The best laid plans

All the best laid plans sometimes fail: the night before our trip to the Duchess County Sheep and Wool festival at Rhinebeck my daughter got sick with a fever and despite my husband’s ardent arguments for me going alone rather than face a year of pining for the festival, I could not drive for 7 hours by myself, and so, we didn’t go.

A week later, I asked my best friend to rescue me from the dumps with a visit to the local yarn store – JP Knit and Stitch in Boston’s newly hip and quickly gentrifying neighborhood.  I got 3 skeins of ECO + by Cascade yarns for a coat for my daughter and 2 skeins of Weekend DK by Berroco in Cornsilk (which is the color of sunshine).  I had two baby sweaters to make: one for my husband’s colleague and one for a friend’s nanny who is about to become a grandmother.

For the colleague, I followed instructions for the Eyelet Yoke Baby Cardigan, but I made one change: instead of increasing before and after the eyelet rows, I used the eyelet rows as my increases.  It made for an ever so slightly different result, but it saved me lots of time.

Eyelet yoke baby cardigan

Once I had to make the second version of this, of course, I had to follow my modifications.  I also thought that the body on this sweater was a bit too wide, so I omitted the raglan increases after the yoke increases.

Here is the final product (I will post detailed directions at some point soon).

If there is any different in perceived color, it is merely due to the lighting.  These are knit from the same exact yarn and dye lot.

 

Blanket blues

Baby blanket from Elizabeth Zimmerman's pi shawlI have two children.  When my first was a little girl, probably around age 1, I knit her a perfect golden blanket.  The blanket came so easily, I don’t even know how it happened.   I got the yarn in a good weight, it was superwash which fitted our sensibilities at the time, and the pattern, Elizabeth Zimmerman’s shawl, was the perfect match.  My daughter still has the blanket and loves it: we spend many reading moments with it.

Step 1: start off

Fast forward 4 years later, I have a second child who is about the same age and I start feeling the pressure to make another perfect blanket.  In retrospect, I should have gotten some of the same yarn in a different color and called it a day.  But I didn’t.  I decided that my kids were different enough that I had to make a completely different blanket, in a different yarn and with a different shape.  Thus I started on another Zimmerman pattern: the square blanket knit from the center out.

Baby blanket from Elizabeth Zimmerman's shawlThings went wrong from the get go.  I had purchased 3 skeins from Brooks Farm yarn at the NYS Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck and once I knit those up, I quickly realized that those skeins go very quickly in a square blanket.  The last skein added at most 1″ to the whole project.

Step 2: get more yarn

In desperation, at the next NYS Speep and Wool festival I bought what I thought was the same yarn, but they didn’t have the same colors.  Why didn’t I ask the lovely lady if I was buying the correct item is beyond me.

Once I started knitting, I realized that what I bought is much thicker (think bulky vs worsted or may even sport) than what I needed. In desperation, I emailed the farm.  They confirmed based on my hastily taken pictures in a hotel, that I was in fact knitting with the wrong yarn.  I upped the needle size between rows and the blanket grew, but over time, you could easily see that it just wasn’t correct.

This year, I made a second attempt to buy more yarn at the Sheep and Wool festival in Rhinebeck. I was determined to go back to Brooks Farm yarn and get the correct yarn.

Ha ha!  The yarn has been discontinued.  I almost cried right then and there and spent the rest of my sheep and wool darting form one booth to the next in a desperate search for something that will work.  I came up with nothing.

Step 3: start anew

When I got home, I was determined to find yarn that was not only the same weight but also the same color – or at least matching one of the colors that was in the original blanket.

I ordered 5 skeins of Brown Sheep Nature Spun chunky wool which I had seen at Rhinebeck and was certain would match in thickness. $70. I sure wish that I had taken a picture of what I saw at Rhinebeck because once I started knitting it up, it became obvious that I yet again had the wrong yarn.

I admitted defeat.  I was not going to find the same yarn and I wasn’t willing to pay Brooks Farm to match one of the colors in the few remaining undyed skeins they had  (in retrospect, a money saving venture).  Now, I had 5 skeins of a very dark purple yarn, which in itself was not enough to make a blanket for a child who is now almost 4. I was determined to finish this blanket, and make it the most beautiful thing I could knit. In desperation, I bought more yarn in pink and light purple – another $70. Note to the dear reader: I never buy yarn in this unabashed gorging. I make lots of lists and buy yarn to match a specific pattern.

So, I had a giant collection of very chunky yarn and I set off to work.  I wanted to make a rectangular blanket from the center out, knit much like its square cousin. I even made a few swatches working out the technique.  Things were looking up. I had a color scheme and a design.  That was, until I took it off the needles after working 3 skeins into the whole thing.  It bubbled in the center! Rip.

By now, I was feeling pretty manic.  The good thing is that my kids are pretty oblivious to the hard line goals I set for myself and so while they noticed that I kept knitting and ripping out lots of different layouts they only said “Mom, why are you ripping that out again?” but not “My blanket is too small. Why haven’t you made me a new one?”

At this point, I had to find a pattern, so I went to Ravely.  I found a double seed stitch blanket design that I really liked.  The only problem is that I don’t have the needles to knit such long rows, plus, since I didn’t have equal numbers of skeins in each of the 3 colors, it would be quite a challenge to figure out how to make different colored rows look elegant.  I had to make it work in squares, so I could knit it a little at time, but, since I don’t like to cut yarn, I had to make it work in such a way that I could knit 1 square and then knit another square adjacent to it from the same skein.

I swatched for about a week to figure out the size of the square I could knit that would take up exactly 1/2 a skein and then, I started.  It looks beautiful.  I’ve made two squares and I will write up the pattern and you will see how I have figured out a way to knit the squares without cutting yarn and binding off at the end of each square.  Here is the dark purple and the pink together and you can see the ball of the light purple that I will also use alternating.

While I will be making a rectangular blanket, you could use this technique to make square blankets or even odd shapes.

The knitting diet

Last month, I was on a knitting diet.  Not a voluntary diet: I had mostly run out of yarn.  It’s not possible to completely run out of yarn as there is always a ball of yarn somewhere waiting to be made into doll’s clothing, but I had no big projects.  I had knit a sweater for my father in law, my mom, my daughter for the fall, my husband for the fall, and then, I had no more project yarn.

Today is September 23rd, or 19 days until the annual pilgrimage to the Sheep and Wool festival in Rhinebeck, NY. Buying yarn now would be counterproductive: I would diminish my Sheep and Wool budget and spoil all the fun.

And so, I was on a diet.  As many avid knitters, I am not quite myself when I don’t have 3-4 projects that can be picked up at any minute. I’m antsy, nothing is going quite right, all of a sudden the train or car ride seem SO LONG!

And then the cold weather came.  Since we live in a condo, the winter things go into boxes in the spring (or midsummer depending on my work load).  Here I was, going through the stash of hats, mittens, scarves, sweaters, and other woolen items that I had so lovingly knit the previous years.  As best as I can see, my kids have outgrown or rejected about 60%-80% of everything they had.

First, my younger daughter took my older daughter’s Basket Weave hat (pattern coming soon). Check – one less thing to store for the next 2 years.  Then it became obvious that the girls have outgrown all of their light winter hats and those woolen pants that I had knit for them two years ago? No one wore them: RIP it! I donated some, but the rest made from good yarn I re-purposed.

Now I had a grown my stash back, without spending one cent and simultaneously discovered a real need for my family.  Winter hats! Scarves! I’m working on the Every Year Hat pattern  – details coming soon.

Today, I am a wealthy woman

When you can no longer ignore the large pile of projects and project bags (mostly empty with only the needles and small leftover yarn) piling up in your house, you must sort.  Today, Ifound a sliver of 30 minutes to turn chaos into organized chaos.  I am lucky enough not to be in very bad shape, but my pile still consumed and took over the top of my dresser and the top drawer.  I went through and re-sorted my needles and it turns out I own not 2, not 3, but 4 00 needles.  That’s right: 4 double zero needles in case I ever need to help a spider sort out his spiderweb or perhaps knit very very thin socks.  The kind that I have sworn many times I will never do because I can really only get through one sock before giving up in frustration at the slow progress.

Besides the 00 needles, I also found a large pile of other valuables Addis: 4, 5, 7, 9, 13 and many double pointed needles.  Now, I feel ready to tackle my newly expanded stash.  Here are the new additions from a recent visit to Rhinebeck’s Sheep and Wool Festival.

Today, I fell really wealthy.

Off to the Sheep and Wool

Every year, October brings with it a little bit of heaven. It’s called the Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck, NY. I start making my list of required yarns sometime in the summer, usually in my head. Then I forget at least 2 or three out of the 5 or so items I need, so I start writing things down. This year, I will surely remember my list since it will be electronically saved in my phone. Now I just have to remember to bring my phone.

So far, I have:
1. Extra yarn for a baby blanket – at least 2 skeins – Brooks Farm, Macho
2. Thick sock yarn 2-3 skeins
3. Undyed yarn, especially if it contains cotton, bamboo or other non-wool fibers 4-5 for a sweater
4. Something from mostly Merino
5. 2-3 Skeins from Good Kharma farm (their Hibiscus yarn is a big hit for hats with the kids) (that’s the stand with the magnifiscnet tree like holder for yarn)

I can’t wait!

Owlies are coming.

As luck would have it, I discovered the Owlie Sleepsack past my children’s age for using such a thing, so it’s been a nagging who-can-I-make-this-for project. And alas, it seems that my cousin is in the expecting category so I have the perfect excuse to get my hands on some beautiful Malabrigo yarn and knit up this gorgeous project. I am thinking of ways to make this baby-sleep proof. Maybe adding shoulders and armholes so they baby can’t scooch all the way into it.

The colors are the colors of their alma matter. If you are from LA, you’ll know.

Forgive me budget, I have sinned

Yesterday, I had an appointment downtown.  I was running a few minutes early and it just occurred to me, that there was an excellent yarn store just around the corner.   This does not happen often.  Thankfully, I live very far from any such temptation.  Not to mention I have been working dilligently at reducing my stash size.  But alas, here I was, with time and opportunity.

I am now the proud owner of two Rowan Big Wool Fusion balls in a pink and white (on sale for $12 each) and 2 hanks of Dream in Color Classy in Ruby River (pink and purple) not on sale for $19 each – I took the last 2. The Big Wool will become the next winter’s hat for my daughter and the Dream in Color hanks will be another A String of Pearls Sweater for girls (pattern coming soon). Can’t wait!