Tag Archives: Knitting

Knitted: Na Craga

Well, after more than six months, this famed behemoth has been finished. It weights 2 lbs and 3 oz (maybe not quite behemoth caliber, but, when you consider the fact that the average sweater weighs about 1 lb, then maybe), and took about 20 balls of yarn.

No modeled shots yet, since this will be a Christmas present– but you’re not tired of the cables-receding-off-into-infinity trope yet, are you? I guess I could have made Zac model it for me, but, you know, it’s August.

You’ll be happy to hear, though, that when my dad came to visit the farm the other weekend, I made him try it on, and all my fears about a poor fit were relieved.

I do like this sweater an awful lot, but I sure am glad it’s over (on the other hand, having spent a good long while with Aran Knitting, I found myself pretty drawn to Irish Moss. Maybe in CSA share yarn, when it comes back from the mill?).

Pattern: Na Craga, from Aran Knitting
Yarn: Knit Picks Swish in Squirrel Heather, 20 skeins
Needles: HiyaHiya US 5 bamboo circulars
Timespan: January 23 – July 24
Ravel’d here


Working On: Ladybower

knitting cables "juniper moon farm" chadwick

Here’s a picture I took of my current knitting on the living-room floor. I’m working on a Ladybower in Black Chadwick from Louisa Harding’s Little Cake (as far as names go: the dress version of the sweater is Wightwizzle, if that gives you any idea.) Between the close fit and the way the cables undulate when stretched, this sweater’s going to be– I think– pretty sexy.

I’m already trying to keep myself from buying a pair of black jeans to match.


Socks and Sweaters

After swatching on Sunday, I found that my usual gauge for the assymetrical cables socks worked perfectly. Hooray for not having to buy smaller needles! I used my same old trusty long tail cast on. I happen to cast on really loosely, so if you cast on tightly, I might recommend a slightly more elastic cast on.

So far, the cable pattern is pretty straight forward, and I am loving the yarn. I would be further along, except I got a little distracted by OWLS.


I love how charming a little 2×2 ribbing can be as it transitions into stockinette. Very simple. Very classic. The instructions for this sweater so far are clear enough for me to keep up with all the decreases and still chat with my sister all night–until I gave her my tablet to read something funny–and I then I didn’t have my pattern anymore. Between chunky projects, I always forget how satisfying it is to work with this weight yarn. I feel like I am doing so much with so little effort. I can’t wait to teach this class. Details are coming soon, I promise.

And just because it’s pretty.

I’d Love to Knit: Beatnik

I’ve had my heart set on knitting this sweater since it came out two years ago. I don’t think I’m going to ruin anyone’s surprise by saying that I’m planning on making one in Sabine (crew neck, long sleeves) for my sister’s birthday in October.

photo courtesy of Knitty and © Chris Vaccaro

Just the thing to put me in a fall mood!


Knitted: Manu

Juniper Moon Farm will be debuting a really fantastic yarn this fall. It’s called Herriot (yep), and it’s a DK weight alpaca yarn in 10 different natural colors (as in, undyed, straight-off-the-alpaca!). I’ve been involved in putting together the pattern book, which is another tale for several other days– one that I really can’t wait to share with you. The story of this sweater begins at the exact point when I saw this yarn, because I knew exactly what I was going to make with it.

manu "juniper moon farm"

I think a common trait among anyone who makes things is that she carries around a mental (and opportunistic) list like this one: “If I ever happen to encounter [x] sort of fabric, or wood, or yarn, or ground, I’d do [y] with it.”

My list, ever since the fall of 2009, when Kate published the pattern, had included the entry (x=slightly over 1000 yds drapey alpaca DK, y=Manu). When Herriot arrived from the mill early this spring, I knew my yarn had arrived.

herriot juniper moon farm manu

As soon as the Herriot arrived, though, there was the matter of that aforementioned pattern book, so I wasn’t able to get to cast on for this sweater until June. (Not that this was a bad thing! I spent this past spring doing some really neat work that I’m really proud of, and can’t wait to show off!) Plus, I felt pretty guilty nabbing sweater quantities of a fantastic new yarn, so I waited until the not-quite-used up skeins of yarn came back from our wonderful test knitters, and then used about 10 of those already-orphaned skeins.

As soon as I was finished with my last book-related knitting project– as it happens, I was in the car on the way to TNNA with Susan– I set it down and picked up work on Manu. I’m lucky that the construction was so simple, because it made for perfect car-knitting. Things don’t get more oceans-of-stockinette than an extra-long seamless yoked cardigan with a pleated neckline– I think Kate describes it as “knitting a giant box.”

manu herriot juniper moon farm

I worked the slightly-more-fiddly finishing– the pleats, puffed pockets, blousy sleeve cuffs, and the miles of i-cord trim– while on vacation (!) in Chapel Hill. I’m really, really happy with how it turned out. I know I’ll be using Herriot in the future– I’ve got other projects on my mental list that are clamoring to be made!

 

Pattern: Manu
Yarn: Herriot in River Birch
Needles: US 5 circulars and DPNs
Timespan: June 21st – June 27th


Wingspan

I seem to be off knitting at the moment. I think we all go through these periods where we're just not feeling it, right? It's been so hot, and I've been on a reading kick instead (I read seven books...

Working On: Pound of Love

Maybe two years ago, I bought an art book on experimental knitting, and, shortly afterwards, I decided to knit my Halloween costume that year.

That plan fizzled, but the $7 jumbo-skein of cornflower-blue acrylic, Lion Brand’s Pound of Love, lived on until the day I learned that my sister had washed her blanket in the washing machine.

Luckily, I had just the yarn, and I wanted to try out another blanket pattern:

However, it’s pretty slow going.


Pseudo-Ravellenic Knitting

I know to really participate in the Ravellenic games, one is meant to join a team and sign up for a competition, etc., etc. I still wanted to give myself a knitting challenge, and I am taking this challenge just as seriously as though who signed up officially, but the truth is that internet forums have been leaving a bad taste in my mouth lately. Yes, even on Ravelry, and it makes me sad. So, this Olympics, I am avoiding the forums part of the knitting games and just doing it on my own.

I chose Anne Hanson’s Motheye as my project. I have really knit a lace scarf, and I have yet to successfully complete a project out of lace weight yarn. So, I threw my balled-up yarn from my ripped out Starling, which I will finish one day when I have the patience to dye the yarn first, in a pot full of red dye.

This is the effect it’s having on the pattern.

This was just a little ball of yarn, a little snag in the ripping out I couldn’t untangle, and the white shouldn’t last much longer before it runs out. Even now, I can feel myself growing bored with the undyed yarn, and am thinking of switching to the bigger ball. The big ball should have a much larger red section, and therefore a longer transition. We’ll see how it goes. However, I am still enamored of my Pearl Street Pullover out of undyed yarn. Perhaps it is the cables rather than the color?

I do love the nupps! Nupps are another thing I have never knit. I like them and am dreaming of pairing them with cables sometime in the near future. Or do they become baubles when the are with cables. Is there a difference?

There is much I still have to learn about knitting. More on that later.

The suspense, it should be driving you mad.

Everything again?

 rudbeckia explosion

Can't seem to get enough of one sort of thing done around here to have a post that makes sense, so here's everything I guess.

 first harvest

That was my first "pesto garden" harvest a while back. My Memmy gave me a still-in-the-box food processor that she never used (her old one is still kickin' and then somebody gave her this one for whatever reason and it just sat around). Anyway, what? Oh yeah. I chopped up those piles of goodness and smooshed them into a little bitty container and stuck them in the freezer.

And now I'm ready to do it all over again.

herbs

I just wish my 'maters were as fruitful (literally).

tomatoes

They got nice and big, but are just now really blossoming and I've had very little fruit so far.

Ah well. At least we've been finally getting a little rain here and there.

rainbow

Our area was/is not in drought, but it still had been so dry for so long.

A nice thing:

real eggs

Even though we are not allowed to keep chickens in our borough (and honestly? I don't have the energy or money for them at this point in my life anyway), we have plenty of local sources for fresh eggs, and my neighbor Linda surprised me with a dozen the other week. Of course, we had already devoured half of them before I managed to get a picture.

Now. Remember this?

the $20 former kitchen hutch is slowly getting a makeover

I finally picked a paint color and put a better back on it:

$20 hutch - finally repainted

$20 hutch - finally repainted

Hooray! Now I love it again!

And speaking of loving things again... The mystery shawl from my last post? It got weird.

mystery shawl progress

It's hard to explain -- no wait, let me rephrase this. It's actually very easy to explain, and at some length too, but I will not bore you. Basically, the design of the shawl in the second clue proved to be something that I feel does not benefit from a self striping yarn and is much better served by a solid, tweed, or very slightly variegated yarn instead.

Luckily, I had these already on hand.

new yarns for mystery shawl

The brown and tan is undyed alpaca from Ideuma Creek (the ball's worth was purchased at Rhinebeck and the two cakes were purchased online much later), and the white is Juniper Moon Farm cormo that I grabbed on sale a few months back. They are both so soft! And knitting up beautifully together.

"Wool-paca-feller"

Because the pattern name is "Rockefeller" and my yarns are now alpaca and wool, I have dubbed mine, "Wool-paca-feller." ... Isn't it sad that I amuse myself so.

Now some cute things:

the whole family: dashboard version

A few years ago, my friend gave me the Little Miss figurine on the far left for no particular reason except that she was cute. After a while, I got the bright idea to affix her to my dashboard with a little adhesive square; sort of a fun little mascot for our trips. Fast forward a bit and the same friend sent me the pipe smoking bobble headed Pappy in the center, so I stuck him up there too, joking that the little figures were Mr. Ambry and me. This fabulous idea then sent me on a quest to find figures to represent the kids too.

A little while after that, my friend Michele sent us some wonderful baby gifts and just happened to stick that little Kewpie doll on the outside of the package, and I practically bolted out to the car to stick it in its place. All I needed were the boys and after several failed attempts to find the Blockheads from Gumby in an appropriate size, I settled on Mario and Luigi. Even though I am not a gamer, the boys love them, so that's that.

And now, every time we get in the car we have to smile at our little dashboard family up there. :)

Also cute was this terrified leaf friend that John found outside the other day:

Oh noes! :0

Still with me?

I am going to attempt to pickle some things this week. I have dabbled in canning in the past, but not much, and I have never pickled, so this might prove to be horrible. Or not. We'll see.

pickling spices

I mixed coriander, allspice, cloves, turmeric, celery seed, yellow mustard seeds, bay leaves, cinnamon sticks, and mixed peppercorns in there and it smells quite delightful. I have a bunch of dill in the freezer and must grab some garlic, and then I can do half batches of each item in spice blend thinger and also in garlicky dill.

Believe it or not, I could keep talking indefinitely, but I have decided to cut myself off here. Cross your fingers for cooler weather so I can get up in the attic really soon and have a real project to share again!

Travel Knitting

So, I recently went to several Latin American countries (and one Caribbean island) to speak about database technology. For those that are interested, I spoke at a conference and a 6-country tour. I had long plane flights and plenty of waiting, as well as some relaxing time, so here is what I got done:

I participated in the Tour de Fleece.

I worked more on my top-down Cecilia raglan cardigan. Before I landed in Boston I was able to get to the point where I put the sleeves on hold, so I’m down to the armpits:

Cecilia cardigan progress

I finished all the yarn I had for Tony’s Crooked Little Scarf. Unfortunately, it’s a bit too short, so I’ll have to find some other wool to ply with the Louet Black Diamond, that will match the purple, and then knit on it some more:
Tony's crooked little scarf

I made a baby sweater for an impending baby girl that my friend Linda is having. This is made out of Universal Yarn’s supreme cotton batik, which is the softest cotton ever:
For Linda's baby

Also out of cotton batik, I made another hoot cardigan for my friend Nathan’s son, who was recently born. I have to sew on the buttons and
for Nathan's son

And I made a pair of regular stockinette socks, with a sweet tomato heel, out of Mind’s Eye yarns amazing merino/tencel hand-dyed yarn. This yarn is wonderful, it feels like the socks hug my feet! The top pattern is just a knit/purl basket-type pattern (repeat 4k, 4p for 4 rows, then 4p, 4k).
pink/green socks

And I made some hexipuffs in my spare time:
hexipuffs

That’s it for travel knitting, for now. Tomorrow I depart for the Sheep’s Ahoy knitters cruise, so I hope to get a lot of knitting and spinning done then, too!