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Archive for the ‘knitting’ Category

It’s been such a varied week, I thought I would just do a kitchen-sink kind of post today.

In anticipation of the upcoming Okanogan County Fair, and also a new round of teaching the top-down raglan sweater class, I finally got the little cardigan finished that I knit over the summer.  I still needed to darn in the ends, sew on the buttons, and block it.  It was knit using Rowan Yorkshire Tweed (about 7 sts/in), which sadly is a discontinued yarn.  I only had so much of the main color and couldn’t find more anywhere, so I had to get creative towards the end.  It is knit in one piece from the top down, and for the borders I used a mosaic pattern called “Sanquar Check” from one of the Barbara Walker books (1st Treasury of Stitch Patterns I think, am too lazy to go out to the studio and check…)  I had to go with 3/4 length sleeves due to the running-out-of-yarn problem, but I think I actually like them that way.  So, finished object:

On Sunday of the Labor Day weekend, I set up my booth at the Winthrop Artisan Market.  It was very windy, overcast, and a little cold!  We had to tie all the pieces of my display down so they wouldn’t blow over.  I did sell one rug and 2 shawl pins, so it wasn’t a complete bust…but nicer weather would have helped, I think.

Also that Sunday my Dad came over from Anacortes in his little Rialta motorhome, with his cat Squeaky, and spent 3 nights with us.  Sadly, the weather remained cool and rainy, with occasional sun breaks, so we couldn’t do much outside.  But still, we had a good visit.  Took Dad up to see one of the houses Rick built cabinets for last year, and also went up to see the job site for an upcoming job this fall.  It’s in a beautiful location up the Lost River valley.

Tuesday was Dad’s 91st birthday and we went up to Sun Mountain Lodge for dinner.  We had one of the best tables with a beautiful view up and down the valley below, and it had cleared up some so the views were spectacular.

Thursday was the opening day for the Okanogan County Fair over in Omak.  A group from our guild, Methow Valley Spinners & Weavers, had organized a “fleece to shawl” event.  We had a loom already warped for a shawl with handspun yarn that several of us had supplied.  We brought a washed fleece, a natural colored Romney from The Pines Farm in Maple Valley (south of Seattle).  We hand-carded the fleece, spun the rolags into singles, then I was the “designated plyer” and made a 2-ply yarn.  This was handed off to the weavers, who wove the shawl.  We actually finished it in about 5 hours – I was amazed!  Thursday was also the day that a lot of school groups came through, and the kids were really interested and asked a lot of questions.

That’s our guild display on the wall that my friend Diana puts together each year (with some help, but it is mostly her effort).  We usually show what the guild challenge project was for the year, and as I last blogged about here, this year it was to “do something” with some emerald green and camel brown cotton yarn that we had been given an abundance of some time in the past.

The rest of this week, I’ve started on a new round of scarves on my little workshop loom.  Last night we worked late and decided to go down to Twisp for dinner at Tappi.  It turned out one of our favorite groups was playing jazz:

And here’s John with part of our dinner just out of the brick oven – it’s the “Malandrino” burger.  Calling this a burger is more than a little misleading.  And yes, we split it.  It’s a full pound of beef, with grilled onions and grilled tomatoes, melted blue cheese, on a homemade pocket bread.  Best eaten with knife and fork!

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Stop Motion Knitting

Last night I met with some friends at Ashford Gallery in Winthrop – it’s our knitting night on Wednesdays.  We watched a lovely little animated YouTube video on Diana P.’s iPad.  It is a natural gas commercial made in Belgium and features knitting, so check it out!

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Why yes, I have been knitting!  I bought some mixed colors of Koigu PPM (a well known hand-dyed 100% merino sock yarn) from my friend Linda at the spinning workshop on Orcas, and used 4 of the colors to knit the Koigu Linen Stitch Scarf, which is part of the Churchmouse Classics collection (purchase online and download as a PDF file).

But I didn’t want the stringy fringe that they employ, so I knit it with the yarns running up one edge.  Well, for 3 of them anyway – for the 4th color that was used less often, I started at the opposite end and broke off the end when the stripe was completed.  This eliminated some bulk and a long carry at the main end.

But then it looked kind of plain, so I used all of the yarn I had left over to knit the little corkscrews and sewed them to each end.  I love it!!  This has given me an idea which I will be pursuing….

We went for a walk this morning.  Lovely morning.  This is a shot of Mt Gardner taken from Wolf Creek Rd, just where you turn onto our road:

I also took some shots of the master bedroom, since we have it pretty much together, with artwork hung and all:

The propane fireplace still needs to be trimmed out, but Rick did find the trim kit (and the manual) out in the garage so we have what we need.  Eventually, there will be a mantle and wood surround, with bookcases on both sides.  It’s nice to have the little seating area, though, and we can take the chairs out on the deck in the summer if we want to sit outside.  The view is of Mt Gardner from the master bedroom, although we only see the top of it from here:

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FO: Cabled Topdown Raglan

FO = finished object, in knitting-specific internet speak.

Here is the sweater I have been knitting along with my class, and using to demonstrate different parts of the process along the way.  I washed it yesterday and it has been drying on the wooly board.  Today I will wear it!

Yarn: Rowan Magpie Tweed, 7 skeins.  Needle size 8 (5 mm).  The cable panel on the front and back is from “The New Knitting Stitch Library” by Lesley Stanfield (no longer in print but easily found on Amazon or elsewhere).  I used the same motif for cabled ribs on the bottom edge, sleeve cuffs and neck edge, with a simple rolled stockinette stitch edge as the final finish.

Yesterday was our guild meeting and the annual Fiber Exchange.  We run it kind of like a white elephant (draw numbers, go in turn, but something can be taken away from someone else up to 2 times).  The fiber is for weaving or spinning, although there were other fun things in some of the packages like chocolate!  It is supposed to be nice enough to be used in a project but not expensive or “too nice.”  Mainly leftovers from projects, or bargain finds that are being passed on.  Lots of fun!

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My Wonderful Students

Last night was the fifth meeting of my top-down raglan class.  Everyone had made great progress and were still full of enthusiasm for the process of designing their own sweater.

Juliet is making a child-size pullover for her friend’s son:

Deb is making a cardigan version with contrasting seed stitch bands:

Laurelle is making a pullover for herself out of wonderful hand-dyed Malabrigo merino yarn:

Darlene is also making a pullover for herself, and she was our least-experienced knitter.  She knew how to knit and purl and had knit a couple of scarves, but that was about it.  Brave woman!  She has learned a lot:

They all like the way you can try the garment on for fit as you go along.  Here, Laurelle had just finished her first sleeve and she liked the length and the fit:

Judith was AWOL but we will catch up with her at the end of the month!

//

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Spinning Day

We had a good turnout yesterday at Methow Valley Spinners and Weavers, for our 4th Thursday “focus on spinning” day.  Somehow we had kind of fallen out of the habit of making this 4th meeting of the month truly about spinning, so it was heartening to see all the wheels in motion and a lively discussion of fiber preparations and spinning methods.  There had also been some interest in learning more about crochet finishes so we had a little demo and practice of basic crochet and also Reverse Single Crochet or Crab Stitch.

I am teaching 2 knitting classes now.  The Tuesday night group is learning how to design and knit their own top-down raglan sweater.  Next week is the 4th meeting and everyone seems to be doing well.  I’ll try to get some progress pictures of their sweater next week.  Here is the one I am knitting along with them:

The yarn is some Rowan Magpie Tweed I bought several years ago from a friend who was de-stashing.  It’s nice to see it finally turning into something!  I am quite pleased with the cable pattern down the front and back, and the cabled rib with rolled edge on the sleeve.  I plan to use that around the bottom of the sweater as well, and then work out something along the same lines for the neckline finish.

My other group is on Thursday mornings – they just wanted some help with their projects, and to learn some new skills.  Yesterday I taught them how to do several different kinds of buttonholes.

We’re off to the coast today to start packing up and moving out of our apartment there.  We’ll be moved out by the end of February.  It’s been a wonderful place to come to when we are in the big city, right at the Ballard Locks, but it has become harder to justify the expense given how seldom we are actually there.  Kind of hard to give it up, though…

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Greetings from the soggy Methow Valley.   We have had a steady supply of precipitation – if only it would stay about 5 degrees colder… then it would stay as snow.  At least we got a nice 3-4″ over Saturday night, and some of it is still on the ground, but the roads are once again completely clear.  Last week we twice went on a 2-1/2 mile round trip walk up our road, to the end of pavement, which most winters is a treacherously icy affair, best not attempted.

I hear most of the groomed ski trails in the valley are still in decent shape, though.  There was a big national level Nordic ski race here last weekend, the SuperTour, and they had to change the venue in part from the track near Liberty Bell High School to the north summit of Loup Loup (which has a groomed ski trail system of its own).  By all accounts the conditions were good and it went off well.

Not at the championship level ourselves, we were content to ski some of the trails up at Loup Loup South Summit last Sunday.  It was a little slow but not sticky and we were out for at least 2 hours.  Towards the end we had a light snow mixed with rain, so we got pretty wet, but it was great to be out there and doing it!

Yesterday I went with my Tuesday group for a snowshoe outing.  We drove up the Twisp River Road and tried the Buttermilk Sno-Park (not tracked and too icy), another spot at the end of plowing up the south side of the Twisp River (neighbors known to be unfriendly to parking there, were home, and some of our group were nervous…), and finally the end of plowing up the main Twisp River Road.  There we had luck and saw only that some skiers had been in before us.  We had to “break trail” but the surface was firm so it wasn’t too much work.

This was the turn-around spot for some, the beaver ponds and a rather grey outlook:

Twisp River beaver ponds

Four of us continued on to War Creek Campground for a lunch break and turn-around spot.  We figured we did 5 miles round trip, and I was a little tired!  But had a lovely hot soak in the tub on returning home.

On the fiber arts front, I finished my third Jared Flood hat from his “Made in Brooklyn” booklet.  I used my handspun grey Corriedale plus a strand of grey Rowan Kidsilk Haze.  It is wonderfully soft and springy!

I also finished up spinning some dyed wool roving that I bought from Heidi Parra at The Artful Ewe in Port Gamble about 2 years ago.  The roving was dyed mainly green with some areas of brown-into-black, so the color varies subtly along the length of the spun singles.  I wanted to ply it with something else so I could get more yardage, so rummaged around in the spinning fiber boxes and came up some baby camel/merino (50/50 blend).  So here is the final yarn, it is a 2-ply and about fingering weight.  I have 220 gm total or about 1/2 lb of yarn, approx 850 yds and I think it will be knit into a lace shawl.

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Minus One

That was the temperature when we got up at 7 am – minus one degree F, or over 30 below freezing.  Yikes!  Well it stays warm in the shop and apartment so I guess we got this place insulated pretty well.  It has been clear and sunny and beautiful in the valley, although the continuing lack of snow is making us nervous.

The social event last weekend was the Confluence Gallery‘s annual holiday dinner up at The Barn in Winthrop.  Now that doesn’t sound too elegant, but they decorated it in a cabin theme and it was really quite charming.  The food was great, and this year they skipped the benefit auction so it was easier to socialize and mingle after dinner.  Most of the attendees are volunteers, patrons or artists (or all three) so we have a lot in common.  Rick and I had a great time and posed for our pictures in a sleigh:

I have been weaving up a storm this week, having finished four shawls using a mohair boucle in colors that remind me of a parrot.  It is a handpainted yarn from New Zealand, and the dyer called it “Lollipop”.  It has proven to be a popular color, as I sold two at the weavers’ guild sale, and then two of these longer ones are on order.  So then I did two more to have some for stock.

I also finished a knitting project – it is a wool vest that I started around the first of November.  The pattern is “Veste Everest” by Veronik Avery, from the Fall 2005 Interweave Knits magazine.  I used some yarn I had in stash, a Karabella yarn called “Aurora Melange.”  It is a superwash extrafine merino in marled browns (or at least, I think “irrestringibile” means superwash…) and feels so soft and cushy and springy.  I was worried I wouldn’t have enough after comparing the yardage of what I had with the yardage of the recommended yarn, so even though it is supposed to be a short vest and I am long-waisted, I finished it to the shoulders as written.  At that point I had more than 2 balls of yarn left (out of eight) and it was really way too short.  So I ripped it back to the underarms and added two more repeats of the cable pattern, or another 4 inches, before finishing it again.  Now it is perfect on me, and I still had one whole ball left!  Curious, but there it is.

"Veste Everest" in Karabella "Aurora Melange"

The marled yarn somewhat obscures the cable pattern, but more so in the pictures than when you are looking at it in person.  Not sure why that is, but I took about 6 shots trying to get better light and definition, to no avail.

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Off to Knitting Retreat!

Just a quick post today, as I am going off tomorrow for the knitting retreat at Fort Worden, near Port Townsend.  This is an event I have attended for over 20 years.  Now that we have moved away from Seattle, it is even more important to me to spend this time with some of my longtime friends, as well as other people who come from all over who I only see there once a year.  There are no classes, it’s just 5 days of knitting, talking, eating, going for walks into town or down to the beach, laughing and generally having a good time with like-minded souls.  Not to mention hitting all the local yarn shops!

I have been invited to a baby shower the first weekend of November, which I can’t attend as we are going to California for a quick visit with good friends.  But I did want to come up with a nice gift for this little one (we already know it is a girl) as we are friends with the parents, both sets of grandparents, an aunt and cousins.  I was rummaging around in one of the closets and discovered this:

Baby Surprise Jacket 1

It’s a Baby Surprise Jacket that I knit maybe 3-4 years ago, using leftover bits of Shetland 2-ply wool.  It needed only a few ends darned in and the buttons sewn on to be done – DONE, I say!  This was the first of several I knit back then, and it came out a wee bit small, which means it can’t be worn by the intended recipient for very long.  Which is why I also had a Gund teddy bear ready to take over:

BSJ on bear 2

On the home front, the back fence is nearing completion:

back fence 10-27-09

and our new deer fence is basically in, needing only the man-gates which they are making off site; when they come to install those they will also finish installing the green farm gate we bought to accomodate the tractor going in and out.  So it looks like our back yard will be deer-proof by winter!

deer fence 10-27-09

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Tomten sleeve cap challenge

This will be a long, geeky knitting post, just as a warning to those of you in my small audience who could care less! Also, see update at bottom of post **

As mentioned earlier, I have been working on the Adult Tomten Jacket by Elizabeth Zimmermann, for me and using some of my handspun yarn.  This pattern can be found in several Zimmermann books:  The Opinionated Knitter, Knitting Without Tears, Knitting Workshop.  It started out as a baby jacket and therefore the adult version is rather large and boxy, with its signature feature perhaps being the very deeply set in sleeves.

I had found a nice discussion of modifications for a better fit on Jared Flood’s blog, “Brooklyn Tweed.”  He has a lot of excellent photos and some discussion, but not everything he did is spelled out – which is fine, he put a lot of work into that blog post as it was, and a knitter doesn’t have to give away every little secret!

I wanted to incorporate a shaped sleeve cap from the top down, as Jared had done.  The basic method is described in Barbara Walker’s excellent book Knitting from the Top, now back in print thanks to Meg Swansen (Elizabeth Zimmermann’s daughter and a prolific designer, teacher and writer herself) at Schoolhouse Press.

The problem that comes up in this instance is thus.  Normally, you figure out how big around you want the sleeve and therefore how many stitches you should have on the needle once you end the sleeve cap and have arrived at your upper arm.  Using the Zimmermann/Swansen EPS method, that means 35% to 40% of your body stitches for a good fit in that area.  So that is the number of stitches you would normally pick up around the armhole to begin the sleeve cap, after subtracting the number of stitches left on a holder for the underarm.  But this is a garter stitch jacket (garter stitch – knit on both sides, 2 rows makes a “ridge”).  Garter stitch has a compressed row gauge compared to stockinette stitch, so that the number of ridges per inch lengthwise is the same as the number of stitches per inch widthwise.  So you  have to pick up one stitch per ridge around the armhole or the sleeve fabric will not lie flat.  This means you will have way more stitches than you really want in your sleeve at the upper arm.

Using my gauge and my size, I have 152 body stitches so I would like to have 53 to 61 stitches at the upper arm.  I have 38 ridges on both sides of the armhole and will add one stitch for a “phoney seam” at the top of the sleeve.  I have left 8% of the body sts on holders for the underarm (12 sts).  So I will have to pick up 38 + 1 + 38 = 77 sts around the armhole.  Add the 12 underarm sts and I will have 89 sts in the sleeve at the outset of cap shaping.  So I need to get rid of a whopping 28 to 36 sts somehow while shaping the sleeve cap.

I study Jared Flood’s photos and observe:  (1) a line of paired decreases running down the top of the sleeve (this is the way the pattern is written, too), (2) it looks like he started those decreases up above the sleeve cap, in the top part of the sleeve that is so deeply set in that it is actually part of the body, and (3) there appears to be a little triangular gusset on both sides of the underarm area at the end of sleeve cap shaping.  Hmm, what’s that last thing?  Curious.

So I rip the first 13 ridges of the top of the sleeve back, and add 4 paired decreases every 3 ridges.  This takes out 8 stitches so I am down to 69 + 12 UA (underarm) sts at the beginning of cap shaping.  It also adds a shoulder slope which is always a good idea.  Now all of a sudden the reason for the triangular gusset becomes clear.  If done with short rows over 6 ridges, it can consume the rest of the underarm stitches (6 on each side), but the needed underarm space is still provided by the curve of the line along that gusset.  If I get rid of the 12 underarm stitches at this point, I am already down to 69 sts only at the beginning of cap shaping, and if I continue decreasing in pairs every 3 ridges while I knit the cap, it comes out just right at the end with 55 sts remaining.  Hooray!

Sleeve top and one underarm gusset completed

Sleeve top and one underarm gusset completed

Here’s a low-tech drawing:

layout for underarm gusset and shaped sleeve cap

layout for underarm gusset and shaped sleeve cap

And here is the sleeve cap, shaped with short rows per Barbara Walker’s instructions:

Finished sleeve cap

Finished sleeve cap

sleeve cap try-onAnd the try-on:  it fits beautifully and I am most pleased!

** Nov. 11, 2009 update:

I wrote to Jared Flood about a week before proceeding with the above, and bless the man’s heart, he did write back to me on Nov 5th.  He said he did not actually make an underarm gusset, but did shape some stitches next to the underarm stitches to try to mimic a set-in sleeve armhole rather than just leaving it square.  So it looks like I may have “unvented” something with the gusset, but I am still happy with that as another approach.

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