Friday, December 25, 2009
I'm enjoying the calm of the morning and knitting...on Christmas gifts. I'm not finished. Not even close.
My plans were to knit four pairs of socks. I have one pair done, as well as half of the second pair, and almost half of the third pair. The yarn for the fourth pair did not even get wound into a cake.
BUT...the gifts are wrapped, and the holubtsi is cooked. The shortbread is baked and the house is decorated. I'm guessing that people will wait for their socks.
Merry Christmas to all. I hope you have a day filled with love and Laughter.
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Within a day of posting my SOS, I had a message back from Anna that she had the book I was looking for.
I had also sent out a couple of messages on Ravelry to people who had knit projects out of the book. I got positive replies from ladies in Arizona and Edmonton. I have not met either one of these ladies but they were both willing to trust that I would knit the sweater and then return their books.
I also got a message from Donna. She had found the link where I could order the whole kit.
I have no excuses now for not casting on on January 1.
Friday, December 18, 2009
I am on a mission. I decided that with the Olympics being in Canada this year, I should knit a sweater to wear while watching the games. No, I'm not going to Vancouver. I will watch my TV and enjoy the games while knitting.
Of course, the pattern that I have decided to knit is out of print. I could knit another Dale of Norway sweater but I have decided that the only sweater I want to do is the Whistler Sweater*.
So I am on a search for the pattern. I checked sources on Ravelry...no luck.
I sent messages to other knitters who knit projects out of the book....still waiting for replies.
My only other hope is that someone who reads this will have a copy of the book. Or know someone who has the book.
* I couldn't get the link to work. Dale of Norway Commemorative Collection #85001
Wednesday, December 09, 2009
eggnog-
"Oh the weather outside is frightful
But the fire is so delightful
And since we've no place to go,
Let it Snow! Let it snow! Let it snow!"
I hate winter.
I don't like the cold weather or feeling like a pumpkin when I put on enough layers to keep warm.
I hate being stuck in traffic for three and a half hours when the trip home should only have taken 25 minutes.
I hate the crowded malls and the bozos who don't realise that if traffic rules make sense on the roads, then those same rules are logical when navigating through the mall.
Slower walkers should keep to the right to keep the passing lanes free. Don't come to a dead stop unless you want me to run into your ankles with my shopping cart. Don't stop in the middle of the road to chit chat. Look before you change lanes and SIGNAL!
Rant over.
This miserable cold weather is good for knitting. For several years now, my rule has been that if the thermometer hits -15, it's too cold to go out. There have been many days this past week when I have deemed it too cold and miserable to go out. I have had some good knitting days. I finished Mystic Star.
It's too bad that shawls are easier to wear during warmer weather.
Friday, December 04, 2009
You haven't dropped any hints for Christmas. Wandering through the malls looking for the perfect gift without any guidelines is seriously cutting into my knitting time. I have socks to knit before December 25 and I am starting to panic.
So to preserve the last bit of sanity, I have come to the conclusion that you would like a new knitting bag wrapped up under the tree. And that you would not complain at all, if that bag was filled with yarn...silk and cashmere.
I have also come to realise that the only thing that you hate more than shopping is returning gifts so your Christmas gift might just land in my sewing room. So, because I am a thoughtful loving wife, I will make sure that I pick colours that I like.
Love, M
Sunday, November 15, 2009
I am home from my retreat* and once again, I find that there are projects that I took to work on that never made it out of my bin.
I did start this hat...formerly known as the End Paper Mitts. I'm thinking that if this had been the only project I had taken, I would have been finished it.
Friday, November 13, 2009
Yesterday, while I was out knitting with my friends, I found myself in a dire predicament. I ran out of knitting.
It started innocently enough. I ripped out my 10 stitch blanket...my second start at the 10 stitch blanket. This is not a difficult project. I had slipped the stitches purlwise instead of knitwise and it changed the whole look of the blanket. It had to go.
I ripped out my End Paper mitts. They have been hibernating for a year or two and I just wasn't feeling the love for them. They were the next project to be ripped out.
I was left with my Dorothy Gale socks. I knit on the first sock until I realised that I had left the pattern at home.
I was out of knitting. There was nothing I could do except go home. (we will totally ignore the fact that I was knitting in a yarn store and that I could have started a new project...which I just realised now)
This leads me to the subject of this post. I am packing to go on a two day retreat. I will be away from the city and any yarn shops, without my car, and I will have to knit only only the projects I have managed to stuff in my Rubbermaid tote.
Keeping mind that this is only a two day retreat, I have packed
- Ladybug Socks (they might get ripped out and turned into Nutkins)
- Dorothy Gale Socks (pattern is packed)
- Fern Leaf Shawl
- Mystic Light Shawl
- 10 stitch blanket (started for the third time...I think I've finally gotten the hang of it
- Lady Eleanor
- Raining Cats and Dogs Socks
- the hat that used to be End Paper Mitts
I was also going to pack Mystic Roses and the Crown Prince Shawl but then I remembered that I was only going to be gone for two days and that I had to leave room for the wine, chocolate and chips.
Monday, November 09, 2009
This is
A) The Breakfast of Champions?
b) the lunch blue plate special?
c) an elegant desert after the evening's dining?
d) a nice light snack?
e) leftovers from the previous night's potluck?
It's a trick question because the correct answer is all of the above.
Pumpkin Cobbler... a great recipe*
And I wonder why my jeans are tight!
*send me a message on Ravelry with your real address and I'll send the recipe as an attachment. No more typing than is absolutely necessary.
Friday, October 30, 2009
More Math?
It Ain't gonna happin! All possible titles for this post.
We headed up to Edmonton on Wednesday. I was sure that I was going to have 2 and half hours uninterrupted knitting time on the way there and then again on Thursday. We were heading up to visit a relative in the hospital and since they only allowed two visitors at a time, I would have more knitting time in the waiting room. There would be nothing to prevent me from finishing Dracula's Bride.
As we drove past Balzac, I pulled out my knitting to discover that I had left the pattern at home. I knew exactly where it was. Mr. B asked if I wanted to go home to get the pattern but I realised that I didn't want to add an hour onto the total driving time.
I was disappointed but I since there were only seven rows, I was pretty sure I could finish them when I got home.
Last night three more rows were done and I woke up early this morning to finish the last four rows. It was still doable. Finish knitting before 9, wash and block it and it would be ready to wear to Make 1's Halloween party at 5.
There was this little doubt that kept bothering me. The pattern had no instructions for the final edge. I had printed the original pattern fours year earlier and there were comments on the Yahoo group that the last clue was just blocking instructions. I still didn't feel comfortable. I downloaded the pattern and my worst fears were realised. There was another whole chart that I had been missing. 28 more rows. 17948 more stitches.
I may come up with some crazy ideas, but I do know when to admit defeat.
And what did I do while on my way up to Edmonton? Started a new sock of course. I thought I was packing too many projects for a quick trip, but it pays to have multiple projects around at all times.
edited to correct the math...again.
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Monday, October 26, 2009
I am an obsessed knitter but not a fast one. So when I decided that I should knit a shawl for Halloween, I realised that I was making an unwise ...no, an insane decision..
I started anyway...last Saturday. Yes, on the 17 of October, I thought I would have enough time to knit a shawl. Finished measurements 84 X 41. Total stitches (not including the ones that I knit twice) are 62,156.
At midnight, I had knit 46224 stitches at least once.
74% of the shawl is complete.
How much time did I spend figuring out the math? Too much! I must get back to knitting now. It's a busy week ahead and I didn't account for blocking time.
Warning -Rant ahead
Does anyone else believe that if the powers that be want us all to get flu shots, that they shouldn't make it so difficult?
Four flu clinics for a city with a population of over a million?
The addresses of the clinics were listed in the paper but if you wanted to know the times that they were open, you had to go on-line. How many people don't have access to computers?
If I go and stand in line at 6:00, will the doors close before I get to the front of the line at 8:00?
*edited to correct the math!
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Monday, October 19, 2009
Early Saturday morning, I finished knitting Nefertiti. Normally, I would have blocked it and then taken a artistic shot with it draped around a manikin or at least over the railing on the deck.
Instead, it is being sent to the bad knitting basket.
When I started this wrap, I thought that I had the perfect yarn. I loved the color and while it was hand dyed, I thought that the variegation in it would not detract from the overall design.
I started knitting and all was well until I got to the widest part of the wrap. Then the colors started to pool. Lucy urged me to rip it out but I though that it would be work out.
I hoped that somehow, magically, bad knitting would turn into good knitting. It didn't. I continued knitting. The pooling continued.
I don't mind pooling. I usually like to see how the spots of color line up with each other and make big spots of color. Unfortunately, the color that was most prevalent was...you guessed it...purple.
The plan is to now dye the wrap. Spinknit said that I should kettle dye it teal, and since she is the dying goddess that dyed the yarn in the first place, I would be smart to listen to her advice.
I'm going to postpone the decision for awhile.
I have started a new shawl. Dracula's Bride is a shawl that I originally stared a few years ago when it was published as a Mystery Shawl. I ripped it out when I realised that I didn't like the beads that I had chosen or the fact that I hadn't mirrored it. I also was disappointed that it didn't have any bats on it since it was called a Halloween mystery shawl.
If you don't see me for the next two weeks. it's because I'm home, knitting. If you do see me, it's because I've realised that once again, this was a really silly idea.
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
I didn't think that I had much time to knit but then I realised that I had completed not one but two sweaters...large sweaters.
This is my Camelot Coat....also known as Spamalot. It was knit longer than it needed to be and then fulled in the dryer. Fulling is always a scary proposition. Many, many hours of knitting can be shrunk beyond hope in minutes. Fortunately, that was not the case with this sweater. Fulling it made the stitches tighter and the fabric warmer.
There is one more button to be sewn onto it. I forgot that I had knit 7 buttonholes instead of 6, went back to Make 1, bought another button and then put it someplace safe. I will find it eventually.
I have two sweaters to wear now that the weather has turned cooler . It's almost as if I had planned for things to turn out this way.
I didn't. I started both sweaters with the idea that I would finish them eventually....next year even. I'm glad my plan was altered.
We had a wedding. Some elements were traditional,
Last Thursday, I decided that I needed to knit a sweater for my Muffin, and bought the yarn.
Friday, I borrowed the pattern and people told me I was crazy (big surprise there). Friday night we had the rehearsal dinner at my house.
Saturday was the wedding. I thought about taking my knitting but realised that it would not be a good idea.
Sunday morning we had a brunch at the house and said goodbye to the out-of-town rellies.
Sunday night. I finally got to start the sweater.
Monday. Stupid cell phones gave up the ghost and we spent valuable knitting time sitting in the Telus store.
Tuesday morning.
We left for the airport at 9:30
Friday, September 18, 2009
We've all run into it at one time or another, the knitting project that seems like it will never end. I am working on not one, but two black hole projects.
This is a top down sweater in which the number of stitches increased every sixth row.
I knit. I measured. I knit and knit and knit. When I measured the length again, it was still the same length. I had started new balls of yarn and increased the number of stitches, but the length still seemed to not be growing.
I had to resort to putting a pin in on Tuesday morning. By the end of the day, I had proof that I had accomplished something.
Another pin was attached to my knitting on Wednesday morning. I could see progress and was motivated to continue.
I followed the advice of my knitting buddies and knit longer than the pattern said to. It was good advice.
Around the same time that the Swing Coat was started, I fell victim to peer pressure and started Camelot. I thought it was a good idea.
I didn't realise how big this sweater was.
There is a ton of Stocking stitch in this sweater and a shitload of seaming.
I can see the light at the end of the tunnel and am pretty sure that by the time the weather turns cold, I will have two spiffy new sweaters to keep the chill out.
And if mine looks as good as this one does when it's finished, I won't care if I'm warm.
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Thursday, September 10, 2009
I have decided to give away my old circular needles to my SIL but I don't think that throwing them into a bag with a needle gauge is a really good idea. If I had kept all the individual cases, I could just include them, but in a previous organising binge, I was sure I wouldn't need them.
They currently reside in pencil cases that are linked together with binder rings. I have written the size of the needles on the outside of each pencil case. While there is room for all the needles and the dpns in the pencil cases, I'm not sure if I want to give them away too. It has been a good system but it is really too big to carry around.
My Addis and ebony needles are in a Lexie Barnes circular needle case and it is packed. One day the zipper is going to burst and there is going to be knitting needle vomit all over...and I mean all over everything.
Has anyone out there tried the 'Circular Solution'? Is it something that looks better than it actually is?
I need the perfect organizational system? Does it exist?
Monday, August 24, 2009
Recently, a lady came into make 1 yarns where several of my shawls are on display. She said she wanted to make a wrap so Bess suggested that she look at the many shawls that are hanging around the store and that perhaps she could fine inspiration in one of them.
The reply? "Oh well, yes, but they're not very inspiring because they are all machine made."
My automatic response when I heard of the conversation was to laugh. When I relayed the story to others, I got different responses.
Some people also thought it was funny.
Some people thought it was insulting to have hand knitting compared to machine knitting.
Others thought that I should take it as a compliment that she thought my tension was so even that it could only be knit by a machine.
I actually had a knitting machine for a period of time. I bought it at a friend's garage sale, tried it a couple of times and hid it in the closet. After it collected dust for four years, I sold it to another friend. *
The only way I enjoy knitting is with two needles (or 1 or 4 as the project may dictate) not with a hundred hooks in a frame.
I'm not sure how I feel about the individuals who can't tell the difference between hand and machine knitting.
Creideamh (cre-div is the Gaelic word for Faith) designed by Renee Livingstone for Woolgirl Embrace the Lace Club
Hand knit in Miss Babs Yearning in the Sandstone colourway.
*The knitting machine is in a new closet. It still isn't being knit on.
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
We knit for the Guinness book of World Records. (900 knitters continuously knitting for 15 minutes straight) That's the Tsarina of Socks sitting beside Trish.
And of course, we shopped. We bought yarn. We bought more yarn. And just in case our stashes suddenly disappeared while we were gone, we bought more yarn.
I also found some other treasures.
The perfect stitch markers. This is a great idea for markers. They also had markers for the left and right decreases.
And just for fun, I bought a bracelet.
It's almost as hard to get a good picture of your hand as it is to get a good picture of socks that you are wearing.
There have been all kinds of rumours floating around for the past week or so. Mainly, that there will be another Sock Summit but not next year. The location may be moved...to Toronto?
Portland was the perfect location. The Convention center is huge. There are many hotels nearby. There is a direct flight from Calgary to Portland and driving home was the perfect length of time to get one sock knit.
The only thing that was missing? Next time we have to convince a few more friends that they need to join us.
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
I don't believe that there was another shooter on the grassy knoll on that November Day in Dallis back in '63.
I don't believe that Neil Armstrong took his "giant leap for mankind" on a sound stage in Hollywood.
And I don't believe that 9-11 was an inside job.
I am, however, becoming very suspicious that there is plot against me. People from near and far are conspiring against me in the most nefarious way.
Anyone who knows me, even for a short period of time, realises that I don't like the colour purple. I don't wear purple clothes. I don't knit with purple yarn. I don't even put grape jelly on my toast. It's just too purple.
But is there really a plot against me? The evidence will prove it.
March - My STR sock kit arrived. Fraggle socks could have been red or lime green.
Nope...purple.
My favorite size of needles to knit socks with has always been 2.5mm. Sure, Signature Needle Arts makes wonderful needles and I love knitting with them.
but did they have to make the 2.5mm needles purple?
I heard that the Plucky Knitter is a wonderful indi-dyer. In June I decided to join her lace club so I could see for myself the goodness that is Plucky. Just last week the skein of 'Vintage Glass' came to my door. 900 yards of purple single ply.
Perhaps it's all a coincidence.
Not when the people that I see often, in my own city, are in on the plot too.
I finally got my hands on an elusive skein of Wollmeise in a lovely shade of green. It was gorgeous. I was asked if I would trade it and since I was trading a superwash yarn for a 80/20 yarn I thought it would be a good trade.
Who knew that Petit Poison #5 dark was ...you guessed it ...purple.
I gave up. I ran away to Sock Summit where I avoided any and all yarns with even the slightest hit of lavender, violet, or aubergine.
But the mailman had delivered a package to my door while I was gone. The first sock from the Peanuts sock club had arrived.
Happiness - Schnappiness. The purplest yarn that I have ever seen. It couldn't be more purple. If there was such a thing as a neon purple this is it.
I will not give up. I will not fold. I will continue in my quest to keep my stash purple free.
But maybe, just maybe, 'Men in Black' really do exist.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Monday, July 20, 2009
Monday, July 13, 2009
You can also find yarn.
Buffalo Gold. 40% Bison down, 20% cashmere, 20% silk 15% Tencel. Soft squishy yarn in laceweight. I think it's destined to be the Heartland shawl....the one with all the hoofprints on it....a perfect match.
Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Hello from Oklahoma...we’re here, and funny enough, we heard those words during the first few minutes of the stampede parade from a cowboy on his horse! We enjoyed watching the floats and big horses go by, and Carson made Grandpa’s day when he was dancing to the bagpipes! Heather treated us to a Tim's coffee (which I've been dreaming about for 6 months), and tim bits ('cake') for Carson...leave it to Auntie to get him hopped up on sugar!!! We’ve also made it to a pancake breakfast where C charmed the line-ups with his dancing! Paige has been smiling so much, she must be a Canadian at heart! She is sleeping a lot, which I can’t complain about, and she rolled over for the first time just the other day! I think Carson reallllllly impressed his Uncle B when he sang that the "pirates on the bus go yar,yar,yar!". Both Grandparents have been playing hard, and due for some time to sleep!! So many things to do while we’re here, including a bus ride, the zoo, Riley park, Nose Hill...and of course relax and put our feet up!
Kari
PS. no time to edit video today, so hopefully I can add it tomorrow!!
Saturday, July 04, 2009
Tonight it rained again.
My Rainbow socks are finished.
They are the first socks from the Wizard of Oz Sock club.
They took longer to knit than I thought they would. Originally, I started with 2.5 needles. They were the perfect project to take to a guild meeting. I had the pattern memorized and I was past the heel so I could knit without worrying about making a mistake. I was confident that I wouldn't need to rip out the sock the morning after the meeting.
What I hadn't considered in all my careful plans was that everyone I was sitting with was going to tell me that the socks were knit too loosely and that I should rip them out. I had the whole leg done. I was past the heel. There was no reasoning with my fellow knitters. Good Grief, before I knew it, Lucy had pulled out the needles and I was ripping the whole sock back...back to the beginning.
I started again with 2mm needles.
I'm not feeling the love for these socks. I agree that they had to be knit at a smaller gauge, but I liked the pattern of the yarn more when it was knit on the 2.5 needles. They will wear longer than a minute and a half but the colours are all mixed up. The short row heel keeps the pattern of the yarn more consistent but I like the way a round heel fits. The toe is just plain weird but it fits with the rest of the sock.
If there's a pot of gold at the end of this rainbow, I haven't found it yet.
The 10 days just before the Stampede are some of the longest.
For those of us who enter our projects in the competition, the days drag on. We wait anxiously until Sneak-a-Peak so we can find out who won in the various categories. Will there be a red ribbon beside our stitching? A blue ribbon beside the socks we knit? We are the ones who are waiting at 6:00 for the doors to open, pacing, impatiently waiting.
The 10 days before Stampede are also very long days for the volunteers on the Creative Arts and Crafts Committee.
It starts the last Wednesday in June when people line up to enter their projects. Invariably there are mix ups with the computer registrations, projects that have been entered in incorrect categories, Artists who didn't read the books and who have to be told that their projects are ineligible for one reason or another.
The space is in such a disarray, it doesn't seem as though it will ever be ready in time.
Before 8:00 that night, all the entries will have been delivered to Hall D. Over the next two days, Judges will arrive, and every item will be examined.
The Volunteers continue. You might get a day off for Canada Day but the displays must be ready and there are no days off for Volunteers.
Finally, on July 2, at 6:00, the doors open.
We race, past the vegi-matics and the sham-wows.
There, in the middle, are my socks.
And there's my shawl.
The Committee works on. They are the people who are walking around the displays constantly cleaning the fingerprints off the glass. They are also the first one's to hear complaints about the displays or disagreements with Judging.
When you go down to check out the display, tip your hat to the ladies with the spray bottles. Once again, they have done an amazing job.
* Thank you SpinKnit for the pictures of the display. I haven't been down to the grounds yet. It's on the calendar for next Sunday!