FO Friday: Diplodocus Sweater

I recently had the good fortune to test knit this adorable sweater for Kate Oates (of Tot Toppers). If you like this pattern, think about joining her KAL (starting August 1st).  If you buy the pattern before the KAL starts, you’ll get it for a mere $4!

2453 J's dino sweater

2451 J's dino sweater

Project: Dino Sweater Test Knit

Pattern: Diplodocus

Designer: Kate Oates

Available: discounted to $4 until August 1st, buy now and save! 🙂

Yarn: Knit Picks Wool of the Andes Tonal in Blue Yonder, Deep Waters, and Springtime

2450 J's dino sweater

Like every single other thing I’ve test knit for Kate, this pattern is well-written and thoughtfully designed.  Simple things like adding a button to the neck on the smallest size (baby heads are big!) make all the difference.  The sweater begins with the neck, and short rows are worked across the back to make the neck scoop down in front.  The colorwork dinosaurs are worked without increases (thank goodness).  After the dino yoke is complete, the sleeve stitches are held while the body is worked in stripey rounds.  Although Kate provides a gorgeous striping chart (I followed it exactly), she also encourages the knitter to be inventive — stripe as you like! 🙂

2449 J's dino sweater

You can see how much my 6yo son likes his new sweater … he wore it in June, in Massachusetts, for several days in a row.  The size 6 did come out a tiny bit big for him — but then again, he is a smallish 6yo, so please blame the knitter (not the pattern).

2448 J's dino sweater

Back:

2447 dino sweater

Closeup:

2446 dino sweater (closeup)

Front:

2444 dino sweater

Fantasy Queue: Knitty First Fall 2011

A few weeks ago, I was anxiously awaiting the new patterns from Knitty’s First Fall 2011.  Then they came out.  If I sound a little underwhelmed …. well, I am.  I hate to admit it, but this really isn’t my favorite issue of Knitty.  Which is to say, instead of wanting to make nearly ALL of them, only about half call me with their siren song.  I’m used to unremitting “ohhs” and “ahhs” when I page through a new issue of Knitty — this one has a few “hmms” and “uh, what?”  That said, there are many more patterns that I could ever reasonably make, so for this post I answer this question: If I had unlimited time and money, what would I knit, and with what yarn?

Chasing Snakes

Often I’m drawn to complex sock patterns with a whole lot going on. Recently, I learned the folly of my ways … and then up pops this little number. Bold cabling in a non-traditional irregular sinuous pattern zig-zags down the leg, while the rest of the sock takes a background role. If I were being very, very good I would use some of my stashed yarn for new socks … but in my fantasy queue I spring for some Stroll Tonal in “Canopy.”

Double Heelix

Love the unique and interesting spiral heel-first approach on these socks! The pair featured in knitty are striking, but I REALLY love the “flavor 3” variation — especially since it uses Socks That Rock Lightweight in “Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.” This is the March 2011 sock club colorway, that I’ve already used to make socks and an ipod nano cozy.  I would definitely have to do a Flavor 3 pair for myself — maybe use my sock club coupon to pick up some STR in “Fire on the Mountain” with “Korppi” for the dark background color.

 

Cast On Monday: the all-BMFA edition

Last week, I sat down and took a good hard look at my Transition Point socks (from the May 2011 BMFA Sock Club shipment). I’d finished the leg on the first sock, and had started the heel turn.  I had been trying on the leg obsessively as I worked, because I’d already frogged and restarted twice due to fit issues. So, the leg fit … but it didn’t feel very good the diagonal slipped-stitch lines pulled and tugged, and although I’m not crazy-sensitive, I am bothered by binding clothing. Then there the odd zig-zag pooling, which was disruptive to the pattern … which, if I am honest, I found a bit over-worked.  Too much going on, without enough coherence. Seed stitch on a sock is another question mark — it just isn’t as stretchy and it’s bumpy next to the skin.  I knew every time I wore these socks (which wouldn’t be that often, because of the binding problem), I would have the seed stitch impressed into my feet after I took them off. So, I took a deep breath, pulled out the needles, and sent this project to the Frog Pond for permanent retirement — consider this an un-cast-on annoucement :).

One thing I do love about knitting is that a project may be over and done, but the yarn is still salvageable. I wound the kinky frogged yarn gently around the cake, and set it aside.  Then, yesterday, I realized that I do still love the colors in the skein, especially when they are mixed up together. Then I thought about how much I like all the one-skein sock yarn shawls out there, and then I thought about this great lace edging I’ve been meaning to use for something … so last night I cast on for a new Remily Knits design: a sideways-knit one-skein shawlette for variegated yarn.

In the midst of all this, the July 2011 BMFA Sock Club shipment arrived! I can’t share photos yet (there are no-spoiler rules to preserve the surprise for all club members), but I can say that I love the yarn, and that one of the two patterns REALLY appealing to me.  I cast on some new socks Saturday.

FO Friday: Red Seas

2546 Red Seas Shawl

I brought yarn and needles for a number of new projects on my family vacation over the Fourth of July.  I promised myself that I could cast on ONE new project for every TWO that I finished.  Well, I finished socks and a cowl, so I rummaged through my knitting bag (and box, and 2nd bag) and brought out a skein of Stroll Tonal in “Gypsy,” along with the pattern I’d matched it with … at the same time, elsewhere in knitting-land, the Beginner Lace Knitters group on Ravelry chose a tempting pattern for their July Knit-A-Long. I looked at the yarn and needles I had in hand, and realized they were perfect for my very own Rough Seas. Out the window with my original plan! I cast on with glee, and given the results … I’m not a bit sorry. (Shawl is smaller than it appears here, modeled by my almost-9 son.)

2547 Red Seas Shawl

Project: Red Seas

Pattern: Rough Seas

Designer: Preita Salyer

Available: FREE! on Ravelry

Yarn: Knit Picks Stroll Tonal

Although I’m in love with my finished shawl — I even wore it while I waited in line for 3 hours for a signing of the new “Game of Thrones” book! outside, in July! — I have to say, with all respect, the pattern as it is currently available is almost unusable.  It is rife with errors, omissions, and confusing instructions.  Were it not for great notes on existing projects on Ravelry, it would have been nearly impossible to follow. Even with those notes, I still had trouble sorting out which parts of the pattern were right and which were wrong.  The lace charts included in the pattern were non-standard and had errors and conflicting design (right vs. left half of shawl). I ended up making fresh charts in excel to show how I decided to do the pattern … I made enough changes that you could argue that my shawl isn’t really a “rough seas” at all.

2551 Red Seas (greenery)

Corrections I used for my shawl:

  • Inserted a WS row between Rows 7 & 8
  • Repeated Rows 1 thru 10, eleven times total — 231 sts altogether, 113 on each “side” (not including 2 edge sts and center spine st).
  • I saw no reason to use the increase rows as written, since I already had the right # of sts.

Lace charts:

  • I used the ssk/k2tog orientation from the “right side of shawl” chart (they are reversed on the “left side” chart).
  • I opted for a s2kp rather than a sk2p, because I like the more centered look with a vertical line.
  • I extended the lace pattern into the corners to avoid a big chunk of un-patterned stockinette.
  • I added an increasing section on the edge (to use the edging YOs).
  • I used my corrected/altered “right side” chart for both sides, thus avoiding the problems with the “left side” chart, including the pattern repeat box being one stitch too large, and also the missing column of ssk’s near the center increases.
  • I decided to do three (rather than two) repeats of the edging to better balance the shawl (and use up more of my skein).
  • I finished with one additional repeat of row #1 to “finish” the points on the pattern.
  • I used a decorative crochet finish rather than just binding off, for prettiness and to avert curling on the FO.

Crochet edge:

  • In the “points” I (DC, ch5, DC) in the stitch below the point.
  • Between points, I (DC, ch3), with the DC going through TWO stitches…
  • … except for the THREE sts at the point of the lozenges, where I (DC, ch3) with the DC going through THREE sts (so it would be centered.

I’ve made my version of the rough seas charts available on Google docs.

2552 Red Seas (point)

I thought this shawl is a great example of how much blocking can change a knitted object.  Here you see the unblocked shawl: you can barely see the eyelet rows in the body, and the lace and crochet edging looks lumpy and curled. You can see that it is about six boards across the wingspan.

2531 red seas (unblocked)

Here is a photo of the shawl while being blocked: you can see that I’ve straightened the top edge, and pulled out the points severely. I kept the triangle shape rather than morphing it into a more curved shape.

2534 rough seas (blocking)

Here is the fully blocked and dried shawl — nearly 10 boards across! The yarn (superwash sock yarn) has held the blocking better than it has any right to. The points especially have stayed crisp and dramatic.  Yay!

2549 Red Seas

Review: What Would Madame DeFarge Knit? edited by Heather Ordover

Let me begin by admitting that I am a long-time fan of Craftlit, a fantastic podcast that combines the joys of craft (knitting and more) with the wonders of classic literature.  The host, Heather Ordover, “is an award-winning high school and university teacher who also happens to enjoy knitting. The podcast starts with a little crafty talk, then moves into explanatory notes on the chapters covered in that episode.”  That last bit has been crucial for me — Heather has single-handedly rescued classics from my mental dust-bin.  Remember that dense tome you skimmed through in high school, reading just enough to get by and write some semblance of a final essay? Heather’s enthusiastic and down-to-earth introductions to each episode breath life into these dusty stories by putting them in context and making them exciting again.  I personally gained a whole new appreciation for “The Scarlet Letter.”  I have loved “Pride & Prejudice” for some time now, but listening chapter-by-chapter with Heather was so much fun!  Right now we are finishing up with “The Woman in White,” a novel that I have never heard of before, but I am now entranced by.  It’s a real nail-biter — full of mystery, suspense, and twists that M. Night Shyamalan would pay for.

I suppose it is a bit ironic that one of the few books I wasn’t able to get into is the inspiration for a wonderful new book of knitting patterns and more.  Craftlit brought us “A Tale of Two Cities”  in 2007, and although I really, truly, deeply desired to be as excited about it as Heather and (seemingly) every other listener, I just couldn’t do it.  I’m ashamed to admit that by the halfway point, I’d stopped trying.  I still listened to the crafty portion of the podcast, but as soon as the conversation moved on to Dickens, I pressed “next” on my iPod. That said, from what I gather, Madame DeFarge is a quite a character.  According to the foreword, she “was keeping a record of the names of the doomed” hidden in code in her knitting.  How cool is that?

What Would Madame DeFarge Knit?” is no ordinary knitting pattern book.  For one thing, instead of lavish (read: expensive) color photos, the book features clever black-and-white “woodcut” illustrations by Jen Minnis. Color photographs and much, much, much more are available online, through the main WWMDfK? site and (of course!) Ravelry’s source page for WWMDfK?. At first I was disappointed with the lack of clear photos of the patterns.  I’ve been accustomed to my knitting pattern books doubling as coffee-table books, full of glamour shots of the finished objects.  The more I thought about it though, the more I realized that I never go by just the book photos anyhow–I always check Ravelry to see what others have done with a pattern.  The illustrations have a charm all their own, and lend an old-fashioned air to whole enterprise that suits a book of patterns that are inspired by classic literature.

Another draw to this particular book is that it is one of the first books published by Shannon Okey‘s Cooperative Press. This indy publisher uses a different model for compensating designers: instead of buying patterns outright, they provide something like royalties.  I don’t know the details of the WWMDfK? deal, but I’d be willing to bet the designers are getting more than they would through any other publisher.  Frankly, there’s a good chance this book wouldn’t even be released through a regular publisher, which would be a crying shame.

Each of the 21 patterns is accompanied by a short essay by the designer. One of my favorites is the first in the book: the pattern for Jane’s Ubiquitous Shawl (by Erica Hernandez)  is sprinkled with quotes from Jane Eyre. I imagine knitting this pattern and reading along, with a virtual Jane sitting nearby and chatting.

The patterns aren’t just for knitters: Dawn Ellerd‘s Not-So-Ruby Slippers (a nod to the sparkly red shoes from the Oz movies that never appear in the books) are crocheted in 11 quick rounds from superwash worsted-weight yarn. I’m not usually a “crochet” person — I have, in fact, been heard to say something like, “I can crochet, I just choose not to.”  However, I might just make an exception for these quick and pretty slip-ons.

Another fascinating non-knitting pattern is “The Mermaid’s Lagoon” by the aforementioned Jen Minnis. The book includes paper patterns for a whole cast of shadow-puppets based on J. M. Barrie’s “Peter Pan.” The evocative silhouettes are beautiful and just beg for story-telling.

Back to knitting!  Two patterns that are definitely in my Fantasy Queue are “Bertha’s Mad, Mysterious Cowl” (also by Erica Hernandez) and “Hyde’s Hooded Sweater” (by Gretchen Funk). I imagine making the cowl out of some luscious tonal colorway … in fact, I had set aside a skein of Stroll Tonal in “Gypsy” for this project, but it was diverted into a lace knit-a-long (check out my “Red Seas” shawl!). I love the Hyde hoodie, especially the button-up hood that doubles as a dramatic collar. If I had the funds, I would buy some Stroll WotA in “Deep Waters” — on sale at 25% off as I write. Sigh, alas!

I may never actually make my own Frankenhood (by Syne Mitchell), but I truly appreciate the detailed tutorial on making the light-up LED neck bolts. I haven’t made many amigurumi lately, but I’m thinking that making a Deep Sea Anglerfish with an actual light-up lure would be exceptionally cool.

Two more patterns for my Fantasy Queue: Wilhemina’s Shawlette (by Chrissy Gardiner) and Cthulhu Waits (by Hunter Hammersen).  The latter appeals both for the literary inspiration (I am a fan of all things Cthulhu) and for the asymmetrical wandering tentacles.  My only concern is that I frogged a sock project yesterday, because diagonal lines like this pulled uncomfortably when I tried on the sock. The shawlette is probably going to be part of a Craftlit knit-a-long this fall, to accompany the reading of “Dracula.” I shall be disciplined and wait until then!

I love the pattern for Madame Defarge’s Stole (by editor Heather Ordover): the lace bits are lovely, but the best and most interesting part is the seamless, graft-less construction. The unique (or at least new-to-me) method alone makes me want to make this lacy stole.

So — there you have it.  A great book chock-a-block full of interesting patterns and essays for the literary-minded crafter. Support indy publisher and indy crafters alike, and buy yourself a copy of this book.  You won’t regret the purchase.

 

 

Cast-On Monday

While on vacation I finished several projects, which meant I could cast on new projects! I brought several yarn+needle combinations with me, including leftover Swish DK in Hollyberry and Marble Heather that my youngest son picked out for his requested cowl.  He wanted it to be “half red and half grey,” and I wanted it to be cabled (so it would stand up better). I conjured up a way to knit it without seaming ….  and it was so fast and easy I finished it while on vacation! I’ll write up a pattern and test knit it later, but here is the prototype of my Two-Color Knit-Flat In-The-Round Cabled Cowl:

2524 two-color cowl

I also had with me yarn and needles destined to be Bertha’s Mad, Mysterious Mobius, but then the Beginning Lace Knitters chose Rough Seas as there July KAL, and I couldn’t resist!  My Stroll Tonal in Gypsy was too perfect for words, so I gave up the mobius (at least for now) and cast on my Red Seas Shawl:

2505 Red Seas

As of today, I’ve finished the body and done three repeats of the lace edging (I’m weighting my yarn after each repeat — I’ll make it as big as I can). I have to say, there are a LOT of problems with this pattern — confusing parts, mis-count stitches, missing rows, poorly-formatted charts with several different types of errors — BUT, the finished shawl is so pretty, it’s worth the effort to muddle through the pattern + helpful notes to figure out how to get it done.

New Pattern Release: Berrie Pie

Introducing my latest pattern: Berrie Pie! This adorable sleeveless dress for babies and toddlers has a knit-as-you go flower stitch pattern that is perfect for colorful hand-painted yarns.  Design features include a button-up back, scalloped collar and hem, and an optional built-in diaper cover.

Pattern: Berrie Pie Baby Dress

Designer: Rachel Henry (that’s me!)

Available: in Knit Magazine #38

Yarn: Wild Fire Fibres Tempo

1192 PBD (optional diaper cover)

Inspiration: I love buying hand-painted colorful yarns, but sometimes it can be difficult to match them with a pattern. The flower-stitch pattern on the skirt of the baby dress breaks up pooling and flashing nicely, and takes full advantage of high-contrast hand-painted colorways. The scalloped neck and hem use short rows to play with color too.  I designed a built-in diaper cover with snaps to make it an easy-wear garment and prevent riding up.   I designed this garment with my friend’s baby girl in mind, and the prototype (in pink, below) found a home with her.

1128 PBD

Design/Skills Needed: This is a challenging pattern with a lot of little quirks! The diaper cover is worked flat, then set aside.  The skirt begins with short-row scallops and is then worked in the round using a slip-stitch flower stitch.  The diaper cover is knit in at the hip.  After the waist, the bodice is worked flat.  Button bands and holes are worked as you go. The collar is knit separately, then joined to the neckline.  Knitters should be comfortable with a wide variety of stitches and garment construction, and be willing to read the pattern closely.

I would be delighted to answer any questions or help any knitters working on this project.  I made a quick video to help explain the flower stitch:

Yarn Review: Misti Alpaca Tonos Pima Silk

A couple of months ago, I read about Misti Alpaca’s Tonos Pima Silk in the Spring 2011 Interweave Knits. I was so intrigued, I actually ordered a skein from WEBS in the “Bahama” colorway. When my order from WEBS came I was very pleased!  The yarn is very soft and beautifully hand-painted.

1954 Misti Alpaca Tonos Pima Silk

Yarn: Misti Alpaca Tonos Pima Silk

Price: $18.40

Fiber: 83% Peruvian Pima Cotton, 17% Silk

Put-Up: 100g/327 yards

Suggested Gauge: 5.5 – 6 sts/in on US 4-6

I wound it into a yarn cake right away, found the perfect project to try out this sweet silky blend, and got to work.  It is an absolute dream to knit with, soft and gentle — not at all squeaky or harsh, like some cottons and cotton-blends can be.  I did find it lost it’s sheen a bit as I worked, but washing & blocking the finished scarf brought back the shine I hoped for from the silk content.

2136 silky zigzag scarf

A word of warning! During washing, the FO bled dye significantly.  I washed and rinsed several times before getting marginally clear water.  But, the washed & blocked scarf seemed just as color-rich as the unwashed version.

2397 Tonos  Pima Silk (dye bleeding)

2415 Zig Zag

2416 Zig Zag