Trish Knits.com

Author: Trish

  • Not Just My Grandma’s Clicky Bag!

    Purple purse, purple jacket, purple hat

    Yesterday I received my very own Knitter’s Satchel by Jordana Paige. One look at the color should make it obvious why I fell in love immediately; it’s a near-perfect match for the purple bomber jacket I wear for all but the very coldest days. It must have been fate that this dusky grape color would be one of the avaialable color options. (Matches my hat, too, don’tcha think?)

    I’m still trying to figure out what all of the pockets, holders, and little loopy things are for. But my scarf project fits in with scads of room to spare, and I can see this bag comfortably holding all but the largest of projects. I can tell that there are tons of places to stash things such as my scissors, tape measure, darning needle, and other thingys that always get me digging through my knitting drawer. What fun.

    But my favorite part? The clicky, snappy top closure that reminds me of the purses that my grandmother carried when I was a preschooler. I used to love to just sit and click her purse. Ok, I’m weird that I even remember that, but hey… it didn’t take much to amuse me. Thank you, Jordana, for making a bag that combines my loves of knitting, retro fashion, and purple… all at once!

  • Le Scarf

    cable scarf in progress

    Ok, so I’ve been working on the same old, same old project for nearly two months. But I think I’m almost done and ready to go onto the next thing. I’ve enjoyed working on the project… it was my first design! Click here to see the pattern. But there comes a time when one wishes she could just move onto the next thing. Which is why my pile of UFOs is so large… boredom kicks in before finishing gets here.

    But I do have my sights set on my next project! It’s the Lace Edged Tee from Knitpicks. I already bought the yarn and pattern, despite my recently self imposed yarn diet… the pattern looks so interesting and the colors so vibrant. I chose to do mine in the orange color. The only thing is that the pattern only goes up to a size 47″, and sadly, I need to make mine just a wee bit bigger than that. So I guess I’ll be testing my guage math skills for the first time. Wow. Wish me luck! But first, I do have to finish that scarf!

  • It’s Growing!

    lavender cabled scarf

    Well, I’ve been knitting away at this thing all week, and it’s at least a couple inches longer to show for it. It’s almost long enough to be wearable, but I really hope that I can stretch the skein out enough to wrap it around my neck completely at least once. We’ll see! This skein of yarn seems bigger and bigger the longer I knit with it. Guess I’ve been knitting with expensive yarns and teeny balls for far too long!

    In the Mail This Week…

    I’m so excited! This week I received the pattern for the Reversibly Cabled Afghan by Lily Chin for Fiber Trends. It’s lovely! I’m not sure yet if I’m going to use it to make an afghan, or whether I will just use sections of it to make scarves and wraps. I guess time will tell…

    And then there’s Leda’s Dream Wrap and Scarf. I am SO not into lace, and I hate charts absolutely! But something about this pattern spoke to me immediately. Maybe, just maybe, I’m bold enough to give it a try. It was written with Knitpicks Alpaca Cloud in mind, but I have some Shimmer laying around that I may try this with. I’ve been looking for the right pattern and maybe this is it. I kinda thought I might do a lightweight Clapotis with the Shimmer, but now I don’t know. Decisions!

    Until next time…

  • S.O.S.D.D. (Same Old Scarf, Different Day)

    cable scarf getting longer

    It’s been a while since I’ve blogged, but I’ve felt like I have not much to say! I’ve just been knitting away on my braided cabled scarf. A couple of traffic jams this week have caused my DH to lose a few more hairs, and we both ruptured our eardrums listening to my 4 year old son scream for more that two hours during one of them, but hey, I had my knitting with me and I was ok! I think my knitting serenity probably drove DH even crazier. But hey, it works for me.

    I just noticed that you can see my cable needle stuck into the skein of yarn in this photo. I don’t use one much; in fact I prefer cabling without a cable needle. It’s simple to learn, and so much faster because it doesn’t interrupt the flow of knitting quite as much. There are several websites that teach this technique, but the one where I saw it and “got it” was on Wendy Johnson’s site. Check it out!


    The Circular Knitting Wiki

    I was surfing the web looking for sweaters knit in the round and came across the Circular Knitting Wiki! How cool is that? I added some stuff about knitting with one long circular (of course!)

    Ever Seen These Before?

    20mm Addi Turbo needles

    I just bought a bunch of Addi Turbos this week in teeny tiny sizes I didn’t already have, and some larger sizes. The big ones weren’t pictured at the place where I bought them from online, so I had never seen them before. The 20mm needles are different! Kinda cool. Now I have to try and come up with something to make with them. Which is odd that I should feel so compelled; I HATE big knitting! But I gotta try these. Maybe somebody will get an unplanned scarf for Christmas this year. Haha.

  • Cable Scarf Update

    lavender scarf with braided cable

    Here’s the latest photo of my Fancy Cabled Braided Scarf. Yes, it’s my own design, based on some common stitch patterns and modified to get a completely mirrored design on either side of the cable. Since the poncho is too big to be my take-along project, this one has taken its place; and I do enjoy working the cable and look forward to each time when it’s time to do a cable row. I think next time I modify this pattern, I will make it as a tubular scarf so I don’t have a reverse side. Boy, that would take a lot of yarn, haha!! But it would be sooooooo pretty!


    A Great Big Book

    Great Big Knits book cover

    I just received this out of print book, “Great Big Knits” by Dawn French from an Amazon reseller, and I do love some of the cool design ideas. (Not to mention that I am a HUGE fan of both Dawn French and Lenny Henry!) Some of the sweaters are actually TOO BIG for me, but they give instructions in the book about how and where to reduce stitches to make the patterns a bit smaller. This book is definitely written with the “thinking knitter” in mind, but it definitely gives some great places to start when planning designs for fuller figures. I’m definitely feeling inspired.

  • Alison

    Alison's Poncho

    It’s been a while, so here she is. Alison. Poor, poor Alison. Regular readers might remember that I’ve been working on this poncho on and off since August of 2005, and it just refuses to be done. It’s getting little by little, bigger and WAY heavier, and each 50g ball is now producing slightly less than one inch of length. I’ve placed one of those tiny, open-ended stitch markers randomly at a point a couple of rows back, to indicate the last time I held it up to its recipient, and so I can have a point to measure from. I think I have 10 inches in length left to go. Yikes. I definitely don’t have enough of the original dye lot of green yarn (Cashmere Luxury Chunky, from AC Moore) so I’m going to have to add a thin white stripe before continuing with a different dye lot of the green, to break it up a bit. I still have hope that one day I will be able to photograph Alison herself wearing this beauty. I hope ponchos stay in style that long!

    It’s gotten so large that it is no longer a take-along knitting project, but I have a couple of scarves at the ready for that. Still, I wouldn’t be honest if I didn’t say I was neglecting it… it’s still a bit hard to knit on the projects I was working on before my dad died. There’s still a Santa hat in progress that I haven’t been able to bring myself to touch. But this poncho was his favorite; he asked about it every time I would visit and would always want to see it. He loved the braids and would say that maybe someday I should make him a braided Aran sweater. Maybe one day I will. An Aran for me. I’ll call it, “Dad.”

    Someday soon I will post the pattern for Alison. Many people have actually written and asked me for it, and I am flattered! The main reason I haven’t posted it thus far is that I haven’t gotten to the bottom yet, and I don’t quite know what I’m going to do when I get there! To fringe or not to fringe, that is the question. Right now I am leaning more toward wanting to do a ribbed bottom to mirror the ribbing at the neck. But I also know that if I get slightly impatient, a fringe is a good way to “cheat” and make the poncho feel a little longer than it is. We’ll see when I get there what I feel like doing. Right now, it’s anybody’s guess.

    I’m going to try to knit as much as I can of poor Alison this weekend. Maybe at the end of a couple of days there will be enough of a difference to post a new photo. (By the way, don’t put your money on that one, but I’m gonna try, nonetheless.)