Yarn, Knitting and Crochet

Tame Those Stripey Yarns

You know those really lovely stripey skeins of yarn that look so pretty on the shelf and then just jump into your shopping basket and come home with you?  You remember how disappointing it can be when you knit up one of those too gorgeous to leave behind skeins and it turns out that the colour changes are too abrupt?  The must have, love it to death, oh so pretty stripes that look like heck when turned into an actual project can be redeemed!

I am guilty of the same impulse buys that a lot of us are.  There must be a lot of us because the yarn companies keep making new versions of the same stripes, short colour changes or long.  There is a way to minimize the effect of the colour changes that always seem to fall at a place in your project that is just wrong.

This hat knitting has given me plenty of opportunities to play with colour.  I have always doubled two yarns of contrasting colours to make a bulky yarn that will calm down a too bright (but again, oh so pretty) yarn and make it usable.  I have been experimenting with ways to cure the colour change.

It means that the yarn is doubled but a number of today’s yarns are thinner than they were a few years ago.  I start with matching the colours from both ends of the skein.  I like to rewind my yarn into a cake before starting to check for knots and this also facilitates using two ends easily.  Then I will pull one end out to about half way through the colour so that points where the colour changes do not line up.  Start knitting or crocheting and you will see a lovely blending of the stripes so that there are no abrupt changes. The first hat is Lion Brand Landscape which is a worsted weight.  I knit this one with 8mm needles.

 

Next up is made with Red Heart Unforgettable, a little lighter that knit up nicely doubled on 6.5mm needles.  I also tried crocheting with the same method and you can see how the colour changes are softened.

 

 

Finally we have Red Heart Roll With It Melange in two colourways.

 

You can also use one end of a self striping yarn and one of a solid colour.  This hat was made that way using the same Roll With It as in the hat above and a light worsted in medium grey.

It really is that easy.  I used Red Heart Roll With It for a couple of projects and, even though the colour changes are quite short, I still ended up with a pretty tweedy effect that softened the visual impact of the yarn.  I hope that this little tip has helped you with ideas to use up that part of the stash that is calling out to you for guidance!

Have a lovely week, stay safe and be kind.

Knitting, Yarn, Knitting and Crochet

Where Did February Go??

It seems that being home every day just makes time fly by faster.  I feel like I blinked and February disappeared into the past.  I have been merrily crafting away thinking that I just blogged a few weeks ago and I am kind of stuck in a rut so it’s okay to wait another week and, zoom, six seven weeks have slipped away.

 

As I said, I have been busy.  I wrote last time about knitting hats and how soothing and mindless it is.  On January 16th I had finished seventeen hats and thought that I was doing pretty darn good thank you very much.  I laid out the hats that I have knitted up to today and I have reached an astonishing fifty-five!  I should reach my goal by early June.

 

I actually have a few more than that as I added a couple that I had left from the last craft sale that I did and I machine knit ten hat and scarf sets too.  I am in love with the popular fluffy, furry pompoms as the photos show!

 

My goal is one hundred hand knit hats so that is the tally that really counts for me.  I just cast on number fifty six.

 

Thank you for looking and have a lovely crafty week and be kind to each other.

 

Knitting

Finishing

I have taken a bit of a hiatus from writing this last few months so my posts have been few and far between.  I have reached a point where I am ready to connect again so here goes.

My last post in the middle of September was about unfinished projects.  Well, I did some more tidying and, low and behold, my twenty one unfinished projects turned into thirty four, yes, that is correct, thirty four.  I obviously have too many project bags and hiding places for them when I get bored with a project!

I am happy to say that all except for two are finished.  One of the remaining, a cardigan, will be finished and the last one, that shawl started in January, is going to be frogged.  Maybe.

I finished all of the toys, wait, make that five unfinished projects, (what is wrong with me!), except for a doll, a tiny bear, and a chicken hat.  Here is an example of how something started and hated can be rescued with a little imagination and colour changes.

I made this monster, a free pattern in my Ravelry store, in orange and brown, my least favourite colour combination, a couple of years ago and just could not bring myself to finish it.  Look how a change of colour (the nose) makes such a huge difference to the overall look.  I added neutral fuzzy yarn limbs and I think he or she turned out to be a real cutey.

Moral of the post: don’t be afraid to try something different and you might be surprised how things turn out.  I know that seems simple but sometimes we just have to reach out from our comfort zone and give lime green a whirl.  I have officially been blogging for five years on the 25th; I never thought I had it in me to stick to this for so long.

Thanks for reading and have a lovely crafty and safe week.  Remember to be kind.

Yarn, Knitting and Crochet

New (Old) Shawl

I have been lying low this last month but have still been busy at my craft.  I spent some time going through my stash and unfinished stuff.

When I started sorting through every bag and box, I found twenty one, yes you read it, twenty one unfinished projects.  I was ready to cast on a new one but thought it was time to buckle down and get at least a couple of these finished first.

I am down to five remaining, no six, I just remembered a shawl that I started in January and am reknitting for the third time.  That one may become a frog project since the level of frustration is growing with the pattern that I am working on.

I found a shawl that I started in December or November of 2018.  Did you see how I put December first so you would think that it is not as old as November but really I think it was October or maybe September.  You know how that goes.

 

Anyway, I found a shawl worked with Caron Cotton Cakes and finished it!  I knit the top piece and, at the time, dithered with changing to crochet to finish the bottom.  I started the crochet last weekend and here is the result.  I am pretty happy with it and look at the miracle of blocking!

 

I will show you all of the toys that I finally finished off next week.  In the meantime, have a happy and crafty week.  Be kind and wear your mask please to help keep your vulnerable fellow humans safe.

Yarn, Knitting and Crochet

New Bear

I love to make and sell toys at craft fairs although that is not happening this year.  I also like to play with my knitting machines when I am not hand knitting or crocheting.

I have made a bunch of kid’s sweaters, not yet photographed, and wanted to knit something different.  I, like a lot of us, collect patterns as well as yarn and had purchased a few of Maggie Andrews pattern books for machine knits online.  Included in that pattern haul was a book of toys.  The legs, body, and head are worked in one piece and the arms and ears, etc. are knit separately.  It was designed for a standard gauge machine which would give you a little 15cm stuffie.

I had my bulky out (I only have room in my craft den to have one machine out at a time) from the sweater run and want to continue that so I adapted.  Using the same row and stitch count gave me this little guy who is about 22cm tall and really cute except that his nose, which I hand knit, could have been a little higher on his snout.  Happy, happy me!

I think that this could also be hand knit with the same row and stitch count.  Who needs to worry about gauge when you are making something that can be any size?  It is a great little stash buster and I will be making more; next attempt will be a bunny.

Thanks for reading once more and remember to spread kindness around freely during the week ahead.