Showing posts with label hey teach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hey teach. Show all posts
Monday, June 21, 2010
Hey Mom cardigan's done!
Only took me 30 days, but I got my Hey Teach! done, and the weather is still appropriate to wear it! Unlike my scary scabbard that I finished just as the weather warmed up to the point where the alpaca yarn made it much too warm to wear, sigh. My new cardigan should get a lot of use over the summer in the evenings when it gets cool outside from our ocean breezes (I have thin California native blood, I even got cold in Hawaii of all places!). Have I mentioned yet that I love Knitty, their patterns are fantastic and they provide them free of charge to us all, hooray (just gotta remember to click on their advertisers to keep the good stuff comin')! I am still kind of surprised that I was able to complete this so quickly, for me at least! I think I still have the summer of the ice blue bamboo shell in my head, that sucker took all summer to finish and it was not that complicated of a pattern. It was however, the first thing I made that was more complicated than a scarf or an afghan.
For my cardigan I used Knit Picks shine worsted in the serrano colorway on US 8 needles. I cast on all three pieces at once as I detest sewing seams and for this garment it didn't seem that necessary as it was cotton and would stretch (hopefully) as I wear it anyway. It came out a little shorter than I'd like but as I think it will stretch some while being worn I'm not too worried, I can just block it out a little bigger if wearing it doesn't get it to grow. I didn't have much trouble working the lace pattern over the decreases as some knitters have commented on as being troublesome on the Ravelry forums. For some reason I was able to wrap my head around it fairly easily with the help of the handy dandy lace chart (I am beginning to think I really, really like charted patterns!). Overall it was a fairly easy knit, just enough difficulty to keep it interesting but not so much that it required my undivided and total concentration. If you are looking for a nice summery cardigan, look no further this one is great! I was even able to get the buttons for my cardi on sale at Jo-Ann's, as all their buttons were half off, yea!
I really liked the yarn, nice and soft with a really lovely sheen, gee that's why they named it shine! As it is mostly cotton, 60% cotton and 40% Modal (beech fiber), it didn't give a whole lot but it was light years better than Sugar n' Cream (which I like for washcloths but not much else). I don't know how it will wash up and wear yet, but to knit with it, it does give off some fuzz that will end up on you, your hands, and unfortunately up your nose. I spent some time sneezing while knitting this sucker let me tell you! The finished garment does have some weight to it, I used approximately 8 1/2 balls of yarn so that is about 420 grams, just under 1 pound of fabric. It is pretty and soft and I'm thinking I will be enjoying this creation for years to come as long as I take good care of it.
Monday, June 14, 2010
Haruni, my oasis in the stockinette wastelands
Something that isn't stockinette, oh happy day! Having just finished the Twirly skirt for Lil' Miss (which she is prancing around the house in as I type!) it is time to cast on a new project that doesn't require miles of knit stitch. My new project of choice is the absolutely lovely Haruni shawl designed by Emily Ross for which I will use the fantastic new stroll tonals yarn in royalty by Knit Picks. As I am not sure just how long this sucker will take (I have never done a whole lace shawl before, or even a partial one for that matter!) and it is intended as a Christmas gift for Chatty-Cathy I decided to get started on it now.
First off I needed to wind the skein of yarn into a workable ball so I can actually knit with it and I thought you all would be very intrigued by my oh so fancy ball winding accessory (can you smell the sarcasm?). As I don't even have the luxury of willing little hands to hold my untwisted skein carefully, I draped it across their chair, ain't it fancy! Who knew that the family heirloom built for Mister Vonkysmeed's great grandfather would come into use someday as a skein holder for me?
Funnily enough, after complaining about doing too much stockinette in an earlier post, now it seems almost all of what I am doing is lace. My Hey Teach! has now progressed to the lacework section, and on Isabella I have started the all too brief interlude of the lace panel in the midst of miles of stockinette. So my Haruni that was cast on with the intention of being my oasis has very quickly become more of a quagmire rather than an oasis you could say! Anyway, for some reason I found the Haruni pattern totally terrifying, let me be blunt, it scared the crap out of me! But since I want to have it done in time for Christmas gift giving (did I mention that already?!), there was nothing left but to knuckle down and get started!
Now that I am a few rows into chart A on this sucker I wonder what my angst was all about? I am familiar with using charts, having knit and crocheted with them before, and I have used all of the stitches required before so nothing new there, plus the yarn and needles are familiar to me having used both before. Yet in spite of all this I was anxious to the point of sweaty palms while getting it started, why, I guess I'm just weird that way (or is that wired?!). Of course now that I have essentially said the pattern really isn't that difficult I am probably going to make some sort of foolish mistake and have to rip it all out, I just know it!
I think I will use lifelines as recommended by the knitters in the Beginning Lace Knitters group on Ravelry (can I just say how relieved and happy I am to have this resource if I come across any trouble whilst making this shawl?) as a way to preserve my sanity. When it comes to lace it seems to me that the difficulty factor comes in when you need to remember where you are in the pattern and being able to repeat that pattern correctly across an entire row of knitting, as I discovered with my Hey Teach! the other night. I performed the S2KP incorrectly, so ended up having to frog out 6 rows of knitting once I realized it would take more time (and much more patience than I could ever claim to have) to fix each error one by one rather than just going back to where I messed up in the first place. Maybe I should use a lifeline on that one too!
Here's to hoping I can get this Haruni finished and blocked in time for Christmas gift giving! I know, it's a long way off but I am nothing if not a worrywart...
Sunday, June 6, 2010
Stuck in a stockinette wasteland
That's right, in my infinite wisdom I have cast on three different projects that each have miles of stockinette I am required to knit. Currently on the needles are Isabella, Hey Teach!, and Twirly Skirt. What makes it even worse is that in wanting to make things easier on myself (and see how well that worked out!), I adjusted two of the three projects, Isabella and Twirly Skirt, to be knit in the round so all I am doing is the knit stitch, over and over until the coming of the Apocalypse (at least that's what it feels like!). Thankfully Hey Teach! gives me a little break as it is a button front cardigan so I am knitting it flat, one row knit one purl, although admittedly I am knitting the two front pieces and back piece all as one instead of in three seperate pieces so the rows seem to go on forever!
I'd give anything for some lace work or some fiddly cables right now, even some scary colorwork would be welcome. But no, I have to perform the knit stitch, ad nauseum. Theoretically I know it will be over eventually, but first I have to cross this boring desert of knit to either finish the item or progress to a far more interesting section of the project to work on.
Why not cast on a new project that has a more interesting stitch pattern you ask? Let me present Exhibit A, the Lacy Shell that took well over 3 months to finish. That may not seem like a lot to you, but I prefer to finish things in a more acceptable period of time (by my own standards, I am not judging anyone else's productivity here!) and this one kept getting put off with other projects so I instituted the 3 project rule (and I'm sticking to this one by gawd!) of no more than three fiber projects in progress at any one time. So for now I am in the hinterlands of stockinette, but I will cross this seemingly endless expanse of desert and move onto something more interesting. Something like the Haruni shawl I have planned, doesn't seem nearly so scary now that I am bored to tears. Note to self, in the future make sure to cast on different kinds of projects, something with cables or colorwork, lace, ribbing, anything but endless row upon row of stockinette!
Honorable Mentions:
hey teach,
humor,
Isabella,
knitting,
work in progress
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