Saturday, April 30, 2011

Miss Puss





















Lucky Nicholas will also get Miss Puss for his birthday today. I found her in almost finished condition among the UFOs this week, just needing an outfit and some eyes. The pattern is nowhere to be found but came from my friend Anna who unlike me is extremely well organized -- siiiiigh. Used up some old stash for the dress.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Little Nicholas Socks


The third pair of Little Nicholas Socks are finished -- just in time for his second birthday on Sunday. I have to admit that little socks are becoming addictive. And what a great way to use up odds and ends of sock yarn. My daughter Sue is even more creative. She made Berry Bear and Sssssharming Snake above with her leftovers.

The basic pattern I've been using is Anke Klempner's 'socks with afterthought heel' because she gives details for several sizes from infant on up. Since I wanted to do the heel as I went, I switched to an old ragg sock pattern of mine for the heel.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Those Swatches we Love to Hate, or is it Hate to Love

I don't know what I'd do without swatches - nothing ever comes out right without them (sometimes nothing comes out right with them but at least I feel better if I've made one first).


My swatches and samples seem to end up on bulletin boards. I love bulletin boards and love mingling swatches with family photos, notes etc.

Swatches are memories of all the things I've made for someone else. It's like the heart of the project lingers here.

There's the ones I did for Sue's cotton sweater, and Kaffe Fassett's Persian poppies, the fantastic stitch pattern I invented -- oh and the lovely lace bookmark Sue made me too pretty to use is there.



And below in orange tweed is the pattern I used last year for a baby kimono sweater and christmas stocking mini samples.








What do you do with your swatches?

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Which end is up? and Which do I Prefer?






















Two shawls on the needles got me thinking about shawl construction today.


The blue shawl, Birch, is a Rowan pattern by Sharon Miller in Rowan KidsilkHaze. Construction starts at the bottom with 299 stitches and it travels north becoming smaller by 10 stitches every 8 rows until you bind off the last 3 stitches together.


The Nature Scene shawl from Knitters Mag. Spring '96 starts at the bottom point with 3 stitches and expands at the top to over 449 stitches. I'm working this one in certified Sea Island cotton - a true light cloud of fluff. It is heavenly to work with unless you have to correct mistakes. It is prone to break if you knit and reknit too much. So far I have had just two such occurrences and am being very careful.

Interestingly both shawls start at the bottom but they differ in that the bottom is the long end for one and the short end for the other. Which way do I prefer? Well lets wait 'till I finish them because I haven't decided yet.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Back to Lace







It's been a few years since I suffered from the 'knit lace' bug. Right around New Years Resolutions time it hit so this is the year of knit lace for me.
It all started when I was browsing through the stash one day (in the merry, merry month of May) no, no scratch that, and found two lace pieces I had finished in the 90s. That was when I fell in love wit Herbert Niebling's designs (the white sampler in the photo) and found a couple of Burda lace specials on eBay.

More to follow and certainly not all lace - perhaps even not all knitting.