Tag Archives: WIP

WIP: Charlie Sweater Finished

It’s been quite awhile since I updated you last on my Charlie Sweater. Ages and ages, in fact! In January I finished all the knitting and late last month I wove in all the ends. But I only just now finally got around to photographing it. Knowing that it would take awhile to dry, I photographed it before I blocked it.

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I’m so thrilled with the finished sweater! Pamela Wynne did a fantastic job with the design (as always!) I can hardly wait to see a chubby baby hand poking out from the end of this sleeve:

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And the colorwork yoke just slays me! I had anticipated it being much trickier than it actually was and found that I settled into a nice rhythm once I got started.

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I did have to rip back at one point when I discovered a mistake, but it was well-worth it and is a great project to cut your color-work teeth on.

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I was a little worried that my colorwork wouldn’t be even enough when I finished, but Julie assured me that it was fine. You can see below that it’s a bit bumpy.

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Here’s a while-drying photo so that you can see that the inconsistencies did indeed block out! Never underestimate the power of a good soaking!

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Charlie is available as a free pattern right here. It uses Yearling yarn, which we are not releasing this season, so you should snatch up any that you might stumble across. As a bulky cotton-merino blend, it’s a great spring yarn and I’m sad to see it go from our line, but we had to make room from some new yarns (one of which we’ll be sharing with you this week).

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WIP: Zig Zag Quilt

I'm making progress!


Earlier this week, I pieced together the HSTs (half-square triangles) into groups of 3, then I pieced the groups of 3 into zigzags!


Hopefully, by the weekend, I can get the top done and go buy some batting!  I'm going to do the back and binding in fabric from my stash.  I wonder if I have enough binding from the Blue Sampler Quilt to bind this one, too?  Hmm...

WIP: Zig-Zag Quilt

At first, I had looked at the Rainbow Stash-Busting quilt from A Quilt Story from the book Modern Quilts from the Blogging Universe, inspired, I jumped into my stash and came up with handfuls of lovely fabric.  I used many of my Tula Pink "Prince Charming" fat quarters and finally used up lots of my rainbow color scraps.  But I cut too many HSTs (half-square triangles) with white and then decided to rearrange them into zig-zags (chevrons).  And, I think it'll work!

 

I have no idea what the final size will be, but with all the HSTs already cut, I may have enough to do two baby quilts, so I'm having fun!  The first little quilt  is going to focus on blues and greens (above pic), and hopefully I can finish it before baby arrives.  I'm running out of time!


WIP: Mitered Detail Cardigan 2

At the moment, I am working on the second version of the Mitered Detail Cardigan.  This time, I'm knitting it in green!  I've also refined the instructions and I'm knitting it together with the folks over in the Ravelry Machine Knits group.  I had no idea we'd have so many folks sign up, so I had to cut it off after over 20 people showed interest!  Crazy!

Here's my progress so far...

1 skein, Wollmeise Lace Garn

add a knitting machine and some claw weights

measure twice, cut once (just kidding, there's no steeking in this one)

Something Shiny, Something Green: Knitting Lace and Thinking about Spring

Sarah and I fought over who convinced who to write about her next project. She insists that she bullied me into allowing her to write it; I’m convinced that I begged her to write about it. Whoever is right, I think you’ll enjoy hearing about her latest knit! – Lauria

It’s still winter in most of North America.* In many places, it’s been a particularly cold and brutal season this year. In some ways, I think, that’s good for knitters: there’s ample reason to use and wear our amazing handknits, friends and family don’t question our abundant knitting time, and we can glory in being clever, stylish, and warm people.

By this time of year, though, when winter has been dragging on for a while and the sparkle of the holiday season feels far behind us, even the most committed cold weather knitter might be harbouring some thoughts about springtime… and spring knits. Starting something springy while it’s still winter also helps me to actually have spring garments to wear in the spring: if I wait until June to start a shawl, it might not be finished until fall breezes are blowing.

When my knitterly mood starts to shift out of cold-weather mode, I usually reach for lace. The lightness and airiness of a lot of lace projects reminds me that warm weather is coming, even if it’s not here yet. It gives me a chance to think about the sundresses and shorts I might pair my lace projects with. And, it means spending some quality time with drapey, soft, shiny yarns and challenging, interesting patterns that make me feel like a knitting genius. Most of the time, my is-it-spring-yet lace projects are also in bright, pretty, cheerful colours.

Feline and ovine supervisors!

With those things in mind, I’ve been knitting some come-on-spring lace! I’m knitting Kieran Foley’s (free!) Cold Mountain pattern in Juniper Moon’s gorgeous lace yarn, Findley, in just about the most perfect goldish green colourway – #29 Greengage. Greens are my absolute favourite colours, so it’s perfect for me. Plus, I think most people associate happy green with spring weather.

The start of something.... lacy

Lacy diamonds!

There are so many things that are happy-making and spring-beckoning about this yarn and this project: it’s shiny and drapey, soft but strong, all of the things I like in lace yarns. Combined with the colour, it almost has a glow to it.

Even messy lace is pretty

Green on green

I’m imagining wearing this stole on a sunny day, while sipping a cool drink on a patio near some water… just as soon as it stops raining!**

Lace and chart!

(*Technically it’s winter in all of North America, if you go by “astronomical winter” instead of meterological winter – or, what the calendar says instead of what the thermometer says. I know this because we have an argument a spirited and productive debate about this in my family ever year. This year, calendar winter goes until March 20th.)

(**Where I live, winter is all about gray days and cold rain, instead of snow. I know that’s colossally unfair to everyone dealing with the jillionth month of snow everywhere else!)

Sarah hangs out with her cat, drinks a lot of tea, and knits as much as possible in beautiful Victoria, BC.

2014 Blanket Block-A-Long – March

This winter has been a rough one here in western Kentucky.   We have had a number of significant weather events, and it feels like my children have been out of school more than they have been in it.  At this very moment, as I type this, we are getting freezing rain with an expected half inch to an inch of ice accumulation.  With all of this cold, wet, miserable weather, it is no wonder that I find myself dreaming of hot, dry New Mexico summers.

Check out the ice accumulation on my back porch.

In my college years (and also a couple of post college years), I spent five summers working at Philmont, a cattle ranch located in northeastern New Mexico owned and operated by the Boy Scouts of America.  The ranch offers year round training and high adventure opportunities for both youth and adult scouts.  Working there was an amazing and wonderful experience, and, while it has been many years since I have set foot in that state, there is a part of me that still considers New Mexico home.  This month’s block is an ode to that far-away home.  (I apologize for the dimness of these photos.  With the bad weather, natural light is hard to come by today.)

The center motif of the block is the Zia, a sun symbol that appears on the New Mexico State flag.

New Mexico State Flag

The blue motif you see around the edge of the block was inspired by this ring.  I purchased it one of my first summers in New Mexico and still wear it regularly.  I love the simple geometric pattern and the texture of the silver.

Originally, I had planned for this block to be only yellow and red, just like the New Mexico state flag.  My intention was to stitch the motif from the ring in purl stitches / reverse stockinette, giving the block more texture, not more color.  But, at the very last minute, when I went to pick up the yarn, I grabbed the blue for the border.

In all honesty, I am not convinced I made the right decision.  Part of my lack on conviction is the fact that colorwork is not one of my strengths, and the border feels untidy to me.  With any luck, it will neaten up once it has been blocked.

All of the designs on the block are done using stranded colorwork techniques.  Hopefully, the floats on the back won’t get hung our caught on things once this block has been stitched in to the final blanket.

Here is a gratuitous picture of the blanket block posed with my son’s Lego tower.  He wanted the tower to be in the picture too.

As always, if you are interested in stitching up one of my block designs, you can contact me on Ravelry.  Also, if you have your own blanket that you are working on, please come visit us in the blanket thread in the JMF group on Ravelry.  There are several of us working on assorted blankets, and we would love to have you join us.

Cris lives in bucolic western Kentucky with her husband, two children, and a menagerie of assorted four-legged creatures.  She spends her days as a librarian and her nights dreaming of a small plot of land where she could raise a few chickens.  She be found on Ravelry as Flarkin.

 

 

Flarkin’s Blackberry Cabled Cardigan – Sleeves!

Watching this sweater start to take shape and seeing the cables grow is completely addicting.  The cables look like intertwined vines to me.

I mean, look at them!  Aren’t they lovely?

As soon as I  finished up the body pieces for my cardigan, I immediately cast on for the first sleeve.  It didn’t take me long to realize that, if I wasn’t careful with my measuring and monitoring of my row counts, there was a real possibility my sleeves could end up different lengths.   (Keeping track of increases, decreases, row counts, and cable crosses in this pattern is a challenge. More on that in my next blog post.)  So,  I decided to knit both sleeves at the same time.

Only a few inches into knitting it, I slipped the first sleeve to a spare needle, and set it aside.  Then, I switched to a longer cable on my interchangeable circular needle, one long enough to accommodate both sleeves side by side.  Then, I started knitting the second sleeve on the circular needle.  Once I had the second sleeve up to the same row where I had left off on the first sleeve, I slipped the first sleeve back on my circular, so both sleeves were side by side, ready to be knit on the exact same row.

By knitting both sleeves at once, I am able to do exactly the same thing on each sleeve, row for row.  It makes it easier to measure accurately and to put my increases and decreases in the same row on each sleeve.  (This is an Important Thing for an OCD knitter, such as myself.) As an added bonus, both sleeves will be finished at the exact same time, and, as soon as I am done stitching them, I can move on to seaming.

WIP: What’s in progress?

What's in progress?  Let me show you!  Here's what I've been working on...

In Hand Knits:
On my double pointed needles, there's currently a second mitten!


This is the second mitten of red/white pair using my Rosita Mittens pattern from Knitscene Accessories, 2013.  I think I managed to make a larger size by mistake.  Oh well.

In Machine Knits:
I'm working on a cardigan design I'm temporarily calling "Mitered Detail Cardigan".  I was doing all the calculations using the old-school methods you see below (tape measure, calculator, and pencil).


Here's the first mitered square done on the machine.  It took a LOT of hand manipulation using a garter bar to move each row of stitches toward the center to create the centered double decrease, but it looks good.


Here's the completed back piece of the cardigan.

In Sewing:
I made my first overlocked zip-pouch.  This is one of three that's in progress.  It's my test piece, and it will likely be the subject of a giveaway very soon.  Who knew that boxed corners had to be so accurate?!



I used the Liberty Lifestyle fabric I wrote about earlier along with some other quilting cottons, fusible fleece, and a zipper from my zippers-on-a-roll.  Can't wait to master the boxing of corners.  What are you working on?

Unwinding

Sometimes you unsew, sometimes you unknit.  This weekend it was time to unknit and unwind... literally.


The project:
Avril in April was a contiguous method hand-knit top completed last year, but worn only once.  The sleeves and neckline were a bit too unflattering for me.  The neckline came down too low, and the sleeves were weird and poofy. Cool contiguous technique though!  The yarn used is a beautiful, bubble-gum/pepto/play-doh pink cashmere blend yarn.  So, I didn't want to just trash or donate it.  Despite the slightly pop-princess color, I truly love the yarn.  I also have some in play-doh yellow which I used for the stripes. I think it could be something else that I'd wear more often.  Yes.  Time to unwind!




Unwinding takes time!!


Every knitted stitch that was picked up needed to be unwound by hand with a hook or tapestry needle.  That took some patience, but in the end there's this!



 A bunch of little pink balls and one big hank.  So, how do you re-use the yarn once it's all kinked up from knitting?  Well, next, I'll secure the yarn off the winder.  Then, I'll soak it and hang it to dry with a knitting machine weight on one end.  When it's dry, I'll re-wind it into a yarn cake and knit it up!

Full Disclosure, Life WIP

My latest stash acquisitions are actually a gift from one of my friends.  She thought of me and brought me fabric from Japan!  And you're probably wondering why she's given me a bunch of baby-boy themed fabric... Well...

Time for a confession.  It's been a bit quiet around here on the blog, but in real life, it's been a lot more chaotic.  See, I've been holding something back from you all.  If you know me in person, then you can see what's going on, but I didn't want my life's issues to spill over into the blog.  I try to keep the blog focused on my work: knitting, illustrating, sewing, quilting, etc.  But, I'm about to shift gears, and I wanted you to know ahead of time.  As I look around the blogosphere, I've noticed that I'm at that age... that age where bloggers  who are in my age group are starting families.  What I'm trying to say is that I'm pregnant.  I'm very pregnant.


And, that's why I haven't really been sewing for myself.  It's been crazy.  This will be our first child, and we are over the moon to be almost at the third trimester.  As a nice science project-type thing, I started taking my measurements on a weekly basis starting from the early weeks of pregnancy... Let's just say we (baby + me) are growing at a quite rapid pace.  So quickly that if I started a dress today and it took me a week to finish, I may not fit into it.  We're talking about an inch (2.5cm) to two inches of bust difference in just a week some weeks.  So, I'm taking a break from sewing for myself.

Instead, I've been illustrating and finishing up loose ends.  I'm done with the blankets for the twins and will have photos to share soon.  I also would love to get some baby sewing done!  I hope I get time to do it.  I was hospitalized for a whole week last week fighting a serious infection, and I'm truly hoping that everything goes smoothly from here on out.  The baby is okay, but that was quite a scare.  So, I'm going to try and check in as often as possible with the latest projects, but just know I'm not as nimble as I was, and life... well, life has a way of letting you know when to slow down.  Point taken!

xoxo