YOP#10 Week 7

Cubbies!

The cubby system is starting to get filled. I can already tell I have grossly miscalculated how much yarn I need in my life and how little space I need to store it. The top row is basically just one tub of lace weight yarn. I have at least another but believe, due to what I am not seeing in the grays and whites, there has to be 2 tubs. I have already moved the reserved for a specific project onto the Original Cubby System and these are just for shopping my stash.

Calypso is waning but still being worked upon in spurts. Now that I have missed the deadline I am no longer feeling like I must work on it diligently. Of course my knitting time is being taken up with playing with yarn which is an altogether different hobby.

I also realize that I have been suffering from a mild case of the blahs or, as my youngest puts it, Meh. I didn’t mention this before but the same weekend that my middle child moved into his new digs my eldest, who is expecting, brought up all the reasons she was concerned about parental units visiting. Which I read as don’t come.

So, of course, the need to finish Calypso in a hurry so that I could resume wee garment knitting was taken away. And the whole rush to finish wee garments so that they would be ready for Labor Day -literally due on Labor Day!- is also taken away since mailing instead of dropping off. What is a week or two wait to mail a package? Does that sound horrid? Well regardless there is a big difference in knitting 3-6 month old sized outfits to hand over upon birth and mailing 3-6 month sized outfits to arrive within 3 months of birth. At least in my mind.

Clearly my knitting mojo has been lost again. And my organizational mojo is currently more entertaining. I am shopping for desk chairs and knitting chairs and thinking about clear bins so I can see what I have vs organza bags to group together yarns for a project vs impossible to find locally purple bins that will maximize stuffing yarns into cubbies.

As an apparent digression, my mom, who lives in Miami, has been in Chicago for several months visiting my sister and I just received a call that they will drop by next weekend to visit. My moving a few items from one room to the next and deciding where it should go before gathering another item is now not cutting it. I am going to have to hyperdrive the supreme mess created by combining all of the items in my office/youngest child who visits a weekend here or there bedroom/yarn storage room with all of my middle child’s left behind stuff; a larger more comfy bed, a couple of nightstands, bookshelf; items he thought youngest child would appreciate into a, if nothing else, clean and semi-tidy room. My close friends know that I am not particularly neat and tidy although I do think I am clean given the confines of lots of yarn and books which require more picking up for dusting than I do to be actually ‘clean.’

All of this is to say there will probably be zero knitting content at all next week and probably no yarn organizing either. My tag line of the past 16+ years will most definitely not be happening at Casa de Elka. Doesn’t keep me from wishing you all:

yarny days and knitterly evenings~ Elka

YOP#10 Week 2

Hey I am allowed to share progress shots for my test knit so hurray! Yarn arrived Monday and Tuesday I swatched, Wednesday I cast on, finished the ribbing as I was off work then ripped since I was under 100 stitches, Thursday I cast on again and ribbed, ribbed, ribbed. Friday night {about 11 pm} I ripped again since I was over in my stitch count and yesterday, Saturday, I cast on again and forced myself into another late night to just hit the color work part.

I have been ribbing for dayyyyyys. Days.

I did finish one item from the box and shared it with the group on Ravelry instead of posting here. I also added the yarns for Calypso Crop to box list since it is precariously plopped upon the box. You can see my color choices on Wednesday’s post since I did blog about having to rippity, rippity, rip.

THIS YARN ROCKS. I have frogged it, tinked it, reknit it multiple times now and it holds up like a champ. Also it is a total delight to work with. I honestly only mind the days of ribbing because I wanted to hit color work and see if my choices worked together. I just now ordered a ball of two more colors in case it doesn’t–the shop I ordered from did not have black or dark gray and adding those colors to mix is safe since they are neutrals. Onto my color work so as always…

Yarny days and knitterly evenings~ Elka

Lichen 3.0

Nancy Bush, as I am sure any knitter would agree, is a sock knitting queen.  I was lucky enough to take a class with her at Stitches Midwest over a decade ago and she is a real delight.  Her Folk Socks book was the first sock knitting book I ever purchased about 22 years ago now.  One would think all this fan girl talk would result in copious socks but any blog reader of mine will know I do not consider myself a sock knitter.  Tho I do knit socks.  Probably a lot more than I think I do considering my husband and myself plus my child all have socks.  It just doesn’t seem as if I am knitting them! Case in point Lichen from Knitting Vintage Socks:

Lichen

 Ignore the couch.

This is a basic 3/1 ribbed sock with an unusual heal and toe-or at least unusual for me since I usually work a short row heal and toe ala my other favorite sock pattern-Michelle’s Basic Socks.  Michelle’s are a 4/1 rib and was my go to sock pattern for a long time.  Lichen I knit twice in the span of a week way back when.  I knit myself a pair out of gray yarn and a pair that was made out of self striping yarn.  The self striping was for a gal who admired the first pair while I was at a women’s retreat so I whipped them out super super fast.  Plus retreat is code for lots of knitting time and no cooking, cleaning, children etc.  At the time {2006? 2007?} I posted about what a difference yarn choice can make and this will be another example.  I made this set out of Alpaca with a Twist yarn and I can already tell they are not going to last nearly as long as my Regia-ish {you know the Regia type of yarn} gray pair which is looking worn.  But they are cozy warm and I love them already.

More fun details.  I *believe* I started these when I finished Strokkur so Nov 2017.  I finished these yesterday so Thanksgiving 2018.  I am starting to think I should stop calling myself a knitter given that I so rarely knit.  But it was such a large part of my identity for so long I am struggling.  Ah well

Yarny days and knitterly evenings

YOP#6 Week 17

YOP6_Banner_perfect_lines_slightly_larger_medium

 

Has it really been 5 weeks?  I have been working half time -next week will be the third in a row–and I am kinda in a funk because of that.  I am sleeping late and then picking up a bit around the house instead of knitting.   I have, however finished some projects.  First up is the lovely tam I was working on called The West Wind designed by Lorraine Condotta of Twisted Traditions and Sheriff of Knittingham.

I realized while doing the finishing work, aka weaving in ends, how deeply I have been influenced by my early knitting years.  I recall, perhaps incorrectly, reading in an Elizabeth Zimmermann book to never ever knit in a knot.  Also it is wise to not carry the yarn up, or weave in colors before a change, in a striped item so that you could fiddle with the juncture to avoid the dreaded jog.  This was of course followed by various suggestions on how to avoid said jog.  So here I am with not too many ends needing tackling which I was dutifully weaving in when it struck me that the Grand Dame of fair isle knitting, Alice Starmore, mentioning that some knitters just knotted the ends together.  So that is what I did.  A combination of weaving and just knotting the ends together in the inside of tam.  I took several pictures:

Blocking

Blocking

 

When blocking tams I put the tam on a dinner plate and balance said plate over a smaller vase.  This way the ribbing doesn’t get blocked in a stretched out position.

I think the shaping for tam top is very clever.  Lorraine worked decreases organically into the leaf design of wheel:

Leaf Design on Tam Wheel

Leaf Design on Tam Wheel

 

Here is the wheel design itself:

Tam Wheel

Tam Wheel

Along the top of the last picture you can see a couple of gray thingies.  I volunteered to test knit a set of wrist warmers and a pair of fingerless mitts for Helen Gray Designs on Ravelry.  The first I did is called Forget me not wristwarmers.  I pulled out some discontinued yarn from Madil called Vanity and some scraps left over from fair isle knitting to come up with:

Forget me not wristwarmers

Forget me not wristwarmers

Ty really liked them and claimed them right away:

Tyler with wristwarmers

Tyler with wristwarmers

I then worked on a variation on Alice fingerless gloves for her and had a difficult time picking colors.  I find color a fascinating medium.  I was actually thinking about how sometimes I would see a garment in a magazine that was one of my ugh repulsive colors and not even notice the garment itself.  I am not sure if I am the only person who just doesn’t *see* something because of how it is presented but I suspect there are many others like me.

An even earlier knitting influence was Maggie Righetti.  The yarn shop I ambled into at age 20 when I picked up knitting again suggested it to me even above Knitting without Tears which I believe was my second knitting book.  Maggie has an entire chapter, one of the early ones, regarding the tricks magazines pulled to get you to knit ill fitting garments.  The whole golden sweater on curled up in golden chair blond model with golden fire flickering in background so all you had was an impression of cozy warmth but no real idea of how long or loose the sweater was–the sleeve length or neckline shaping etc.  This reassures me that my suspicions are correct.  We often, per Maggie,  fall for the staging and not the garment’s merits.

My color insecurity is also fed by early influences.  I am fully aware that I can knit a solid colored item in a different shade but when it comes to color work, fair isle in particular, I often am scared to mess with whatever perfection drew me towards the pattern in first place.  The Grand Dame herself supposedly stopped working with Rowan yarns because they discontinued colors, being a fashion driven yarn company, thereby ruining her vision of how something should look and sued others for using her name and designs when substituting, even in part, non AS branded yarns.  Ann Feitelson, whose color sensibilities tend to appeal to me more, cautions about substituting colors.  On pg 101 of my 1st edition hardback she writes:

I do not recommend substituting any colors for those specified.  Even shifting to an ever-so-slightly darker or ever-so-slightly lighter color may radically change the appearance of the patterns and the garment, creating either a strong horizontally striped  appearance and/or obscuring the pattern.

Followed by the encouragement to experiment.  Not sure how not recommending it and encouraging both work at same time but there you go.  My take away was don’t do it. :-/

Back to Helen Gray and her designs.  She presents us with fingerless mitts or wrist warmers that have a smidge of color work.  I felt it was perfect for experimentation.  But still I unknit and reknit my Alice variation mitts second guessing myself left and right.  In the end I think I did a fair job and encourage anybody at all interested in fair isle to pick up one of her patterns.  My youngest has claimed these and I finished the second one yesterday so photo only shows the one needed for testing purposes.:

Alice Mitt Variation

Alice Mitt Variation

I carefully examined how the designer had combined colors.  Her version had a wine red, red and then hot pink pop color for the center band and although I am sure I could have duplicated the colors with my shetland yarns I decided to use greens with a evergreen, teal and orange yellow pop color.  I didn’t have quite as lively a shade for my main color around so softened the outer band to a navy instead of black she used.   I did keep the avocado and seafoam colors tho and of the two I think the seafoam could have been done in something different.  Okay close up:

My colors on Alice Mitt Variation

My colors on Alice Mitt Variation

Whew what a long post.  3 finishes and discussion on my color angst….

As a technical thing I was unable to link to anything today.  Not sure what was going on but I will try to do links later.  Right now I am knitting socks and just kinda want to get to the soothing mindlessness of my stocking stitch tube 🙂

 

yarny days and knitterly evenings

Elka