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On the Needles

  • Striped Silky Wool Jacket
    started: October 8, 2007
  • Jade by Elsebeth Lavold
    started: November 6, 2007
  • Pomatomus Socks
    started: August 12, 2007
  • Lizard's Ridge
    started: September 14, 2006
  • Trellis from knitty.com
    started: September 6, 2006
  • Ribbon Short Sleeve Pullover
    started: August 28, 2006
  • Sarah's Surprise
    started: July 30, 2006 finished: August 26, 2006
  • Log Cabin Blanket
    started: July 8, 2006
  • Socks that Rock May kit
    started June 11, 2006
  • Audrey
    Rowan 35
  • Ravenna
    Lopi No. 24
  • Abfab Afghan
    Kit in Ivory for a wedding gift
  • Kiri Shawl
    All Tangled Up started: October 2005
  • Baby Bobbi Bear
  • Cable Lace Cardigan
    Vouge knitting s/s 2004

It's a joining thing

November 06, 2007

Mother, it is finished and waiting

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Finally after years of waiting I have finished my mother's sweater. I brought it in the car on my way to Montpelier Fall Fiber Festival during the weekend of festivals with just the collar and the seaming left to do. I was meeting my mother there and thought I could seam it up while watching the sheep dog trials. However the weather was extremely hot and dusty and sitting around with a whole sweater on my lap was out of the question. My mother, however, wasn't aware of how close to finished I was. She pulls me over to check out the pockets in a sweater hanging in one of the booths (not wanting to ask about her sweater outright), she points out cardigans but then as soon as I mention that it is almost finished -- just a row or two on the collar and lots of seaming -- she states that it is much too hot for a sweater today and she will gladly come to get it once the weather turns colder (she is nothing if not gracious after her needling and nagging).

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In past years I have given my mother flowers on my birthday since in my ego centric world it is my mother's day. This year I will present her with a sweater, just like the old sweater. Happy Mother's Day, Mom. Hopefully, she will agree to model it when she comes to pick it up (or when I drop it off). If not, I will have my photographer take some pictures so that I can do a summative post.

October 02, 2007

Almost finished with more abandoned knitting...

In an effort to finish some things up and put some order to my house, I have been rescuing abandoned knitting from various parts of the house and dedicating myself to finish things rather than start new things.  (Although while searching for matching yarn or previously knit parts I keep finding things that I want to start but then I imagine that I need the needles that are stuck in some piece of abandoned knitting.)  Well, two different people had asked about my mother's sweater in the past few months and with just the fronts between me and a finished sweater I figured I better get working on it.  The weather will soon be turning crisp and my mother will need a warm sweater for her walks out to the chicken house to gather eggs.Picture_442

I have finished the five pieces and now must work on the button bands, pocket edgings and collar.  I should be able to get to the seaming by tomorrow and will easily be done before the Montpelier Sheep Dog Trials and fiber festival where I will see my mother.  Now if only I can find the buttons that my mother bought for this at MDSW year before last.Picture_452

February 23, 2007

There are two things in life for which we are never truely prepared...

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Not too much to speak of happening here at 40 shades.  I am plugging away on the Log Cabin Blanket and am back  on my random self imposed schedule of 1 square per week which would have me finished with 51 blocks by today (I am currently half way through 52).  But there is knitting that I should be doing and have been putting off.  My sister called with big news...

100_1113 Yes, she is having twins. That is twice the baby sweater knitting. That changes everything. I started looking at patterns, cute coordinating intarsia sweaters , complicated cabled arans, sweet little frilly things. Who was I kidding? We all know that I am deadline challenged when it comes to baby knitting and these girls are due in May (does that make them geminis?) So I decided that I would make cute stripey sweaters of my own design. And because I am anti baby colors, I have chosen greens and oranges. Now to get knitting...100_1111

November 30, 2006

November 30: yet more on baby sweaters

Well, I will go with popular opinion and use the Celtic knot buttons on the yellow haiku.  I was swayed by the argument of ease of buttoning on squirmy children and maybe I will decorate a plain sweater with the whimsical buttons without function.

I was distracted from seaming the green trellis which I will get to this weekend (and then need to decide on buttons -- maybe I should purchase more Celtic knots?).  I have a baby shower in 9 days and I hadn't figured on having to knit for this baby.  I cast on for a Baby Kimono from the Mason Dixon knitting book.  I am more than half done with only a few hours of knitting although I worry if a baby wrist will fit through a cuff made from a 4" sleeve.  I am knitting with some variegated cotton that I bought on my early forays into e-bay -- I got a huge lot at a great price but it is a questionable yarn as far as my likes and sensibilities.  If this works out I may make a slew of these to use up the bounty.

I left my photo cable at work yesterday (and had training in Richmond today) so I will post a picture in the morning.

November 27, 2006

November 27: Button, button

I am not thrilled with how the sleeves are set in but I wasn't going to rip them and knit them again so I just sewed them in one last time. They are a little better, but not much. So I went to my local Hancock fabrics to find buttons, however, I seem to be the most indecisive person ever on this issue. So I will leave it up to you dear readers. Should I go with something whimsical, befitting a wee bairn, 100_0863100_0871 or something a bit more sophisticated. 100_0866 100_0877

Here are close ups of those last two.100_0869 100_0873Excuse the crappy photography (I took the photos at the local Panera next to Hancock fabrics and the lighting left something to be desired) and leave your opinions on which buttons I should go with in the comments. (That means all of you lurkers, too). Is it dinosaurs, hearts and stars, Celtic knots or those metal swirls?

November 02, 2006

November 2: trellis

It snowed in Colorado and there is a little girl who is likely to get cold if I don't hurry up and finish her sweater.  You have seen the back:Trellis_edited_1

And I did the two sleeves at the same time and have completed them:Trellissleeves

Trellisbackandsleeves I am working on the left front and hope to finish it and the maybe the right front by Monday.  Then I can set to seaming it.  Trellisleft

October 02, 2006

Everyone is having babies...

It is a long established fact here at 40shades that I am not overly concerned with finishing things.  A sweater can sit in plastic bags with all the pieces knit, for years before it is seamed.  Take Salt Peanuts for example, almost two years before I got around to sewing it up.  And I still haven't sewn the collar down so that it is instantly wearable.  And that is one that I actually finished -- there are others out there languishing in the stash extra bed room just waiting for some mattress stitch. 

Remember Haiku?  The baby is going on three months and all it needs is a little bit of seaming before she can wear it.

hmm, there is mention of three baby sweaters needed in that post.  This accounts for one, Haiku accounts for two, and the third?  The baby is 5 months old, she lives in Colorado, it gets cold in Colorado.  I have been knitting Trellis.  I am finished with the back and two inches on each sleeve...Trellis_edited

Looks like I have my work cut out for me and we won't even mention all the other babies who haven't made an appearance yet.

September 05, 2006

A very simple sweater

The first thing (aside from gauge swatches) I ever knit and finished was a sweater.  Sure lots of people don't start off knitting sweaters but I have always been rather intrepid about my knitting and couldn't see any reason not to jump right in with a sweater.  It was the 80's and I heard plenty of horror stories about sweaters with 9 foot sleeves or two different lengths, etc.  But, I carefully followed the pattern and the one thing my grandmother taught me was to make a gauge swatch and use it.  So I finished a sweater late in 1989 and gave it to my mother.  Firstsweater_11

It is a simple cardigan with a rounded collar and pockets from a Brunswick (they were bought out by Paton's several years ago) pattern leaflet called Classic Keepsakes (copyright 1988).  The pattern was one that had directions for three different weights of yarn and was straight forward.  I knit it in a worsted weight wool that was tweedy and fun from a LYS in Alexandria that has long since closed and has hand made ceramic buttons.

My mother has loved this sweater and been careful not to wear it out gardening and to treat it with care but it is 17 years old.  She requested that I knit her a new sweater almost 2 years ago.  We were at the Montpelier Sheep Dog Trials and Wool Festival (which seems to have changed its name to Fall Fiber Festival) and I was looking at some yarn from Carodan Farm that I thought was well priced.  She said, "How about I buy this yarn for the sweater I want you to knit me?"  I think she even let me pick the color.  Well, I let it sit in my stash for quite some time until earlier this summer when I went to visit my sister and use her swift and ball winder, I took it with me.Carodanfarmyarn

Well, I have been buying patterns and making suggestions to my mother for two years and have finally come to realize, she doesn't want me to knit her another sweater.  She wants me to knit her that sweater again.  Instead of continuing to search for another acceptable pattern, I will knit her the sweater she wants -- if I want to knit something fun, I will make it for me.

I felt a little guilty that I have had this yarn for almost two years now so I started swatching.Classicswatches

There are three different needle sizes represented in those two swatches and none of them come close to the worsted or bulky pattern gauges.  With needles any smaller the fabric would be too stiff, any larger and it would be too floppy and loose knit.  What is a Goldilocks to do?  Yes, math.  I choose the fabric that I liked best and figured out the number of stitches I needed to cast on for the dimensions I wanted and with 9 (x3) sizes and very little shaping I was able to find a size with instructions  that matched my new calculations (saving me from having to rewrite the whole pattern).  The knitting is going rather fast.  I cast on late on September 1st and by afternoon on the 2nd I had finished the first skein of yarn.Classicback

As I am currently suffering from startitis, I will introduce you to another project tomorrow.  Don't worry I am still on track (ahead even) with the Log Cabin Blanket  I completed square 12 today.

August 29, 2006

knitted gifts

Vadress4

Vadress3_edited As soon as my niece opened her dress, she threw it on -- on top of her other dress and continued to jump on the bed with her sister who had donned her peacock poncho.Peacockponcho

Peacockponcho2 It was deemed a hit.  Her first comment on putting it on was, "it is just like on the computer".  This appreciation of knit gifts must run in the family because my sister put on her socks and wore them to dinner.Sarahssock6

She may have been tempted to wear the surprise slipper clogs but they were still a bit damp from felting and may need another cycle in the washer.  Here they are before felting with my feet for reference (remember that I have freakishly small feet).Sarahssurprise3

After gifting 4 knitted objects in one weekend I immediately cast on for something new when I got home.  Something for me, of course, in green.  More on that later this week.

August 21, 2006

Another birthday gift...

With my visit to celebrate my sister's and her girls' birthdays quickly approaching, I realized I better make a decision on the edging for my youngest niece's dress. I was a little worried that I would not have enough of the raspberry colored yarn so I kept the edging simple and finished with just a few yards to spare Vadressyarn_1 and I sewed on the buttons.Vadressbuttons

Vadress

  • Pattern:  loosely based on Lion Brand Child's Knitted Jumper
  • yarn:  King Tut Cotton in Lt Pink (1085) and Raspberry (1972) 2 balls of each color
  • needles and notions: size 6 needles, 4 buttons (these are handmade buttons that I bought on my trip to Vermont)
  • size:  hopefully to fit a 2 year old (it is about 18 inches from shoulder to hem and about 26 or so inches where the skirt meets the bib)
  • started:  June 20, 2006
  • finished:  August 20, 2006  (I finished everything but the edging on the bib before I left from Vermont but since I couldn't decide on the edging it has been sitting around on the coffee table while I debated picot cast off, crochet edge, etc)
  • Comments:  This was a quick knit but I am a little worried about the weight of the cotton and whether it will quickly pull out of shape hanging from the buttons.  For the edging, I decided on picking up stitches, knitting a row and then casting off.  However, rather than picking up stitches around the whole thing, I picked up one section at a time and then cast off before moving on to the next section.

August 2008

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Needs Finishing

  • Via Diagonale
    from knitty.com Needs handles and lining
  • Aztec Sun Vest
    This needs the sewing and a little embroidery