports from those who’ve seen it in person are
that it’s pretty badass.
I dyed the whole thing with Wilton’s
Icing Gels using a plain stainless steel kitchen pot. Minimal mess, no
harsh chemicals, beautiful colour. I highly recommend this method for
anyone who might be thinking about dyeing some yarn, but doesn’t have a
large kitchen or space for extra equipment or is even just a little
nervous about the harsh chemicals in a working kitchen like I was. I’ve
since dyed 20 more skeins of yarn in various colourways using this
methodology, and the only thing I haven’t been able to get right so far
is grey. Not a bad track record, and I hope you’ll all follow along with
me on my yarn dyeing journey as I grow into this and figure it out and
post all the pictures of my progress here for you to see. If you follow me on Instagram,
you'll probably get a quicker peek at what I'm working on, but I'll
make sure that everything eventually gets posted here as well!
To
start . . . here’s a few photos of the special edition Baten Kaitos –
Kalas yarn I did for this swap. Not bad for a first start, if I may say
so myself!
Stay tuned for part 2 of the swap, where I give you a detailed tutorial on how I made a project bag!
Hi again readers.
I was doing so well on keeping on top of
updating you and then I sort of fell off the wagon again. Maybe third
(fortieth???) time’s the charm? We shall see.
Today’s post
is all about some confessions. Namely . . . I have too much yarn, but
tangentially, I have too much stuff overall. It has come to my attention
that if all goes according to plan, I will need to move from my current
not-all-that-large 2 bedroom flat into a likely even smaller 2-bedroom
(I hope) flat within the next year. Since my current flat, I have come
to realise, is at (maybe slightly beyond, depending on your definition
system) capacity, this means that I absolutely need to have a “no net
gain” of possessions, and ideally will have a net loss of possessions
before May-June of next year. In an attempt to get organised for this
thing, (prompted by the fact that I bought 4 skeins of yarn and then had
to basically cram them in the drawers to get them stashed), and because
I’d been thinking about my stash recently and how near it was to
capacity, and because it’s been bothering me that all my yarn didn’t
have accurate weights/lengths and photos catalogued on Ravelry, I took
the better part of a day about a month ago and went through my stash.
All of it. The bitter truth. And I had SO help me so he could see the
actual impact of the amount of yarn I owned and could stop being a
terrible enabler at the LYS.
Now, I realise that compared to many,
I have next to no stash at all. However, this isn’t about a contest or a
comparison. It’s about me feeling like I have acquired at too great a
rate and needed to put things into perspective. I remember the
early(ish) days of Knitmore Girls Podcast when Jasmin and her friend Tika made an agreement they called “The Social Pressure Experiment”.
It was basically about re-evaluating their stash purchasing and
becoming smarter consumers. Really thinking about what you were buying
and knowing that you had to give up the equivalent amount of that thing
puts your purchasing habits into perspective, and I loved listening to
how Jasmin’s purchasing philosophy evolved during the 8ish months of the
challenge and how they became sort of permanently ingrained afterward.
I’ve recently been trying to apply that philosophy to everything in my
life . . . do not consume a thing unless you absolutely NEED to have it.
If you do consume it, please identify an equivalent thing that can get
re-homed. It’s going well so far, but it’s only been a month.
On to the yarn stash. And accountability. This will get long.
Because
I don’t have a big enough room and because I don’t have a good place to
take a photo of things even if I did have a big enough room, I don’t
have one photo of all the yarn together. Instead I have photos of each
grouping of yarn I split things into. Doing it this way also REALLY
helped me identify problem areas in my stash, which was very helpful.
Plus . . . now everything is in Ravelry and is searchable and sortable
and I can make plans about knitting. I already have my knitting booked
until at least mid-December, I’m pretty sure. I also identified some
things that I listed for destash
(some of which, if actually requested, will be pretty hard for me to
part with because I’m sentimentally attached to them). It’s likely no
one will want most of them, as it’s a lot of acrylic, but I have plans
to either use it or donate it if I get to its position in the new
chronological knitting plan and no one has claimed it yet.
We started with all my fingering weight yarn.
I didn’t expect there to be as much of it as there was, because I don’t
knit socks or shawls or many of the things that require fingering
weight yarn, but gosh was I wrong. Admittedly, much of it is yarn that I
acquired from Knit Picks during their annual sale when I got the
brilliant idea to use Palette and the Imagination Yarn to make all the Song of Ice and Fire things on Etsy.
I still think that was a good idea, although no one has actually
purchased one yet, so perhaps I’m being more than a bit naïve. After
weighing out the partial skeins and sorting everything, I ended up
having ~20,551 yards (18,791 meters) among the 74 skeins of fingering
weight yarn in my stash. It surprised me, too.
Here it all is!
Next was all my sport weight yarn.
Only 12 different kinds of yarn this kind, so this is a bit of a “stash
deficiency” as it were. If I really do need to knit something in a
sport weight and I cannot make one of these 12 yarns work, I do have
permission to acquire what I need. In fact, I already did that to get
another skein of Knit Picks Brava to make some hats. It’s not in my
stash yet, but SO made it an allowable purchase because he is benefitting from it
I will be knitting it right away in a project that’s on a deadline. In
total, this ends up being ~ 5205 yards (4760 meters) of yarn among the
20 skeins of sport weight yarn in my stash. (this number is off from the
actual stash management day numbers because I’m currently knitting with
some of the sport weight so I’m at 2 skeins less than I was then).
Manageable and not too shabby, since really this is just 12 different
kinds of yarn and at least 5 of the skeins should be out of my stash by
the end of the year. Still shouldn’t acquire unless needed, but far less
dire than some.
Here’s the sport weight.
We move on to DK weight,
which is definitely the yarn I have the least of. I don’t know if it’s
that DK weight yarn is just rare or if I just happen to never knit with
it or never be drawn to it or some combination of all those things, but
if a major project came up that needed DK weight yarn, I’m not sure I’d
be able to swing it without a purchase. Which is good. That’s where I
want to be, mostly. Not that I’m against having a stash, I just like the
idea that most of the yarn in my stash is dedicated to a project and
has a clear, foreseeable future. I only have 6 “projects” worth of DK
weight, and much of that is remnants from other projects and/or is
designated for destash. It ends up being ~2350 yards (2148 meters) in 13
skeins (6 of which are designated for destash). This is manageable and
somewhat realistic, although if for some reason I start making more
projects that call for DK weight, I’ll probably need to think about
bulking up this part of the stash. For now, I’ll just keep doing what
I’m doing and if one comes up, I’ll figure that out.
Here’s the DK weight. It and the sport weight are sharing a drawer right now.
Aaaannnnd now we come to the “problem area” also known as my worsted weight yarn stash.
Specifically the acrylic bits of my worsted weight yarn stash, but
really all of it is problematic. I actually split it into acrylic vs
non-acrylic just to make it more manageable. Also, because in most cases
involving my stash the distinction between worsted and Aran weight is
thin at best, I have combined “worsted” and “aran” into one category.
Truly some of what is labeled aran in Ravelry is actually aran weight,
but most of it can all be classified the same, imo. So, I think it’s no
secret that I like knitting sweaters, which generally means that I buy
sweater quantities of worsted weight yarn. In the past, it meant I
bought sweater quantities of worsted weight acrylic yarn because I still
hadn’t figured out that acrylic sweaters mostly just make you sweat a
lot. And also because I got a lot of the worsted weight acrylic I have
for free when I was doing some charity knitting and people foisted off
their acrylic yarn on me. To be fair, I also rather like a lot of the
worsted weight acrylic I have. I’m not trashing on it in the least, I
just know better than to think of it as the default anymore.
First . . . non-acrylic 10-ply (worsted or Aran weight).
I have ~13, 153 yards (12,027 meters) in my stash, spread among 59
skeins of 30 different yarns. Which isn’t all that bad, actually, when I
compare it with the fingering weight. At least I *knew* I had a lot of
worsted weight yarn. Much of it is remnant WoTA from Fourth Doctor
scarves, really.
Then we move to . . . acrylic 10-ply (worsted or Aran weight).
The numbers are less exact here than they are elsewhere because I have
lost ball bands or things are committed in projects that will be frogged
and reknit and I haven’t figured all the yardage yet, but it’s
close(ish). It ends up being ~1902 yards (1739 meters) among 19 skeins
of 14 different yarns. I mean, in the grand scheme of my yarn stash
that’s not a ton, but it’s a ton considering it’s a lot of sweaters or
large projects worth of acrylic. I’ll use it for things, but it’s
something I need to think about. I mean, I haven’t purchased acrylic
yarn (save the purchasing of Knit Picks Brava for specific projects or
the yarn for my WTNV bag) since June of 2013, so I feel reformed. I also
feel weirdly compelled to finish making the sweaters I got this acrylic
for. Reality is, some of it will probably end up as hats or bags or
some other accessory. I’m not really purchasing this anymore, but I
still feel guilty about having it in the first place for some reason.
It’s because I use it in inappropriate ways and the reason I still have
all of this is because (as previously alluded to on this blog) I try to
make garments with acrylic yarn and then they don’t work out and I’m
unhappy and frog them. No. More. Acrylic. Sweaters. Not for moral
reasons, just because I’ve come to realise they are almost always a bad
idea.
In
total, all my worsted weight yarn adds up to 15,055 yards (13,766
meters) among 72 skeins of 44 different yarns. Because worsted skeins
take up more space than fingering weight skeins, this has become A
PROBLEM and will subsequently stop.
Finally . . . bulky and superbulky.
It honestly amazed me that I had *any* of this yarn in my stash, as I
never use it, but then I remembered I made some bad decisions at a
Michael’s sale a few times. It turns out, though, that I actually have
identified uses for much of this, despite it all being in destash. Maybe
someday I’ll get to it. This is another yarn family that I need to just
buy on an as-needed basis. The odds of me needing some around in case
something comes up are so very low, at this point. I’ll use, sell, or
donate what I have and only purchase if I absolutely see a need. Right
now I have ~1449 yards (1325 meters) in 19 skeins of 6 different yarns,
most of them in destash.
In total,
I end up with ~53477 yards (48899 meters) in 202 skeins of 101
different kinds of yarn in my stash. Again, that might not sound like
terribly a lot to you, but I’m currently finishing off my most
productive knitting year by far (which included THREE Fourth Doctor
scarves) and it’s looking like I’m going to hit a knitting total of
around 15,500 yards (14, 242 meters) so even if I do manage to sustain
this mad knitting pace (which I likely will not), it would take me 3.5
years to knit through all this stash. That’s a lot, and I need to scale
back. The great yarn un-purchasing of 2014 starts . . . now. (well . . .
actually, it started on August 30, 2014, but I’m telling all of you
now. Keep me accountable.
Happy smart stashing!
Shortly after arriving home from my summer of travel, which should
probably also be known as the “summer of buy all the yarn while you’re
on vacation”, I was browsing around LYS’s website (for some
reason…probably they sent me an email) and saw that they had a new yarn
in their "Nerd Alert Yarn" series.
Many (most) of these are Doctor Who themed (because the staff at my LYS
are my kind of people) and this one was no exception. They’d actually
added quite a few new Doctor Who/Torchwood themed colourways to the
series, but I knew there was only one of them that NEEDED to come home
with me.
"A Centurion is Faithful 100%"
Now, since most of you don’t know me in real life and haven’t heard
me gush for hours about how much I ADORED the Ponds (basically because
that IS my relationship…I’m not making that up), you don’t know how much
this yarn needed to come to me and be something amazing in my life, but
trust me…there was no option.
One major problem is that I don’t knit socks. I don’t WANT to knit
socks. Which means I needed to buy more than one skein so that I could
potentially make something substantial that is NOT socks. So, before
heading to the store I did a bit of research and queued up a few
patterns that I thought I could manage with two skeins. All of them were
sweaters, but they were short sleeved and should be feasible with the
yardage of two skeins.
Then I went to the store, bent on buying this yarn and only this
yarn, and the shop staff, being the terrible enablers they are, showed
me ALL of the new Doctor Who yarns they had. Which led to me ALSO
purchasing two skeins of Three Irish Girls Adorn Sock in the “Exterminate” colourway. And still feeling proud of myself because I only bought TWO yarns instead of all ten that Jeremy showed me!
Fortunately, I had a groupon, so I only paid about half as much as I
would have, but when you keep saying you’re not going to purchase more
yarn because you are out of room, buying four more skeins isn’t the way
to accomplish things. Especially when you get home and have to literally
CRAM these four skeins in your yarn drawers (meaning you’re somewhat
damaging the skeins/labels every time you open the drawer). That,
combined with the lingering thought that you might be moving soon and
the idea that you will soon need a goodly sum of extra money (for
various reasons) meant…
It’s time for a yarn intervention…
Stay tuned. There will be photos of my stash. All of it.
Near the beginning of August, just as I was thinking I was going to
let the listing expire without getting an order to knit a Fourth Doctor
scarf, another order came in. This one was my first overseas Etsy order
(Germany!) and came with the (totally valid) request to change the
purple colour I traditionally use from a less red purple to a more
purple purple. Which is valid. The colour I use isn’t actually the best
and I think I might like the purple I used for this scarf better. The
buyer was lovely in looking on the Knit Picks site and picking out the
colour she wanted and the whole process was very painless and yielded a
lovely scarf.
Because I’m not the sort of person who likes having a ton of random
scrap yarns around, I dug out all the Knit Picks WoTA worsted
(fortunately I keep it all in one bag) from the previous full WoTA
worsted scarf, took out my trusty yarn scale, weighed what I had, and
then adjusted the ratio of how much to purchase.The one concern I had
was that I had no idea how close KP matches colours between dye lots, as
I was clearly using yarn I’d purchased a year ago and expected the dye
lots to be drastically different. Good news…they weren’t. Even in the
sections of the scarf where I *know* I joined a ball of the old colour
to a ball of the new colour mid-section, I cannot even tell the
slightest colour difference. I wouldn’t put 100% faith on this working
all the time, but it worked out this time and I’ll probably take this
gamble again.
The only real problem is that even though I made sure that when I
ordered, the total amount of each colour I ended up with was greater
than what was recommended on the pattern, but I still ran out of red,
grey, and tan just before the end of the scarf. This put me a little bit
behind schedule because I was on vacation when this happened and even
though I ordered more yarn (from Ravelry destash and some from Knit
Picks), I had to wait until I got back home to get to finishing the last
quarter of the scarf. Fortunately, the buyer is a knitter as well, so
they were very understanding about the slight delay and were perfectly
lovely about everything, even when the package got stuck in customs in
Berlin for a week and they had to call and take care of all of those
problems.
Overall, this is the scarf I’m the most happy with since the first
WoTA scarf (which I got to see “in the wild” at the end of August, as I
saw the person I made it for and she was wearing it. It’s wearing well
and looked great even a year later!) I made, thus reinforcing my new
policy of only making scarves in WoTA (or Cascade 220 if a person wants
superwash) because it is the best yarn I’ve used for this process. Plus,
because I have a new yarn scale and did a better job of monitoring how
much yarn I had at the start and end, I have a WAY better estimate of
how much of each colour I actually need for the scarf, so maybe the next
time I open the listing up (might be a while…I knit this and then
immediately knit a stockinette scarf in the round, so I have garter
stitch burnout right now), I might not actually have to reorder yarn two
times to get to the end.
Here’s a photo of the finished scarf. It’s pretty beautiful. Almost
all credit to Knit Picks Wool of the Andes for being such a great yarn
for this project.
This summer, the host of one of the podcasts I’ve recently started listening to,
Subway Knits, was holding a summer “Armchair Knit Along” while she was
in Greece for 5 weeks over summer vacation. The premise was that we
should knit patterns inspired by Greece or photos of Greece or use yarn
inspired by the same. At first, I wasn’t going to participate because I
had absolutely no ideas and no yarn that I thought would work and even
less time for adding another project to my days, but inspiration struck
me and the prizes were SO AMAZING that I just couldn’t say no.
This was my first KAL experience and while I’m glad I got such a
great FO out of it, I’m not sure I got anything much out of the actual
social aspects of the KAL. I’m new to the group and I admit that I’m not
sure exactly how one becomes part of the inner sanctums on Ravelry
forums anyway, so maybe that had something to do with it, but in this
particular KAL there wasn’t a ton of participation and I feel like the
only chatter that was going on was by the moderator of the group and
some incidental posting by a few others. On the other hand, I’ve seen
groups with 4000 people participating in a KAL and I feel like it’s easy
for your posts and what you’re doing to get lost and it’s even more
impossible to keep up, so perhaps it’s better to have something smallish
to start with.
The tank I knit for the KAL was the Aran Necklace Camisole by Caroline Bautista out of Interweave Knits Spring 2010.
About halfway through the KAL, while not at all searching for
inspiration but somewhat lusting after all the amazing prizes, I
stumbled upon an idea. In my stash I had a few remnant skeins of Knit
Picks CotLin from SO’s cardigan that I knit back in May, and one of the
colours is a beautiful deep blue colour called Planetarium. This made me
think about the night sky and how much reference to Greek mythology is
(or used to be) in astronomy/astrology, which then felt to me like a
pretty great tie-in to the KAL. I knew I didn’t have enough of the
Planetarium colourway to make a full sweater, but when I found this
pattern and saw that the yoke part was knit separately from the body, I
knew I could supplement with the remaining Cashew colourway (a rich tan)
to make sure I had enough yardage. Added bonus, the cashew colour could
be reminiscent of the sandy beaches of Greece to fully round out the
theme.
I’m really happy with this tank overall, and it was easy to knit and
fairly straightforward, My only issue with the pattern is that a portion of the gauge
swatch was done over the cable pattern so swatching
for the yoke part of the sweater was overly complex and meant a bit of
adjusting. It all worked out in the end, although I had to knit the yoke
3-4 times (some of this was my own fault for not counting rows
correctly and trying to knit while I was in meetings and other social
settings and losing track of where I was.) The only major mod I had to
make to the pattern was that I needed to rip back the strap portions
because of gauge and because I didn’t want the back to droop as low as
it would have if I stayed with the pattern directions.
This was also my first foray into airplane knitting. I had finished
the final iteration of the yoke while waiting in the airport (first time
taking knitting through security in a carry on. Zero problems, but I
was also flying out of the smaller terminal), and since I had a very
short flight to get across the border to see my family I thought I’d see
about knitting on the plane. For long flights, I don’t think I could do
it because I get terrible pressure headaches on planes and I’m sure
that hunching up in my seat to knit would cause more damage to me than
good. Perhaps not. Perhaps I’ve now become an airplane knitter.
Regardless, I managed to pick up for the back and get a significant
portion of the back (down to the armhole joins) done on the plane with
no problem whatsoever. My Knitters Pride Cubics traveled brilliantly and
no one seemed shocked or annoyed by my knitting and all I had to do at
that point was miles of stockinette, so I consider my first airplane
knitting experience a success.
Sorry, all. Got WOEFULLY behind on posting again just when I told
myself I was going to work even harder to stick to a regular posting
schedule. I’ve had so many posts in the drafts that were basically
outlines and needed to get posted, but I just never had/made the time to
actually get to them.
Many things in the works, so I do promise to be better about making time to write posts!
To start, I want to talk about what I honestly mean this time is THE LAST MAJOR YARN PURCHASING OF 2014 (more on that later).
I took another trip across the border to visit my family, and this
time I was there for a week. In that week, I managed to make one trip to
a new yarn store (which I am IN LOVE with…they have ALL THE QUINCE
& CO.) and also purchased yarn at a festival (not a yarn festival).
The festival was the main reason I found myself in town and I knew that
they’d had a yarn vendor there previously, so I was fully expecting to
purchase some yarn at the festival. I was not expecting to purchase what
I did.
For context, the festival in question is a rather large Irish
heritage festival (my mother’s mother is from Ireland), and in the past
they have had a charming independent vendor from Ireland selling some of
the yarn spun from their sheep. I’ve never actually purchased any of
this yarn, but this year I told myself that if they were back, I would
make the commitment to purchasing a bit of yarn. Well, this particular
vendor was not there, but I was not disappointed on the yarn front. This
year, the festival had a representative from Studio Donegal, and she
had brought several baskets of various colours of their Soft Donegal
yarn. Having just purchased two skeins of their Soft Donegal back in
July during my trip to California, I knew that I wanted to buy enough to
make myself an Aran sweater. So, after much deliberation of colours and
much of my mother raising her eyebrows at me about how much I was about
to spend on yarn, I purchased 5 skeins of their purple colour. And
then, upon getting it home, I realised that in order to make the sweater
I wanted I probably needed 6 skeins. But I’ll burn that bridge when I
get there.
A few days after the festival, I wanted to take a trip to another one
of the few local yarn stores I had discovered the last time I was in
town. This one had hours that were rather inconvenient (my mother was
going to work during the week and I was working from my parents’ house)
as the only day they were open past 6pm was the day I was leaving town
at noon. But I managed to convinced my mother to leave work early one
day so that we could go, and I’m really glad we did.
The shop was charming on the inside AND the outside, and the two
women working there were extremely kind and helpful. On top of that,
they wound all my yarn into cakes for me, which I greatly appreciate as I
don’t own a swift. But, best of all, they had shelves upon shelves upon
shelves of Quince & Co. Even better than that, I was in mighty need
of some Quince & Co. to make one of the billions of Cecily
Glowik-MacDonald sweaters I had added to my Ravelry queue. Previously,
I’d taken some time with SO to sit down and narrow down some of the
sweater options and taken notes on which yarn I would need and how much
of it I would need and then headed to my LYS (where they used to have a
shelf of Quince & Co.), but their shelves were rather bare on the
Quince & Co. front and I ended up not purchasing. So, after many
frantic text messages to SO to ask him if he happened to be home and
could look at the list, then several texts back from him about what
yarns I had picked out for which sweater I managed to pick out just what
I needed.
The yarn is Quince & Co. Chickadee in the River colourway, and it’s destined to become the Irina sweater by Cecily Glowik MacDonald (hopefully sometime this fall)
While I was there, I also picked up some other yarn that I needed for some gift knitting projects. For a Ravelry swap I’m in, I needed to knit someone a scarf, so I
picked up a few skeins of Cascade 220 in forest green and yellow. I
can’t yet talk about what the scarf design is since the swap package
hasn’t arrived yet, but I will post about it as soon as I can.
I also picked up some Cascade 220 superwash sport (which I’m still
bitter about not being 220 yards/skein) in basic black to knit a hat for
my father for his birthday at the end of October.
So…overall I managed to come home with 18 new skeins of yarn to put
in an already full yarn drawer, but I told myself that 6 of them are
getting used nearly immediately and if all goes well the Quince & Co
will be getting knit up soon too. Still…I knew it meant that I was
about to need a yarn intervention. It was a few more weeks before that
happened, but it has happened and I’ll be sure to tell you all about it
as soon as we get through the pile of other things that happened in the
interim.
It’s been an exciting summer/end of summer on the crafting front, and
has no promises of slowing down. Thanks for making the journey with me.
The Fifth (Seventh) First: Bamboo Yarn
Both for the T.A.R.D.I.Socks and the lace sweater
I’m using a bamboo blend yarn. It’s my first time knitting with any
level of bamboo fibre, though it’s something I’ve wanted to do for a
while. I’ll do proper yarn reviews when I talk about the WIPs or FOs
(whenever I get to them), but suffice to say that I love one of them,
I’m frustrated as hell at the other one, I bought my first set of big
girl circular needles, and I will forever insist on knitting bamboo WITH
bamboo (or at least wood … but preferably bamboo).
And that wraps up my series of post about knitting firsts. Thanks for
reading. Happy knitting. Feel free to share your knitting firsts or any
tips/tricks/experiences with any of my firsts either in the comments or
by sending me an email, Google+, or Twitter message.
Fourth First (although I guess we’ve now established it’s my Sixth First): Ravelry Competition
Unrelated to all of the buying of yarn at festivals and receiving of
yarn from swaps, I’ve decided that I need to do my part to decrease the
amount of yarn I have. Now, compared to many people I don’t actually
have that much yarn, but I also don’t have that much yarn space in my
flat and it’s already become incredibly cluttered. Aside from the Kauni,
everything I brought into my house from the festival was already DFA
(designated for assignment) to a project in my queue, so I felt
comfortable with it. I’ve spent a fair amount of time in Ravelry trying
to match up the oldest yarns in my stash with projects so that when I
finish the epic deadline knitting of summer (it’s getting wild around
here) I will have clear directions for the older yarns in my stash.
Problem was that because of the plan (knit the oldest first) conflicting
with reality (knit all these things by these dates and also you need to
buy yarn for them) I felt like I wasn’t getting anywhere. Enter the Knit Girllls podcast (which I don’ t listen to yet, but was mentioned on another podcast) and their StashDash 2014.
The objective is between May 26 and August 2 (I think) to knit 5km
worth of yarn. Which sounds impossible. The catch is … things already on
the needles no matter how far they were in progress at the start of the
competition, could count their full yardage. So here I was with a sport
weight vest, a pair of knee high socks, and an 800yd sweater project
already in the works and scheduled to be completed by July 9. So I’m
doing it. I don’t think I actually get anything for completing it other
than the satisfaction of having FOs and getting yarn used up, but that’s
good enough for me. I haven’t really been participating in all the
chatter etc. because while I know other people feed off the social
energy of these sorts of things I find it draining. I’d rather compete
against my personal goals and not constantly compare my progress to that
of everyone else who seems to either have all day long to knit or are
the fastest knitters on the planet. I’m making progress, I finished one
thing, I’ve established a rhythm for finishing the others, I have plans
for the future, and I’m going to make it as far as I can and do my best
to not buy yarn in the interim.
Third First: Yarn Swap
Since I’ve only recently gotten into knitting podcasts and the more
social aspects of Ravelry (even then I’m just dipping my toe in the
water) it’s only within the last year that I learned that yarn swaps are
a thing people do. So, when my first knitting podcast foray
rolled around to their second anniversary in May and they decided to do
a swap, I knew I wanted to participate. It’s a video podcast so I’d
gotten to see them showing the spoils of yarn swaps past
and it just seemed like a really great way to potentially experience a
new yarn or local goods from places I’d never been and to just connect
with some of the people you only communicate with via the internet. I
was excited to try to share my local flavour with someone else and have
someone share theirs with me.
Interestingly enough, I ended up with one of the hosts of the podcast
as the person I was buying for (it was a round robin swap so
you weren’t getting the same person who got you), which I thought was
pretty great. I’d been watching her progress in knitting and life over
the past two years and I felt like I had a good handle on what she
liked, so I hoped I could put together the best possible package. I knew
also that whenever possible I wanted to give her something uniquely me
or uniquely Minneapolis. I got two kinds of tea from my LYS (because
they have special tea blends and they are both phenomenal and I enjoy
them whenever I’m there knitting or shopping or winding 50 skeins of
yarn on their swift/ball winder because I don’t have one), yarn that was
the exact colour of green she’s always showing off on the podcast (I
conquested hard for it) that I picked up from a local independent dyer
at the fibre festival, a pattern I also picked up at the festival, a
stitch holder that she had requested, and a reversible project bag I made myself.
Which I guess isn’t a knitting first per se, but is a first. I’d never sewn a project bag before (or really a bag of any type … I’m a garment
sewer almost exclusively), but it was a quick and mostly painless
process and I hope to make many more of them for friends or for myself
(though I don’t really use project bags) or to sell on Etsy or anywhere else I might find myself
selling things. The best part, I think, was that since mine went to one
of the hosts of the podcast I got to watch her open it on the show and
see her reactions to everything. It was really special and it’s a bit
tense and also a bit exhilarating to wait with anticipation to see if
someone halfway across the country likes the things you sent them.
Also amazing was receiving a package in return. We had to fill out a
short questionnaire to tell our potential swap partners more about us,
and my partner really seemed to have a knack for taking the short info I
provided and really putting together something truly special. She sent
me two kinds of tea (divine vanilla black tea and the most bergamot-y smelling Earl Grey I’ve ever had) from a local-to-her tea shop, two sachets of lavender
(one of my favourite smells) from her bushes in her back yard that made
the whole box smell lovely and are now residing in my yarn trunks and
hopefully making my yarn smell lovely as well, my first ever real, actual stitch markers
(so I guess that’s the Fourth First – up until now I always just tied
scrap yarn around the needle to mark the stitches) which are jeweled and
beautiful and I can’t wait to get back to a point in a project that
needs the stitches marked so I can use them and smile because I feel
like a real knitter, a needle size/gauge checker
(a really awesome one) because I mentioned that I lost my other one
somewhere in my flat and I’m banking on it never returning until I move)
and a skein of yarn from an indie dyer that I stalk on Etsy but have never purchased anything from. This yarn is SO VERY EXCITING to me, both because it’s inspired by one of my favourite fandoms (Welcome to Night Vale)
but also because it’s even more beautiful in person and it’s not very
expensive so it’s telling me I should just buy yarn from this dyer
instead of just favouriting all of it and then being moderately sad when
it sells out. I’ve found a new dyer and that’s amazing. So I suppose
this is my Fifth First—it’s my first fandom-inspired indie yarn. It’s
also my Sixth First because it’s 100% Blue-faced Leicester and I’ve
never owned any BFL before.
Yarn swap … stressful, but INCREDIBLY FUN. Let’s do more of them!
The Second First: Fibre Festival
The weekend after my two weekends of knitting classes, I ventured out of the confines of the city to my first ever fibre festival.
It was a small one held out in one of the very rural suburbs at the
county fair grounds, but I think that was just what I needed for my
first time. I hear many horror stories from podcasters about the rush of
people waiting to get in to the big festivals and the hordes of people
all grabbing at the same yarn from a certain dyer and how people are
carrying around armfuls just to make sure no one takes the one they
want, and I’m just pretty sure that scene’s not for me. Instead, I went
to this small one on the lookout for a select few things for a select
few projects and I had a really great time. There were sheepdog trials
and spinning demonstrations and many very nice vendors who I still feel
bad about not giving money to. In the end I got just what I wanted (yarn to make the aforementioned sweater that I’m laughingly trying to accomplish by July 9, beautiful variegated organic wool yarn in just the right colours to finally make myself the Hobbit dress
before the third movie premieres in December, and the perfect colour
green yarn for my yarn swap partner (see the Third First)) and I also
got some things I’ve been dreaming of for a long time (two skeins of
Alisha Goes Around –and let me tell you that (1) Alisha is an AMAZING
and LOVELY individual and (2) I wanted to buy the whole damn table, and
two skeins of Dansk garn called Kauni
that I’ve been loving and wanting and dreaming of for a long time and
have never seen in person anywhere in the US). Originally I thought I
would make my sweater with Kauni, but then the other yarn turned up and I
somehow knew that it had to be the sweater yarn and the Kauni will be
turned into something perfect and wonderful. It may linger in my stash
for years to come until it meets exactly the right pattern and
circumstance and that is okay because I wish nothing but the best for
it.
I also got an adorable pattern that SO picked out and a charming skein of wool/bison blend handspun
from reasonably local bison (Dakotas) that still has the beautiful
smell of lanolin and bison wool. Aside from yarn there was a booth
selling all manner of sheep cheese and since I’m intolerant to all cow
milk I have to get my cheese fix exclusively from sheep or goat cheese.
So … I bought a lot of cheese. My drawers are full of yarn and my
freezer is full of cheese and that’s the best possible way I can think
of to exist.
In short, I had a blast at the festival and look forward to the next
one. Maybe I’ll work my way up to something bigger. Here’s a photo of my
yarny take homes (minus one skein because it got pretty much instantly
converted to sweater) that caused me to text my best friend and say “I’m
yarn envying myself because of all the awesome things I got”.
Fibre
festival: A+ would do again.
The past month (or so, I’ve been lax in posting all the things) has
been a month of a lot of knitting firsts for me and I thought I’d share
them with you. Because I got long winded, I’m going to do these as a series
of posts.
So…we shall begin with…
The First First: Knitting Class (and tangentially … sock)
Because I’m the sort of person who thinks to herself “but why
shouldn’t I do it the most awesome and hard way possible on the first
try instead of easing into a thing”, I decided that for the femme Fifth
Doctor costume I’m working on for a con upcoming in July (and then
another one in August and then office Halloween in October) I should not
only knit a vest
(which is done and I really need to post photos of it but haven’t)
which is easy and I KNOW how to do and will be nbd, and sew a skirt
which is using a pattern I’ve already sewn and love and is also nbd, I
should also knit myself socks. Knee high socks. Knee high T.A.R.D.I.Socks.
I made this decision at the end of April and then told myself that
before I could cast on said knee high socks I had to finish the mittens
of repeated epic fail (more to come once that situation sorts itself
out) and also my SO’s cardigan.
Which, as previously discussed, took me until the middle of May. So I
somehow decided that between May 15 and July 3 I would finish the half
completed vest, sew a skirt, also knit another sweater that I wanted to
make for a trip I have on July 9, and knit knee high socks that by all
reports take experienced sock knitters months to years to do because
they are SO DAMN ENORMOUS. Oh, and did I mention I’ve never knit a sock
before in my life and while I conceptually understand that socks have
heels and toes and legs and feet I don’t have a clue about how to adjust
that to fit my actual heel or toe or leg or foot? Did I also mention
that these socks are toe up and leave most of the adjusting to the
knitter? They are.
Which brings me to my first first … my first knitting class. In a timely fashion, my LYS
sent me an email that they were having a “knit a sock” class for the
first two weeks of May. I’d never taken a class there before, but I
learned to sew by taking classes so I figured what harm could it do.
Granted this was a cuff down sock on two circular needles using worsted
weight yarn and not a toe up sock with patterning and self-adjusting on 4
dpns, but at least I could understand the basics of sock mechanics.
Hopefully. The short answer was, I found the people in the class not
that awesome (much discussion that made me cringe at the levels of fail
on various levels) and the teacher was distracted at best and almost no
one but me actually made any progress or seemed to understand knitting
in the round, but the materials I received and the comprehensive
instructions on how to figure out what size your feet were and how the
parts of the sock went together accordingly were hugely helpful. And at
the end of it all I had a sock. Just one, but a sock no less. I want the
cuff to be longer, but I ran out of time, so I’ll probably end up
ripping it out and making it taller ( which can wait until closer to
winter because worsted weight wool socks in the summer are just … no),
but I have a sock.
So there you have it. My first class and my first very plain, very boring, ultimately well fitting sock.
I feel like I’ve been neglecting you all lately. I promise it’s not
intentional, I was just mired in my first true foray into non-monogamous
knitting (I hated it) and was waiting until I had anything finished (or
even remotely finished) to make an update. Consequently, I have about 5
posts in a row that I’m going to need to make as I’ve been doing ALL
THE THINGS. I’ll try to space them out a bit so you don’t get them all
at once.
The first thing I want to talk about is something I think I mentioned once before, the Men’s Striped Cardigan that I made for my SO for our anniversary. It’s out of Knit Picks CotLin
(because I really wanted to knit with Knit Picks CotLin) and it turned
out pretty well, despite me having a lot of struggles with the pattern
(part my fault, part the pattern’s fault) and having to rip out the
sleeve THREE TIMES (though it turns out that the third time I ripped it
out, I didn’t actually have to rip it out, the pattern was just
confusing). I also learned that although I don’t usually mind
finishing/seaming, I DO hate seaming things with stripes because making
the sleeve stripes line up with the yoke stripes was an exercise in
madness. Because of the sleeve setbacks, I was worried I wouldn’t finish
it by our anniversary, so I dropped all the other projects I had in
progress (monogamy ftw) and basically did nothing with my free time but
knit that sweater for about a week and a half. I finished weaving in all
the ends at around 10:30pm on May 14 (the day before our anniversary).
So, technically it was finished on time, but the seams were so horridly
bunched up that I knew I needed to block it, so he couldn’t wear it
right away. He did wear it to the fibre festival we attended this Sunday
(more on that in a later post) and it fits him well and he likes it
well enough that I think he’ll actually wear it, so I’m counting it a
win. That means that I have successfully knit him THREE sweaters now and
I have successfully knit myself two. Yep.
Sadly, I don’t have any pictures of him wearing the cardigan (despite
the fact that I was with him all day yesterday when he had it on), so
here’s a photo of it blocking.
I was really excited to use the CotLin yarn after listening to the
Knit Picks podcast where they were talking about the yarn. I’d never
knit with cotton yarn at all before, so it was a new experience for me
to knit with yarn that didn’t have much elasticity to it and had a lot
of stretch. I think I already mentioned that I had to switch to bamboo
needles because the cotton yarn and the aluminum needles were not
agreeing with one another. Once I switched to the bamboo, all went well.
I didn’t LOVE the CotLin as much as I hoped I would, but I think it’s a
pretty great yarn to knit with. It helps that the pattern I chose was
designed with a cotton yarn, so I didn’t have to worry too much about
how it would stretch with gravity (although I don’t know yet since SO
has only worn it once), but the linen seems to help it keep a bit of
integrity. The stitch definition is nice and it definitely wasn’t hard
on my hands while I was knitting (something else I’ve heard about cotton
yarns). I LOVE the colours that SO picked (Cashew – a lovely toasty tan colour, and Planetarium
– a rich navy blue with the slightest bit of a greenish hue and almost a
little sheen that’s basically the colour of the midnight sky) and I
have quite a bit of yarn leftover (especially in the blue) so I’m
thinking about other things I can make (perhaps for ME) in the yarn. I
wish I had more of the tan left because I think it would be a great
neutral for me to make another short-sleeved layering cardigan with, but
I definitely don’t have enough of the tan for a sweater. The blue
however …
The only thing I’d caution about when knitting this is that when I
made it (in XL, not sure if smaller sizes also have this problem)
according to the pattern dimensions, the armpit shaping starts a bit
low, unless you’re planning on wearing a dress shirt or bigger shirt
underneath it, and the sleeve lengths (at least on my SO) were about 3”
too long if you made the sweater as written (see: why I had to rip back
the sleeve the second time), so you might want to measure and adjust as
needed.
I might knit this again, but not for a while and definitely not in
stripes. Also, I forgot how much longer it takes me to make sweaters for
SO because he is so much bigger than me! Yet somehow, he is the one
that has all the sweaters that fit and I am the one with a bunch of
sweaters in the “things that need to be re-knit” pile. Whatever.
For some dumb reason I’ve all of a sudden decided that I absolutely
*need* a cowl-neck sweater. Right now. Never mind that I have five
projects in progress on my needles, some of them with timelines.
Never mind that I don’t have the yarn for these projects and I was going
through my stash today and told myself no more yarn until I use up a
significant amount.
I’ve quelled myself for now and have put about forty bajillion
cowl-neck sweaters into my Ravelry queue for a rainy day (or, you know,
the next time I buy yarn), but in doing so, I discovered something.
I am in love with all the patterns of Cecily Glowik
MacDonald. I’m sure I’m late to the game on this and all you lovely
people have been happily knitting her things for ages now, but I’ve only
just discovered her and now I would like to purchase every single
pattern and do nothing but make and wear her fabulous sweaters every day
of my life.
These sweaters are my new fandom. On the off chance you haven’t heard
of them yet, please do go check them out. All are beautiful and the
photography doesn’t do anything to make me want them less.
PSA: This also gets into a bit of a “needle review”, which is to say I
might say some unpopular things about knitting needle brands and people
who feel like if I’m not knitting with $400 needles I’m not doing it
right. You have been warned.
Start Post
SO has been really into cardigans lately and since it is allegedly
going to be summer soon, I thought that making wool cardigans for
someone seemed a bit silly. Thanks to my binge listening to the
KnitPicks podcast, I’d been seriously itching to knit with their
cotton/linen yarn blend “CotLin”.
I don’t really know why, but the podcast made it sound like such an
amazing and exciting yarn and since I was thinking about summer knitting
(who are we kidding here, I made a worsted weight, all wool, 4th Doctor
scarf during the duration of last July/August…summer knitting isn’t a
thing I think about) and I was thinking I should make some things out of
cotton yarn (which I’ve never used before) and CotLin seemed fun.
I had to wait for the backordered black Palette to come in (Night’s
Watch hat!), but as soon as it was ready I pulled SO in and we sat down
and picked out colours for the cardigan. There was no question that a
navy blue was going to be involved, but we spent a fair bit of time
going over the various greys and brown colours and finally settled on
“Cashew” and “Planetarium” (the cardigan is done with wide stripes—12
rows high with a gauge of 6 rows per inch). I waited for the yarn to
come and then I got swatching.
The first thing I noticed while knitting the swatch was that although
this yarn claims to be a DK weight, it’s very thin. I think it’s just
spun very tightly, but when I put it up next to a strand of Palette, the
CotLin strand is just about bigger than the Palette strand. That said,
the pattern (which is written for DK weight yarn, although not cotton DK
weight yarn…more on that when I talk about the cardigan) called for
4.5sts = 1” and 6 rows = 1” over stockinette stitch using US 7 needle
and after washing and blocking the swatch, that’s what I got, so I’m
rolling with it.
The second thing I noticed is that cotton yarn is strange. Or,
rather, it’s strange compared to anything else I’ve ever knit with
(which is basically acrylic and various wools). It feels like knitting
with macrame thread (for all I know it basically *is* like knitting with
macrame thread) as it slides through my hands. I’ve gotten used to it
after knitting about a quarter of a cardigan, but for a while,
especially since I’ve been switching between that, Malabrigo Rios (which
is ridiculously soft superwash merino), KnitPicks Brava acrylic, and
Knit Picks Palette, the CotLin just felt bizarre in my hands. Once it’s
knitted, it’s actually rather soft, but it feels very stiff as I knit it
and the fact that it has next to no memory (it doesn’t spring
around or squish or anything) is still odd for me.
The third thing I noticed is that this yarn is terrible when knitted on aluminum
needles. I was dropping stitches all over the place. The cotton yarn is
slicker than wool and because it doesn’t have the fibre memory, it
doesn’t grip the needles the way I’m used to. I have a Boye
interchangeable needle set (this is where my potentially unpopular
opinions on needles start…you have been warned) that I use almost
exclusively to knit things. If I don’t use those, it’s because the
cables disconnect from the needle tips and on certain projects (Palette
on size 3) that means the yarn gets stuck in the connectors, so I’ve
purchased a stand-alone Boye circular needle for that. In many cases, I
also own the straight needles. Problem is, I somehow managed to lose ONE
US7 straight needle (which was the reason I was gifted the Boye set in
the first place because I was knitting a lot of things on US7 and I had
ONE NEEDLE and no circulars). I do own wood DPNs (mainly Clovers) and I
own them in a US7, but this cardigan called for me to cast on 150+
stitches and it’s not knit in the round (because it’s a cardigan), so I
wasn’t going to use DPNs.
Here are my needle thoughts. Yes. I just admitted to you that I
literally knit everything on US$8 aluminum needles from the craft store.
Everything. Unless it needs to be on a DPN and then I knit it on US$10
bamboo DPNs unless I have caved to pressures of ergodynamics and bought
myself square Knitter’s Pride Cubics rosewood US3 DPNs (which, lbr, were
also $10 DPNs) because all the hats I make are finished on US3 DPNs and
I own NO US3 DPNs at all (been finishing them on US5s. I’m lazy and
cheap, what?). I’ve been using those to knit my Evenstar Gloves, and I
like them, but really can’t tell much of a difference between them and
the Clovers I usually use. So, okay, let’s discuss this.
Whenever I hear someone saying that one needs to buy only Hiya Hiya
or only ChiaoGoo or ABSOLUTELY ONLY Signature needles, I sort of stop
listening to them. I admit that the cables on my Boye circular set are
pretty stiff, and if I use anything other than the two biggest sizes I
basically can’t use them because the cables are too stiff to bend
properly. I admit that the junctions routinely come unspun and I have to
respin the tips on at the end of rows. But you know what, I’m actually
okay with that. A friend gifted me the set for free and it has all the
things I need and I’ve knitted some truly amazing things with so-called
“worthless needles”. I once heard someone say that if you paid so little
for a needle that you feel no remorse giving it away, it wasn’t worth
knitting on in the first place. I’m calling bullshit on that. I knit on
“worthless” Boye aluminum needles and I knit with a bunch of “horrible”
acrylic yarn and I do some really fucking fantastic work. So there.
Anyway, the point of this is that I was dropping stitches all over
the place and quickly realized I needed bamboo circulars. I’d been at
JoAnn to buy fabric (I needed the Marvel licensed fabric and they
routinely carry it), but I didn’t have the swatch done for the CotLin,
so I didn’t yet know what size needles I would need, so I didn’t
purchase any. Thankfully, the same friend who gifted me the Boye set
also has bamboo circs in just about every size. So, I started the
ribbing on my US6 Boye aluminums and then moved to the size 7 for the
rows and just dealt with it until she came by on Sunday and saved me
with the bamboo. You can definitely tell that the first stripe had a lot
more fixes done to it if you look at it closely, but SO is okay with it
and I’m hoping after a wash/block you won’t even be able to tell.
In summary: It’s too soon for me to tell what exactly I think about
the CotLin, but now that I have the proper needles I’m finding it much
easier to knit. I’m worried about proper drape on the cardigan once it’s
finished, and I’m not convinced it’s going to hold shaping well through
the sleeves, but I’ll be certain to keep you all posted through the
process.
Sorry this got long. I will leave you with a quick photo of the CotLin cardigan as it currently stands.
Perhaps you remember a few weeks ago when I mentioned I was playing
around with the Malabrigo Rios I’ve had laying around for years now.
Well, I finished the cardigan I was knitting with it! Which also means
that I’ve successfully completed a second sweater for myself, and this
one actually fit on the first try!
The pattern is: Katrina Ballerina Lace Layering Cardigan by Nicole Feller Johnson. Photos below, then my thoughts on knitting it.
(Sorry about the poor photo quality on the first two photos. SO just
hasn’t yet mastered the art of not mashing your finger down on the
shutter button so hard that it makes the camera shake, yet.)
The Malabrigo yarn was absolutely lovely to work with. I chose the
short-sleeved cardigan because I thought I’d run out of yarn (I only had
three skeins and all the patterns I was seeing called for 4 at a
minimum), but I ended up with nearly a full skein leftover, even after
adding a few extra rows to make the lace begin where I wanted it to.
This means I get to do another project — the Evenstar gloves
by Audrey M. It seems perhaps a bit silly to some of you to undertake a
summer cardigan and follow it up with a pair of mittens, but as it’s
mid-April and where I live there’s snow on the ground and the current
temperature is 17F (-8C), I wonder if I shouldn’t perhaps have started
with gloves and moved on to making the sweater sometime in May or June. I
did wear it the other day though, because I finished it (really it just
took me two weeks to buy buttons and then sew them on because I’m a
procrastinator about such things) and I was damn well going to wear it.
You can see my creative solution to the short sleeve sweater in winter
problem in those photos.
The pattern itself is also lovely. It was a breeze to knit, being
just several rows of stockinette stitch while you work the raglan
increases for the sleeves and then moving in to a simple two row lace
repeat over and over until you get the right length. The most difficult
part was getting the arrow points in the lace at the bottom, but that
could be because I was trying to do it while we had a friend over to
watch Frozen and I had to try to count and it just wasn’t happening for
me. Once the film ended and everyone was out of the flat, I managed them
just fine. It’s not a free pattern, but it’s only $7US, so it’s very
manageable. It’s also incredibly well written. The instructions are laid
out in sections with adorable ballet terms and they’re clear and easy
to follow no matter what size you’re making. I would take the advice of
the pattern and size it up one if you’re planning to wear the sweater
over anything substantial. I made a size M and, as I think you can see
from the photos I’m a rather petite person and it fits me well.
In summary: I adore Malabrigo Rios (while I was wearing the sweater
yesterday I kept squishing the end of it in my hand because the yarn was
so lovely) and hope I can find some again and create something else
lovely, and this pattern is a dream to knit, fits like a charm, and is
really the perfect pattern for a summer layering cardigan. I have dreams
of making several more in different colours and perhaps seeing what it
would do if I moved on to a cotton/linen yarn (more on Knit Picks CotLin
in my next post) to make it even lighter for the hot summer months.