January 2007

Junebug

This little guy was actually my second FO of 2007, but it was a surprise that had to be mailed pretty far away, so I didn’t want to post anything until he was safely home.

Bug in a Flower

Pattern: Junebug, from Jess Hutchison’s Unusual Toys for You to Knit and Enjoy
Needles: Clover DPNs, size US7
Yarn: Scraps of Brown Sheep Cotton Fleece, LB CottonEase, and KP Main Line, for washability
Started: January 9, 2007
Finished: Januray 11, 2007

The above picture doesn’t show his little I-cord antennae, but that’s fine with me. I was super excited to finally get to use some safety eyes, because I love how they look! I used bigger eyes than the pattern calls for, since that’s all I had, but I like how they give him a slightly bug-eyed look.

This is the third pattern I’ve knit from that booklet (first was Spherey, and then the still unfinished Odd Fellows), and they’ve all been fantastic. Now I just have to keep knitting them, because I’ve got a huge bag of fiberfill to use up, and I’ve only put a small dent into it.

Book Reviews
Finished Objects
Knitting

Comments (5)

Permalink

Green Socks

You may have noticed that I’m not really a sock knitter. This might have something to do with the fact that, although I have completed three pairs of socks, none of them really fit properly. Despite this, I do occasionally buy sock yarn, and I got some lovely green sock yarn as a graduation present to myself last May. It’s been sitting in my stash since then, just looking pretty, but since knitbloggers right and left have been showing off their green socks, I thought I may as well start a pair, too.

Green Sock in Progress

This beautiful yarn is Leprechaun by All Things Heather, and it’s my favorite kind of handpainted yarn, since it’s all shades of one color and it’s not pooling. Of course, it will be interesting to see when I actually finish these, since stockinette in the round on size US1 needles is kind of slow going. The good news is, the sock fits (so far)!

In other news, I did manage to organize my knitting and sewing stuff this weekend, but there was no sunshine today, so no pictures. I should have some soon, though, and in the meantime, I’ll keep on knitting my socks (maybe).

Knitting
Promising Starts
Socks

Comments (3)

Permalink

Just In Case You Missed It

Adamas Shawl with Mistake Highlighted

I thought I would highlight the mistake. In that circle, there’s a blob of knitting where there’s supposed to be a YO or two. But I still love it.

I’m pretty excited about my plans for the weekend; in addition to knitting and leaving my apartment occasionally, I plan to reorganize my crafty corner. I had it pretty well in hand before Christmas, but there is now an explosion of yarn and sewing notions, and I’ve discovered that if I want to have continuing access to any of those sewing supplies, I’ve got to reorganize. Plus, I still have some bare walls, and who says organization can’t be synonymous with decoration? You just have to get a little creative with it, which is what I intend to do this weekend. If the weather is nice enough for photography, I will have pictures of the reorganized area to share soon. And if I don’t? Feel free to bug me about whether or not I finished the job.

In other news, I took my computer back in to be fixed (again!) so that between the two of us, Heather and I might manage to have one laptop that can be considered “portable” (and also, more than one that is “functioning”). Fortunately, I have a job that allows me to read knitting blogs and post here when I want to, so I don’t have to go through withdrawal or anything.

This week has been a little bit hectic at work, but I’m still really enjoying my job, as I expected I would. I know my boss has been worried that I get lonely here alone all day, or that I’m disappointed that I’m not meeting a lot of people through work, but that’s so not the case. I feel like I get more done when I’m alone, because even though I take occasional blog reading breaks, there’s no one here to talk with. Plus, I’ve been told in the past that I can be a bit of a control freak (what?! not everyone has a specific way of arranging glasses in a cabinet?), and being able to organize everything exactly the way I want to without having to worry about anyone else messing it up is really nice.

Adamas Shawl
Knitting
Lace
Rambling

Comments (2)

Permalink

Finished- Adamas Shawl

Here it is (thank you sunny sky on my lunch hour!):

Finished Red Adamas Shawl

My second finished Adamas Shawl.

Project details:
• Pattern by Miriam Felton
• Yarn: JaggerSpun Zephyr Wool Silk in Cinnabar, from Sarah’s Yarns, an online shop I would highly recommend. And also, I highly recommend the yarn, it’s one of my favorites.
• Needles: KnitPicks Options circulars, size US 5

I started this shawl last October, ended up ripping it out at some point in late November, and restarted it early in December. Then I stopped working on it so that I could finish up some Christmas knitting, and it became my January project for the UFO Resurrection Challenge. I finished and blocked it this weekend, and since it’s not for me, I’ll be sending it on it’s merry way soon.

Of course, observant lace knitters will notice that there is a mistake visible just below the center of the photo. I noticed it while I was knitting, and fudged it as best I could, but at that point, my lifeline was a couple of repeats down, and I couldn’t face ripping back that much lace, especially as the rows get longer the closer you are to finishing the shawl. For the less observant out there, I managed to catch the mistake (completely unintentionally) in the close up photo I took.

Adamas Mistake

Did you catch it? While I don’t think any of the lace I’ve turned out has been technically perfect, even an error this small will not be tolerated in the next big piece of lace I’m planning… but more on that later. For now, the great light made me giddy this afternoon (even if it was 29ºF), so I have another picture to share. Seriously, I don’t think this yarn has ever photographed so well, what with the sheen coming off of the silk and the whole red being nearly impossible to photograph accurately thing. So here’s the shawl draped over an armrest. I love the way blocking makes the lace so airy!

Drapey Adamas Shawl

Adamas Shawl
Finished Objects
Knitting
Lace
UFO Resurrection Challenge

Comments (7)

Permalink

Busy Weekend

This has totally been the weekend of finishing things! Of course, that means it was also the weekend of watching TV, and it was unfortunately the weekend of having a bit of a cold and pretty much sitting on the couch for way too long. So, I give you the weekend in movies and knits (and a crochet, too, for good measure).

We start with The Two Towers Platinum Extended Edition, which is a very long movie. This produced a lovely crocheted coaster, as well as a knit hat.

Crocheted Coaster

Here we have a single crocheted coaster. I used KP Shine Sport in some bright pink I had lying around, and made a double crochet circle with a single crochet edging. See, I still crochet! I only made one, because I’m taking it to work to put on my desk. As I’m the only one there, I only need one coaster, right?

As that only accounts for 15 of 223 minutes, I finished off the movie by making a hat out of Rowan Tapestry, a single-ply yarn made of 70% wool, 30% soy fiber. Being a native Iowan, I naturally love soy and soy products (except for tofu, and soy “milk,” and roasted soybeans), so I had to get some of this yarn, and I got colorway SH 171. Because that’s meaningful.

Rowan Tapestry Hat in Progress

Of course, the only picture I got is of the hat in progress. I’m planning a matching scarf, so this yarn will be appearing again on this blog. For the hat, I just made a garter stitch rectangle and sewed it up to make a hat that stripes vertically.

After those two FOs, I devoted myself wholeheartedly to finishing the red Adamas shawl, my very first project for the UFO Resurrection Challenge. Of course, it’s not blocked yet, but I have summarized the last of the knitting below.

I modified the pattern, only repeating the main chart 12 times before doing the edging chart, which means that this weekend, I had to do two pattern repeats, the edging, and the bind off. That’s a total of 42 32 rows, which in most patterns isn’t that much. With a lace shawl that grows as you knit it, however, these forty thirty-two rows take a very long time. Measured in the inimitable unit of time known as television, they took this long: Return of the Jedi, The Truman Show, Groundhog Day, Dances With Wolves, Ghostbusters, What a Girl Wants (yes, I’ve seen this movie… twice), half of Footloose, and two hour-long episodes of Mythbusters.

And having admitted that, I feel kind of pathetic. But the upside is this:

Adamas Shawl Pre-Blocking

Now all I have to do is block it and go to bed, so that I can finish sleeping off my cold before work tomorrow.

Adamas Shawl
Finished Objects
Knitting
Megan Crochets
UFO Resurrection Challenge

Comments (3)

Permalink