Trish Knits.com

Category: blog

  • I’m In with the In Crowd!

    Wow! At about this time yesterday, after more than two months of waiting, I finally received my Ravelry invitation! I’ve only begun to scratch the surface of all that this wonderful tool can do. It has a way to help you catalog and track your projects, track your stash, catalog your books, needles and other tools, and share in projects with others who might be working on the same thing.

    A quick search showed me that there are about 5 other people so far who are from my town that are Ravelry members. I don’t know any of them, except one girl who I know I went to college with, but I don’t think she remembers me. Maybe I will contact them and suggest a knit-in at our local Borders. There is actually a Borders group that meets on Wednesday nights but I can’t go, so I’m looking for some Saturday people.

    Adorable Hats!

    ittybitty.jpg
    I just got the book Itty Bitty Hats this week. This book is adorable! I definitely will be making a few things from the book. Did I mention that ANOTHER co-worker is expecting? There’s no way I can do another baby blanket. But, I do hope that a few cute baby hats will do the trick. Wish me luck! I might even get to reuse some of my yarn from the baby blanket, but instead, I think I sense some balls of KnitPicks Shine coming my way. (Yes, they are calling me!)

    I had an absolutely great time knitting with Rhoda this weekend. Guess what she brought for show and tell? The new KnitPicks Harmony Needles! Ooooooh my! They certainly are pretty! I hope I can restrain myself all the way until Christmas! Kelley, what have you done to me now?? We enjoyed a pizza for lunch and then knitted while listening to some of my favorite podcasts. Then the power went out. For no reason at all, I might add. Go figure.

  • Down to the Last Stripe

    Me working on the baby blanket

    Yay! I’m starting the last stripe of my baby blanket. Finally! My daughter decided that she needed to snap this photo of me the other day, and is insisting that I put it on my blog. So here it is, with full photo credit to Diana. But, boy… I sure am tired at seeing that fat person in those photos! Who is she, anyway? Someone who wants to be done knitting a baby blanket, that’s who!

    What was I thinking, anyway, doing such a large project? I think this confirms for me that I am a small project kind of gal. I’m fine with that.

    I am still trying to decide whether the blanket needs an edging. I probably will, to increase the amount of blue in the pattern, since the baby is a boy. Now another co-worker is pregnant so I think next time I will do a pile of baby hats and socks. The baby is due at Christmas and is a girl. Yay, one of each to knit for this year. How fun!


    Cable-y Goodness

    Cables Volume 1: The Basics book cover

    Yesterday I received the book, Cables Volume 1: The Basics by Janet Szabo. I love this book! Ok, I think I’m a book ho. But seriously. Still. This is a good one. If you love cables like I do, or a shameless fan of Janet’s work, as I am, Go. Now.

    The book is chock full of photos and very clear instructions. The photos are black and white, which I think is a good thing, because sometimes color can be distracting in cables. So it’s really easy to see the work. She also discusses cabling without a cable needle right up front, which is how I do it, and I think that’s a very useful thing. Makes cables go a lot faster! Each chapter talks about different types of cables with photos and instructions in charts and words, and also gives you challenges to try other cabling experiments. There’s even a chapter on designing your own cables. How cool!

    So look what I found when I opened the book:

    Janet Szabo signed my book

    Wow. I wasn’t expecting a SIGNED copy! It says, “Patricia, may all your cables cross the right way!” But hey, even if they don’t, there’s a section in the book on fixing cables.

    If Volume 1 is this good, I already can’t wait for Volume 2!

  • Must. Restrain. Self. NOW!

    Knitpicks harmony needles

    Have you SEEN these? These are the new Knit Picks Options Harmony Needles. I just can’t believe how beautiful they are. You might have heard by now that I love rainbow-y, colorful-y things? Help me! (Oh, and see how pointy-licious they are? Wow…)

    I have already asked for these for Christmas. Until then I must maintain my resolve and NOT be tempted to buy!

    I already love my KnitPicks Metal Needles, so much so that they are probably my favorite needles of all. But wow. Colorful? AND wooden? You know, there are times when slick, metal needles are just too slippery. So, I NEED these, right? Oh, yessssssssssssssssssss…

    I shall wait. Until Christmas. Christmas is good.

    Meanwhile I will continue slogging away on my rainbow stripey baby blanket. I’m so close to being done on my main knitting that I can taste it. I’m in the middle of my second-to-last stripe, and then I have to weave in the ends! Then there’s the question of the border. should it have one, or should I leave it? I don’t know that I have decided for sure either way yet.

    Happy knitting weekend!

  • I Have This Little Hat…

    Blue crocheted hat with brim

    I bought this hat quite a number of years ago at a local craft fair. The lady who sold it to me said it is made of plain old Red Heart yarn and it is crocheted. I loved it so much I immediately set out to emulate it, hence my start of the love of making hats! I never quite achieved the same thickness with the hats I tried, but I never used Red Heart, either. Perhaps if I had used a stiffer yarn and even smaller hook. It is made with two strands together.

    Well, I don’t crochet anymore and I have yet to find a knitting pattern that produces this stiff of a fabric without felting. But I am going to try to do it. I am sure it can be done.

    I like this hat because it spent about the last 5 years crumpled up at the bottom of our family hat and glove crate in the hall closet. A few punches and it pretty much went right back in shape. My felted hats, on the other hand, need another trip in the hot sink to be wearable again. (This year they got balled up in the hat crate… sigh…)

    The first question is of course how to attain the flat top shape, which requires a bit more thought with knitting than with crochet. I posted yesterday to two of my knitting communities, KnitTalk and KnitHatsNow. I’ve received quite a few tips so far.

    blue crocheted hat with brim

    • Linda suggests that I knit an I-cord tube of 8 stitches until the stitches don’t have a ladder anymore, then switch to working yarn and begin increasing in multiples of 8 stitches. Depending on how and where I do the increases, the top of the hat could look like a spiral, or it could look like a wheel with spokes. I’ll have to see which I like.
    • Carol pointed me to a pattern online for a hat with a brim. This one doesn’t quite have the shaping I want, but it is a cute hat!
    • Rita pointed me to Emily Ocker’s Cast On, illustrated by Theresa Stenersen, whose Techniques with Theresa articles are a staple at Knitty.com. This cast on looks really helpful for the type of hat I am planning to try and I think I will use this technique. Theresa’s articles and tips are always so clear and I love them.
    • .

    • Bonnie then mentioned this round pinwheel blanket pattern by Genia. Wow, the knitting world is small — Genia is the kind lady who taught my daughter Diana to knit. This pattern shows another way to do the increases to achieve a flat circle.

    Wow, so many options! Of course. Knitting is like that. That way, there are many ways of achieving a desired result, so I will play around and see what works best for me. Thanks, everyone! (Sorry for the blurry photos; it was my first attempt at doing a self portrait, a la Wendy Johnson, by staring in the bathroom mirror. My mirror glass is very wavy!)

  • New Pathways for Sock Knitters (and Why You MUST Buy This Book!)

    New Pathways for Sock Knitters Book Cover

    I recently added this book to my collection: New Pathways for Sock Knitters: Book One by Cat Bordhi. To say that I LOVE this book is putting it mildly. I don’t own the “Socks Soar” book because many of the reviews at the time said that it sort of assumes you know a thing or two about making socks, which I don’t. So I was a bit scared of making that investment.

    I’ve never knit a sock in my life. But I’m about to. As soon as the stripey baby blanket is done. And this book couldn’t be any clearer. It shows step by step, very clearly, how socks are constructed. Not only that, it shows, with clear diagrams, how to set up the stitches on DPNs or circs, so that you can dive right in with your favorite knitting method. This is just the book I’ve been waiting for. It is not prejudiced about what method of knitting you choose and even embraces the Magic Loop. This means, for me, socks are finally do-able. Yay!

    The book starts out with some very simple baby socks, so you can get the idea of making them without having to put lots of time or effort into them. And it builds from there. There are a series of sock “architectures” that show you how to build a sock in different ways, and each one contains lots of variations, aiming at showing you that the possibilities are endless. Wow. If you have never knit socks before, this book is like taking a very detailed sock class. If you have knit socks before, this book still has lots to offer. Check it out!

    I’ve been doing lots of knitting at the pool this weekend. Our swim club closes for the season after today. I’ll be sad to say goodbye to summer, but I am stocked up with lots of yarn and many new projects to lessen the blow. I just started a 10-row orange stripe, which I think will be my second to last stripe. I’ll end with a pink stripe, just like I started, and then, all those ends! I’ll be busy with a pair of scissors and a darning needle for a while. Then I’ll have to decide whether the blankie needs a border. I am leaning toward a crocheted edge, despite the fact that I avoid crochet as much as possible (aggravates my carpal tunnel), but we shall see. Attached I-cord might also work but I can’t decide! Whatever I choose it will have to be fairly inconspicuous as a border so it doesn’t compete with the bright stripes. Wish me luck with deciding. Got any suggestions? Drop me a note in the comments. Thanks!

  • Earning My Badge!

    trish knits in tomorrowland

    See? Here I am, knitting in TomorrowLand of the Magic Kingdom in Orlando. I had this one ball of yarn with me everywhere I went, and believe me, people giggled when they saw me knitting in the nearly 100-degree heat! I was practicing the Flame Chevron stitch pattern from Barbara Walker’s A Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns, and yes, on many occasions I found myself talking to people about how, yes, you really can knit anywhere! And I did! My knitting helped me to maintain my sanity while waiting in long lines, or while waiting for people who were waiting in long lines. Isn’t that what Disney is about… lots of waiting? Haha. I didn’t mind one bit!

    (This pic was actually taken on August 20, 2007.) I hope to have more real time knitting content to share before the weekend is up!)