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Short & Boxy

I haven’t been taking too many pictures lately, and blogging without pictures seems kind of lame.  But it isn’t like I haven’t been busy!

I am teaching the Topdown Set-In Sleeve Sweater class again (I taught it for the first time in the fall) – 2 groups, one on Thursday nights here at my home, and the other on Saturday mornings down at Uptown Woolery in Chelan.  I set it up as a 5-week series, although we are taking a break over Thanksgiving week.  With her permission, I am basing it on Karen Alfke’s Unpattern, although in the course of teaching it the first time, I came up with an alternate approach to planning and knitting the set-in sleeve cap.  By the way, these are knit in one piece from the top down – NO SEWING.  I love that.

Here’s a sweater I knit along with my first class – I used 8 skeins of Grignasco “Alaska” which I bought from a friend at a stash reduction sale several years ago.  It is a long discontinued yarn, so there was no chance of getting any more, and it was a close-run thing.  I had about 18″ (yes, inches) of yarn left when I was done!

Top-down Set-in Sleeve Sweater in Grignasco "Alaska"

I think Wilma would have liked it – she was fond of “short and boxy” sweaters!  And by the way, that is MY sleeve cap, not the Unpattern one.

We had a little bit of snow yesterday, and it was beautiful this morning when the sun first came up.

 

 

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Lochinver finished

It’s done, the hand of the knitted fabric feels great, and it fits as well as you can expect from a drop-shoulder design.  The extreme taper to the sleeves seems a little odd, but I will wear it for a while before deciding if any adjustments are needed:

I found these 3 buttons in my stash and they are perfect.  I don’t plan on buttoning/unbuttoning as it pulls over my head just fine.  But they make a nice decorative finish to the neckline:

I’m entering it in the county fair next week in the “Fleece to Finished Item” category.

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Lochinver progress

I’m in the home stretch on the Lochinver sweater from Alice Starmore’s Fishermen’s Sweaters.  Here it is with the body, collar and one sleeve done:

I have modified the sleeve patterning from the pattern as written.  In the book version, she alternates pattern bands with plain stockinette stitch sections.  After looking at pictures of finished “Lochinvers” on Ravelry, I wasn’t crazy about the look.  I also looked in some of my books on traditional fishermen’s sweaters of England and Scotland.  They tended to have patterning at the top of the sleeve (ending either above or below the elbow) then finish with plain stockinette stitch before the ribbing.  I think this was because they tended to snag and wear more on the lower arm – these were working sweaters, after all.  It would be easier to tear out and re-knit the lower part of the sleeve this way, to keep the sweater going.

Anyway, after the first pattern band where you decrease away the underarm gusset, I continued with 3 of the body charts and the same 8 rows between them as in the body, making for double purl bands between patterns.  Had to keep track of the decreases every 3 rows but that wasn’t so bad.  Then finished with a short section of stockinette and the final ribbing.  I was able to try it on to get the sleeve length just right for me, which is always nice.

Hopefully I will be done with this by next week – block and sew on the 3 buttons for the collar – and post one final picture!

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Last week we spent 3 nights out at Lake Quinault at our friends’ cabin resort:  Lochaerie Resort on the north shore, in the Olympic National Park (see link in sidebar).  The occasion was a fund-raising bike ride around the lake (31 miles if you make it all the way) for the Quinault Cancer Fund.  I believe this was the 22nd annual ride!  There were 10 of us plus our hosts:

who moved there last year after retirement and spent the wettest winter in recent memory (which is saying a lot, since this is the rainforest we are talking about) tearing down and rebuilding the main house, while living in one of the cabins.  But it is substantially done and they are moved in now.  It’s a fabulous house:

The bedrooms are on the top floor and Rick and I got to stay in the guest room in the main house.  The view is magnificent out to the lake, and down on the cabins below:

On Friday Rick and I drove out to the ocean (only about 45 minutes from Lochaerie).  We went for a little beach hike at Beach 4, just north of Kalaloch.  It was a beautiful day and we hadn’t been out to the Washington coast for quite a long time.   So nice to see and smell the ocean.

trail to Beach 4

looking north up the beach

Tide was low so we had tidepools!

Saturday was the actual bike ride, and we had a perfect day for it – sunny but not hot.  We made it about 20 miles, over to the Rainforest Resort on the south shore, lunch on the lawn and the “sag wagon” back to Lochaerie.  That’s what we managed last year, as well, and our behinds were just as sore and legs as weary as last year, too.  But it was fun!

Here’s some of the group having wine/beer/appetizers after the ride:

They all like to cook, so our potluck meals were delicious and I came home with 2 new recipes.

While there, I finished the shawl I have been knitting out of handspun wool & silk.  It’s a pattern from the internet called Bell Pattern Shawl.   Just got pictures today:

One of my pet peeves about triangular shawls is that the ends don’t drape nicely but want to head off towards the side.  In an attempt to avoid this, I added two extra repeats of the Bell Pattern just at each end, using short rows, so the first repeat spans 8 “Bells” at each end, and the second repeat only the 4 outer “Bells” at each end.  Kind of hard to describe, but here is a photo:

short row shaping at end of Bell Pattern Shawl

I think it worked, as you can see in the first photo above.  The points hang straight down instead of pointing off to the sides.  I am quite pleased with how this turned out, actually.  The pattern was suitable for this rather rustic yarn with lots of flecks of silk in it – it didn’t show regular lace patterning well at all (I know, I tried…).  It was easy but not boring to knit.  The size is just right for wearing over a shirt in the evening.  And, I only had about 2 feet of my handspun yarn left when done!

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What, me wadmal?

The Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers Guild has an annual “challenge” project, due in April of each year.  Usually the challenge is to weave something in a particular weave structure (2 years ago it was “overshot”).  This year it is more of a fabric type – wadmal.  This is a woven fabric that has been felted so the weave structure is no longer apparent.  Often it is used for apparel (jackets etc) or it can be made into mitts or slippers.  Usually it is woven as yardage, loosely, in plain weave or twill and it is the color choice and final treatment of the fabric by machine felting that gives it the final appearance.

So I set out to make a small blanket using miscellaneous colors of 2-ply Shetland knitting yarn, because I also wanted to make a gift for some friends who have recently had their first child.  I got some of my ideas from a project in the Jan/Feb 1996 Handwoven Magazine:  Cloud-Light Lap Robe by Sharon Alderman.  I liked the braided fringe, and her instructions for machine fulling leave the fabric dense but still soft and drapey, not stiff as a board (soak in hot water with detergent for 4 hours, followed by only about 5 minutes of agitation plus a couple of gentle rinses and spinning out).

I used 5 colors of Shetland 2-ply for the warp (a total of 8 skeins at 150 yds each), but the weft was a New Zealand DK-weight wool I got in a fiber exchange a couple of years back.  It was sett at 8 epi (that’s ends-per-inch for the non-weavers out there).  I threaded it as a 2/2 twill and treadled it in a broken zig-zag pattern, trying to maintain 8 picks per inch.  To maintain the openness of the fabric, the weft needed to be nudged into position, not beaten, after changing sheds – another tip from Sharon Alderman.

Here’s the fabric before fulling:

After fulling:

It was 41″ wide on the loom and I wove about 2 yards, maybe a little more.  Off the loom before fulling it measured 37″ x 64″ (excluding fringe).  After fulling it measured 30″ x 57″.  I still need to trim the fuzzy ends of the braided fringe, but otherwise it is done:


I am really pleased with how this turned out.  Maybe it isn’t exactly “wadmal” (not felted to jacket fabric consistency) but I love the feel of it.  I am tieing on another warp already and will try a different treadling pattern on the same twill threading.

Hey, what’s that peeking out from under the blanket in that last picture?  I finished the Notre Dame de Grace Pullover designed by Veronik Avery!

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The Twice-Knit Sweater

Warning! Knitting lingo-intensive-post ahead.

For several months now I have been working away on this sweater, “Notre Dame de Grace Pullover” by Veronik Avery.  It was originally published in the Summer 2007 Interweave Knits magazine.  I’m using Rowanspun Tweed in a color called Fig, which I have had in the stash for quite a while.

I don’t know why, but it has seemed like a star-crossed project.  First I decided to work the body in the round to the underarm, instead of 2 separate pieces worked flat and then sewn together as specified in the pattern.  I was well along before I took a good hard look at it and realized the fabric was biasing terribly.  I’m not sure if that was because of the stitch pattern (double seed, or moss stitch) or the yarn, which seems to be a bit twisty.  Or both!  Anyway, ripped it all out and started over.  Finished the back and started on the front.  Then I realized I hadn’t read the directions for the selvage stitches correctly, and the pattern was placed so it wasn’t centered in the middle of the front and back.  I had to finish to the underarm to make the side seams work out, but had to futz around with re-positioning the pattern for the center front placket.

But wait – I noticed I had cast on one too few stitches for the left front placket and now the edge of the placket was going to bother me.  So I ripped back to the beginning of the left placket and re-knit it.  Then I finished both sides of the collar and grafted them together in the back as directed, but wasn’t looking forward to sewing it onto the back neckline, which includes live stitches left on a holder.

So then I decided to try a knit-in sleeve cap from the top down, instead of knitting the sleeves separately and then sewing them into the armhole.  I was using Karen Alfke’s directions from her Top-down Set-in-sleeve Pullover, except I planned the pickup of stitches around the armhole to match the sleeve cap shaping in my pattern.  I was marking off the sections with plastic markers when I realized with horror that when I re-knit the left placket I had used my notes for starting at the underarm level and knit the darn thing about  3 inches too long!  I mean, it was bizarre looking – how could I not have noticed it until now?  I had to take the collar apart in the back, rip out the left side of the collar and the whole placket and do it once again.

There was an upside to this turn of events, though.  I realized I could pick up stitches across the side of the back neck and put the live back neck stitches on the same needle, then attach the collar as I went (since I knew from the previous attempt how many rows there would be).  This was a much more satisfactory solution than sewing the darn thing on, so I ripped out the right side of the collar and re-did it as well.

I am happy with the knit-in sleeve cap:

This is worked with “increasing short rows” (isn’t this an oxymoron – that makes them “longer and longer” rows in actual fact).  I decided to use a traditional “wrap and turn” method at the end of each row.  When you reach that point on the next (longer) row you need to hide the wrap as you work past it, and that presented some challenges when working within the double seed pattern, but I think it looks OK.  The sleeve cap came out the exact height it was supposed to be and I am happy with the fit.

So onward!  I may actually finish this sweater in time to wear it before the weather turns warm.

I also finished a little Feather & Fan pattern scarf using Noro Silk Garden Lite, which was started some time last year as a car-knitting project:

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The show, titled “Lacunae – The art of gaps, holes and negative spaces”, at the Confluence Gallery in Twisp opened yesterday.  My friend Sara Ashford and I have our work displayed in what they call the Solo Gallery, which is now on either side as you walk on back to the main gallery space.  Sara owns (or owned) the Ashford Gallery in Winthrop and has been carrying my rugs, scarves, shawls and shawl pins on consignment for the last couple of years.  She does beautiful nature dyeing on silks and is also a weaver and member of our local guild.  She is closing the gallery in Winthrop to devote more time to her own artwork, and will hopefully have a new studio space at TwispWorks (on the site of the old Forest Service complex) in the near future.

While up on Orcas Island, I was also knitting away feverishly on the embellishments for my woven and felted wall-hangings.  I wanted each one to have a theme, and wound up knitting Estonian lace panels in Rowan Kidsilk Haze for the blue/green wall-hanging, and patterns from the fishermen’s ganseys of Eriskay (in the Outer Hebrides) for the black & white one.  I have always loved the Eriskay ganseys and this got me excited about actually knitting one this year.  My idea for the purple wall-hanging was to do stranded colorwork (Fair Isle, Bohus, etc) but this wasn’t panning out too well, so when I got home I found a yarn that worked well color-wise, and wound up knitting some elaborate cable and texture patterns from my stitch pattern books.

The idea here came from some of my friends asking me if I still knit, in slightly puzzled tones, when they observe my new obsession with weaving.  It made me realize that for me, weaving is new, exciting, exploratory and offers a way to play with fiber and color and also get something completed relatively quickly.  Whereas knitting is more of a “slow fiber” craft, it can take 6 months or more to complete a finely knitted sweater, but that is always OK with me – I enjoy the process and enjoy knitting challenging and complex patterns.  So the wall-hangings are titled “Still Fitting in Knitting” – they are meant to be playful and whimsical, but also represent the place of the two crafts in my life at present.

They had to be in to the gallery by last Tuesday, and I was working on them right up to the end, but here they are hanging.  I also have a nice selection of my plaited twill scarves in the Confluence Gallery gift shop.

Still Fitting in Knitting – Texture
Still Fitting in Knitting – Lace
Still Fitting in Knitting – Eriskay

By the way, for you traditional knitters out there, I know of two sources for patterns for complete Eriskay ganseys:  Alice Starmore’s Fishermen’s Sweaters, and Madeline Weston’s Country Weekend Knits (originally published as Classic British Knits).

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Kick & Glide

After the Big Snow last weekend, there was a terrific base for the cross-country ski trails, and the groomers have been out in force.  We went out 3 times this week, right from the house (more or less).  The Methow Community Trail that runs the length of the valley from Mazama to Winthrop goes by about 200 feet from the end of our driveway.  We got permission from the neighbor across the road to cut a trail along his fenceline over to the trail.  Here is a picture taken from the trail back towards our home:

We definitely had sore muscles after the first time out, but today we went out for an hour and a half and both felt a lot stronger.

The Methow Valley has one of the top cross-country ski trail systems in the country… check out MVSTA, the Methow Valley Sports Trail Association.

I finished another of the swirl-top hats, using Noro Silk Garden and Rowan Kid Classic in a raspberry pink color.  I picked up one ball of this color from my friend Jessica at a stash reduction sale a year or two ago.  For this hat, I tried out a different mosaic stitch pattern – it’s a slight variation of one I found in Barbara Walker’s Treasury of Knitting Patterns.

We’re off to the Coast tomorrow for 6 nights – for family events, including Christmas of course.  See you in a week!

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Snow is Me

The “Pineapple Express” arrived in the Pacific Northwest this past weekend.  It made for a wet trip to Portland – the roads and passes weren’t bad, but it just rained down in buckets.  We arrived in good shape late Thursday, delivered and set up the headboard for a very happy customer, and then spent 2 nights with our friends who own The Real Mother Goose Gallery of fine American craft in Portland, OR.  Friday was a fun day spent wandering around Portland, finding Christmas gifts for the little great-grandkids, going to Powell’s Bookstore, etc.  Also it didn’t really rain on Friday, so we could actually walk around town without getting soaked.

We headed up to Seattle on Saturday in another complete downpour, all the way up I-5.  We are listening to “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest” on audiobook in the car, and the reader is really good, so that helped a bit.

Yesterday I went to my knitting group with my friend Carol.  I hadn’t seen my Seattle knitting buddies since the first of November, so this was a good thing.  I have been working on a couple of hats using a pattern I bought years ago at Weaving Works in Seattle.  Here is the designer’s Ravelry page:  Triangle Topped Hat by Ellen Christensen.

My first one, done last week, used a long discontinued Filatura di Crosa yarn (wool and rayon) plus Rowan Kid Classic left over from my “Come Together” Sweater:

The second one was knit mainly in the car this weekend, and finished about an hour ago.  I used two Mirasol yarns bought at the Ashford Gallery in Winthrop:  the brown one is “Miski” (100% baby llama) and the red one is “Akapana” (65% baby llama, 25% merino wool and 10% Donegal, which are the color flecks).

This is a really fun pattern, knit all in one piece (very few ends to darn in!) but there were a few challenges in interpreting the pattern.  I am probably going to make a couple more.

But back to the Pineapple Express.  We left Seattle about 2:30 and went over Stevens Pass.  The rivers were muddy, raging and very high – it looked like Sultan was on the way to being underwater!  But Highway 2 was open and the drive wasn’t bad except for lots and lots of rain on the west side.  Our housesitter had told us we had gotten 2 feet of snow at the house the night before.  TWO FEET – yes, you read that right.

Our snow-plower had cleared out the driveway, but Rick is out there digging out the truck:

the camping trailer and the utility trailer:

and they are clearing off the carport roof, since the metal roofing is supposed to be delivered today:

Dec 13, 2010 - after the big snowfall

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Truss – but Verify

Work proceeds on the carport.  Today the trusses for the center section were delivered, but it remains to be seen how far they will get on installing them (if that is the correct term).  It’s supposed to snow a lot tonight!

Dec 7, 2010 - side roofs framed, trusses delivered

Dad wondered where it lies in relation to the other 2 buildings, so here is a shot from farther out on the driveway:

carport lies to the right of the studios

Last Saturday some of the women from Shear Creative Guild in the Okanogan Valley came over to my house for the bi-monthly meeting.  We had a great time, and the potluck lunch is always a big part of it:

I finished up some knitting projects last week.  One is a poncho that I started in the car on the way to Seattle for Thanksgiving, and finished in 10 days.  It is a pattern from Ravelry:  GarteRing Poncho by Lisa Risager (a $5.00 PDF download).  I used 4 skeins of a discontinued Noro yarn bought on sale 3-4 years ago (Manmosu, wool-alpaca-silk) plus 4 skeins of Debbie Bliss bulky tweed (the dark brown).  In all, about 780 yards of bulky yarn on 7.0 mm (US 10-1/2) needles.  The pattern did not call for stripes, it uses a variegated yarn – but I had to use 2 different yarns so this is what I came up with.  I really like it, it’s very cozy!

Poncho in the snow

I also finished up a sweater I knit almost a year ago:  Come Together by Pam Allen, off of Twist Collective.  This was a $7.00 PDF download.  I used Rowan Kid Classic on US 9 needles.  The top portion is all rib so it stretches out quite a bit and is, ahem, form-fitting (but in a nice way).  I had to fiddle with the neckline, which she does not put any edging on.  It was way too wide and stretchy for my taste, so I did a row of single crochet around, pulling it in a bit, then a final edging of reverse single crochet.  Also the hem wanted to flip up so I had to deal with that.  Finally done and ready to wear to all those holiday parties!

 

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