|
|
 |
Friday, November 03, 2006
I sure feel like dancing with my hands inside my gloves...
I don't speak sign language - so I really hope I'm not insulting anyone...



details:
yarn: noro shinano, shade # 12, less than 1 1/2 skeins.
pattern: urban rustic gloves
extremely fast and fun to knit - the grafting, however, takes some time! I highly recommend this very useful tutorial!!
needles: size 5 mm, circular. + the straight needles, stitch holders, tapestry needle and crochet hook - it's all described in the pattern!
I have some "left-over" yarn (ahem - I got myself 5 skeins - I thought my hands were that big...) so I need to put that yarn into a scarf, don't I?:

The pattern is Cowslip from Jane Ellison's "Naturally Noro".
Then there are the socks. And a "few" other WIPs... Hmmm. Wonder how my knitting goes when I get my hands full in a few weeks....
Do I need to say more?!:

Posted at 11:34 am by karen
Permalink
Friday, October 20, 2006
I din't fall off the planet earth but I am really having a hard time finding some spare seconds for knitting and blogging these days... However - riding my bike to work the other day with bare hands just forced me to to clear the table and make room for this (well the room was made at home, not at work ;) ):

What could this little monster possibly resemble??
With excellent tutoring here I think I might very well be able to bring along a couple of gloves when we now most probably are entering a colder season...
The grafting actually works! It's wearable!!:

I must make another one. Now.
Posted at 03:58 pm by karen
Permalink
Friday, October 06, 2006
Squares. FO. Lace leaf. Weekend. Thank you.
Three days, two squares - this could be looking good! We'll see what the next days (and weeks, and months...) bring....

Yes, yes, yes, the grey matter surrounding the yarn is indeed a FO! The cabeled bag turned out to be perfect as container for this mitered square blanket (well, at least the beginning of it!)

details:
yarn: topp t tå from Gjestal spinneri
needles: 5 mm circular
pattern: this here. (feel free to drop me a line if the language looks too peculiar...;-))
modifications: i made cabeled handles and attatced them in a slightly different spot.
The main drive to knit this in the first place was really to give it a go with this yarn. I was curious as to wether it could be usable for the lace leaf pullover or not. I made a swatch and it looked quite fine - but maybe a bit too loose and airy. I remembered I had some left-over Eskimo somewhere, I found it and made another swatch. Even though the yardage/weight is very similar in these two yarns the swatches turned out very different - by far in favour of the Eskimo.
Two pieces are working their ways toward the final grafting...


And now I have to work my way over to the couch for some serious knitting and compatible activity...
And finally, the thank you part - gee - it's good to finally have it in writing!!:
| You Are Teal Green |
You are a one of a kind, original person. There's no one even close to being like you. Expressive and creative, you have a knack for making the impossible possible. While you are a bit offbeat, you don't scare people away with your quirks. Your warm personality nicely counteracts any strange habits you may have.
What color green are you? |
Posted at 09:08 pm by karen
Permalink
Tuesday, October 03, 2006
Let me present the lamest excuse ever for not finishing my WIPs.
I have at least 2 things lined up, knitting done. BUT I HAVE NO SEWING NEEDLE! Don't look at me. I blame it on the needle-eating monster in this house. It's lurking somewhere in the dark. I know it. Monsters scare me so instead of trying to hunt it down I went shopping. So from today on I no longer have an excuse. That is, if the monster doesn't strike again.....

And I went more shopping, at amazon last week. I thought I could use a treat. For my birthday. Tomorrow. Arriving just in time:

I am instantly and absolutely enamoured with all these books. There are several things I want to make - and some things I HAVE to make, like the cover sweater of Yarnplay. The Mason*Dixon is even a lot more than I expected - I love the projects, I love the layout, I love the whole book, I love all three of them!!
Many years ago I took a quilting-course. I had the ambition of making a BIG bedspread. Some day. But the sewing machine and me, - my neck to be more specific, turned out to be far from good friends. I just couldn't handle it. So I gave up on the whole idea - until now - finding the mitered square blanket in the Mason*Dixon book:

There will be a bedspread. Eventually.
One square pr. month: in 6 1/2 years.
One square pr. week: in 1 1/2 years.
One square pr. day (definitely not!): in 11 1/2 weeks. (Or: in my dreams!)
Isn't it just lovely?
Posted at 05:04 pm by karen
Permalink
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
I am making leaves. The pink ones are embossed (the english language file in my brain is still working on that one) - and the muted plum is a lace one:

I am absolutely enjoying them and not at all stressed about the fact that my WIP-number is now well into the 2-digits. But in the name of decency - I'll try to behave from now on. I promise to stop at least before I reach the 3-digit sphere. (Wonder btw what it might look like up there.....hm)
The pink sock (saying socks might just be too optimistic at this point...) is for my sister. Maybe I should try to let this one pass as pinky's mate:

Anatomically speaking it might be evident that we are looking at the medial side of the foot with the toes way down there. Strange? Yes, very strange. Too strange. This happens to be the back of my leg with the heel way down there. The reason I know that for sure is because I remember very well my obscure posture while shooting it right there at the big window. I hope our neighbors are not in.
From the front:

No, it fits me perfectly and I want it for myself, little sister, so you'll get your two pink ones. Eventually. Sheesh - sisters are demanding, aren't they?
So. Where was I. Yes. On Iceland.
A loooong way back I tried in a very correct and friendly way to order a book. From Iceland. I had some correspondance in english with someone there - they even put the book aside for me! To make a long long and boring story very short; - it was a dead end. They just didn't manage to send it to me.
So what is this, then? Here right outside my door?:

Very good friends of very good friends are indeed very good friends. My friend B. in Bergen has a lovely friend who had this book lying around somewhere hidden after moving - she had not missed it for six months so she let me borrow it! Hurray!!! I won't see her until around new years eve so I have plenty of time to look and drool and maybe study some icelandic... She also happened to have some real icelandic einband - 1-ply - that she plain out gave to me - I was speechless! Thank you, thank you!! I think there is at least a 2-digits number of shawls I want to make now!
The good thing about shawls however - they are great as singles! No demand for pairs!!
Posted at 12:55 pm by karen
Permalink
Sunday, September 17, 2006
Here is another try at capturing the red:

I really got carried away last night and did too many cables, meaning the cable theme here in the back got totally decentered. First i thought "nah, cables in the middle, cables on the side, who cares". So I knit on, while I knew I had to rip, of course. Too stupid a mistake, and after all I only had to rip 8 cm. No big deal as knitting this heavenly yarn is not too bad. I might have mentioned that in my last post.
Getting carried away with cables also includes this little experiment:

I just had to test this incredibly reasonable superwash wool. I am having the Lace leaf pullover in mind. Maybe. The wool turns out to be incredibly wonderful, everything considered. Non felting, non piling, very soft. Of course it is not much of a test because the gauges for this here project and the Lace leaf are entirely different. But doing a little swatch for the Lace leaf made it clear the yarn is perfect for that. Nuh-nooo, not to worry! I am not casting on for yet another project. I wouldn't even consider such a thing! At least not this afternoon.
The heathered plum Karen Noe shetland wool from a couple of posts ago has aslo been put to use;
Cables are fun. Wonder if this pattern wouldn't be very easy to adapt into a sock-pattern!? Now let's see, where did I put that lovely green sock yarn......
Posted at 04:27 pm by karen
Permalink
Friday, September 15, 2006
Is it summer? Is it fall? Will there be a winter when we have to do something to keep the house warm? It's the middle of september and we have more than 20 degrees celcius. In Norway. Well at least here in the south-western part. It's wonderful, it's great - but also scary to think it might very well be the result of global heating. And it's confusing; "emmm...Summer, I would like to introduce you to Fall, and Fall, meet Summer....hey wait... you're not supposed to be present at the same time...or?"
Norweagian wood meets summerflowers:

Well, the wood turned out to be lithuanian, not norwegian after all - but it seems to be really good, dry, singing quality wood. So I feel confused. I should be enjoying this fantastic weather, but instead I find myself dreaming of dark and cold fall weather, a lit fire and maybe I tiny bit of knitting... And when winter comes I long for silent, sunny warm indian summer days like this. Here. Today.
Anyway. I had another trip to Bergen last weekend. Of course to visit my dear friend B. and to finally get my hands on something she kindly bought for me at Pinnsvin design som while ago. And with Kris being out in space for the time being, I also consider this some sort of a consolation prize to keep me from crying as I didn't get to meet her this time.
Cashmere is really comforting somtimes...

It's devinely soft and wonderfully red, but red behaves strange in front of the camera so it's hard to catch the real color. The process of knitting with this king or queen of fibers is soothing, it's therapy, it's everything you need in order to gather your thoughts and senses inbetween the daily ordeals and events. I don't care when I finally get to finish this sweater - the knitting itself is good enough for me. Hah! - of course I can't wait to throw this sweater over my head! But it is some sort of a "can't have your cake and eat it" kind of situation...
Yes, this sweater:

from the latest Vogue Knitting. I am enjoying the back:

Red is really hard to catch, it is a bit darker/not as orange in reality. This is a toss-everything-else-aside-for-a-while kind of project.
It's addictive - and above all - cashmere is not stash-yarn!
Posted at 11:35 am by karen
Permalink
Tuesday, September 05, 2006
And cold hands..(or: "how to shift from one sidetrack to another"..)
I need some gloves.
I have some great patterns, and I have some lovely yarn:

I need them - and I want them - and I sure want to knit them! Isn't that what knitting is mostly about?!
I also finished one of the stockings. This is a very strange heel. I blame the pattern for the shape (but it fits!). The pink, however...I take the blame for that...

Naah - it's not that bad is it?
Posted at 12:23 pm by karen
Permalink
Friday, September 01, 2006
First of all, Michelle asked about the picot-edge of the Hourglass, and she already figuered it out - it's as easy as can be - k2tog, yo, all the way around, then continue in stocing st. and you get the nice little holes and peaks!
Speaking of stocking stitches. My feet are getting cold this time of the year. I want wolly socks, no, knee-highs. No. Longer. Over the knee! I want stockings! If nothing else - just to pull up when sitting around doing nothing - to keep warm! I was playing around with the thought - and then my eyes fell on this article from the latest Vogue Knitting:

Yes. Thank you - look at those wonderful Elizabeth Zimmermann artful stockings! I think the pattern for some similar ones is to be found in one of her books - a book I don't have. But I do have two other great sock-knitting books, Nancy Bush's Knitting On The Road and Knitting Vintage Socks. So I take the very basic and straight forward pattern for "Ladies useful stockings" from "Knitting Vintage Socks" (which I think will suit me very well even though I don't do "reenactments or belong to the Society for Creative Anachronism" - as the pattern suggests...!). But I also want a little bit of interesting things going on in the front - so I add the diamonds on the "New England" socks from "Knitting On The Road":

The yarn was found in stash! It's discontinued, but ever so soft - Garnstudio's Babyull, superwash, 170 m / 50 g. This is getting loooooong:

The weird thing is - I knit this up faster than I ever did the leg of a sock before - strange what obsessing inspiration does to a knitter!
My twins also want socks:

I think I've pushed this to the limit now! Three single socks - now I really have to watch my step!!
Posted at 11:15 am by karen
Permalink
Friday, August 25, 2006
FO no. whatever 2006! Hourglass sweater
Clap-clap happy dance! I actually totally finished something!:




details:
pattern: hourglass sweater from last minute-knitted gifts by joelle hoverson
yarn: noro cash iroha shade 10 (spruce-ish), less than 9 skeins for second-smallest size, 50 g pr. skein. (this yarn comes both in 40 and 50 g skeins - beware!!)
needles: 4,5 mm circular for body and yoke, 4,5 mm dpns for sleeves
modifications: picot edges and a couple more repeats around neck to avoid shoulder-show-off.
satisfaction: very, very big!
While knitting I was worried it was getting too small, but I knit on, as I know that noro-yarns have a tendency to stretch a bit. After finishing and doing a little steam-blocking, the fit was perfect- just as I wanted it! Cash Iroha is an amazing yarn - very rustic looking - yet softer and more comfortable than most yarns I've ever used. Why on earth did Noro discontinue it? To anyone wondering and pondering: get it while you can!!
Posted at 03:10 pm by karen
Permalink
|