Tag: acatherinenoon

  • Opera Gloves

    So, I joined Weight Watchers. I decided to make milestones for the celebrations, and I’m celebrating my first 5%! I’m so excited. I purchased two skeins of Sock Ease™ yarn from Lion Brand in “Red Hots.” It’s beautiful!

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    I will say it\’s more orange than I was thinking it would be (which isn\’t bad, just surprised me). It\’s very Autumnal in flavor and I think will look really nice with summer-tanned skin (not that I tan a whole heckuva lot, but hey).

    I’m going to make a pair of opera gloves that are fingerless. I’m thinking I’ll have partial fingers go to about the middle knuckle, then have the glove go all the way up to cover the elbow and end in some pretty ruffles. I’m just swatching right now, but I’ll post more as the design comes together in my head.

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    These are double-pointed needles from Brittany, size US2 (2.75 MM). I want to like them, but I find them too bendy and broke one while making a sock. I\’m going to get some Crystal Palace (first I\’ll swatch with my CP 3\’s and see how it looks, I may just use them). I am also planning to try some metal needles for the really small sizes, 4 and below, because the natural ones just seem to be too fragile when they\’re that thin.

  • Box Loff!

    As some of you know, I\’ve recently started playing with fabric boxes. Here is the bottom of my latest creation, Earth Meets Sky.

    The bottom of the box has a lip, visible in the picture; the lid will fit over the entire piece and be flush against the lip.

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    Here is a detail of the box. I used a simple overdye yarn so I could concentrate on the construction; but next time I plan to use more embroidery design. I\’d like to make boxes in other sizes, as well as a drawer liner for my desk at home (to house things like paper clips and stuff).

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    Several people have asked me how the box is put together. Here is an image of the bottom being worked. First the designs are laid in, and then the box is sewn up. You use simple plastic canvass from Michael\’s or JoAnn\’s (which has the benefit of being cheap!) and can use any yarn or thread you like. This yarn is a simple worsted weight (double DK) that cost about $2.00 USD a skein (which would make a LOT of boxes – smile). The pattern is a simple tent-stitch, I just varied the rows by covering one or two squares.

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  • Fuzzy Shawl

    My lovely sister in law gave me yarn for Christmas (which is a little like giving crack to an addict, but there you go). Two of the balls are this really fuzzy tribble stuff that have a variegated black and grey colorway with little silver sparkles. It’s fun stuff. I decided to make a triangle shawl with it, since it’s a little scratchy, that way I can wear it over other clothing.

    Here’s the progress so far. I’m going to have to switch to circular needles shortly, since I’m running out of room on these. As you can see from the tip, I was adding four stitches every other row – a make one on each edge and a yarn over in the middle once the lace pattern started. I decided to leave off the make one, so I don’t run out of depth (since I only have the two balls). It makes a pleasing sort of rounded heart edge on the point that I like.

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    This detail picture shows the lacy bit, which is a little silly with such a textured yarn but I like it. Bonus points if you can spot the error!

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  • The Story Shawl

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    My husband and I went on an Outward Bound Dogsledding expedition in 2006. When we got back, I went shopping with a friend of mine in Wisconsin and found some incredible silk and mohair yarn that looked like sunrise on snow. Still under the influence of the Boundary Waters and our experiences there, I set to work on a shawl that would tell our story.

    The border is eight stitches, one for each person in the party. I chose a seed stitch to symbolize life and growing. Just like in a garden, people can come together and learn to support each other in the same space but not taking the other’s light or nutrients. We form symbiotic relationships.

    I added a row of lace yarn-overs, the holes symbolizing the fact that when we came together, we weren’t a team. We were eight separate individuals, but not one unit. We separated into two teams of four; three students with an instructor. One day the students were with the dogsled, one day they were skiing. The instructors had a two-day cycle, two days on the sled, two days on skis. I chose a basketweave pattern of K4, P4, four rows each, every so often going for eight rows to symbolize the instructors.

    At one point in the middle of knitting, when I had about a hundred stitches on the needles, I decided to try an alternate basketweave stitch that I found in a book, thinking it was the “right” way to do it.

    It looked totally wrong.

    Faced with the decision of unknitting three rows of over a hundred stitches, it occurred to me that this was a perfect metaphor for the middle portion of an expedition. You know your mates well enough to identify their quirks and likes, and well enough for little frictions to pop up. After all, you’re adults enclosed in a vast and threatening wilderness with these other individuals for hours at a time.

    It was exactly right.

    I left the stitches in and completed the shawl. Eight rows from the end I dropped the yarn-overs, symbolizing that by the time we arrived back at Home Place, we were a team.

    The bind-off is done in a sewing needle bind-off that took about six hours to complete. Incredibly detailed, it nonetheless creates a soft, supple edge that doesn’t look at all like a bound-off edge. It’s springy and slender and adds to the beauty of the garment.

    This is one of the most expensive and time consuming projects I’ve designed and I share it with you so you can see what can be done with two sticks, some yarn, and an idea.

  • Fingerless Gloves

    I came across a wonderful pattern for fingerless gloves in a book by Melanie Falick, Weekend Knitting. Here it is from her website with some images you can browse:

    http://www.melaniefalickbooks.com/weekend-knitting-gallery/

    I used some bulky wool from Knitpicks, in a lovely dusky rose color. I got them from a class I took a couple years ago, so these gloves are a good thing to use when you have stash and no project.

    My hands are larger than the model, though, so I cast on 30. The first one I knit I used the directions for the thumb and didn’t check before I bound off; it turns out to be too tight. I apparently have really muscular hands. (We won’t say fat, will we?) The other one I used six stitches and it fits just fine.

    This first shot is of the gloves flat on the table. They’re not very attractive this way, surprisingly, though you can see the garter rib stitch very well.

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    For this second shot, I used one hand with the camera and wore the glove on my right hand, which is coincidentally the glove where I modified the thumb.

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    I really like the purl bind off. It’s simple but pretty and makes a nice line of stitches that match the cast on. I will definitely be making these again. If I make them longer, to go up to the elbow, I’ll need to modify them to fit over the muscles in my forearm (here is where your gauge swatch will come in handy). (Shush. Of COURSE you gauge swatch.)

  • Weave-It!

    I inherited a new old tool from my mother\’s estate called a Weave-It. I spent a large portion of today playing with it.

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    Before I show you my work, check out this website for how the experts do it:

    http://store.buxtonbrook.com/instruction.aspx

    Okay. Here is the first swatch I did. I couldn\’t get the edges to lock, so it\’s not stable; but I like the look. It\’s Lion Brand Homespun in a colorway I don\’t recall from a couple years ago. The weaving came out a lot flatter than the knitted version looks.

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    This next one is done on the smaller loom, 2×2. I had the same problem with the edgings.

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    So after looking at the website, I realized I wasn\’t catching the edge threads properly. It does come with an instruction book, but I have a very difficult time going from 2-D to 3-D, and that really was the case here. The website was extremely helpful, and I was able to do this:

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    So I got out some scrap cotton yarn and…

    it broke.

    🙁

    Moral of that story, use better yarn. I was only an inch from the end!

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    Not even an inch! But my tension was REALLY tight, which is something the instructions tell you to watch out for – and boy, they ain\’t kiddin!

    But I had fun. I think if I got faster, I\’d be tempted to play more, but if today is any indication, it\’s slow going. I\’m much faster knitting (which, to be fair, I am no novice at), and even crochet (which, to be fair, I\’m quite the novice at).

    Happy crafting!

  • Unravelling…

    I just joined up on Ravelry, a wonderful site that is an enormous global community of fiber geeks. (We have a community!) I don\’t have much up yet, but give me time…

  • Sewing Lessons, Here I Come!

    I have decided that one of my holiday gifts to myself will be sewing lessons! Those of you who know me, know that this is a little silly, since it will be the third, yes THIRD, time I have taken it. Well, third time\’s the charm!

    I will be studying with Veronica Brackett, one of the best teachers ever! (And I mean that!) She is awesome. An incredible seamstress, she is patient and kind and an excellent instructor. I hope to actually finish class this time, and emerge successfully with a skirt out the other end!

    I will be making a Vogue Pattern, and am very excited.

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  • Crochet Victory!

    I have successfully figured out crochet! I got a great book, one of the Interweave Press Harmony Guides (which I highly recommend, by the way).

    Harmony Guides: Basic Crochet Stitches 250 Stitches to Crochet, by Erika Knight.

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    First I did several swatches, experimenting with Single, Double, Half-Double, and Treble crochet stitches. Then I dug out some red yarn I had left over from a project and got to work. It\’s a combination of Half-Double and Treble stitches and turned into a scarf for Michael.
    Here it is in its entirety:

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    And here is a stitch detail:

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  • New Beginnings for the Holidays!

    I\’m so excited! I just signed up for sewing lessons with Vogue Fabrics, instructor Veronica Brackett. She\’s incredible. Best teacher ever!

    I\’m going to take Beginning Sewing, which will teach me how to make a skirt for a suit. I can\’t wait!

  • Happy Birthday To Me!

    I\’m so excited! I\’m getting a dress form for my birthday! Her name is Leticia and she\’s a Singer. She\’s arriving next week, but here\’s a picture so you can get excited too!

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  • Weird Goofy Tree Ornaments

    My knitting guild, The Windy City Knitting Guild, volunteered at the Museum of Modern Ice festival in February, 2008. We put together a giant craft studio, with knitting and other handicrafts. Some of the many things they had available were pipe cleaners, beads, and little satiny balls that look like tree ornaments. I got to thinking. When I was little, we used those little triangle beads to make wreath-shaped ornaments… what if…?

    Figure 1: Okay, it looks goofy. But it\’s the only one of its kind in the world, so be nice to it. It\’s lonely.

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    Figure 2: Side detail of lonely ornament of doom. The beads came out kind of blury, but the little satiny ornament thingies are clear. I mean, don\’t they remind you of ornaments?

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