Yarn, Knitting and Crochet

Still Away But Crafting

Lucky, lucky me, I am still vacationing in paradise! Just because I am away from home though doesn’t mean that I don’t still have the bug to create. I lasted about three days before I brought out the knitting.

I always try to bring small projects when I am away. Knitting or crocheting something large in the heat is just not my cup of tea. I packed a few, okay six, balls of cotton blend yarn that I had purchased to make soft dollies for my craft store. I am working on number five of the expected six that I hoped to make and may be able to squeeze a couple of more out of the yarn that I brought to fill in the few days that we have left.

I will happily craft anywhere. As long as there is enough light and a clean bag to hold the yarn, I am content. I was knitting on the beach a couple of days ago and was getting some looks from the lady a short space over. She got up and left her lounger returning ten minutes later with a bag from which she pulled out her knitting! We didn’t speak the same language, but I believe that crafting is universal and we share the same need to create. She was knitting a beautiful aran sweater with a honeycomb and cable pattern. The yarn she was using looked like alpaca or a similar blend, just lovely but it must have been hot to work with in the 29C heat.

I wrote a few posts ago about a cake of Twister from Hobbii that I was crocheting into a poncho and how unhappy I was with the abrupt colour changes that were happening instead of the gradient that I expected. I put the project aside until I stopped being mad at it and went ahead and finished a child size poncho without using the whole cake in order to minimize the striped effect. Here is what I ended up with and, although I still don’t like the colour changes, it looks better than I expected.

This is a free pattern that I found on Ravelry called 123 Shawl and Poncho.  It is really hard to follow if you have never worked with C2C but Youtube came to the rescue for me. I used a 3.5mm hook to accommodate the finer yarn that I used and added a button and buttonhole band. I would like to try this one again in a thick and fuzzy yarn as it really is an easy and pretty make.

Have restful week and may all of your Christmas knitting and crocheting be done before the big day!

Yarn, Knitting and Crochet

On Vacation So Don’t Expect Much!

Okay, I am on vacation so can’t promise you much but here goes. Two weeks in Aruba, are you jealous yet? We have only been here two days and already I feel like mush, good mush but mush none the less.


I finished up the craft sale season and am ready to move on to pattern writing. Look ahead to January for that. I think that I am over my pattern writing block and ready to move forward now. I have a few machine patterns and a couple of hand knit as well as crochet patterns to publish for you.

I had some fun with my LK 150 machine in creating an easy poncho that will translate well to hand knitting too and, as a bonus for those of you that are multicraftual, the edging is crocheted. Look forward to that pattern before the end of the month.

In the meantime, have a great week ahead and I should have a real post for you next week. By the way, I have reached a milestone in my blog life. Last post was number 100 and now I am on to the next century of posts.

Happy crafting and remember to be kind to everyone you meet whether you believe they deserve it or not.

Knitting

Gift Wrap Up!

If you are anything like me, you use that last minute that everyone talks about to get the most work done. We are sneaking closer to Christmas and all the fun (and stress) of gift giving. I have a couple of patterns in my Ravelry and Etsy stores that fill the handmade gift and last minute criteria both.


Free is always a good thing, well mostly anyway. Sometimes free advice is not welcome and freeloaders definitely not but free patterns, okay! I have a few suggestions from my catalogue. First is the Curved Shoulder Scarf. Easily made in a couple of evenings, or one if you stay up very late, it is a very pretty way to make a gift without breaking the bank. You likely have a suitable yarn in your stash just waiting to be used!  Also in the four hour category and also free, is my Simple Shawl pattern.  Use up those fancy bulky yarns in an evening with this one.  I made the pictured one with one skein of Lion Brand Landscape.


Next, may I suggest the Delphinium Shoulder Scarf? This one is a paid pattern but you will want to knit this one more than once. It is a little more involved than the Curved scarf and more shawl like in size and fit. I used less than one skein of Red Heart Super saver to make the sample for the pattern. It uses short rows for shaping to hold it on your shoulders with the wrap and turns nicely hidden in the seed stitch body. I really don’t like the look of wrap and turn except when they are hidden in the stitch pattern.


Also free is my Latte Scarf, made with one Caron Cake. You could make this into a wrap by increasing the number of pattern rows if you have a second cake. You could also use a plain or variegated yarn for this one and have a very pretty present. It has been a very popular pattern judging by the number of downloads, thank you, and is still being chosen regularly.


Okay, now you have some inspiration, get stash diving and start crossing those handmade gift projects off of your list! I, however, intend to wait for the last minute ’cause that is the only time I get anything done.


Have a happy week with kindness all around you.

Yarn, Knitting and Crochet

On Time This Week And A New Shawl In Development

Well, it is finally the end of summer and yes, that is me you hear crying. I am sad because I love the long days of light in the summer. I am happiest when it is still light at ten at night, go figure.
The change of seasons, however, gives us a great chance to get creative with our knitting and crochet.

I am working on a shawl right now (did you guess that I love crafting shawls and wraps?) that uses Caron Tea Cake. DD1 bought me a couple of cakes as a gift in the spring and I finally figured out what they wanted to be. I started and realized, of course, after I had started that I needed a third cake to make my imagined shawl become real. I am sure that you know exactly how it feels when you are looking for the impossible to find skein of yarn.

I made a couple of tours of different Michael’s yarn aisles and nada. I searched online and nada until I looked at the Woolwarehouse site and yay! I have a couple of cakes coming just in case a third is not enough. Here is what I have done so far.

It is pretty basic, just garter stitch, but I am trying a wider border and centre spine. I plan on embellishing the plain knit with some crocheted appliques. We will see how that works out for me. Sometimes what you envision and what you get in real life are vastly different.

The Christmas craft sale season is fast approaching and I will be at two sales this year. I will post my locations closer to the dates if you live in Calgary and would like to stop by and chat. I am focusing on kid’s clothing and mostly toys again this year as there is always a plethora of hats, scarfs, mitts, etc. at other vendor’s displays.

Don’t forget that charity begins at home so if you love to make warm wearables, I am positive that they will be welcomed by shelters this winter. Have look at my previous blogs for an easy hat and scarf pattern.

Happy crafting until next week and remember to love yourself.

Knitting

How Summer Flies By and Part 5, The End

Seems like I just posted yesterday and already it is Thursday again. Summer is just too fleeting! I wonder why I always comment about the weather. Could it be that I am a true Canadian? All kidding aside, I do love the seasons and the wonderful ideas and opportunities to create that they bring. Fall means shawls to me and that is what I have tunnel vision about right now.


I am still chugging away at the next shawl pattern as well as retesting the current one, this time in solid colours rather than a gradient. I am making the colour changes at each section but am running out of enough different shades in the stash yarn that I am using so may make it every two sections. Because I have more yardage, I may increase the number of repeats in the last two pattern designs as well to make the shawl a little larger. I will post photos and my modifications when it is complete. I am on section three and so far so good on the writing. I will keep you up to date on any corrections in the next few sections although I am confident that the directions are right.

Changing the subject, I have a shining example of the importance of maintaining gauge. I am knitting some topsy turvy dolls and thought that my midgauge machine might handle a Jean Greenhowes pattern. It worked out beautifully with a few mods for avoiding garter stitch. Except, and this is a big one, I made one side of the doll at tension dial 2 and the other at tension 2.5 as tension 2 seemed a little tight in the dk yarn I am using. Did I think about the size difference that .5 might make? Nope. Now I have to try and fix the skirt, the only obvious part, and I have already sewn it all up. I think it is time to break out the crochet hooks, trim the bottom edge with a pretty edging and call it a day. I really wanted to throw the whole mess against the wall but told my inner child to behave. I hope to finish them up this weekend and will show you my solution.

Big note to self: ALWAYS check your gauge whether machine knit, hand knit or crochet. ALWAYS!!!

Here is the final part of my latest shawl design, the edging. In this part you will still keep increasing at the border edges as before but you will remove the markers at the spine and keep going straight across.  Here you can see how much yarn I had left over.


Row 1: (right side) Work border stitches as before, slip marker, YO, P all stitches across to the last marker removing the centre spine markers as you go, YO, slip marker, work border stitches as before.
Row 2: (wrong side) Work border stitches, slip marker, K all stitches to last marker, slip marker, work border stitches as before.

Now we start the lace pattern which is version of Old Shale or Feather and Fan.
Row 1: Work border stitches as before, slip marker, YO, K2tog twice, YO, K1 four times, (K2tog four times, YO, K1 four times), repeat the stitches between the ( ) across to the last four stitches, K2tog twice, YO, slip marker, work border stitches as before.
Row 2: Work border stitches as before, slip marker, P all stitches across, slip marker, Work border stitches as before.
Repeat these two rows three more times. You will have extra stitches at each end before the border stitches from your YO increases. Just work these stitches as knit on the right side and purl on the wrong side.

For the final edge:
Row 1: (right side) Work border stitches as before, slip marker, YO, P all stitches across to the last marker, YO, slip marker, work border stitches as before.
Row 2: (wrong side) Work border stitches as before, slip marker, K all stitches to last marker, slip marker, work border stitches as before.
Row 3: repeat row 1.

Cast off: Working from the wrong side, K2, slip these stitches back onto the left needle and knit them together. Knit the next stitch, slip the two stitches back onto the left needle and knit them together across to the end. Cut the yarn and pull it through the last stitch to fasten off.  Weave in your ends and block yarn shawl to open up the lace.

I hope that you like my latest pattern and please contact me if you have any questions on this or any of my other patterns or if you just want to chat.

Have a great week and enjoy the remainder of summer with some crochet or knitting!