Stuff from Knit Picks, that is. I’m becoming a slut for Knit Picks Kits. It’s true. Why, yesterday, these three babies found their way to my door:
Three Knit Picks Kits
They are the Maeve Hat and Mittens Kit, The Knitter’s Tool Bag Kit (in purple, of course!), and the Line By Line Mittens to Gloves Kit. I can hardly decide which to knit first! This is the year I am going to master the mitten. These patterns, I hope, will get me well on my way. The Knitter’s tote kit, by the way? It comes with the fabric to line the bag with. Way cool.
I don’t have an extra Rubbermaid tub yet but I do have an empty DVD bin on my side of the entertainment center, so all my kits are going in there. Wait! What’s this?
Cat in bin
For some reason, my cat loves to lick plastic bags, and there’s no shortage of plastic containing the knit kits in this drawer. I caught her in there the other day and so snapped this picture. My cat doesn’t love my yarn, she only cares about the bags it comes in.
So all week I’ve been working on this:
Noro Kureyon hat in progress
It’s a simple top-down hat made out of Noro Kureyon yarn, and I think I’m going to love it! I finally increased it to the size I want at the top and will knit for a couple of inches before decreasing to the size of my actual head. The end result, I hope, will be something sort of beret-shaped. Stay tuned on that!
Oh, and I wound yarn for a new project tonight. But it’s late, so I’ll have to talk about that tomorrow.
OMG Have You SEEN This Kid?
And if you liked that one, you GOTTA see this!
That’s all for now; I’m off to bed at a decent hour for once this week. What? It’s not a decent hour? Well poop. I’ll try again tomorrow.
I’m sorry if it seems I’ve been ignoring you lately. But you know? Sometimes it’s hard to know what to say.
You know I love you, right? It’s just that lately I’m having a hard time making steady progress on anything at all, and instead, my brain is on one of those crazy junkets where I’ve got a million ideas happening at once, which leads to lots of new projects getting started, but making real progress on nothing at all.
So, despite the new fair isle hat, and the new Noro hat, and the pink scarf that’s still screaming for attention from the bottom of my bag, now there’s this:
Lady Eleanor Entrelac Stole underway
It’s the Lady Eleanor Entrelac Stole from Scarf Style, a brilliant little book edited by Pam Allen a few years ago. I think nearly every knitter I know owns this book. I’ve been drooling over nearly every pattern in it for years, but, as per usual, I’ve never made anything from it. But you already know this about me, Blog. You know that I have scads of knitting books here, and that I continue to buy more, even though I don’t knit from them. Mostly. I will, however, say that knitting books give me lots of creative inspiration. So that makes them worth it. Right?
What I don’t understand, Blog, is why my knitting is making me so antsy lately. Why I can’t just stick to something and get it done. Why I can be so excited at the thought of so many knitting projects, and dreading starting them, all at once. And finishing a project? What’s that? We both know it’s something I rarely do.
(For the curious reader, I’m making my stole out of Silk Garden Chunky that I picked up at Stitches East last fall. I am making it with lots fewer repeats than the pattern calls for because the original yarn isn’t so thick. Plus, I’m finding that I don’t think the 10 skeins will go as far as I wish the would. So, I’m getting a good-sized scarf plus, if I’m lucky, a matching hat out of it. We’ll see.)
Could it be the weather? It’s been unseasonably chilly and gray here for the last couple of weeks. The kind of weather that makes me want to curl up under a blanket and sip cocoa and do nothing but knit all day. Which, since we’re talking about knitting, might seem like a good thing, except that in reality I don’t have time to hide under a blanket. Work is insanely busy, it’s middle school soccer season, it’s high school application time, and so on, and so on…. With the grayness of the sky I have not wanted to keep up with all of these other things. I’d really just rather knit, and sleep. Or sleep and knit. And the fact that I can’t have a life full of such self-indulgent luxuries? Would I be complaining if I said sometimes this just pisses me off?
So, I’d like to find joy in what knitting time I have. I’d like to finish something once in awhile, so I have something to show for my knitting time. Are you with me, Blog?
Great! Let’s kick this slump. Show it the door. Knitting is supposed to be fun! Now I just need to figure out what that is again.
Thanks for being here, Blog. It’s great to have someone to talk to.
Saturday September 12 was a big day for the Bowie Knitters. A really BIG day. It was our biggest group session ever. We had a really long table strung together, and we still ran out of room! I couldn’t even get everyone’s picture. It was crazy fun.
The word is getting out about us. We had lots of new visitors to our group, and everyone was a real delight to get to know. I hope they’ll all be back!
As usual, to see a bigger version of the photo, please click on the thumbnail!
Yvonne helps Lorna with a crochet pattern
Alice is working on a baby blanket
Trish starts her Lady Eleanor stole
Sue joined us for the first time
Christen works on her February Lady
Rhoda plugging away on her felted bag
Sylvia shows off her big needle shawl
Lots of new folks stopped by this time. Thanks to those who helped spread the word!
Heather is doing a sweater sleeve
Bravo Camille for crocheting a scarf!
Kristen is working on a new hat
Jenn is getting ready to do the sewing in of the sleeves on her sweater
Tammy shows a new knitter how to bind off
Anna came by to learn how to knit. She’s a natural!
Ileana is working on a shawl
Deb is working on a dishcloth
April came too… she was working on a shawl that day
You know, I never imagined when I started my little once a month knit group that it would ever take off like this. I almost got overwhelmed when I looked around me and realized how many wonderful new friends I’ve made over the last year or so. This has been a real blessing for me personally. It sure has changed my life for the better to be in such good company.
Uh oh. My power is flickering. I’d better finish this post before it evaporates. More knitting news tomorrow… I promise!
I love it when I’m all excited about my knitting! And if you have been putting up with me in recent weeks and months, you know there hasn’t been a whole lotta glee goin’ on here at the House of Trish Knits. But then last week, I decided that I needed to WAKE UP my knitting. So, I decided to give myself a challenge.
I’m knitting the Fair Isle Sampler Hat by Mary Jane Mucklestone. Click the picture to see how pretty, and wonderful, and fun and quirky it is. All of the things I love most about a hat! You’ll have to click that link to see the picture; it doesn’t belong to me. (Or, if you’re on Ravelry, look here. If you’re not on Ravelry, WHY NOT? Go There! Sign Up! You will not regret it.) The pattern first appeared in Interweave Knits in the Winter 2004 issue. I was barely knitting crooked garter stitch scarves back then, and I certainly didn’t own any knitting magazines. But, soon I was attracted to a pair of mittens in the magazine and bought it as a back issue. I almost overlooked the pattern, when once again I pulled the issue off my shelf to stare at those mittens, and BOOM! There it was. That Hat. That hat I had to have.
By the way, Mary Jane says it will soon be available as a kit from her website. Which is good, since the issue seems to be sold out or gone from the back issues collection available from Interweave Knits.
I tried to cast on all those teeny tiny stitches using Magic Loop on a long needle, but for some reason when I Magic Loop with fingering yarn it always looks terrible when I start. I tried again, and it still looked awful. And to say that I HATE starting a new project, well the cast-on, anyway? THAT would be putting it mildly. Especially when we’re talking about a lot of stitches. It takes me, like, for-EVER. So, I got an idea.
The pattern consists of lots of charts. Each representing a band of a different design, with all kinds of crazy colors. It is knit, typically, from the bottom up, starting with the ribbing and working up to the point at the top. Casting on was driving me MAD. And it looked awful every time I tried to join the round, with a huge ladder in between the first and last stitch. I am usually pretty good at dealing with this, but usually with fatter yarn.
So, I contacted the designer for reassurance. If I knit from the top DOWN, instead of the bottom UP, and read the charts from top to bottom instead of the other way, would it matter? Doing this meant I could start with a miniscule 6 or 8 stitches (I fudged the designer’s original counts until I increased to the designer’s original band of 20 stitches). Would this work? Several members of my knitting mail list and the designer herself reassured me that yes! Why not? Knitting is all about what works for the knitter and makes her happy, right? And I’d had just about enough of the knitting unhappy. So, as of a couple nights ago, I have this:
Fair Isle Sampler Hat beginning
I also had to take the original charts from the magazine, and scan them into my scanner, so I could blow up each one to a size I could actually see. I have eye tracking issues due to my disability and charts and I do not usually get along. So I blew them up to 200% and put each chart on a separate page. Then my daughter found a report cover for me and put them all into the cover so I have a whole notebook of charts. Charts that I can actually see and knit from with no problem, although with quite a lot of concentration. Still, I am loving the challenge!
Oh, but there is a bump in this happy tale:
darn that dropped stitch!
See it? My first dropped stitch in this project. I’m sure there will be many! But, this being my first for this project I wanted to hurry up and snap it for posterity before fixing it. It’s a good thing I have great lighting on my new computer desk now; I’m going to need it.
I’m still loving the project, dropped stitches and all. Perhaps my knitterly brain needed a little exercise!
Hi there! I know, I know… not very nice of me to be away from the blog for more than a week. But… I’ve been sick. Nothing terrible, really… but I did wind up missing several days of work this week and sitting around like a bump wishing I could be more productive. But, last weekend, we had an interim monthly gathering of the Bowie Borders Knit Group, and I do have a few photos to share! As usual, click to make with the bigger…
Two hands, tackling some knotty yarn together
Yvonne says, I’m making THIS!
Rhoda shows off her beautiful wavy scarf
Marie is making stuffed animals for charity
Ileana joined us today with her daughter
Heather and Jennifer show off their matching sister shrugs from Vogue
Dina brought some yarn that needed to be measured and balled up. Luckily, Heather had a yarn meter.
Our group is meeting again next week on September 12, in lieu of meeting this week on Labor Day Weekend. I’m already looking forward to it. We had quite a few people just drop by our table and ask if they could join us, so maybe we’ll have some new people next week. We also had a young girl spy our activities and she asked if someone would teach her to knit. Luckily there was some spare yarn and some extra needles, and before long, our young charge was knitting away. She went away with a piece of knitted fabric somewhat resembling a trapezoid, but it was HERS, and she made it, all by herself.
As for me, I’ve been knitting again, rather happily. I have photos and stories to share later this week.
That’s all for now; I promise I won’t wait more than a week to catch up with the blog next time. Happy knitting!
It’s late, especially today, but I just wanted to share this before bed:
Knit Happy mug
I got this adorable mug from Knitting Today earlier this week. In fact, I got several of them. They come in six colors, and of course I picked purple to show you. I don’t plan on using the mug for tea; I plan on keeping one on my desk at home, one on my desk at work, and giving the other three as gifts. The little sheep is adorable, and I love the saying on the front, “Knit Happy.”
The ironic thing is that I don’t feel like I’ve been knitting happy at all lately. I’m surrounded by yarn and a plethora of patterns and books, and everything is all neat and organized and I can actually see what I’ve got now. Except that now that it’s all neatly put away it’s like I don’t want to touch it. I wish I could just dump all my yarn out all around me and go diving for something fun. While I’m great at making the kind of mess something like that would involve, I’m not so good at putting it all away without help. So in the boxes it stays, and at times I think I forget what I have.
Maybe I should bite the bullet and go to my trusty box of Cascade 220, and ball up some yarn and knit a hat. Hats used to make me knit happy. But you know what? I haven’t made a hat in a looong time. Maybe that’s the cure. The hat I’m dying to make most is Vivian, by Lisa Cruse. The showier, the better. Big hat, huge flowers.
Or, cables? I have a fabulous pattern for a cabled scarf that came with some cashmere I bought at the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival. The cable pattern looks pretty complex, so I told myself I should practice it on something else before tackling the cashmere.
Or, Girasole? I know I mention that project a lot. But one advantage to that one is that the alpaca yarn I have for it is right behind me in my active projects bin, waiting. Maybe I should just cast on for that.
Tomorrow is an interim meeting of my knitting group. Our official meeting isn’t until September 12, but lots of folks have been itching to get together and knit. I’m going, and I guess I better decide by tomorrow what I’m going to knit.
Wish me luck deciding! I’ll check back in tomorrow.