Main

October 25, 2008

Seams

To answer a couple of questions about the cashmere sweater…

Q. Why spend months knitting a plain gray sweater that you could have bought at a store?
A. Because I couldn't have bought it at a store exactly the way I wanted it: tight fit, extra long sleeves, rolled edges, the exact shade of gray…

And beside all that, because I enjoyed knitting it, at least for 80% of the time. :)

Q. Can you show pictures of the seams?
A. Not the best pictures, but here they are.

Q. Any seaming tips?
A. Ha! Seaming tips from the queen of seam procrastination?
I don't know if this will be any help, but I knit the sides of the sweater with a selvedge, just a single purl stitch at the end of each stockinette row. When Ivar sewed the pieces together he inserted the needle into the first stitch *after* the selvedge stitch. I think there is a name for this technique, but I don't know it.

Maybe someone else can fill in the blanks?

October 19, 2008

Miss Luna & Twined Knitting

I can get used to this: knitterly afternoons eating good food, sipping Lapsang Souchong, listening to Cassandra Wilson and Ella in Berlin, all the while learning something new (twined knitting) with the sweetest Italian greyhound leaning against my leg or using it as a chin prop.

Isn't Luna the cutest?

Of course she knows it and has all the boys wrapped around her little paw, starting with Doug who has furnished his apartment to reflect who's in charge. Sofa pillows with reproductions of renaissance tapestry with exquisite images of Italian greyhounds… drawings, paintings, photos and a beautiful poster of a 1912 Frankfurt dog show.

You can't blame a girl for letting it go to her head.

Almost forgot about the knitting…

Ivar taught me how to set up a ball of yarn and cast on for twined knitting, and how to twine knit stockinette stitch with two colors. He also showed me how to purl that way, but I didn't actually get to do that, so most likely the information won't stick.

Twined knitting is slow — I mean, sloooooow — and it may not be practical for LA weather, but it sure is an interesting technique that yields beautiful results. I'll try to practice in the next few days to fix things in memory and worry about possible applications later.

October 14, 2008

On the rack

What do you know… I finished the cashmere sweater that had been languishing there forever. It took a friendly hand to get me out of a rut. After spending about three months knitting 3 strands of superfine cashmere with #0 needles, I botched the seams, my constant nemesis, until Ivar quietly picked up the sweater, undid the seams and redid the whole thing properly — or I should say beautifully — and now I also know how to do it myself.

For now the sweater is drying on a rack and given that it's finally turned a little cold, it might take a while to dry completely. Wouldn't it be great if I could keep those leaf shadows in the sweater?

I decided to finish the neck, cuffs and bottom by keeping the raw rolled edges. I'll see how I like that when I wear the sweater.

Pipie is supervising the drying while enjoying a little bit of October sun in the dining room.

Unfortunately the orange cast is due to the fires in the San Fernando Valley. Let's hope they get completely extinguished soon.

October 10, 2008

Twisted friends

Back in July I met two great guys and wonderful knitters: Ivar (a.k.a. Asplund on Flickr and Ravelry), a Swedish knitter who at the time was living in Israel, and Doug (a.k.a. DougLaughlin), the friend he was visiting in Los Angeles. They came over for a knitterly afternoon on the 4th of July and I had the most pleasant and relaxed time with them.

Ivar brought a beautiful sweater he was knitting with the twined technique. If it weren't that I have some serious UFOs to get out of the way and that LA weather is not really right for twined knitting, I would take it up in no time.

His Flickr pages are worth a visit just for the outstanding and flawless gussets. And you can see more of his work in this video of a recent exhibition. The video shows off some of his beautiful sweaters.

Doug was very gracious in putting up with Kelvin's lap requirements on such a hot day and managed to keep knitting despite the frequent tail interferences. Talk about being a good sport…

Some details of Ivar's twined sweater.

I wish I had remembered to take pictures sooner in the day, because I missed Doug's socks and vest and other sweaters.

But I may get another chance… the lads are coming back tomorrow. :)

On top of having a great time, I received a large skein of yarn that Ivar brought from an island off the coast of Sweden and green-headed matches in a box graced by a Linneus botanical illustration.

The yarn is a deep red with the slightest heather effect and subtle variations in color. Soon after their visit I started a scarf with the Melon Scarf motif from Victorian Lace Today. Not much progress so far, but I think tomorrow will inspire me to get back to it.

Maybe fluffbuff is back…

February 22, 2008

Working on a pattern

So many things going on…

Culinary school is not looking good right now, but I am not giving up. In fact, I am thinking of ways to raise money to at least get started. Call me optimist, but if I can put together tuition for the first term, I believe that things will work themselves out.

One of the ideas I am working on, thanks to encouragement from a couple of friends, is a knitting pattern. For now I am stuck on a technical issue, but hope to resolve it over the weekend. Once that's taken care of, I'll move on to the overall design and choice of yarn. I need to get the pattern written and tested quickly; next term starts April 7!

In the meantime, I am trying out recipes, working with Ben on our first online venture of our own (still under wrap), and trying to keep my arm reasonably out of trouble, which means frequent computer breaks.

On the knitting front, I still haven't gotten around to sewing the pieces of my cashmere sweater together. Could I be more of a procrastinator?

For the rest, life as usual with just enough occasional kitty excitement to remind me to keep an eye on the daily stuff. This morning I had to wrestle Kelvin after he grabbed some dental floss from the bathroom's trash basket. I really need to stop throwing it there. A couple of years ago he gave us a big scare after swallowing two long strands of dental floss. Frantic calls to the vet and we were told to just wait and see if he got sick because there was nothing they could do, not even X-rays since floss would not be visible. So we held our breadth for two days and Kelvin was fine. I wonder if his renewed interested in dental hygiene has anything to do with having a new girlfriend.

Kelvin and Jennifer on their Valentine's date.

Sorry Andrea! You've been gone too long and he needs a local girlfriend.

February 2, 2008

Wool from Norway

I've been bad. Bad at answering emails, bad at getting stuff done, bad at staying in touch with friends. And I've gone almost a week now without knitting. It's a case of the blues and my arm hurting form too much computer work and the rain I'm not used to anymore. Gotta shake this off.

Three sweaters are calling for me to finish them — what is it with me and sweaters anyway? — but I've found all sorts of excuses for not hearing them. Now I have one more reason: some beautiful wool from Norway arrived in the mail the other day. For once I won something by leaving a comment on a blog and strikkelise sent me all this goodness.

The heathery gray Norwegian wool really appeals to me. I think it wants to become a shawl; which one I don't know yet. Any suggestions? It's a total of 750m (820 yds).

The Swedish hand dyed wool is also beautiful, but I am not sure what to do with it yet. Strikkelise suggests a hat or mittens.

I love the sheep card — those Dorset Horn sheep look ready to pop! — and the cute little flower buttons.

Thank you, strikkelise!

January 30, 2008

Wool Peddler shawl

Three days after washing, the sheep odor has subsided almost entirely (stress on the almost). I am pretty sure that by now 99.9% of people would not notice anything. Me, I am cursed with a finely tuned sense of smell; and a curse it is, most of the time anyway.

But the color is pretty, me thinks.

I grabbed Ben for some pictures and we borrowed the neighbor's garden again, this time with his permission. I didn't realize that I was partially in the shade and the color gradation doesn't read too clearly in the photos. For a better read on that, I am adding a WIP photo below.

The shawl came out slightly smaller than I had expected. I got so used to my Wing o' the Moth shawls that now everything else seems small by comparison.

Hey, three FOs in one month! This has to be a record for me.

Oh, wait, the details…

Pattern: Wool Peddler Shawl
Source: Folk Shawls by Cheryl Oberle
Needles: Addi Lace US#6 (4mm)
Yarn: Kauni Effektgarn 8/2 (color W-ES)

January 27, 2008

Kauni Woes

The Wool Peddler shawl is blocking right now and I am a bit upset about it. I like the pattern, love the color, but after multiple washes and rinses the yarn stinks like sheep in a disturbing way. I've had unskirted merino fleeces that smelled less foul than this yarn.

If the offending odor doesn't fade away, I don't know what I am going to do with the rest of my Kauni. I swapped some yarn I wasn't using with a Canadian knitter on Ravelry so in addition to a good leftover from the blue cone, now I also have two big skeins in a beautiful brown color palette. Keeping my fingers crossed here.

I wonder why I haven't seen any mention of the smell issue on other blogs. I know that I am highly sensitive to smells, but surely this is too much to go unnoticed even by normal people.

Another feature I could do without is the presence of guard hairs and vegetable matter. I suppose I have grown rather spoiled by knitting lace for a year using supersoft yarns. That'll teach me…

January 26, 2008

Gradualissimamente

Impossible to take pictures of WIPs without Pipie getting in the way. In between naps and snacks a kitty needs some action, you know.

È impossibile fotografare i progetti in corso senza che Pipie si metta nel mezzo. Fra pisolini e spuntini un micio deve pur darsi da fare, no?

I love how the Kauni Effektgarn is changing color ever so slowly.

Mi piace molto come la lana Kauni cambia colore, gradualissimamente.

January 21, 2008

Wisp

January is turning out to be a good month for FOs. After the shawl for my mother, I cast on and quickly finished a little scarf using a pattern called Wisp.

I modified it to eliminate the button holes and make it slightly longer.

Love, love, love Habu Kasuri Silk Mohair; those suble color changes make me very happy.

Maybe I should knit quick projects more often; they are good to offset those languishing UFOs.


January 18, 2008

Swallowtail #2

My second Swallowtail shawl is finished. The knitting was done two weeks ago, but I couldn't find enough time for blocking it during the day. This one is for my mother and I'll have to figure out how to get it to her. Neither one of us wants to trust the postal service with it. She is still waiting for a book I mailed her the first week in December.

There is also the issue of blocked shawls getting unblocked in transit. I read about that on a couple of blogs. Placing the shawls inside plastic bags to protect them from possible harm can result in condensation and heat that cause the shawl to get unblocked and reach its destination in a crumpled mess.

It's been almost three years since my last trip to Italy, so I guess I'll have to deliver in person. :)

This Swallowtail is bigger than the original pattern. I added five repeats in the body so that it would be more wearable than the tiny one I made for myself last year.

I cannot recommend enough the Jenkins lace needles, the sharpest little things in the universe. They made knitting the nupps a pleasure. I had been dreading making all those nupps, especially with the larger version of the shawl, but those needles saved me a lot of frustration.

Another thing that made this shawl more fun to knit was the yarn. I definitely enjoy knitting with Zephyr a lot more than Misty Alpaca.

January 10, 2008

Feminin Strik

    

Feminin strikk (Danish title: Feminin Strik)
by Lene Holme Samsøe
118 pages
ISBN-10 8204128428
ISBN-13 9788204128423
Language: Norwegian (Bokmål)
Original language: Danish

Bought from Nordic Fiber Arts

It's a small book with a total of 26 patterns — if I counted correctly) — mostly incorporating lace. Below are a few of my favorite ones. Of course you've all seen Rundstrikket jakke, as it's the one people have been raving about the most. I think there is also a KAL for it.

I like the transparency effect of "Plissé". I wonder about the name, as Hanne Falkenberg has a model called Plissé as well, and it looks nothing like this. Doesn't "plissé" mean "with pleats"? This one doesn't seem to have any, and from the photo it looks like it's constructed by alternating bands worked with different yarn weights or different stitches. If only I could read Norwegian…

In addition to these models, the book includes patterns for a simple shawl, a blanket, a scarf, a Fair-Isle long coat, an Aran sweater, a few vests and cardigans, a pullover, a handbag and a skirt.

You can see how knitters have knit some of these patterns in various blogs and on Ravelry.

The price for books originating in Denmark is rather steep; still, getting the Norwegian copy from Nordic Fiber Arts is more affordable than getting the Danish version from Lacis or directly from Europe.

I started looking at online Norwegian-English dictionaries and soon lost my resolve to ever learn enough to understand these instructions. For now, this book will be inspirational only. No immediate plans to knit from it.


January 6, 2008

Progress bars

Casey is my hero. I now have progress bars. :)

See in the right column? Casey made it a cinch to add the code and voilà, automagically updated info as soon as I update my project page on Ravelry.

Yes, I owe you a book review (Feminin Strik); I haven't forgotten. It's just been a little messy chez fluffbuff lately and I don't quite have my act together. Soon!

Oh, and I just received permission from Giorgio to publish his mom's torta di riso so as soon as I make it again (I can't imagine posting a recipe without photos) and translate the directions into English, you can try it, too.

Buona domenica everybody and I hope you are staying dry.

December 31, 2007

Year of lace

2007 will go down as my year of lace, where I learned to knit lace in the first place and got hooked on shawls big time.

Knitting projects for this past year have included three scarves, six shawls, a pair of wrist warmers, two pairs of socks and a pair of convertible mittens, for a total of thirteen FOs. If I had to pick a favorite project, it would probably be Anne Hanson's Wing o' the Moth, that I knit twice. I just LOVE that pattern. A while back I bought also the pattern for her Bee Fields triangular shawl, but just looking at the 18-page print-out has stopped me from trying. Her patterns are beautifully crafted, include charts and step-by-step written instructions, but there is such a thing as too much information for me; perhaps it's because I grew up in Italy where patterns are less detailed. I've heard just the opposite complaint from American knitters who find European patterns too sketchy and vague. In any case, Anne's designs are gorgeous and I can't say enough good things about her.

The gray cashmere sweater is about 80% done, but I haven't worked on it for a couple of weeks because my arm was starting to suffer from constantly knitting with tiny needles. This week I also started another shawl, this time for my mother. She liked the pictures of Swallowtail, so that's what I am making (here goes the serial knitter again). It's okay to mention it since she has no Internet access and only gets to look at my blog when she visits my brother in London. This time I am going to modify the pattern by adding five repeats to the main area, so the shawl is a more wearable size. I really didn't get much use from my own Swallowtail because it's so tiny.

Despite my best intentions, I still have a couple of embarrassing UFOs languishing in the closet. We shall not mention them again until such a time as they change status, all right Marina?

This has been an exciting year for the knitting community because of Ravelry. If you are still on the waiting list, you should know that there will be an Open House event in January, so keep an eye on the Ravelry blog for updates.

I'd like to close this post by thanking all the knit bloggers out there that have kept me inspired throughout the year, as well as the knitters without a blog who have emailed me asking questions, offering answers, or simply to say "Hi". You all add to my enjoyment of knitting and I have learned a lot in so many ways. Too many of you to mention in one post, but thank you girls! and a few boys, as well.

Happy new year everybody!

And, as we say in Italian, Buona fine e buon principio! (Happy ending and happy beginning!)

December 29, 2007

My Danish obsession

  You may have noticed my growing obsession with all things Scandinavian. Lately, Denmark has taken the lead in my Nordic interests and I've been ogling Danish knitting blogs, intrigued by the patterns of various knit designers such as Hanne Falkenberg, Marianne Isager, Vivian Hoxbro and Karen Noe. Sooner or later I'll have to give in and buy one of those kits I've been coveting. Too bad the dollar is doing so poorly these days.

Here are a few Danish items that have made it to casa fluffbuff, often by roundabout ways.

Two Japanese embroidery books with Danish titles: Easy Embroidery and Small Embroidery. I am still not sure what the Danish connection is.

A Norwegian copy of Feminin Strik. I had been curious about this book for a while and finally got my copy from Nordic Fiber Arts.

The DVD of After the Wedding, a poignant drama, if a little melodramatic, with powerful and intimate performances. I enjoyed watching this movie to the point that I put down my knitting and turned off the Ott-Lite lamp. Trust me; it's a stellar endorsement. I was already a third into the movie when I noticed how enjoyable it was not to have to endure the heavy-handed musical treatment so typical of American movies. Mr. Spielberg could learn a thing or two about that. I still cringe at the recollection of Amistad, a movie plagued by over-the-top styling that turned gruesome scenes of abuse into renaissance tableaux of unbearable prettiness, and courtroom scenes looking as gripping and realistic as a prolonged shampoo commercial. And to top it all, overbearing music punctuation that never let you forget what the filmmaker wanted you to feel. Ah, yes… I can hear you say "Now, tell us how you really feel". Ok, cut to…

A big cone of Kauni Effektgarn, an Estonian wool sold by a Danish company come to me via a Canadian retailer. My first swatch was somehow disappointing as the yarn turned out to be scratchier than I expected and released an unpleasant odor after washing. Maybe it'll grow on me.

At least I have one Danish book I can actually read: Shadow Knitting.

Stay tuned for a post about Feminin Strik in the next few days.

December 25, 2007

Encore

The good thing about being down with the flu is that I got some knitting time I wouldn't have otherwise had. A girl's gotta have her priorities straight, n'est-ce pas?

So, at the very last minute, on Christmas Eve, I finished my second Wing o' the Moth, or as it shall now be known: my Christmas shawl. Still feeling and looking sick enough that a fashion shoot is out of the question; instead, I dressed up the mantelpiece and asked Gigi and Ugo to help out by holding up the shawl.

I am now officially a Cracksilk addict. As fussy as it often is to knit with Kidsilk Haze, there's nothing quite like the lightness and softness and smoothness of it. With all their holes, my KSH shawls are the ones that keep me warmest.

So happy I got something done, because I've been very clumsy this past week: broke a glass, ruined a cake yesterday (the kind of ruined that requires throwing out the whole thing) and now I have to bake another one stat. Ben's mom and dad will be here in a few hours and I want to have at least something homemade.

A very merry Christmas to you all.

…and may all your knits be bright!

November 25, 2007

Knitting Progress

Yes, I have been knitting, and yes, there has been progress, but did you really want to look at pictures of shapeless gray stockinette? I didn't think so. Today, though, I thought I'd break the knitting radio silence to show all the pieces finally together at the yoke. I have about an inch done since I put them all together and am about to start the raglan decreases.

Nothing like cashmere under your feet.

It's all part of our in-house quality control testing,

and Pipie gets rewarded for doing a good job…

while Kelvin (aka String Boy, for his addiction to strings) tests PH reactivity by applying carefully metered quantities of saliva to one of the dangling ends.

Strings… yum!

I couldn't wish for better assistants.

A good job completed, Kelvin returns to supervising the world outside the window. A mean cat has been going around all day, messing with his mind.

If I had had my camera handy earlier this morning, I could have shown you Kelvin looking like a cross between a B+W watermelon and a giant porcupine.

November 5, 2007

Nordic Knitting #2

  Yesterday's book hunting expedition rewarded me with knitting and embroidery books. Here is one I had been on the lookout for since a friend in Japan had alerted me that it was being released.

I like this book just as much as I liked Nordic Knitting: Ten Fabulous Techniques.


北欧ミラクルニット—驚きいっぱい7のテクニック
Nordic Knitting: Seven Miraculous Techniques
by Kirja Kongsbak
ISBN-10: 4579111621
ISBN-13: 978-4579111626

Table of Contents

    Vendepinde:
  • Zigzag
  • Frill
  • Spiral & Circle
  • Rose
    Four Knitted Rectangles
    Dropped Stitch
    Garter Socks
    Chain
    Buttonhole Technique
    Moebius Band
    How To Make

I don't know the correct translation for Vendepinde, but all the projects in this section are worked with short rows, so maybe that's what vendepinde means. If you know different, please let me know.

The projects are diverse and illustrate the various techniques well. You'll find scarves, hats, table mats, bags, a necklace, sideways socks, a Moebius headscarf.

If they come out with Nordic Knitting #3, I'll buy it with my eyes closed.

October 30, 2007

Wassup?

Ah, yes, I've been remiss in my blogging duties. Between the fires, a business deadline, and the raccoons and coyotes acting up in the middle of the night, I haven't had a good night's sleep in almost ten days and sleep deprivation turns me into this. You don't believe me? Ask Ben.

Fortunately, our experience of the fires was indirect, other than for the unhealthy air, and Ben's youngest brother — who had to evacuate twice in three days with his wife and small child — didn't lose his house. Thank you for all your comments and emails; it may sound corny, but the expressions of concerns and the messages from friends near and far really are comforting. The first few days, when fires were starting up all over the place, I was worried in spite of knowing that we were far from any large fire. When air humidity values are in the single digits and winds blow at 100 miles an hour, things can change quickly and now that we are down to one car and I was stuck at home all of last Tuesday, well… I didn't like that.

In spite of everything, I managed to relax and have fun on Sunday with a handful of friends. This time I kept the gathering very small on purpose; I find it more enjoyable and relaxing when it's not a crowd.

Our equal-opportunity lap-cat got plenty of hugs from Elena and an extended petting session with Carol's plastic nails. He and Pipie got inside all sorts of bags and boxes and Pipie even stole Carol's scarf for some private fondling.

Including Ben, there were just six of us, which worked perfectly at the table. I didn't get much knitting done, but boy, did I have fun. What with Anne's and Theresa's stories, we spent more time laughing than knitting. Laughing notwistanding, our mouths successfully negotiated bread, cheese, grilled eggplants and zucchini, red wine, a whole frikkin' fruit tart that could have fed twelve people, small hazelnut dessert thingies and some coffee. Life is good.

I don't know if it comes from dealing with children (Anne is a teacher and Theresa a children's librarian) but those girls know how to tell a story. The thing that cracks me up the most about Anne is not so much how she tells stories as how she drops comments in regular conversation and half the time I have to do a double take, as when she was talking about a former renter, "a little ol' lady, so old she didn't even like sex anymore". And we all loved Theresa's account of the baby possums that started showing up in her toilet.

But all good things come to an end, and a little after 4PM, when all the girls were gone, it was work until almost midnight. Ben and I were working on a business proposal for a startup challenge held by Amazon.com. The deadline was midnight on Sunday and we spent the last two hours that day trying to submit the various parts of the proposal in the form fields provided, but couldn't. And no error message to help us figure out why the system wasn't working, so by the time we finally went to bed we were both rather discouraged and convinced that all the work of the previous few days had been in vain.

Yesterday, Amazon extended the deadline and we found out that each form field had a limit of 4,000 characters, which was news to us since their submission instructions expressely said that we could be "as brief or as detailed" as we wished. So we had to edit several sections of our proposal to fit the new requirements. Who was it, Pascal, who once said "I would have written you a shorter letter, but I didn't have the time"? Exactly. That took all of yesterday with both of us working on it and bouncing things back and forth each other to shave off a few more characters.

So we edited and chopped and edited again and tried to submit the proposal and still no luck. Obviously we weren't the only ones having trouble with that submission since Amazon extended the deadline again to noon today and we finally succeeded. Just.in.time.

Now, let's hope we do well in the competition.

October 17, 2007

Counting inches

The gray cashmere sweater is inching along.
148 rows = 10.5 inches

And while Ms. Cornflower color-coordinates her knitting with her reading, I coordinate my knitting with Pipie.

If I keep this up, I won't have to wait 'till Christmas 2009 to wear this sweater. On the other hand, everything else is on the back burner; who knows when Wing o' the moth #2 will get some action. And my mother has asked me for a shawl. And I planned to knit scarves for my nieces. And…

OK, I'm starting to stress. Time out. Knitting is about relaxing and I know some of you won't believe me, but the small gauge stockinette really works for me right now. It's smooth sailing, no worrying about missing a yarn over or inexplicably finding an extra stitch at some point. All I have to do is knit, knit, knit and purl, purl, purl, and press my chaka-chaka at the end of each row to keep track of increases and decrease every eight rows as I am doing a little bit of shaping.

I am in love with this yarn, even before washing. The cashmere comes still oiled and really blooms only after washing, but even oiled, the knitting is very pleasant. I think I'm going to become a big ColourMart fan.

October 14, 2007

Malibu Knitting

This month's guild meeting at Sand & Sea was an interesting one with plenty of good projects across a spectrum of knitting techniques. Pamela's Modern Quilt Wrap in Kidsilk Haze is proceeding beautifully.

L'incontro di ottobre della "Sand and Sea knitting guild" è stato interessante, con molti bei progetti realizzati in una varietà di tecniche. La Modern Quilt Wrap di Pamela in Kidsilk Haze sta venendo molto bene.

A member who works at Caltech (I didn't catch her name) had a great shawl with an intriguing construction. The pattern — Kousa Dogwood Shawl — is by Miriam Selma and appears on page 48 of the book Knitting in America.

Shari had a shawl of southwestern flair combining different patterns, a slip stitch motif and yarns in several colors. I only know that it was designed by a man; hopefully I'll find out more about it. Shame on me for not taking pictures. Shari had also a Hanne Falkenberg project under way that I like a lot: a jacket called Da capo.

Una socia che lavora a Caltech (non mi ricordo come si chiama) aveva uno scialle molto bello con una costruzione interessante. Il modello — "Kousa Dogwood Shawl" — è di Miriam Selma e appare a pagina 48 del libro "Knitting in America".

Shari aveva uno scialle particolarissimo, in stile southwestern, che combina una varietà di punti e lane di colori diversi. So solo che il modello è stato creato da un uomo, ma spero di scoprire i dettagli. Purtroppo non ho fatto foto e adesso mi dispiace. Shari sta anche lavorando ad una giacca disegnata da Hanne Falkenberg che si chiama Da capo.

I was lucky to get a ride with Anne so the way there and back was fun, too. We took the scenic route from Calabasas to Malibu and on the way back we stopped a few minutes to enjoy the beach scenery and breath the salty air. Plenty of seagulls and sandpipers, crashing waves and not too many people either, as the temperatures are finally starting to be more in line with the season.

Ho avuto la fortuna di avere un passaggio da Anne così anche il viaggio è stato piacevole. Abbiamo preso la via panoramica e al ritorno ci siamo fermate qualche minuto a goderci la vista della spiaggia e respirare un po' di aria marittima. Gruppi di gabbiani e qualche sandpiper, le onde che si rinfrangevano sulla spiaggia e poche persone… finalmente la temperatura si sta adeguando alla stagione.

Next month, the regular guild meeting will be replaced by a workshop with Myrna Stahman of Faroese shawl fame.

A novembre l'incontro mensile sarà sostituito da un workshop con Myrna Stahman, l'autrice di un libro sugli scialli delle isole Faroe.

October 11, 2007

Certifiable

All you lovely people… thank you so much for all the birthday wishes and the comments about my last shawl. I made progress on Wing o' the moth #2, although that is about to change as I have finally started the cashmere sweater I'd been waiting to get to.

My cashmere cones arrived from Colour Mart and I made a few swatches before deciding on… rolldrums please…

Grazie, grazie, grazie per gli auguri di buon compelanno e per i commenti sull'ultimo scialle. Il secondo "Wing o' the moth" è proceduto bene fino ad ora, ma le cose stanno per cambiare visto che ho iniziato la maglia di cashmere che avevo in programma già da un po'.

I coni di cashmere sono arrivati da Colour Mart e ho fatto diversi campioncini prima di decidere … rullo di tamburi…

…knitting with three strands of cobweb cashmere 1/20 NM on 2mm needles for a raglan sweater in stockinette stitch. Yep, I know: I'm officially certifiable. I expect this sweater will be finished by Christmas 2009, if I am good, that is. Don't even try to dissuade me; I've made up my mind, cast on, and have 30 rows already knit up for a whopping two inches of vertical growth. Weeee!!!

… di lavorare tre fili di cashmere sottilissimo su ferri da 2mm. La maglia sarà semplicissima, a maglia rasata con maniche raglan. Lo so: sono ufficialmente suonata. Immagino che la finirò per Natale del 2009, se sono brava. Non provate neanche a farmi cambiare idea; sono decisissima e ho già fatto trenta giri per un totale di ben 5cm in altezza. Promette bene, eh?

For those of you who like numbers: my gauge is 20 sts and 28 rows for a 2" x 2" square.


September 28, 2007

My colors

With the exception of a pair of red convertible mittens and a yellow shawl, everything I've knit this year was either a shade of blue or earth tones. I hadn't noticed the trend until I had all my projects lined up in Ravelry.
Blue has always been a favorite color of mine in terms of wearables, but it really looks like I'm having a blue period, à la Picasso.

A parte un paio di manopole rosse e uno scialle giallo, tutte le cose che ho lavorato a maglia quest'anno sono blu o in toni naturali. Non mi ero resa conto della tendenza finchè ho visto tutti i miei progetti in ordine cronologico su Ravelry.
Il blu è sempre stato uno dei miei colori preferiti in termini di abbigliamento, ma ultimamente sembra proprio che stia avendo un periodo blu, tipo Picasso.

Previous years show more reds and, surprisingly, a green sweater. Surprisingly because I never wear green, never ever, and in fact I only wore that sweater once or twice. Green simply doesn't look good on me; it makes me look like a corpse.

Negli anni precedenti c'erano più rossi e stranamente una maglia verde. Stranamente, perchè non indosso mai capi verdi; mi fanno sembrare molto cadaverino. Infatti, penso di aver indossato quella maglia solo una volta o due.

Next in line will be a red and a medium-dark gray. A jewel red Kidsilk Haze for another lace shawl (I'm thinking of another Wing o' the Moth, if I muster the patience) and a cashmere sweater in Derby gray with a cobweb yarn that's on its way to me from Colour Mart. Gray, especially charcoal gray, is another of my favorite colors.

Prossimamente su questi schermi un rosso liquoroso in Kidsilk Haze per un altro scialle traforato (sto pensando di fare un altro Wing o' the Moth, se riesco a racimolare la pazienza) e una maglia grigia in cashmere sottilissimo che dovrebbe arrivarmi presto da Colour Mart. Il grigio, specialmente quello canna da fucile, è un altro dei miei colori preferiti.

And after that, who knows? Maybe I'll surprise myself.

E dopo, chi lo sa? Magari mi sbizzarrisco.

September 27, 2007

Fluttering my wings

We borrowed our neighbor's front yard for today's photoshoot. He's never there anyway and no plants or creatures where harmed in the process.

Abbiamo approfittato del giardino del nostro vicino di fronte per il servizio fotografico di oggi. Lui non c'è mai, e nessuna pianta o creatura è stata danneggiata nel corso dell'operazione.

  • Finished size: 83" x 37"
  • Yarn: Rowan's Kidsilk Haze in color Hurricane (shade #632)
  • Yardage: about 900 yards (4 balls of 25gr/229 yds each); very little leftover
  • Needles: size 3.5mm (US 4)
  • Pattern: Wing o' the Moth by Anne Hanson
  • Source: Knitspot
  • Dimensioni: 211 cm x 94 cm
  • Filato: Kidsilk Haze (Rowan) nel colore "Hurricane" (tinta #632)
  • Quantità: circa 823 metri (4 gomitoli da 25gr/200m ciascuno), pochissima rimanenza
  • Ferri: size 3.5mm
  • Modello: Wing o' the Moth di Anne Hanson (Knitspot)

Uh-oh… is that gray hair there?

Oh on! Cosa ci fanno quei capelli grigi lì?

A little blurry, but ready to take off.

Un po' sfuocata, ma pronta a decollare.

I really like the size of this shawl.

Mi piacciono proprio le dimensioni di questo scialle.

I have five balls of Kidsilk Haze in a gorgeous red shade that want to be made into another lace shawl, but I don't think I am ready for another mohair marathon so I'll probably have a sweater intermission for a change.

Ho cinque gomitoli di Kidsilk Haze in un rosso stupendo che vogliono diventare un altro scialle traforato, ma non credo di essere pronta per un'altra maratona col mohair. Probabilmente farò un intermezzo con un progetto diverso, magari una maglia, tanto per cambiare.

September 26, 2007

Stretching the Moth

Wing o' the Moth is on the cutting blocking board.

Wing o' the Moth è sul piano da taglio bloccaggio.

Pipie tried to chew a couple of pins — and he had just had breakfast — before deciding they weren't edible after all.

Pipie ha cercato di masticare un paio di spille — e aveva appena fatto colazione — prima di decidere che non erano commestibili.

I LOVE the scalloped edges…

Mi piacie moltissimo il bordo a "conchiglie"…

and the deep, dusty blue.

e il blu intenso e polveroso.

As pesky as Kid Silk Haze was to knit, I enjoyed the tactile experience, so different from the other shawls I've knit so far.

Nonostante Kid Silk Haze sia rognoso da lavorare, dal punto di vista tattile è stata un buona esperienza, diversa dagli altri scialli che ho fatto finora.

My board is not big enough for this shawl and the side tips are hanging out. I definitely need to get myself some blocking wires soon, if I keep all this lace knitting up.

Il mio cartone da bloccaggio non è abbastanza grande per questo scialle e le punte sono rimaste fuori. Devo decisamente prendermi delle "blocking wires" al più presto se continuo a fare scialli a questo passo.

As soon as my Moth is dry, I'll weave in the ends and see if I can get Ben to take pictures like last time.

Appena è asciutto, fermo i fili e vedo se riesco a farmi fare qualche foto da Ben come l'ultima volta.

September 20, 2007

Knitting math (triangular shawls)

Wing o' the Moth is 65% done. How do I know? No, I didn't use the Excel shawl progress calculator. For one thing I hate Excel, spreadsheets and Microsoft software in general, and then I much rather prefer to be able to figure things out for myself. If I can do it on paper, I don't have to get up from the sofa (my knitting place of choice) and get back to the computer.

I had seen a blog post months ago about the math of calculating your knitting progress on triangular shawls, but I couldn't find it so I posted a request for help on Ravelry and sputnik provided the formula derived from the Excel progress calculator.

That went over my head (yeah, a math genius I'm not) so with what I remembered from the blog post I couldn't find and a couple of tries, I got this and it seems to work well.

Here it is:

Take your total numer of rows (in my case 204) and multiply by the total number of stitches at the longest row (471) and you get the total number of stitches your shawl requires.
Total rows = 204
Total sts at last (longest) row = 471
204 * 471 = 96,084
Divide that by 2 and you get the total number of stitches you need to knit to make the shawl.
96,084 / 2 = 48,042

Now take the number of rows you've knitted, say 165, and the number of stitches on the needle, about 385 (I may be off a couple of stitches but you get the idea) and do the same.
Multiply the current row by the current stitches, divide the result by two and you'll get the number of stitches you have knitted so far.

165 * 385 = 63,140 / 2 = 31,570

Now divide the current stitches by the total stitches to get your progress so far:

31,570 / 48,042 = 0.65 (65%)

To put this into a formula where CR = Current rows, Cs = Current stitches, TCs = Total Current stitches, Tr = Total rows, Ts = Total stitches, TOs = Total Overall stitches, P = progress:

(Cr * Cs) / 2 = TCs

(Tr * Ts) / 2 = TOs

TCs / TOs = P

As soon as I figured it out, madorville replied on Ravelry and pointed me to her own blog entry. Her system is more detailed and takes into account yarn weight.

…which goes to show that you never have to do anything, if you wait long enough.

September 10, 2007

Wing o' the Moth

Thursday night I cast on for Wing o' the Moth with the newly acquired Kidsilk Haze in the lovely Hurricane color. The pattern is from Knitspot. I discovered Anne Hanson's blog a few months ago and had been waiting to have a few lace projects under my belt to tackle one of her patterns. As it turns out, Wing o' the Moth is not a complex pattern, at least so far, and Anne's instructions are fabulous, including detailed charts and written step-by-step directions. I have her BeeFields triangular shawl also in my queue, but that one is a little more complicated.

These pictures are poor quality, but you get an idea of what it's like to knit lace with mohair. It's murder! I love the look and feel of the yarn — it's gorgeous — but my eyes are getting twisted trying to see what I'm doing. I've had to tink a few rows already and it was a nightmare. Mohair doesn't like to be frogged, I tell you.

Still, I have eight out of fifteen repeats of the fir cone motif for the body and if I can keep this up, I should have the shawl ready by the end of the month. Since I am a sucker for punishment, I already have five balls of KSH in Blood color for another, yet unspecified, shawl. Not BeeFields, that's for sure. That one will have to be knit in wool.

September 6, 2007

Habu Trunk Show

    It took a Habu Trunk Show to finally get me down to Wild Fiber in Santa Monica.

It was my first time there as that side of town is usually an unpleasant drive in snail traffic, and yesterday was no different. The store has an excellent inventory with lots of yarns I like and don't find easily in LYS. So far, the only place I'd been able to buy Habu and Jade Sapphire locally had been Purl Soho, and that's even further away from me than Wild Fiber. Needles, bags, accessories and books are also in good supply. I don't know what it was like with the old management (the store just recently changed hands), but I was favorably impressed with this one.


Isn't this the most adorable little dress?

Habu had a variety of garments on display on a rack and against a wall, with some yarns, handknit bags and color cards on a table. The Habu lady (I wish I had asked her name; she was very friendly and helpful) let people try on the garments and held short workshops on how to read the Japanese knitting charts in the Habu kits. Wish I could have stayed for that.

The restrained beauty of Setsuko Torii's design is the kind that grows on you. The appeal of her garments is all in the muted tones, earthy quality and impeccable details. There was a bright red cardigan in paper yarn that was not exactly understated, still it fit in perfectly with the rest of the show.

I loved the buttons on the sweaters, cardis and one of the handbags. No kits came home with me, partly a matter of budget and partly because the kits themselves were not on display and you had to order them. Probably a good thing for me because I spent enough on yarn anyway.

On the other side of the store were several Habu yarns.

This is what came home with me.

Four balls of Kid Silk Haze in a glorious shade of blue called Hurricane. I'm in love and have already cast on a new project (more about that tomorrow).

No project in mind for these three little balls of hand-dyed silk mohair Kasuri (Habu of course), but they kept calling my name and wouldn't take no for an answer. Three is all they had so this will probably be a lace scarf. I never thought I'd buy variegated yarn for lace, but these babies had me staring until I gave up. What can I say? I have no will power. Besides, my birthday is coming up and I have an extra excuse to spoil myself. :)

So glad I got out of the house yesterday.

August 24, 2007

Cables and Lace

All in one small project.

You may remember the swatch I made a few weeks back. I fell in love with a pattern by Norah Gaughan in the book A Gathering of Lace, but didn't quite feel up to knitting a whole sweater with it. Instead, I decided to use the motif for a scarf. Getting older and wiser by the minute… I like having FOs.

  • Yarn: Cashmerino by Ornaghi Filati
  • Yardage: 492 yards (4 balls of 25gr each)
  • Needles: size 3.5mm (US 4)
  • Pattern: stitch pattern by Norah Gaughan for Ribbed Lace Pullover
  • Source: A Gathering of Lace

August 15, 2007

Ready for fall

It was hot, but I really wanted some pictures outside. I am so ready for fall or even winter. A wool fan like me shoulndn't be living in Southern California; no way. I need to move to a colder climate.

I loved knitting Ene's scarf. Not that I didn't run into a few problems. In fact, I spent the best part of the weekend frogging and reknitting.

At one point I noticed a mistake several rows down and I had just finished a frogging session, so I kept knitting and told myself that I could live with the mistake.

The following morning, after sleeping on it, I realized that I could not live with it and frogged 24 rows. It's easier to be brave early in the morning.

Last night I finished knitting and started thinking about how to use the left over yarn.

One of my boys (I'm not sure which one, but I have an inkling that it was Kelvin) decided to spare me the burden of decision and proceeded to destroy my lovely leftover cashmere.

Now that the shawl is washed and blocked, I like the yarn even more, if that's at all possible.

The next few days will probably be spent swatching and thinking about the next project.

What kind of project? Why, lace of course!

August 14, 2007

Blocking

Guess who's on the blocking board?

Yes

Ene

is finished.

In an hour or so I'll be darning in the ends and then I'll recruit Ben to take a picture of me and my new shawl.

Estonian Lace (Pitsilised Koekirjad)

  Can you tell I am being consumed by everything lace? Somehow I don't seem able to knit or think about anything else lately.

The book on Estonian lace I ordered from Martinas Bastel & Hobbykiste arrived yesterday. I was immediately worried by the lack of even the most basic English translation; I had expected that there would be a leaflet with at least a translation of the symbols, but no such luck. At 11:30 pm I posted a request for help on two Ravelry boards and this morning voilà, automagically a link was waiting for me with exactly what I needed: the English translation of the three symbol legend pages. It took less than two hours for a good soul to find my cry for help and help me. Thanks, Kate! Of course, I could have run a search on Google, but late at night I'm not always that alert.

Pitsilised Koekirjad
by Leili Raimann
ISBN 9985-54-016-6

These spreads show what most of the book looks like. In total, there are more than 300 patterns, many of which I haven't seen anywhere else. Be prepared for lots of nupps in the more interesting ones.

The print quality is not the best (these seem very old photos), but you get a good idea of the various patterns. A feature I particularly like is that for border patterns, the charts include a corner.

Two minor issues with the book. Everything is charted, but the more complex charts are printed at such a small scale, that anybody over 40 (or less) will need to photocopy and enlarge the charts significantly. Also, the pages are glued to the spine, not bound, and they'll start detaching from it quickly. Two pages are already half detached from my book.

I am so glad someone took the time to translate the symbols because some are definitely confusing for those of us used to the symbols commonly seen in US books and magazines.
As an example, the symbol typically used in the US for a right-slanting decrease, in this book means "slip the stitch without working it". I am sure it would have taken me a while to figure that one out. A big thank you to Shelda Eggers and Merike Saarniit of Liisu Yarns for figuring it all out and making it available to the rest of us.

If these images have wetted your appetite for Estonian lace, take a look at Knitting Beyond the Hebrides for an article on the subject, illustrated with several swatches of patterns from Pitsilised Koekirjad.

And for an excellent blog entry on how to reverse-engineer a lace pattern, check out Twosheep. The blog author went to great length to figure out one of the patterns in Pitsilised Koekirjad and explain how she did it. Ironically, she did that while waiting for the book to arrive in the mail. :)

More swatches of Estonian lace patterns at another blog, entirely dedicated to Estonian Lace: Estonian Lace Study.

Happy lace knitting!

August 9, 2007

Ene and me

We got off to a rocky start. I cast on twice, frogged three very long rows and then tinked two more. At the end of the weekend, I only had three rows finished, but it's all forgotten now and we are getting along very well. In fact, I am enjoying knitting Ene a lot more than I enjoyed working on Swallowtail. A big reason is probably that I happened to pick just the perfect yarn for it: Little Knits' Indie cashmere. It's pure butter that gives me the greatest pleasure as I knit along those neverending rows.

Fortunately, last night I got to the main pattern (chart 3) and things are easier already. In another couple of evenings I should be halfway through the shawl. Given the math of triangular shawls and that this one starts off from the sides, I'll be halfway done before I reach row 60 (out of 179).

I didn't swatch this time (hear hear), so I don't know how the yarn will behave after washing, but it sure is gorgeous now and I have a feeling that this shawl (why do they call it scarf?) will become an all-time favorite.

August 7, 2007

All your yarn are belong to us

  More, more, I want more of these gorgeous yarns hand-dyed with vegetal colors! Or I should say "colours", since these beautiful yarns are the work of a British dyer now relocated in the French Pyrénées: Renaissance Dyeing.

I was immediately in love with every single little skein and with the bigger hanks (isn't that a fantastic madder red?), but Pipie had different ideas about the QA process and subjected the goods to a rigorous inspection that involved sniffing the yarn and sitting on it.

I am happy to report that they all passed the test…

…and are now officially approved for use in the next lace project, whatever that is. Now I think I should have ordered three hanks instead of two and I am thinking of fixing that by ordering another one or two just to be on the safe side. I didn't have a project in mind when I placed my order and I was knitting Swallowtail at the time, which I think influenced my judgement, but I'd rather knit a larger shawl next.

For the little skeins I have something else in mind, perhaps a little crazy given the yarn's weight: I want to knit some Bohus-like swatches and see how that works out.

Did I confuse you with this entry's title? No, I haven't lost all my grammar and I'm not into video games, but I live with someone who is and we were just joking about "all your base are belong to us" last night, looking at You Tube videos that merge that old video game sequence with the more recent "dramatic chipmunk". We are easily amused.

August 5, 2007

Swallowtail - done

Thank you everybody for your suggestions about using a crochet hook for the nupps. I will definitely try that next time. And I will also look into alternative ways of knitting nupps, as Allison suggested.

With everything that knitting those nupps was a royal pain in the butt, I love the look of them and I am pretty sure there will be more nupps in my future. For one thing, I am enamored with an Estonian lace pattern and and just added "Pitsilised Koekirjad" to my wish list.

In spite of a couple of minor issues – both to do with mangled nupps – I am happy with the way my Swallowtail shawl turned out. Not so crazy about Misty Alpaca, I have to admit. Too slippery to knit with and a slightly different texture in the finished item than I have come to expect from merino, merino/silk, and cashmere blends. Or maybe it's a bit too thin, I'm not sure what it is, but I don't think I'm going to use the other two balls of Misty Alpaca in my stash.

So here is Swallowtail, which surprisingly took me only one week to finish. Okay, I did knit compulsively.

It's a very small shawl, and I knew that before I started. Still, I'm not quite sure how I'll use it. Interestingly, there is a discussion going on in the Ravelry forums right now about lace knitters knitting lots of shawls they'll never wear. It seems that lace is addictive, regardless of the end result. Me, I want to use my shawls. The first one turned out too small for a shawl and the wrong proportions for a scarf, but I do like it and will probably use it as a scarf.

Lace has really grabbed me and I've already cast on for a new shawl: Ene's scarf. I hesitated to start it because of the brutal cast-on: 375 stitches. Since I'm becoming interested (obsessed?) with lace shawls, I want to learn different construction methods, and that's one of the reasons I chose Ene's scarf. It's another triangular shawl but knit from the sides towards the center, as opposed to the top down construction of Swallowtail.

Happy Sunday, everybody.

August 3, 2007

Nupps

*#@!~^!!

And that's all I have to say about that…

…before I go make myself a hot chocolate. Yes, it's 33ºC and I'm making myself hot chocolate. If you've ever done nupps, you understand.

Sgrumpf.

July 29, 2007

Swallowtail

The ribbed lace scarf is three-quarters done, but I was itching to get a real lace project started and I've been wanting to knit Hyrna Herbogar from the Icelandic shawl book: Three-cornered and Long Shawls. Armed with the book and some good information from various blogs, I thought I was ready to try my hand at it. Ha! Was I wrong.

Despite the suggestions of a friend who can knit Hyrna Herbogar in her sleep and even created a photo tutorial of the cast-on for my benefit, I ended up starting and frogging four times and so frustrated that there was really no point in trying again. Not yet at least. I couldn't get past the 12th row without mistakes. Instead, I followed the advice of a couple of lace knitters on Ravelry (thank you girls!), and looked for a simpler triangular shawl. One of the things that was throwing me off was the triangular shape, new to me, so getting my feet wet with a less demanding triangular pattern seemed a good idea. After considering various patterns, I chose Swallowtail, from the Fall 2006 issue of Interweave Knits.

The pattern calls for Misti Alpaca, a thin laceweight that is probably not the best choice for a beginner, but after seeing a finished shawl at my LYS I really wanted to try that yarn. I cast on and frogged once, then started again and this time I'm using lifelines. After I had a few repeats in place, I spotted a mistake at the beginning of the shawl, but I am not frogging again. If it doesn't come out perfect, I'll put it down to learning experience.

So this is my first Swallowtail, with nine repeats. I am learning a lot with this little shawl: triangular construction, using lifelines, trying out different stitch markers, and once I get to the outer patterns, also nupps.

Another thing I am learning is how wonderful the knitting blog community is (as if I didn't know already). In the past few days I have received an incredible amount of help and encouragement from many knitters. Ravelry is amazing in that respect because you can get feedback from so many knitters so quickly. Special thanks to Beadlizard and Lacefreak for being very generous with their time and giving me lots of useful suggestions.

Look ma, lifelines!

July 25, 2007

Wild Apple (Bohus)

  As of today, a new Bohus knitting kit has become available: the "Wild Apple". The design, a Kerstin Olsson classic from 1958, comes in two kits, one for the cardigan/pullover and one for hat/scarf. Available from SOLSilke and the Bohusläns Museum.

New Bohus kits keep getting added to the existing selection as Susanna Hansson translates new (or I should say old) patterns. Thank you Susanna for all your work!

July 23, 2007

I Like to Swatch

When it's hot, hot, hot, who wants to knit big wool items? At most, I could knit socks right now. So in the past few days I've used my spare time for swatching. I know a lot of knitters who dislike swatching, whether be it for gauge or other reasons. I love it. Unfortunately I'm a very disorganized swatcher, since almost invariably I forget to write down notes about my swatches: needle size, yarn, and so on.

I like making swatches to try out new patterns or to see how a pattern works out with different yarns and needle sizes.

Quando fa un caldo bestia, chi ha voglia di lavorare a maglia oggetti di grosse dimensioni? Al massimo potre fare dei calzettini. Così negli ultimi giorni ho usato il mio tempo libero per fare campioncini. Conosco un sacco di knitters ("magliste" non mi piace, ma non mi viene in mente un termine migliore) che odiano fare dei campioncini per qualsiasi motivo. Io lo adoro. Purtroppo, sono disorganizzatissima e quasi invariabilmente mi dimentico di prendere appunti sui campioni che faccio, il tipo di lana, la misura dei ferri, e così via.

A week or so ago I swatched the Myrtle Leaf shawl pattern in different laceweight yarns: Zephyr, Jagger's Super Merino, and Cashwool (Lane Borgosesia). Not that I want to make another shawl like the last one, but I didn't have a new lace pattern picked out and I wanted to see how I liked the new yarns. To my surprise, I didn't enjoy knitting with Cashwool. It's a wonderful yarn, super soft, really lovely, but a bit too thin for me.

Una settimana fa ho fatto tre campioni usando il motivo del Myrtle Leaf shawl con queste lane: Zephyr, Jagger's Super Merino, and Cashwool (Lane Borgosesia). Non che abbia voglia di fare un altro scialle come l'ultimo, ma non avevo scelto un nuovo motivo per pizzo a maglia e volevo vedere come mi sarebbero piaciute le nuove lane. Con mia grande sorpresa, non mi è piaciuto lavorare con Cashwool. È una lana bellissima e morbidissima, ma ho scoperto che preferisco lavorare con una lana leggermente più grossa. Non di tanto, ma Cashwool è un po' troppo sottile per me.

The swatch you see here is for the "Ribbed Lace Pullover" motif from the book Gathering of Lace. I am enamored with this stitch pattern and I considered knitting the pullover, but I don't think I'm quite ready for such an endeavor. Despite the level of difficulty being indicated as "intermediate", this pattern requires my constant attention and even for the swatch I made a few mistakes and had to tink my way back after inverting a few cables.

Il campioncino che vedete qui è per il motivo del "Ribbed Lace Pullover" dal libro "Gathering of Lace". Sono innamorata di questo design e ho pensato di fare il pullover, ma non credo di essere pronta per un'impresa del genere. Nonostante il livello di difficoltà indicato sia quello "intermedio", il motivo richiede costante attenzione e già per il campione ho fatto diversi errori e ho dovuto disfare alcuni giri perchè avevo invertito un paio di trecce.

I find this pairing of cables and lace very appealing and I need to get this motif out of my system so yesterday I cast on for a small scarf using this stitch pattern. It will be a very skinny scarf and probably not that long either, but it looks promising already.

Trovo che questo accoppiamento di trecce e traforato è molto attraente e devo togliermi la voglia di usarlo, quindi ieri ho iniziato una sciarpina. Sarà una sciarpa molto stretta e probabilmente nemmeno molto lunga, ma promette già bene.

July 22, 2007

From Germany with Love

  Friday I got home brain dead from a tiring day at our accountant's office and a torturously hot and slow drive home on the Ventura freeway. Luckily, leaning against the door was a surprise: a package from Germany.

Venerdì sono tornata a casa col cervello in fumo dopo una giornata sfiaccante dal commercialista e più di un'ora di macchina in un caldo infernale e il traffico a passo di lumaca della Ventura freeway. Per fortuna, dietro la porta di casa ho trovato una sorpresa: un pacco dalla Germania.

Betta spoiled me again and, among other things, sent me a skein of Wollmeise yarn that so far I had seen only in pictures. All sorts of colors in one skein.

Un'altra sorpresa da Betta (grazie dada!) che, fra le altre cose, mi ha mandato una matassa di lana Wollmeise, che finora avevo visto solo in fotografia. Tanti colori in una matassa sola.

The only variegated yarns I've used so far have been of the self-striping variety and I am not sure how this one will work out once knitted, but I am very curious. I think it will become a pair of socks.

Le uniche lane variegate che ho usato finora sono state del tipo che fa le striscie e non so come funzioneranno questi colori, ma sono curiosa. Penso che userò questa lana per un paio di calzettini.

And now, I am going to relax with some swatching.

E adesso mi rilasso a fare dei campioncini.

July 20, 2007

English-Italian Knitting Dictionary

    My friend Betta in Hamburg has put together a small English-Italian dictionary of knitting and crochet terms — Betta's Knitionary — that should prove very useful to Italian speaking knitters dealing with instructions written in English.

La mia amica Betta di Amburgo ha preparato un dizionario Inglese-Italiano di termini per lavoro a maglia e uncinetto — Betta's Knitionary — che sarà molto utile per persone di lingua italiana alle prese con istruzioni scritte in inglese.

July 16, 2007

Earth socks finished

Another pair of basic socks ready for the fall. I really like the softness of this yarn and I wish it was available in solid colors as well.

Still a bit bummed after realizeing my blunder with the sweater yesterday. Nothing a little retail therapy can't fix, though. Besides, I don't have much yarn around the house and I need a new project. :)

Added on July 16: since some of you asked, I bought Diakeito Diamusee Fine from a LYS called Itza Knitterie in Glendale, California, but a quick search on Google brought up several online stores that carry a variety of Diakeito yarns. The ones I happened to check out are all in North America. If you know of stores in Europe that carry it, please let me know so I can pass on the information to a couple of interested people.

July 15, 2007

Apologies

A few people asked me to write the pattern for the Celtic Tunic and I started to chart the motif and retrace my steps, because it has been a few years since I made it. Alas, in going through my books, I realized that the design is not as mine as I remembered it. The pairing of the cabled motif and the hive pattern comes from a sweater in Alice Starmore's "Aran Knitting". All I did was to move things around a bit and design the tunic around those motifs. I don't feel that I can write a pattern for the tunic at this point. Sorry, folks. I honestly had forgotten… I'm so mortified now.

Good thing I went through my books before I embarassed myself further. That'll teach me to take notes as I work on a project.

July 13, 2007

In love with Diakeito

Last week I discovered a yarn I'd never even heard of (yes, I lead a sheltered life): Diakeito. It's a Japanese brand and I bought two skeins of Diamusee Fine, a fingering weight, to knit a pair of socks. Diamousee Fine is not marketed as sock yarn, but it's perfect. The only downside is that being 100% wool, these socks will require hand washing — something I usually shy away from — but I love the look and feel of this yarn so much that I gave in.

Something I particularly like is the way the variegation works; the stripes blend into each other and you don't get those much thinner stripes on the instep compared to the rest of the sock.

On a different subject, I decided to frog the German Stocking again. This is a pair of socks that was not meant to be. For one thing, I am not really crazy about Louet Gems. Maybe it's the very flat solid color after so many self-striping or semisolid yarns. I very much like solids for lace, but socks — especially the basic socks I've been knitting so far — fare better with some umpf. So the German Stockings will be retired for now.

July 9, 2007

Sock Design

If only I hadn't been awake all night on Saturday, Sunday I would have been able to make the most of the sock design workshops with Cookie. As it happened, fog hit my brain around 2PM and it was all downhill from there. I just hope Cookie didn't think I was bored. Still, I'm very happy that I went and I took notes and managed to have fun through most of it.

The morning workshop was about taking existing patterns and adapting them to designing top-down socks (some basic math involved, but mostly a matter of common sense). The afternoon workshop was about the pros and cons of different sock styles and details, in order to make the appropriate choices during the design process. I was still mostly awake (the all-nighter came after ten days of poor sleeping) when I saw a square root on the white board and lost whatever little focus I had left.

Towards the end we also talked a little about charting and converting written instructions to charts. If you are interested in understanding sock structure and design, I recommend Cookie's workshops. It's too bad that I couldn't be my usual alert self, but that was nobody's fault.

I brought my German Stocking WIP to class to get some advice on measurements and sizing. It' is now obvious that my stocking is too big and I have to rip and start over; not a prospect I really care for. I am also not so sure I want to knit knee-high stockings at this point. LA temperatures may have something to do with it. Maybe the stocking will join the list of UFOs and I'll work on designing my first socks instead. How about that? I think I've been bitten by the design bug.

July 7, 2007

Out of the closet

Back in the early days of web development — we are talking Netscape 1.1, kids — I used to stay up until the wee hours trying to come up with creative ways to make browsers do things they weren't supposed to do. And then I would lie awake in bed thinking about the code.

Now, the end of the day is all about knitting. I knit a little, check my blog and Ravelry messages, surf for yarns and knitting related information, then I go to bed and toss and turn thinking about knitting patterns and stitches and techniques and yarns…

The past few days I've been thinking about designing my own patterns. For one thing, several people on Ravelry have asked me if I am going to publish the pattern for my Celtic Tunic, a sweater I made a few years back.

I thought: sure, why not? But the truth is, I didn't make any notes while I was knitting it and I would have to knit a new sweater to figure everything out. I am not discounting the possibility, yet, so if you are interested, there is still hope. :)

Before writing a pattern for it (heck, where do I start?), I also would want to fix an issue that didn't bother me at the time, but does now. The point where the front pattern joins the 2/2 rib is sloppy; two of the cable ends don't join the rib perfectly.

Aside from this sweater, I have ideas for other sweaters and a few ideas for stitch patterns and maybe a shawl. So many ideas, so little time…

In the meantime, I decided it was time to clean my craft closet enough that I can actually find my stuff in there, so I went to the Container Store and bought a few boxes. Here they are; the top shelf looks good and the second one is getting there. I'll spare you the unsightly bottom shelves.

I ended up throwing out a bunch of stuff that had been cluttering my closet with no hope of ever being used. I am also considering destashing my spinning fiber since I haven't been spinning in a long time. I am a mono-crafter and never seem able to hold two hobbies at the same time, although I've gone through several fiber related crafts over the years. I try them out and sometime hold them for quite a while (I was a spinner for about four years), but knitting is the only one I keep going back to.

Tomorrow is sock design day and I am looking forward to it. I had gotten the date of the workshops with Cookie A. wrong and thought it was last Sunday. Now I'm sorry that I didn't sign up for the Toe Up workshop as well. I guess I'll have to pick up that technique some other time.

July 4, 2007

Sea socks + Swatching

Hey, I'm on a roll here… another FO!

I had forgotten how quickly I can finish a pair a socks compared to a lace shawl. Right now it's actually too hot even for cotton socks, but I know they'll come in handy one of these evenings.

The past two days I've started thinking about the next big project. Yesterday I received some color cards I ordered from Sarah's Yarns — JaggerSpun Zephyr, JaggerSpun Super Fine Merino and JaggerSpun Super Lamb — and have already started swatching. They have an offer now where you can get free samples of their yarns, so in addition to the color cards I got three samples that are enough for some good size swatches. Since I haven't picked up a pattern for the next lace project yet, I'm swatching with the Myrtle Leaf pattern from the shawl I just finished.

And more color cards for laceweight yarn are on their way. I have definitely gotten the lace bug.

July 2, 2007

Happy happy joy joy

No, not my house… just that my neighbor's gate worked better than mine and his house has greater curb appeal.

Can you tell how happy I am? After all the roller coaster of the bad start and bad finish, I am very happy with how the shawl turned out.

And I learned a few things in the process:

  1. Check for possible pattern errata BEFORE you cast on.
  2. Check for pattern errata BEFORE you cast on the second time.
  3. Check for the darn pattern errata, woman, BEFORE you cast on the third time!
  4. Learn to use lifelines.
  5. Check your knitting for mistakes OFTEN.
  6. Find a better way to keep track of which row you are on in the border.
  7. DO NOT run around with scissors.
  8. If you didn't pay attention to #7, at least, do no rip indiscriminately while still in shock.
  9. If everything else fails, bribe a good friend!

For those who like details:

Pattern
"Myrtle Leaf shawl" from the book Victorian Lace Today.
The pattern is "true lace", being worked on both right and wrong side.
ALERT: There is a mistake in the pattern so please check out the errata before you cast on.

Finished size
36" x 80" (91 cm x 203 cm)

Yarn
Brand: Lorna's Laces
Product: Helen's Lace.
Composition: 50% wool, 50% silk.
Yardage: 1250 yards/4 oz (I had only a little left over)
Color: Denim.
NOTE: I have since learned that Helen's Lace is Zephyr yarn hand-dyed by Lorna's Laces. Zephyr is considerably less expensive and if you are interested in solid colors, it's worth checking first.

Needles
Brand: Addi Lace
Size: 3.5mm (US #4)

Happy Monday, everyone!

July 1, 2007

Blocked!

What can I say? Even when I am closely supervised (see a very alert Kelvin by the window)…

… corners are my nemesis.

Not enough board space…

… and not enough T-pins…

… but I had enough flower and quilting pins (quilters will be horrified), to block the whole shawl.

Pipie stepped gingerly on the shawl and sniffed out the pins; ooh, shiny! Fortunately, I caught him before he tried to eat any and he retreated to his new kitty condo.

For the next blocking session, I'll make sure to buy another box of T-pins or two.

And now we can all relax while the shawl dries completely.

June 30, 2007

Fixing lace

Thank goodness for friends. If it weren't for Kathy, I would have strangled the shawl, myself and possibly someone else, today.

She managed to disintangle my mess and see that I had not in fact cut the body of the shawl, as I had thought. The damage to the last few rows of the body was actually my fault, as I had ripped part of the border while still in shock and forgot that, at that end, it was knitted onto live stitches. That was a very good piece of news, and after Kathy did all the hard work of analysing the structure, picking up the stitches at the top of the body and on one side of the border, I was on my way to reknit just a few repeats of the border.

I sure learned a lot today. For one thing, I didn't realize how much harder it is to figure out how to pick up stitches from the bottom than from the top. When I cut and then ripped those few repeats, I was only able to pick up the stitches properly on one side of the border (where the teal markers are). I had tried to pick up the stitches on the other side (salmon markers) and failed.

So, around 3pm or so, I was done with the edge and ready to graft, when…

I saw a mistake several repeats down, and I mean several repeats before where I had reknit the edge. And I got so upset that I inadvertently pulled the needle off the wrong edge. I was ready to throw in the towel, but Kathy picked them up again and got me to the point that I could tink my way back all those rows. She would have unraveled those rows much faster, but I didn't trust myself to do it that way and preferred to tink to the point where I could start reknitting again. Thank you, Kathy!

I am now done with the tinking and the knitting and I'm back where I can graft the two sides of the border. Only, at this point I don't trust myself; I am mentally exhausted by concentrating all day on this. Tomorrow I'll be gone for the sock workshops at Unwind, so this may have to wait until Monday.

June 29, 2007

Sea socks

After getting stuck with the first German Stocking, I casted on for new socks with the cotton/wool yarn I bought last week. The first one is almost done and I call them my sea socks because of the fiber and the colors. I thought I'd reacquaint myself with knitting socks since I hadn't done that in a while and I am taking two sock workshops this Sunday.

The issue with the German stocking is that the instructions are very precise about how to take measurements, but I don't understand one of those measurements so I'll ask Cookie A. on Sunday.

And tomorrow, a friend is coming over to give me expert advice and moral support for the fixing of the myrtle leaf shawl. If all goes well, next week there will be FOs. :)

June 13, 2007

Workshops with Cookie A.

Cookie A. is coming to LA next month to teach some sock workshops at Unwind in Burbank. I'm in love with her German Stockings and couldn't let this opportunity pass me by, so I signed up for two of the three workshops offered at Unwind:

1. Toe-Up Socks
2. Top-Down Sock Design
3. Troubleshooting Your Feet

For some great pictures of the German Stockings, check out sock prØn.

The workshops will be about sock design and not specifically about this pattern, but I don't care. I figure that I'll pick up enough sock design goodness to be able to tackle the German Stockings pattern. In fact, I hope to design my own socks and stockings after that.

Since I can't bear to post without pictures, here's something totally unrelated, just because. Oh, and for the record, I'm going to have to frog everything I knitted last night as well. Getting senile, I suppose. Grumble, grumble…

Have I mentioned that, in our free time, Ben and I are basically laps for the felines?


June 12, 2007

On a fait du frogging

Sunday I finished the body of the Myrtle Leaf shawl and started knitting the border. It took me three starts because I got myself into trouble over a couple of things. One was the YO at the beginning of the row. Fortunately Google brought up a tutorial that showed clearly how to handle that (thank you Purlwhites for that). You'd think I could figure it out on my own, but I guess you have an inflated opinion of my mental abilities. Never mind… once the YO issue was taken care of, I made good progress. Til last night, that is, when I realized that I had a couple of boo-boos along the edge that I couldn't possibly live with, so frogging I went, and started the border again.

June 10, 2007

Estimating yarn quantities

My first official Sand & Sea meeting was fun and informative. I had met some of the people in this knitting guild last month, when I attended the Bohus workshop with Susanna Hansson, but yesterday was my first time attending one of the regular monthly meetings. Same friendly, relaxed atmosphere I enjoyed at the workshop, including carpooling with some new and old friends. So friendly, in fact, that Pamela brings one of her Bearded Collies, a very handsome puppy called Ghillea. Is he cute or what? No, he doesn't sit on her lap all the time! He was amazingly well behaved and never even made a sound or moved while we were having demos and show-and-tell.

One of the things I learned yesterday is a useful tip for planning yarn purchases. When estimating yardage for a project, keep in mind that yarn is sold by weight and yardage quantity is usually approximate. Dark colors weigh more than light ones because of the weight of the dye, so when buying the same yarn in different colors, you may need to buy a little extra of the dark color. Thanks Aila for this tip! Aila took the Domino Knitting workshop with Susanna Hansson last month (I missed that one) and found out this the hard way. The project for that workshop was a domino scarf in three colors and she chose the "DNA" variation, where two of the colors cover exactly the same area so she purchased a ball of each color. Because of the different weight, she ran out of the dark yarn before the scarf was completed. Fortunately, someone else had enough of that color available that she could finish the scarf.

For those of you who knit Fair Isle, this might be the reason for the problems you occasionally run into when buying Fair Isle kits where you run out of some colors sooner than you expect. Marina, I'd be interested in hearing from you since you had this problem twice in the past few months. Was it the darker colors you ran out of?

This reminded me of another instance where the same yarn behaves differently depending on the color: felting. I knitted and felted a bag last year and used three colors of the same alpaca bouclè yarn — black, dark gray and light gray — and they felted to different degrees. I think the dye had something to do with that, too, but I'm not sure. Maybe Janel can shed some light on this issue, since she has a chemistry background and is an experience dyer. By the way, congratulations Janel on making the cover of Spin Off magazine!

June 7, 2007

Sofa pleasures

Sometimes it comes down to blogging or knitting and this past week I found myself more inclined to spend my evenings on the sofa making progress on the Myrtle Leaf shawl. Thirty-one repeats done. I'm thinking I'll have the body finished by mid June, which makes me very happy. And it's starting to look as if I might have enough yarn for the whole thing after all.

Other than that, not much craftiness to report. I missed a lovely LAF guild picnic last weekend (business got in the way), but this Saturday I am planning to attend the Sand & Sea knitting guild meeting in Malibu. What with working at home and the foot still in not-so-good shape, I'm not getting out much and I look forward to spending a few hours in good company.

Some progress on the vacation planning front: we settled on Portugal. Two weeks is not enough time for two countries, so Spain will have to wait for another time. I bought two guides — "National Geographic Traveler: Portugal" and "Rick Steve's Portugal" — and I'm doing my homework to figure out the itinerary. I'm pretty much sold on the idea of renting a car so we can include some countryside viewing in the mix, and I'll see if we can fly to Lisboa and leave from Porto or something like that. I am really excited about this vacation. I want to learn some Portuguese before the trip, but I only have an audio course in Brazilian Portuguese and I'm not sure how different that is from continental Portuguese. If I learn on the Brazilian tapes, will that get me into awkward situations in Portugal? Should I even worry?

May 31, 2007

Myrtle Leaf progress

After getting the half mittens and the Bohus wristlets out of the way (the wristlets only temporarily since I have to knit a third one that actually fits me), I picked up the Myrtle Leaf shawl again. A gap of several weeks meant that I got confused a few times with the pattern and lots of tinking happened, more than I want to tell you about. Still, I made some progress and now have fifteen repeats done.

Hard to see lace when it's not blocked, eh? Here I am pinning it down with a knee on one side and a hand on the other.

Twenty-five repeats left to go to finish the body. That'll take about a month, then the border is anybody's guess. BUT… I am starting to think that I may not have enough yarn. I won't know for sure until I get a little further with the body. Keeping my fingers crossed for now, as Purl Soho has already sold the remaning blue skeins.

May 26, 2007

Tension, tension

  The Blue Shimmer wristlets are done, BUT… I ran into tension problems and the second wristlet — while better looking — is quite smaller than the first one and almost unwearable. That'll teach me to pay attention while I knit. Maybe.

It does fit my wooden hand perfectly, though.

And Gigi likes it as a neck warmer.

Fortunately, a new friend from the Sand and Sea knitting guild, where I took the Bohus workshop, is coming to the rescue and sending me yarn she's decided not to use so I'll be able to knit a third wristlet.

These were knitted entirely on needles #000 (US size). For the new one, I'll use #000 for the rib and switch to #0 for the rest. I don't have #00; Addi Turbo doesn't seem to make that size. I may also change my cast on from tubular to longtail, because I hated doing the tubular cast-on on short tiny needles. It's actually my favorite cast-on, but only if I can stick the needle under my armpit.

May 24, 2007

Quasi mittens

Getting stuff out of the way. Woohoohoo! Here are the convertible mittens (or whatever you want to call them) I started a while back and then sort of forgot about. I do that, but now that I'm entering all my projects in Ravelry, I have an extra incentive to finish things.

I think my quasi mittens will get a lot of use next fall and winter.

May 23, 2007

Felted

And it wasn't intentional.

After an injury caused my right foot to be in a soft cast, the only socks I've been able to wear over the fat bandage have been my second layer socks, the oversized socks I knitted last fall with a lovely yarn I got from Rosie.

This morning, I inadvertently threw them in the washing machine and they took their felting job so seriously that now they won't even be regular socks. I am so bummed.

May 20, 2007

Bohus wristlet

  One down, one to go.

Last night I finished the first of my "Blue Shimmer" Bohus wristlets. The execution leaves something to be desired, but I love the pattern, the colors, the yarn, everything. And it feels so soft and warm against the skin. Go ahead: laugh. This is the end of May in Southern California and here I am, wearing my angora/wool wristlet. No, really, I am wearing it. This morning is cold again and our old house takes a while to warm up after a cold night. I took off my zipper hoodie to take a couple of photos and I had goosebumps to the point that I had to Photoshop my arm. So, for a little longer, my left wrist will enjoy the warm fuzziness. :)

May 18, 2007

"Ephemera" scarf

I did say it was going to be low-key, didn't I? After the sunny stole and the ruffled scarf, I wanted something earthy and understated.

Yarns:
Habu merino
Habu Silk + Stainless steel
Habu Wool + Stainless steel

Pattern:
Hum… none. Just plain stockinette sticth throughout.
I knitted half the scarf with a strand of merino and one of silk+steel, and the other half with a strand of merino and one of wool+steel.

Needles:
US #2 = 3.25mm

Props:
Clear glass pebbles from Smith & Hawken, $4.95/lb.

I created the bobbles by sewing in some glass pebbles then fulling the scarf a little by alternating hot and cold water baths and agitating the water. Despite the energetic treatment, the fulling effect is barely visible; as a consequence I think that the first wash will remove much of the three-dimensionality of the scarf.

It's okay. I really wanted to try this and I am pleased with the result regardless of its impermanence.

Here's a look at the back, in case you are curious.


BUI (Blogging Under the Influence)

Must.not.blog.while.asleep.

From your comments so far I realize that most of you thought the glass pebbles were permanent inclusions. Course you did… I never said otherwise. That'll teach me to blog when I am half asleep. Nope, the glass thingies were meant to come out and they did last night. Trust me, you wouldn't want to wear the scarf with those in place, unless you were trying to impersonate a turtle; that was almost a pound of glass.

Pictures as soon as the weather complies. It's still early, but the overcast seems a feature for the day. Silly LA weather.

May 17, 2007

Adding glass to steel

Well, temporarily.

I've been toying with the idea of adding textural interest to my steel scarf and decided to run a little experiment. I am almost done and have a feeling that it's not going to come out exactly the way I envisioned it but, as Ben is fond of saying whenever I try a new dish, experiments are always worth it.

So, armed with my quasi finished scarf (ends still to be woven in), a handful of glass pebbles, sewing needle, sewing thread, and a good supply of alcohol…

I sewed in a few glass pebbles at both ends of the scarf.

Then I fulled the scarf a little. I agitated the water vigorously and alternated hot and cold water baths; still, the result was not as dramatic as I had anticipated. The scarf is ending up more low-key than I had intended, but there's a wabi-sabi beauty to it, that is so very Japanese. After all, it's made with Habu yarns and all in very plain stockinette stitch with no frills at the edges or sides.

I'll have to wait for daylight to take pictures of the finished scarf. I am going to call it "Ephemera", because I think that the textural effect created by sewing in the pebbles will not survive the next washing.

May 13, 2007

My fabulous Saturday (Bohus Stickning)

  My first meeting with the Sand & Sea Knitting Guild coincided with a fabulous Bohus Stickning workshop led by Susanna Hansson.

Informative, entertaining, fun… what more can I say. There was a little bit of everything and it was all good. In a friendly and relaxed atmosphere (I am definitely going back to the guild meetings with or without workshops), we learned about Bohus knitting, including the correct pronunciation. "Bo" as in the first phoneme of the English word "bull" and "hus" with the "h" as a typical English "h", "u" as a French "u" (I think of it as a "ü"), and "s" as in "salt". Just in case you were wondering.

Susanna started with a talk + slideshow on the history of Bohus Stickning that I found fascinating. It's so much more enjoyable to learn a technique in context, and the characters in her narration came alive along with the (inevitably limited) socio-economical background of the times. Bohus Stickning originated in Sweden in 1939 thanks to the intersection of economic depression and the creativity of a remarkable woman who settled in Göteborg from Vienna.

Understanding that a bunch of knitters couldn't possibly keep their hands idle during the lecture part of the workshop, Susanna got us going with the kits and we started winding the beautiful little skeins and casting on for a wristlet before she started her presentation. Wise woman!

This was the kit, containing a folder with printouts and our 50%-50% merino/angora yarn in four colors. The yarn is an integral element of Bohus knitting and really enhances the stitch and color patterns. The angora in the mix creates a soft halo that contributes to the visual blending of the color gradations.

The pacing was just right and I never felt rushed or bored, being able to look at my work without missing any of the slides. You could tell that she had done this many times.

Here are some finished wristlets Susanna brought along to show us the finished items in a variety of gauges and finishes.

The wristlet cuff could also be used as a sock cuff.

In addition to the slideshow presentation, Susanna brought many original vintage items knitted during the operation of Bohus Stickning, from 1939 to 1969, some purchased in Sweden, others acquired via eBay and other sources. There really is no substitute for seeing the items in person.

During the first few years, the items were knitted with 100% wool and looked quite different from those of later date. It was very interesting to compare a hat knitted with original Bohus yarn — the process was entirely controlled from fleece selection to dyeing the fiber to designing the patterns — and the same model knitted with a different yarn and at a larger gauge. Bohus knitting really looses a lot of its appeal at larger gauges.

Several items from an early collection. These gloves are remarkably well constructed.

Across the various pieces there was great variety of patterns and textures.

Quintessential Bohus design.

I love this beading effect created just by the play of knit and purl stitches. The textures of the "beaded" areas is quite different from the rest.

Some of these patterns are available in the book Poems of Color along with a lot of background information on Bohus Stickning. Be aware that the patterns have been adapted from the original gauge (8.5-9 sts/inch) down to 7 sts/inch.

One of the kits available from Sol Silke.

The yarns are not available outside of the kits and not all designs are available as kits, but new (well, old) designs are being added all the time so if your favorite pattern is not available as a kit now, it might be at some point.

Another great thing Susanna did, was to help us analyze the construction of some of the pieces, pointing out interesting bits and pieces. The detail above is from a scarf from the early period where the alternating ribs make the scarf lay flat. So simple and so clever.

This was one of my favorite pieces and with a great story, too, about how Susanna acquired it; it's called "Lemon".

And my other favorite design: Large Lace Collar.

And this one, for which I don't have a name.

Our wristlets in progress at the end of the day.

In our group of twenty knitters, needle sizes ranged from #0000 (yes!) to #2 and some of us used two circular needles, some used DPNs and one a single circular (magic loop technique).

Don't you feel like picking up your #0-#000 needles and start knitting?

If you are interested in Bohus knitting and get a chance to take one of Susanna's workshop, don't miss it. Check out One of Susanna's for her teaching schedule.

May 11, 2007

Ravelry

Have you checked out Ravelry?

In their own words, "Ravelry is a place for knitters, crocheters, designers, spinners, and dyers to keep track of their yarn, tools and pattern information, and look to others for ideas and inspiration."

I joined a few days ago and started entering my projects (only three for now) and then the other night I spent some time filing my circular needles. I couldn't find a place to enter my #000 needles — yeah, yeah, I know… how many people really use size #000? — but for each needle you enter in the chart you can attach a note, so I filed my #000 under #00 and wrote a note to remind myself that they really are #000.

I'm loving this site already. I can tell it's going to be a time sucker at the beginning, but once you get to the maintenance/update phase, then it'll be a cynch, à la Library Thing. And I love that I can import images from my Flickr account and connect my projects to relevant entries on my blog. I should start feeding Flickr again, after neglecting it for months.

I bet that Ravelry will become BIG in the craft community.

May 6, 2007

LAF meeting

  Today's LAF meeting included felting with Una, who led a workshop on how to make felted bags.

This time I didn't take part in the workshop. Instead, I got busy knitting my silk-steel-merino scarf and chatting with friends and didn't take many pictures, but here is one of Una's creations.

At show-and-tell, JoShell showed her free style crochet bag. It's almost finished on the outside and then it will need lining. The bag frame is of Japanese make and was purchased at Unraveled. I like it for its nice shape with slightly curved edges and good finishing all around. I've seen bag frames on a couple of Japanese websites, but they seemed a little boxier than this one.

My scarf, about 60% done. After running out of the silk+steel, I still had about half of Olga's merino, so I kept going with that and switched the other strand to the merino+steel. The color change is subtle. Tonia asked me about the scarf's drape and I hope this picture illustrates that. Things may change when I am done knitting, because I am thinking of felting the scarf. Still not sure, but it's a distinct possibility.

Another good day with friends, some of which I hadn't seen in a while. Janet brought several items from her recent trip to Ireland. It looks like they are branching out with their Arans. They used to be mostly off-white and in rather coarse wool, but this one is an unusual model and 100% merino, much softer than what I remember from my days in the UK.

Next month, we'll change our regular downtown venue for a picnic in the park.

May 4, 2007

Stitch markers

Not much knitting going on in the last few days, but I just got these stitch markers from Zero Markers. I'd been keeping my lace pattern straight (sort of) by using contrast color yarns and getting a little frustrated here and there. Aija at Zero Markers was prompt and super nice. She offered to customize the rings based on needle size and even sent two extra markers in a different style. Tonight I'll see how my new markers work out. I am a bit worried about those transitions where there is a YO that goes across the marker; will that result in a loose stitch?

April 30, 2007

Adding merino to silk+steel

  After all the kitty drama at the end of last week (we are back to normal, thank you for all your good wishes!), getting a wonderful gift in the mail was just what the doctor ordered. The package from Olga brought me an ounce of Habu merino in a color that happens to match exactly the silk+steel I'd been swatching with. Grazie mille!! By the way, check out Olga's kusha-kusha scarf and look around her blog for more Habu yarns and projects. And if you're not sick of Habu news and pictures yet, there's more at Coloursknits.

Habu packages look deceptively small; this one has *a lot* of yardage in it. I didn't even bother to swatch this time and cast on directly for a scarf. I am knitting with one strand of silk+steel yarn and one strand of merino and they are working beautifully together. Not only that; I am also enjoying the knitting process a lot more then when I was knitting just with the steel yarn.

The scarf is narrow, but it'll probably end up quite long, unless I run out of the silk+steel yarn early. It's hard for me to judge as I've never used a cone before.

What I like about this project is that it's mindless stockinette and I can pick it up any time without having to worry about rows and stitches. Which reminds me: I haven't touched the Myrtle Leaf shawl in several days.

April 29, 2007

And the winner is…

With all the commotion of the last few days, I forgot to follow up on my little anniversary gift, after I asked you to post links for good online tutorials in the comments. Apologies for not posting about this sooner.

The draw was for two skeins of Regia sock yarn in Antik Patch colors; each skein makes a pair of socks. I like this yarn a lot and more than half my current socks are made with this same pattern, just different colors. Since I haven't been knitting socks in a while, I'd like these to go to a good home.

I put your names in a basket and asked Pipie to pick one. He likes the sound of crumpled paper and was eager to please. Your names will now be toys for the rest of the day.

Here is his pick:

Bea, please email me your address and I'll put your yarn in the mail. I am glad Pipie picked someone who knits socks. :)

In case you are not familiar with Whip Up and Purl Bee, I'd like to add them to your suggestions for online tutorials. Check them out.

Hope you are all having a good weekend.

April 25, 2007

Back on track

Thank you for the help with the Myrtle Leaf shawl issue. In case you missed the comments to that entry, yes, there was a mistake in the pattern. It wasn't me! Although I really should have thought about running a search for errata as soon as I started running into trouble.

Grazie per l'aiuto con la questione dello scialle Myrtle Leaf. Nel caso non abbiate visto i commenti, sappiate che si, c'era un errore nelle istruzioni. Non era colpa mia! Anche se avrei dovuto pensare a fare una ricerca per l'errata corrige appena mi sono resa conto del problema.

So, after checking the errata for Victorian Lace Today, I restarted my shawl and now have three repeats done. Yay! Oh yes, there's 37 more repeats to go, but at least the pattern is looking good now.

Così, dopo avere controllato le correzioni per Victorian Lace Today, ho ricominciato lo scialle e ho già tre "repeats" (italiano?) fatti. Si, lo so che ne ho altri 37 ancora da fare, ma almeno adesso il motivo sta venendo fuori giusto.

Not that you can see much this way, but I didn't feel like blocking it just to take a picture.

Non è che si veda molto bene così tutto raggrinzito, ma non avevo voglia di bloccarlo solo per fare una foto.

By the way, one of you blogged (or emailed me) about knitting the border at the same time as the body of the shawl and I had meant to try that out, then of course I lost the bookmark (or email) and I can't even remember who it was. Boohoo… Even though I think it's too late to start doing that now, since I am not, repeat NOT, ripping this any more, would you please send me the link to that post? Please, please, pretty please?

And I promise to double bookmark the entry and take double dose of vitamins and eat more fish so I won't forget again.

A proposito, una di voi ha fatto una entry (o mi ha mandato una email) su come lavorare il bordo allo stesso tempo del resto dello scialle e mi ero ripromessa di provare la tecnica, solo che poi naturalmente ho perso il bookmark (o la email) e non ricordo neppure di chi era. L'arterio galoppa… Anche se penso che sia troppo tardi per questo scialle, perchè non lo disfo più neanche se mi pagano, mi rimandi l'indirizzo di quella entry? Per favore?

E prometto di farci il nodo doppio e prendere doppia dose di vitamine e mangiare più pesce così non me lo dimentico più. Davvero!

April 22, 2007

Myrtle Leaf Shawl - Help!

Considering that I am probably the knitter with the most UFOs in the Alpha quadrant, I shouldn't even be thinking about a new project, right? But do I care? Course not. There's something about starting a new project that is just irresistible and once in a while I even finish an item or two. Really.

So, while I am giving my steel yarn a few days' rest so I can start again with renewed enthusiasm in a week or so, I got my hands on a big fat skein of Lorna's Lace in a gorgeous indigo shade and three nights ago I made a swatch for the Myrtle Leaf shawl on page 142 of Victorian Lace Today. This is actually the shawl I wanted to make right away when I got the book, but didn't because it seemed more sensible to start my first lace project with a pattern that didn't require attention on every row, as this one does. Eventually, I went for the Trellis shawl because the pattern was easier and worked only on the right side.

But back to my swatches. The first swatch was pitiful; I screwed up the SSK and SSP so when it didn't look right I blamed it on that. As it turns out, that was only half the reason. Being the impatient person I am, instead of making a new swatch, I cast on the required 87 stitches for the real thing. Almost immediately, I realized that 87 stitches wasn't quite right. Once you knit together 2 stitches in first row after casting on, you are left with 86 stitches and the pattern clearly only requires 85 (a multiple of 11 plus 4 stitches on each side = 77 + 8 = 85). So I ripped and cast on 85 stitches and everything seemed ok. OR was that my first mistake?

Two days and almost two repeats later, I found out that something was wrong again. Everything looked good with the first repeat, but at the beginning of the second repeat the leaves close properly in one of the columns but not in the other. Where the leaves should close up to a pointed tip, they stay open and the joins are offset by one stitch (or so it seems to me). I am not sure I am describing the problem clearly, but has anyone else had problem with this pattern? Am I doing something wrong or is there a typo in the pattern itself?

Help! Somebody please tell me what I'm doing wrong!

In my frenzy, I ripped everything out before taking pictures. Then I started another swatch and had the same problem. I am clearly making the same mistake over and over. Someone please rescue me from my misery…

Oh, I forgot… I transcribed the pattern to a little flipbook, so I have one line of instructions per page. I checked and rechecked my transcription several times and couldn't find an error.


April 17, 2007

RIP

I know what I said in private emails to a couple of you. I liked the idea of coupling a wool+steel or silk+steel strand with a merino strand, but I was too lazy to rip the piece I had already knitted — I already had a good 30cm done. Also, I wasn't sure it was a good idea to rip a knitted fabric that contains metal; what if the metal part became brittle as a consequence? Yadda yadda yadda… (still trying to justify my laziness).

That was before I discovered that I had a loose half stitch two thirds down my piece.

Still, I was going to pick it up with a crochet hook and not rip anything.

And *that* was before I discovered that I had undone my stitches exactly one stitch over respect to where I should have. What kind of idiot does that? Okay, don't answer that.

Did I mention that I knit at night and even with the light at its highest setting I have trouble seeing what I'm doing? It's something to do with how my eyes react to artificial light (same reason I can't drive at night), but I just can't knit during the day so what's the alternative? No knitting or the occasional goof.

A better knitter would probably have found a way to salvage the whole thing, but I was already frustrated so here's my scarf now.

The good thing is that now I can rethink the whole thing and probably get the merino yarn to go with the steel yarn and knit something a little less plasticky and more satisfying to the touch.

April 16, 2007

Steel swatches

  It's been a few crazy days with lots of work stuff, very little sleep, dental work, tech issues and more. All this to say that I didn't get much knitting done.

I did manage a couple of swatches with the wool+steel and silk+steel yarns.

Below is a swatch with both yarn worked single on metal Addi Turbo. It was very slow going and quite frustrating. The yarn takes some getting used to, especially the cast on.

This swatch was worked on the same needles but with two strands, combining the two yarns. Much easier to work this way and the result is a more substantial fabric. I had expected a more sculptural quality to the knitted fabric; I thought I'd be able to sort of shape things a little, but that wasn't the case. With the double thread swatch, thought, I can stretch the fabric and get a narrow or wide swatch depending on the direction of the stretch.

Because of the loss of brain cells due to stress and lack of sleep, I found myself at a total loss for creative ideas and decided to knit the simplest, most boring scarf ever. Just a plain rectangle with the two yarns worked together. That's what you see on the wooden needles in the top photo.


April 9, 2007

Steel yarn

  Pipie is very interested in the latest yarn shipment. There must be something intriguing in the way the yarn smells because he can't stop sniffing it. I am extremely sensitive to smells, but can only detect a faint odor, neither pleasant nor unpleasant.

I had been thinking of trying out Habu's steel yarn and finally ordered a cone of silk+steel and one of wool+steel. Habu's packages are always cool. The 2-ply cashmere comes in tiny balls and the steel yarn in cones. Each one is only 0.5oz, but it looks rather imposing on the cone.

I tried to get pictures without the kitty, but it wasn't easy.

The charcoal yarn is 75% wool and 25% stainless steel.

The brownish yarn is 69% silk and 31% stainless steel.

I am very curious to see how they feel and knit up.

April 1, 2007

Los Angeles Fiber Guild (LAF)

  We made paper!

Okay, step back. Today was the first meeting of a new LA guild: the Los Angeles Fiber Guild, a.k.a. LAF. Appropriate name for a guild starting off on April 1, no?

The guild had been in the making for a few months, thanks primarily to the work of Janel, Una, and Theresa. LAF is a new kind of guild because it's an interdisciplinary guild for all things fiber and our first workshop today was about papermaking. Future workshops will include silk ribbon embroidery, basket weaving, felting, knotless netting and more.

We started the meeting with some catching up (all of us who showed up today are friends from GLASG, the local spinning guild) and a short show-and-tell.

Theresa brought her short-row blanket which got first prize at Visalia's Conference in the knitted accessories category. Somehow I like everything Theresa makes. Last time she was at my house she was knitting the short-row scarf that I fell in love with and had to make right away. I have a feeling this blanket will join the list of future knitting projects chez Fluffbuff. Isn't it gorgeous?

Elena had the socks she spun and knitted following a pattern designed by Janel and which also placed first at Visalia's.

The meeting took place at a school in downtown LA in a room that the kids use for gym, lunch and other activities. The school has an art focus and the room has a lot of cool artwork.

A giant US map on the floor…

and a clear Warhol thing going, from the Campbell tomato soup cans…

to the portrait treatments we are all familiar with.

We started our papermaking workshop by shredding our junk mail. I had just gotten rid of all my recycling stuff but had plenty of business printouts destined to the shredder that worked out beautifully.

The paper got shredded, soaked and fed to the blender. Some of us added pieces of colored tissue paper to the slurry to colorize it. I decided to keep mine as it was to see exactly how the laser printed sheets would turn out. Since I always have loads of those, I would love to find a good use for the stuff.

Pour the slurry in the deckle-and-screen mold.

Add pieces of paper, flowers and anything else you want to use as an inclusion.

Let stand for a minute or so and remove the deckle (the frame part). Put a screen over the wet paper, a towel over the screen, and roll out as much water as possible.

Set out to dry.

We had to weigh down our sheets because they kept folding and flying away.

Back home; my paper is almost dry.

Before and after: from laser printouts to handmade paper. As Janel told us: you need a sheet of paper to make a sheet of paper.

The ink formed specks in the paper that remind me of vanilla ice-cream.

During my undergraduate years, I bought a papermaking frameset that I actually never got to use. I am going to dig it out and run some tests soon.

March 23, 2007

A better pair

Well, what do you know? Someone has already made my funny gloves and he did a better job, too. I really like the pattern/yarn combination.

Admin + WIP

Since I started this blog, for the most part, I've been addressing comments and questions individually, but now I am wondering if it wouldn't be better to do that on the blog so that each question was answered in the same spot and available to more than just the original commenter. I just can't make up my mind. Emailing you privately has a personal touch and is also what has started a few friendships that I value. Would those friendships have developed if I always replied publicy? On the other hand, most of my visitors — in line with the overall web participation-to-readership ratio — are lurkers who see other readers' comments, but don't get to see my replies and they might be interested. Often I get the same question from several people, which is what prompted me to write that entry on where to buy Japanese books.

Whether you have a blog or not, I'd like to hear your opinion on how you like to see this issue handled. Maybe you have ideas I haven't thought of.

And now to more crafty things…

The past few nights I've been slowly working on my first quilt. For now I am still quilting and haven't started any embroidery. I have ideas, but am unsure of how to proceed.

I also finished the first of my funny gloves. Here you can see it closed…

and with the top folded back.

I worked a little too tight and I want to see if I can figure out a better way to close off the tube than what I've done here. I want it to be as closed as possible when it covers the fingers, but loose engough for when I want to fold it back. It does look a bit wierd, doesn't it? The thing is, if I want it to fold back, I have to leave the top open and if I start adding buttons and such, then I lose the immediacy I like. Ideas anyone?

March 20, 2007

English-Japanese Knitting Dictionary

  The nice people at Kinokuniya's in Little Tokyo agreed to order this book without having me commit to buying it. I'd been curious about this dictionary for a while but couldn't bring myself to part with the equivalent of 10,000 yen without seeing it first. And a good thing that was indeed. When I finally got to examine a copy of the English-Japanese Knitting Dictionary, it definitely was not what I had expected. I had hoped for a dictionary that included a lot of visuals along with translations of knitting terms, and one that would be equally useful to Japanese and English speakers. As it turns out, the visuals are scarce and a lot of entries are textual explanations of words in the same language, with only part of the entries giving translations from one language to the other. When I examined the book I was a little under the whether and probably not at my most alert, but my guess is that this dictionary will be most useful to Japanese speakers who are trying to decipher knitting instructions in English and not the other way around.

Also, when I first converted the yen price to dollars, I must have made a mistake because I was expecting the book to cost $80 (already a hefty sum for one book), but the price is actually $120! Now, I would have bought it at $20; I would have thought about it twice at $30, but at $120, I really didn't have to think.

Unfortunately I don't have pictures to show you, so this is probably not a very useful review as there is always a lot of subjectivity in making this kind of judgement, but I thought I'd share all the same.

日英最新ニット用語辞典
2006/12/20
510 pages
ISBN-10: 4881220853
ISBN-13: 978-4881220856

March 16, 2007

On the needles

Wednesday started off with a trip to the Honda dealer for more repairs to the old lady. Then, while my car was getting a new oil pan gasket (whatever that is), I had a couple of minor medical procedures, one of which turned out to be more substantial than anticipated. Ten external stitches and a bunch of internal ones to remove a mole from my back. The result is a row of dark blue stitches that is too long for any easily available band-aid, so protecting the wound is an exercise in creativity. Some logistic problems also with showering and tying my shoe laces plus some crabbiness 'cause I'm not reacting well to the antibiotics or getting much sleep.

On the good side of things, I have a new project on the needles. We've had temperatures in the 80s and 90s in Southern California, but I dont' let no stupid weather get in the way of my knitting. So here I bring you my new WIP: a glove. Hey, it's winter somewhere on the planet, I'm sure.

The yarn is the Habu cashmere I bought a few weeks ago, used double so I don't go crazy and also have good hopes of finishing the gloves before next winter. I've only knitted a pair of gloves before and it's been at least three years. I am using that old pair as a starting point, but I had to frog and start over three times because I couldn't figure out whether to use the yarn single or double and the best needle size for it.

I'm making things up as I go and I am thinking of not knitting the fingers but rather continue as a tube, probably like the cuff, so that I have the choice of covering the fingers or fold back the tube. Okay, that didn't come out very clear, did it? Hopefully the next pictures will show what I mean.

March 11, 2007

Twist + Lace

The short-row scarf is finished. The truth is, I ran out of yarn and my skein was the last one in this color when I went to Purl Soho. I know, what was I thinking? So this is the shortest short-row scarf you'll probably ever see.

I intercepted Ben on his way to the shower, still half asleep, and recruited him to take some pictures. His hands turned out to be just as unsteady as mine. He says the pics are blurry 'cuz his eyes were blurry.

Pattern: "Twist and Lace" by Brenda Patipa
Yarn: Jade Sapphire 2-ply cashmere, color Silver Pearl (I'm going by memory here so I may be wrong)
Yardage: 400 yds minus a few swatches

After I washed it, I shaped it like this to squeeze out excess water.

Then laid it to dry in a sort of spiral still in double layer because it seemed the best way to preserve the shape.

Two FOs in a week. I'm making progress. :)

March 10, 2007

Holz + Stein

  Forty-three days for an Air Mail envelope to reach Los Angeles from Hamburg, but who was counting? I was already resigned to the envelope having gotten lost or stolen and then yesterday it showed up. I had been so looking forward to getting my hands on some Holz + Stein needles and now I can't wait to put them to the test. My good friend Elisabetta sent them to me. Grazie Betta!

Quarantatre giorni per una lettera via aerea da Amburgo a Los Angeles, ma chi ci teneva dietro? Mi ero già rassegnata che la busta fosse andata persa o sgraffignata, ma ieri è finalmente arrivata. Ero proprio impaziente di ricevere i ferri della Holz + Stein e non vedo l'ora di provarli. Me li ha mandati la mia amica Elisabetta. Grazie Betta!

Theresa had warned me about mail from Germany taking 4-5 weeks when she had a secret pal in Hamburg. There seems to be a postal black hole in the area. Maybe the Germans have beaten the Swiss to building a super collider, you know… one of those atom smashers where physicists in white lab coats try to create super-tiny black holes? The one in Switzerland should be operational in November, but who knows? Maybe they are not the first.

Theresa mi aveva avvisato che la posta dalla Germania ci mette 4-5 settimane quando aveva una secret pal proprio ad Amburgo. Pare che ci sia un buco nero postale nella zona. Forse i tedeschi hanno battuto gli svizzeri alla costruzione di un super collider, uno di quegli schiaccia-atomi dove i fisici cercano di creare buchi neri di dimensioni infinitesimali. Quello in Svizzera dovrebbe entrare in funzione in Novembre, ma forse non è il solo.

But back to my needles (insert happy dance here), they are very light and smooth and the joints also feel good. I really need to test them. Last night I was tempted but decided to finish my little short-row scarf first, since I was very close. Pictures later today or tomorrow.

Ma tornando ai miei ferri (due tre salti di gioia), sono molto leggeri e lisci e anche le giunture sembrano ben fatte. Devo metterli alla prova. Ieri sera sono stata tentata, ma ho deciso di finire la sciarpina di cashmere con le frappe dal momento che ero molto vicina alla fine. Foto più tardi o domani.

In the meantime, some pics of the Holz und Stein circulars, two in rosewood and one in ebony, in sizes 2.75mm, 3mm and 3.25mm.

Nel frattempo, qualche foto dei ferri, due in rosewood e uno in ebano, misure 2.75mm, 3mm and 3.25mm.

Have a good weekend everyone.

Buon fine settimana a tutti.

March 6, 2007

Qiviut

  Blind fold me, and I'll tell qiviut from cashmere. I didn't think it possible, but I lost my innocence after Joanne generously sent me several yards of laceweight kiviut yarn left over from a finished project. Thank you, Joanne!

For those of you who haven't heard of it (is that really possible?), qiviut is the down fiber of the muskox, an arctic mammal with long curved horns that makes its home in Canada, Greenland and Alaska. Despite its name and looks — it rather makes you think of a paleolithic buffalo — it's genetically closer to goats than bovines. The down fiber that covers muskoxen's bellies is softer and warmer than cashmere. How's that for an endorsement?

Qiviut (a.k.a. qiviuk) is the white truffle of the fiber world and knitters and spinners have been known to go to great lengths to get their hands on a few precious ounces. A friend of mine (no names shall be named, to protect the innocent muscox) managed to spin and knit a whole frikkin' sweater from qiviut fiber harvested by a zoo keeper. I can only surmise the kind of favors that were exchanged in the process. I'm thinking of an old Guccini song that goes like this: Siamo qui che giochiamo alla merla, oilì oilà. For you non-Italians, think that scene in Victor Victoria where Julie Andrews is about to trade her virtue for a plate of meatballs. 'Nuff said. ;)

My qiviut goodness arrived in the mail last night and after dinner I started swatching with 2.75mm needles (US #2). First, I made a swatch with a simple lace pattern, then one in stockinette stitch. I probably should have gone one size up for the lace and one size down for the stockinette. Regardless, the results are exciting. This yarn is flufflier than Jade Sapphire 2-ply cashmere which, in turn, is fluffier than Habu 2-ply cashmere. After washing, it blooms even more and I tried to show the soft halo in the photo, but coudn't really show the swatches at their best. The halo is why I think I could have gone up one or more needle sizes for the lace swatch, since it sort of fills up the holes in the lace. I am amazed at how airy and light these swatches are. If only I could have taken better pictures. I took several, but between the color of the yarn and the lighting conditions, none of them turned out decent. You'll just have to trust me on this. This particular color is called Endless Twilight, but you can see the same yarn in many more colors on Joanne's website: JConklinDesigns. Keep in mind that the yarn is darker than the pictures on the website, at least this color.

I think this yarn would be a fantastic match for the large shawl on page 22 of Victorian Lace Today. For patterns that benefit from more stitch definition, I would go with a yarn with less bloom.

For now, I'll just dream of making this shawl. The pattern calls for 1280 yds and the qiviut ball is 218 yds/$70. But then, this is an especially large shawl and you could use the same pattern for a smaller item. And besides, you don't eat white truffles every day, do you?

March 4, 2007

Habu stole

Ready to wear. Thank you for suggesting the right word; why didn't I think of stole?

To recap:

Pattern: from the book Victorian Lace Today, page 52-54.

Yarn: 2-ply cashmere from Habu Textile, more precisely item #A-34, 2/26 cashmere, color #1210.

Needles: 2mm (US #0)

Yardage: I used four balls, with only very little left over. Each ball is 182 yards (163 meters)/0.5 oz. (14 gm) so, to answer Jared's question, I used about 700 yards or 650 meters. The book calls for 1200 yards on 4mm (US #6) needles.

Manufacturer's care recommendations: dry clean or hand wash. Yeah, right… I'm taking this to the cleaners. Ha ha ha!

Blocked!

Finally. Border grafted, threads darned in, scarf/shawl washed and blocked. Okay, I didn't do a great job at blocking, so shoot me. I don't care. I'm happy. The pins wouldn't really stay in place without a rigid board underneath and I couldn't find a straight edge and I was too impatient so the edges are not perfectly straight or perpendicular to each other and the little points are not equidistant, blah blah blah…
Those of you who are under the misguided impression that I am perfectionist, please, revise your mental image of me and file under a different label.

I can't wait for the scarf to be dry. BTW, I dont' know what to call this thing: scarf, shawl? Suggestions? It's too small for a shawl but the ratio between width and length doesn't make it look like a scarf. It's a ULT (unnamed lacey thingy).

March 3, 2007

Reading again

Before and during my grad school days, I used to read a lot. Then, the strain of keeping up a three-year full-time graduate program while working full-time, commuting, sustaining a relationship, keeping a cat and a menagerie of fish and corals in my reef tank alive, and generally trying to have a life, took its toll. My reading habits took a drastic turn from actual reading to browsing, leafing through, consulting and plain just looking at pictures. I haven't read a book cover to cover in about five years.

Two days ago something happened to break the dry spell — I am not sure what — and I started reading again. I am now at page 130 of Dreaming in Code with two other books already lined up: The Wisdom of Crowds and Maps of The Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer. Dreaming in Code, albeit disheartening in its almost fatalistic assessment, is an easy and entertaining read on why it's so hard to build software. Reading it is reacquanting me with concepts and acronyms I had pushed to the back of my mind, and showing me new ones. I feel the old enthusiasm for geek pursuits coming back.

Despite having completed all the class requirements, I never finished my thesis project or got my Masters in Media Studies. The whole experience left me with a bitter taste, a lack of sufferance for the politics and bullshit of academia, and a bad case of information fatigue that caused my regression to picture books. Oh well… it's all in the past now, and I never regretted getting out without the piece of paper.

This weekend will be all about relaxing, some house chores and hopefully finishing the yellow scarf which only needs a little bit of grafting at the border and then blocking. Since I finished the border, I've been knitting the other scarf, the one with short rows. It's growing slowly and I may not have enough yarn after all, but It's relaxed knitting as I memorized the pattern.

February 22, 2007

Jade Sapphire 2-ply cashmere

I'm in love.

Habu 2-ply cashmere is wonderful, but won't come into its own until after washing. Jade Sapphire 2-ply cashmere, on the other hand, is instant gratification. Lusty, passionate, gotta-have-you, let's-spend-time-together-now kind of love. It's heavenly.

I only bought one skein because I wanted to try it and also there was only one in this color — and let's face it, it ain't cheap — so I started spending quality time with it by making swatches.

I started with simple stockinette then moved to more complex patterns. The swatch below is pattern #295 from that Japanese pattern book I got recently.

At first I got one of the stitches wrong. I knew it right away, but was too lazy to get my butt off the couch and go get that other Japanese book that explains all the knitting symbols (a whole entry on that book soon). Eventually I did, and the rest of the swatch looks right.

Last night, I decided to take a little break from my yellow Habu lace scarf (almost done with the border) and actually start a project with the Jade Sapphire. I picked a fun scarf designed by Brenda Patipa. It's a bit frou-frou for my taste, but I can make this with just one skein and I've never done anything with short rows so I'm learning something new.

I promise: I will finish the yellow scarf! I also needed a little break from #0 needles. I am knitting the Jade Sapphire with #1 needles, which may not seem much of a difference to some knitters, but believe me, it does make for slightly more relaxed knitting for me.

February 6, 2007

Day off + goodies

  Since I didn't take any time off during the weekend and had another frustrating day yesterday (after the heating broke twice last week, yesterday it was my car's turn… again), I awarded myself a day off during the week. That's right, I took Tuesday off and felt like raspberrying everyone as I was driving down the freeway on my way to Costa Mesa. That didn't last long, the raspberry part I mean. As soon as I got to the 5, I got stuck in a gigantic traffic jam and I'll spare you the whole story, but it took me more than two hours to get down there. And by the way, it was bloody hot and the AC died a couple of years ago and who wants to put money in a 15 year-old car?

So, by the time I made it to Purl Soho, I was in serious need of gratification.

More Habu 2-ply cashmere, just because. I think I'll try my hand at Fair Isle gloves with it; if not, I'll just fondle it late at night while sipping some Bailey's.

A hank of Jade Sapphire 2-ply Mongolian cashmere in Silver Pearl color, because it's slightly thicker than the Habu 2-ply and I want to try it. Jennifer, always extremely nice, offered to unwind the hank into a ball for me.

Some double pointed needles in size #0 (2.0mm) and #1 (2.25mm).

After that, the usual visit to Kinokuniya, which was actually the main reason for the trip since I wanted t pick up a book I had ordered a few weeks ago. That particular book — Fair Isle Knitting — turned out to be a disappointment (will I ever EVER learn not to buy books without seeing them first?), but I also picked up a booklet on Japanese knitting symbols and one on knitting techniques that I think will be very useful references. The Notations book I had also ordered could not be found, as it's been out of print for several years.

My last stop was at Sanseido Bookstore inside Mitsuwa, a Japanese supermarket. Sanseido is only a few minutes drive from Kinokuniya and I had never been there. As it turns out, they also have a very good craft section and I found a book I'd been after for a long time: Tiny Garden. In this case, I had been afraid of ordering it sight unseen and guess what? I love, love, love the book! I'll put up pictures of several spreads tomorrow. The other book is Monogrammatic Embroidery by Calligraphy, a complete surprise since I hadn't seen the cover anywhere.

Stay tuned for book pictures.

February 2, 2007

Crab knitting

My knitting has been going the same way as crabs go, two steps forward and three steps backwards, or thereabout. I did manage to finish the body of the scarf, though, and got started on the border. BTW, thank you for all your lovely comments and well wishes. Things are better and if we get the heating going again, they'll be better still. :) I'm getting rather philosophical about all the house shit that's been happening lately and I am trying real hard to concentrate on the stuff that's going well.

So here's a few snapshots of the lace scarf with border in progress.

After I laid it all out for the photo shoot, I found a tiny boo-boo in the body that I hadn't noticed before. Oh well. Too late.

Based on my daily progress, I expect to be done with the border in three weeks. Not a speedy knitter, I am afraid.

I am really looking forward to wearing this little scarf.

January 28, 2007

Pine needles and stuff

A bad couple of weeks. Just to mention a few things:
— Chemically induced headaches, unfortunately not of the recreational variety. No booze involved, but rather an unfortunate exposure to industrial resins and paints used in the car model industry.
— A small car accident. No physical injuries, but plenty of stuff to deal with.
— A major plumbing emergency, now barely under control.
— More exposure to chemical agents because of the need to disinfect part of the house after the plumbing spillage.
— Plenty of work-related stress.
— A mammogram (that's always fun).
— Little or no sleep.
The result is that I am a wreck and in a rather foul mood.

There was a highlight to this week, though. At yesterday's guild meeting, I took a pine needle basketry workshop and had a very good time. The workshop was taught by Nadine Spier. I snapped a couple of photos, but they came out pretty bad. More pictures on Jason's blog.

Nadine Spier's pine needle baskets

And this is what I got done at the workshop. Once it's finished, it'll still be tiny. Loos like everything I make lately is small.

Pine needle basketry is slow work, but considering that I am knitting lace on 2mm needles (US #0), it seems right up my alley.

Talking of which, after a small hiatus because of the neck injury, I started knitting again and averaging one repeat per night so I am now at 27 out of 30 repeats. Now that I have most of the body done, I am really concerned about the length. Even though blocking will increase the scarf's size, I am thinking of adding a few repeats. Before I commit to that, I should probably read the instructions for the border around the scarf to see how the multiples of the border relate to those of the pattern repeats in the body.

That's is for today. Send good vibes my way 'cuz if I don't get some good sleep soon, I'll turn into a Tasmanian devil.

January 15, 2007

No knitting for a while

Over the holidays I injured my neck and now I'm under doctor's orders to refrain from knitting for at least ten days. grumpf. grrrr. aarrgghhhh. And I brought this on myself, too. It was all the knitting in the car when I went up north for Christmas: 6-7 hours both ways. Turns out that keeping my head down all those hours in a row while the car makes its up-down motion hurt my neck real bad. I am so bummed. If only I could knit without looking, but I can't do that even when I knit stockinette stitch.

And this past weekend was a very frustrating one. I put many hours into my lace scraf and had to tink my way back several rows FOUR times between Saturday and Sunday. Even with all the tinking, I have 16 repeats of the lace pattern. I am supposed to knit 30 repeats, but I may have to do more than that, given how tiny the repeats are with #0 needles.


January 11, 2007

A little reading

  This week I got a kick out of an article on Science News: Crafty Geometry: Mathematicians are knitting and crocheting to visualize complex surfaces, by Erica Klarreich.

Crafty Geometry is featured on the December 23 + 30 paper issue (Vol. 170 Nos. 26 + 27) and also available to non-subscribers on the Science News website.

On a difference subject, if you are interested in food, check out The Alchemist - Part 1 on Technology Review. As unlikely as it sounds, it's about a chef — Grant Achatz — and his restaurant Alinea in Chicago. This 32-year old chef is blowing food critics' minds by using high-tech cooking methods, unusual ingredients and odd presentations which include custom-made holders and contraptions such as pillowcases filled with aromatic air that are placed under a dish and slowly release scents captured during cooking through tiny holes. Cool, huh?

January 9, 2007

First Lace

My first lace project is from the book Victorian Lace Today. The pattern is for a large rectangular shawl, but this will be a tiny scarf instead, because I replaced the yarn with Habu 2-ply cashmere and I am working with US #0 needles. Yes, I'm crazy that way. Probably should have used a thicker yarn for my first lace, but I'm not good at being sensible.

So, here is the scarf in progress with about five repeats done. I love the yarn and the color. I know yellow is not a flattering color for my complexion, but if I have to sustain my interest in this project, I need something I really like.

After a very slow beginning, I followed Theresa's advice and transcribed my chart into individual row instructions that I wrote on separate cards held together by a ring. I knit one row, flip the card, and it's going much faster and smoother this way. Whoever came up with that idea, deserves a good bottle of wine.

Wish me luck for the next 25 repeats or so. I still have no clue how to knit and attach the border, but I'll worry about that later.

January 6, 2007

Field Trip

   This past week I've been knitting lace swatches, trying out patterns, yarns, and needle sizes. I eventually focussed on two patterns that are very much alike: Eunny Jang's Print O' The Wave Stole and one from the book Victorian Lace.

Armed with my swatches and samples of yarns for comparison and help in determining yardage requirements, I went down to Purlsoho's warehouse in Costa Mesa. Fortunately I went with my friend Theresa, so the trip was much more pleasant.

At Purlsoho, a very friendly Jennifer helped me find what I was looking for: two kinds of 2-ply cashmere yarn. I looked at Habu's and Jade Sapphire's 2-ply cashmere and almost immediately decided for Habu. The Jade Sapphire yarn was slightly thicker and the colors mostly variegated, to various degrees. Some solid colors, too, but I really liked the Habu yarn better for the lace stole I have in mind.

I was undecided between a charcoal gray, a brown and a golden yellow. I almost chickened out and went for the brown, but everything I bought this year clothes-wise has been either brown or dark gray so, what the heck, I went for yellow. Habu yarns come in cute little balls so, even thought the price of the two yarns was comparable, it's easier to get closer to the desired yardage with Habu because of the smaller quantities. I'd hate to have a lot of cashmere leftovers. So I bought four yellow balls (728 yards) and one charcoal, to make samples and see if I can knit it without losing my eyesight.

I bought also two Addi Turbo circular needles in size #0 (32") and #1 (40"). They don't carry Addi Natura, so I couldn't get the #2 I wanted. On the trip home, Theresa showed me her Holz & Stein rosewood DPN needles and now of course I have to have those! Well, I don't use DPNs, but I understand Holz & Steins make circulars as well. They are just damn hard to find in the US. I looked around the Web and there seems to be a lot of confusion about those needles. For one thing some people say that they are being marketed in the US under a different brand name, but a very thorough review of Holz & Steins, Susanne Bates, and Lantern Moon at sock prØn. dispels that notion. Now I only need to find someone who sells the small sizes, because the vendor mentioned on that blog doesn't seem to carry the very small sizes I am after. Theresa got her set from a former secret pal and told me that the needles are made from the leftover wood used to make musical instruments. I guess I must find this romantic, because as soon as I heard that, I wanted them even more.

After Purl Soho, we went to the Kinokuniya bookstore and bought some Japanese craft books. I bought a knitting book, an embroidery book (no, I haven't started embroidering, but that won't stop me from buying books) and a language book.

The titles losely translate as Knitted Accessories from Scandinavia and Embroidery Designs. Pictures from these books later today or tomorrow.

December 31, 2006

Lace Baby Steps

The blue socks are done. These are probably the fastest socks I've ever made; nothing like spending 6-7 hours in a car twice in a week to get stuff done.

In the past few evenings, I started my first attempts at lace. I have to call them attempts because of how badly things worked out. I tried so many times to make a swatch and got only a mess and a lot of frustration out of it. Then it hit me: I had been trying to learn something new using very thin yarn. My first attempt was with Misty Alpaca in lace weight. After starting several swatches I thought I'd try a different yarn so I moved to the lace yarn I bought in Berkeley. Only, that yarn is even thinner than the Misty Alpaca (2400 yards/100 gr) and my tests were even more frustrating. I could hardly see what I was doing. Finally, some common sense prevailed and I started a new swatch with the left overs from the socks. Here is my first lace swatch: a simple pattern from the book Victorian Lace. At least now I know that I can make swatches with fingering weight yarn, but I hate to think what a complex pattern would require of me in terms of concetration. I find cables and color work relaxing. This lace stuff, however, makes me sweat.

But it's a new year, almost, and I want to learn something new. I need a new challenge every now and then and I think lace will be my challenge in 2007.

December 23, 2006

Cozy Day

This morning I got up early to go power walking. No one in sight apart form a few cars and it was bloody cold. If I hadn't bought thermal underwear before leaving LA, I would have frozen myself silly running at 7 am. After such an energetic start, the day turned all cosy indoors and we ended up at the breakfast table one at a time, but eventually doing the same thing. How geeky is that?

This is the lace yarn I bought yesterday at Article Pract. I love the color variations and the soft hand. It's 100% wool, but it feels like a cashmere blend. At 2400 yards per 100 gr, this ball will be enough even for a large shawl.

The evening before the trip, I started a sock with this blue heathery Knitpicks yarn and I am already decreasing for the toes. The only way I can bear 6-7 hours in the car is by knitting.

Ben is enjoying his first time off in months and catching up with some geek reading. Here I caught him off guard…

but doesn't he look good in his Na Craga sweater?

December 4, 2006

That tubular thing

Since the tubular cast-on tutorial is the most viewed page on my blog, I thought I'd let you knitters know that I'm planning another tutorial soon: the Italian tubular cast-off. I just need to find someone to take pictures and possibly make a video while I demo the technique.

If only Andrea hadn't moved to Maryland. What did you do that for, huh? Mezza amica!

December 3, 2006

Not so bad

Yesterday I got to see my favorite bunny: Dorian. He is partially plucked and looks kind of funny with some almost bold patches in his body. Fortunately, Elena promised not to touch his face. This time he wasn't confined to the pen and spent the afternoon roaming in the backyard and chewing all sorts of greens. Oh wait, not just green; he was chewing concrete, too. Yes, really.

After a few hours of rolling in dirt, he had to be brushed, gently, but thoroughly. I was so taken up by the little fuzzball (I even made a movie of him chewing grass), that I completely forgot to take pictures of fiber stuff.

I only took one of a beautiful sock Janel is making with Trekking yarn. I love how the two colorways combine.

On a different note, the damage to my St. Brigid was not as bad as I had feared at first. When I saw the mess on Friday morning, I couldn't bear to even look at the sweater pieces and simply picked up the balls of yarn, untangled them, rewound them and put them back in the basket without looking at the sweater. The two largest pieces — front and back — were safe, as I had already cut off the yarn from the ball. Phew.

The sleeves end up in saddles and those parts got messed up by the tension of the balls being dragged and dropped. Same thing for the collar that is knitted as a separate piece. Altogether, I only have to undo a few rows here and there. The damage was mostly psychological. I am very relieved. And yes, il rigatino (Mr. Stripey) is still alive and snuggling up with me under the covers in the middle of the night. Winter is a Very Good Thing (TM).

December 1, 2006

Carnage

Bloody massacre.

This morning I woke up to a tangled house. If you've been watching the TV show Heroes, think of the wall board with the locations and pictures of the various heroes and the labirynth of connecting threads. Four balls of yarn strewn around the house, down the stairs, around corners and objects. Three of the balls were still attached to my St. Brigid in progress — please send yarn or books in lieu of condolences, thank you. More spoils of war in the basket with sweater pieces and yarn on my office floor. If we had antidepressants in the house, I would have reached for a triple dose.

Guess who's in the dog house?

No, I didn't take a picture of the devastation. That was pre-shower, pre-caffeine, brain not fully engaged.

I know at least one person in Ireland who knows what my wake-up was like.

November 26, 2006

St. Brigid Addiction

Yes, it's time to fess up: I am addicted to St. Brigid. The pieces in the basket, soon to become an FO, are my fourth St. Brigid. The first one went to a friend after it became evident that I had knit it a size too small.

The second turned out a bit too short for comfort and a bit itchy at the neck, in spite of being pure merino and being advertised as perfect for use next to the skin.

The third one is in a gorgeous burgundy Jaeger extra fine merino and has suffered much abuse — all love, really — as it has been my favorite sweater for the past four years. The yarn is lovely, warm and soft; it did pill in the front, though, but I got a lot of mileage out of it. I made the collars very loose on purpose as I like to wear them with comfy shirts underneath.

It's almost impossible to get anything done in our house without at least one of the fuzzies wanting to participate. Almost as soon as I put down the sweaters, Pipie decided to test them for softness and started kneading them (sigh).

Hm, I like this.

Yes, this is nice and soft.

What do you mean, I can't be here? Surely, I'm improving the shot.

And I tried to get in a close-up to show the cable detail, but with only two hands I couldn't hold the camera and fend off Pipie.

At least Kelvin didn't join in the fun. He was taking another nap in front of the kitchen vent. I swear, he has the tostiest butt in Southern California. He was tired poor baby, after helping out earlier with my kanji studies.

See what I mean?

Er, I think you got one wrong here. Shall I fix it for ya?

November 24, 2006

Na Craga #2 - Yatta!

I finally finished my second Na Craga sweater, this one for me. The neck is a bit too tight, but I have no desire to undo it. Once I wash it, the sweater will relax some, although I don't expect the neck to become less tight. Oh well… live and learn. Now I can tackle my third big UFO — the St. Brigid — and after that, I can get back to the Fair Isle sweater.

The picture kind of sucks, but daylight was waning and I didn't want to wait till tomorrow.

Era ora, eh? Ho finito il mio secondo Na Craga. Il collo è un po' troppo stretto, ma non ho voglia di disfarlo. Una volta lavata, la maglia si dovrebbe stendere un po', anche se non mi aspetto che il collo cederà. Pazienza… farò meglio la prossima volta. Adesso posso occuparmi del mio terzo UFO — la maglia St. Brigid — e dopo di quello posso riprendere a lavorare al maglione Fair Isle.

La foto non è granchè, ma la luce stava per andarsene e non volevo aspettare domani.

November 22, 2006

Stranded

It was only a matter of time; I had to join a Knit Along sooner or later. So yesterday I signed up for my first KAL — the Stranded Colorwork Challenge. I am not very good with commitment, but this KAL doesn't have a deadline so it seems perfect for me and since my first attempt at Fair Isle knitting is languishing in a basket in the corner of my office I thought, what the heck, let's give the poor sweater a chance.

Era solo questione di tempo; prima o poi dovevo partecipare a un knit-along (KAL). Ieri mi sono iscritta al Stranded Colorwork knit-along. Non sono molto brava con gli impegni ufficiali, ma questo KAL non ha scadenze quindi mi è sembrato perfetto e poi il mio primo tentativo di Fair Isle è lì che langue in un cesto nell'angolo del mio ufficio per cui mi sono detta, diamogli una chance.

My good friend Andrea (ciao biondina!) is one of the hostesses and I hope that she'll nag me when she sees me faltering. Along with the other two hostesses — MJ and Mary Heather — she also set up a Stranded Colorwork Flickr group.

La mia amica Andrea (ciao biondina!) è una delle hostess e spero che mi terrà battuta se mi vede vacillare. Insieme alle altre due hostess — MJ e Mary Heather — ha creato anche un grouppo Flickr per Stranded Colorwork.

Let's see if I embarass myself or if I finally get my act together. Here is the Fair-Islish sweater with front and back done, armhole steeks cut and the stitches of one arm mostly picked up. That's where I got stuck.

Vediamo se faccio una figuraccia in pubblico o se mi metto sotto di buzzo buono. Ecco le foto della maglia in style Fair Isle con il davanti e il didietro finiti, gli "steeks" per le maniche tagliati e i punti per una manica quasi tutti ripresi sul ferro. È a qual punto che mi sono arenata.

And I still haven't finished my second Na Craga, although I got at a good point last Saturday; I only have to knit the neck and I'll be done. I promise… this weekend.

E non ho neanche finito il mio secondo Na Craga, però sono arrivata a un buon punto sabato scorso. Devo solo fare il collo ed è finito. Questo weekend… sul serio.

November 9, 2006

Make your circular needles

Ever wanted to make your own circular knitting needles, but didn't know where to start? Knitters Review just published a step-by-step tutorial by Rosemary Thomas.

It looks detailed and comprehensive and if I had the patience, I'd try it. Given that my free time is at an all time low — you've probably noticed that I haven't been posting as often — I'd rather use my little scraps of time to actually knit, but you go ahead and make your own needles!

October 27, 2006

Sock boo-boo

Ah yes, the boo-boo I've been telling you about; here it is.

I'll leaf through my books over the weekend and see if I find something that might work for a crewel ebroidery. I am thinking maybe a little flower. I am lucky that the position lends itself to embellishments more than if it had been somewhere else, so it'll look like it was actually meant to be there. :)

By the way, I'm taking suggestions. Anybody got an idea?

October 21, 2006

New friends

Spent a lovely afternoon with Andrea and some of her friends I met for the first time today. I really had a good time. We were on a house on a hill, out on a large terrace overlooking Glendale, sitting around a big table covered with food and yarns. As always when I am having a good time, I only remembered to take pictures at the end. Now I could kick myself for not shooting Julia's beautiful thick-and-thin Blue Face Leicester yarn, MJ's knitting, Lori's Urban Aran cardigan, Kat's leg warmers and Mary Heather's handspun. Hopefully, I'll see them again.

Here's Andrea's Icarus shawl. Isn't it a beauty? I can't believe Andrea is leaving LA in just a week or so. :(

And the dishcloth she knit from her own handspun flax. How many people do you know who spin flax?

I took a few pictures of Shannon's toe-up socks in Lana Grossa but they came out mostly blurred. This is the best shot.

Andrea had also a top …

and an embroidery in progress.

For the first time in ages, I got a little spinning done. Really a lovely afternoon.

October 20, 2006

Na Craga #1

I finished it two nights ago, washed it yesterday and it's still slightly damp. I had forgotten how long it takes for Aran sweaters to dry.

This stone came with the yarn as this particular colorway was inspired by beach pebbles. I thought it was a nice touch. I like the multicolored specks and it's a good yarn to knit with, but it's prone to snagging and that made for a particularly time consuming tubular bind-off since I had to be so very careful passing the yarn throough and through so many times.

In the end it all worked out well. The neck is rather loose, but Ben likes it that way. Besides, he'll be wearing this sweater when it's cold with a flannel shirt underneath and I don't want him to choke.

And now, off to finish the other Na Craga, this time for me. :)

October 18, 2006

Slowly, slowly

Well, look who's back… I am finally, fi-nal-ly, getting to my UFOs, starting from the oldest one… I think. It's a Na Craga sweater I started for Ben 4-5 years ago and that's been languishing in various stages of completion around the house ever since. The embarassing thing is that last year I almost got to the finishing line and then… the finishing mojo left me again. So last night I went looking for it. I couldn't even remember where it was and it took me a while to find it. I had stashed it away along with two other Aran UFOs in a suitcase. Yep, that's right, in a suitcase in the closet, away from finishing temptations.

I finished to pick up the stitches around the neckline and started ribbing only to realize — an hour and a half into it — that I'd been doing it wrong. First, I was using the same size needles as the body of the sweater (what was I thinking?); second, I forgot that I needed to twist the knit stitches every other row. Sigh. Undo. Worst than undo, actually: tink. I just didn't want to risk losing any stitches so I tinked my way back to the beginning. Unless lighting strikes me, I'll finish the neck tonight or tomorrow night and wash the sweater so it should be done by the weekend. It's rather thick, so it'll take a while to dry. I could have waited to post until I actually had it done, but given my history I decided to show you now so this time I'll have to finish it or embarass myself publicly.

October 16, 2006

Red socks

Another FO; I am surprising myself!

It was a nice, lazy weekend. I could have gone places and seen people, but I didn't have the energy. So I stayed home, relaxed, finished another pair of cashmere/merino socks, studied Japanese a bit, nested with the cats… that kind of weekend. The rain made it easy to stay in and I guess I needed it.

October 9, 2006

More socks

The cashmere/merino socks are finished and a new one is already on the needles. When Rachel sent me this yarn, she sent it in two colors and I like the feel of the pumpkin socks so much that I just have to make another pair with the red yarn. I am having a bit of a hard time with this yarn because it has a very loose twist and it's easy to get between the singles with the tip of the needles, but it's simply too beautiful and soft to keep it in the closet.

October 7, 2006

Comforting the Amish community

  If you have been touched by last week's tragedy and wish to reach out to the Amish community, the Woman to Woman Memory Shawls project gives you a chance to do so. Shelley and Dianna are teaming up spinners and knitters to make shawls for the mothers, sisters and grandmothers of all the Amish victims. The widow of the shooter will also be included. The shawls will be in a color and style compatible with Amish tradition. If you can commit to a rather quick turnaround for either spinning or knitting, check out asheepinwoolsclothing.

October 5, 2006

Finito

I finally finished something: my second layer socks. I haven't even washed them yet so they are still looking a bit pointy in the toes, but I wanted to take a picture right away. I haven't finished anything in a while.

They are really making my feet look BIG, but they're toasty. :)

October 1, 2006

WIP

I am slowly getting back into knitting. When I received a beautiful cashmere/merino yarn from Rachele, I decided to be decadent and make myself a pair of luxurious socks. I am almost done with the first one. Then Rosie sent me a fluffy self-striping wool yarn from the UK in a slightly thicker gauge and I tought I'd do something different: a pair of big socks to go over my regular socks. Even though LA weather isn't exactly chilly, our house does get cold in winter, especially the living room, that faces north, and my feet get cold. No more! This winter, I'll be wearing double socks in the evening when I sit on the sofa.

Speaking of which, we spent the best part of yesterday and today sofa hunting. If only we can make up our minds, we'll have a sofa soon. Given that we both loath shopping, we are very tempted to order something we like enough, even though it's not perfect. We just don't have the energy to keep looking for a better match.

But my socks look like they will be a good match, no? BTW, just going up a little in needle size (from 2.75mm to 3.15mm) has made a big difference in knitting speed. My big socks are going so much faster than my usual ones.

September 28, 2006

Beyond the cow on the left

  Bet you're starting to get sick of Japanese craft books, eh? Okay, I'll wait a few days to put up the rest of my latest purchases. But, I am going back to Torrance tomorrow to visit another Japanese bookstore: Asahiya. In the meantime, I created a category just for Japanese craft books (menu on the right) for those of you who want to see just those.

Bunch of stuff going on in the past few days, including Ben's car being in the shop for days and our fridge fi-nal-ly getting fixed. And last night we got rid of the big sofa. The living room is looking rather spacious this morning, and Piper is using it as a race track.

Yesterday's mail brought me a totally unexpected package from the UK. At first I thought it was from my mother, who is currently in London, but it was from my new friend Rosie. I was her secret pal during the SP8 exchange and I never expected to get a package *from* her. How sweet is that?

She sent me three balls of soft wool in a self-striping color that I had never seen before, a British magazine called Knitting, a little notebook, an adorable porcelain egg holder in white and blue with a rooster on one side and two geese on the other, and a great postcard with a view of a meadow outside one of Cambridge's great university buildings where she sometimes goes to KIP with friends, as she writes: "just beyond the cow on the left".
Grazie, Rosie! I really hope to meet you in person one day.

My yogurt is cold, our cars are working, I got yarn… things are looking up. Oh, and 9 pounds down, 21 to go. <insert happy smile here>

September 1, 2006

SP8 Grand Finale

  Rachele, you outdid yourself!

I knew I had a last package in the mail from my secret pal, but I wasn't prepared for such enormous spoilage. Ah, the luxury. Unfortunately, pictures can only capture the visual beauty of these gifts.

The soap package was so pretty, I almost didn't open it. The tofu soap is wonderfully smooth, and it has an almost imperceptible fragrance that reminds me of something from long ago. I can't say for sure, but you know how it is with odors: they bring back memories in a snap. This one brought up the convent of Santa Chiara in Faenza, were I spent four years as a small child. How could something from Japan remind me of Italy? And not just that: forty years apart!

A couple of fun tin boxes for the knitting girl: one with green apple mints and the other with hand balm. I can never have enough hand cream, so this is great. And the little apple mints have no sugar, so I don't have to feel guilty, either.

And the pièce de résistance: FOUR big skeins of luscious, fondable, cashmere-merino yarn from Italy in two spectacular colors and exactly the fine gauge I love. I can't wait to find a worthy project.

Good thing I'm straight, taken and about 9,000 Km away or I'd be tempted to propose.

I could not have had a better first time experience with Secret Pal.

ありがとうございました!

August 29, 2006

Secret Pal is wrapping up

  I sent my last package to Rosie today. Actually, one small thing dind't fit in the padded envelope and the post office didn't have a box of appropriate shape and size, so I'll have to mail that separately. But we are at the end. It's been great fun.

I have so thoroughly enjoyed Secret Pal 8 that I don't think I want to try my luck with SP 9. Too soon. I am convinced that I couldn't possibly be as lucky again. I've been delighted with both my matches: Rosie in Cambridge, UK, and Rachele (mostly) in Hokkaido, Japan. Rosie was my assignment and Rachele my secret pal. I hope we'll stay in touch beyond SP8.

August 20, 2006

I cut it!

I cut the steeks of my first stranded color sweater. With help from Pamela (she even offered to open a bottle of wine to ease the shock, but I had to drive), I machine sewed the steeks and then cut them.

Before

During

After

Now I need to pick up the armhole stitches and knit the sleeves from the top down. I am finally excited again about this sweater. What with the unbearably hot weather and getting stuck a couple of time (thanks Pam!), I haven't really worked on it in quite a while.

August 19, 2006

Fabulous Fiber Fest

  This morning I headed down to Santa Monica's Fabulous Fiber Fest with Una and Theresa.

Outside the building were several spinners and an area with alpaca crias. This baby was feeding from a bottle while two black crias were feeding on grass in an enclosure.

Cute, well-behaved and with the daintiest eyelashes and toenails.

This year my focus was all on textiles, so I didn't take many pictures of yarn or spinning fiber, but I could't resist Trish Andersen's yarns. I ran into Trish at a bead vendor where she was looking for beads to incorporate into a new line of pure cashemere yarn she is about to launch. Her yarns (Tanglewood Fiber Creations) are as soft and lovely to the touch as they are beautiful to look at. No website yet, but it's coming soon.

Several bead vendors.

Some beautiful jewelry.

Ah, the beautiful fabrics! I had been looking for great plaids and striped fabrics for a while and today, finally, I found them at Azabu-ya.

Many stunning quilts on display throughout the show.

Many wowen items, as well.

Unfortunately, Habu Textiles was missing this year, but maybe that's just as well, because I didn't have the budget for their line of yarns.

This was really a good day, in very good company — I also ran into a lot of friends from my spinning guild — and I bought some fabrics to start my quilting stash. More about that in a moment.

August 13, 2006

Sunday trip

  This afternoon Theresa saved me from yet another day at the computer. We drove together to Stick and Stone Fiber Arts, where I hadn't been in a while. It was a pleasant afternoon of knitting and chatting and looking at the new arrivals.

I took a lot of pictures, but quite a few turned out blurry. I really need to get myself a tripod.

Lots and lots of fiber. I especially like the luxury fibers in natural colors.

There was yak down, a favorite of mine, in moka and cream (I am sure they're called differently, but you get the idea).

Others were: Mongolian cashmere, merino blends, many shades of alpaca and baby alpaca. Lots of colored fiber, too, but those are the pictures that came out blurry.

More wheels than I remember from my previous visits, plus weaving and tapestry looms,

New this time, an enormous selection of cotton cones for weavers. This picture is only a small part of what was in the store. Theresa, being the creative experimental person that she is, bought a big bundle of cotton in very bright green that she's going to ply with other fibers. I am curious to see what she comes up with.

And this is a bag made by Janel with different kinds of fibers, including a rayon that seems very suitable for kumihimo and cording. Theresa got some of that, too, for another plying experiment.

She also lusted after this drum carder, but behaved herself… for now.

August 10, 2006

Flight woes

My brother is stranded in Turkey — his return flight to London cancelled — trying to get a flight to France and then cross the Channel by ferry or via the Channel Tunnel. Amid the seriousness of it all, I feel a little selfish worrying about this, but I wonder: will knitting on planes become a thing of the past? So far, I've been able to knit on board using circular needles, but it doesn't look good for knitters now. I really dislike travelling, the getting there and getting back part of it, and knitting or spinning have been the only way to make the long waits in airports and then the long flights bearable.

August 7, 2006

Shetland color cards

  I know… I should be working on my existing projects, but it's fun to think of all the possibilities for after I finish the current sweater. I am definitely going to do another Fair Isle project and I've pretty much decided that next time I'll try Jamieson & Smith's shetland yarn. It comes in so many colors and a lot of them are heathery; something I really like.

This is the J&S color card for the 2-ply jumper weight. Look at all the lovely hues. I wish I had a skein of each color to try out many color combinations.

And this is the color card for Jamieson's shetland yarn in similar weight and a comparable assortment of colors. I'll go with J&S, though, because they are less expensive.

August 4, 2006

Colourway

The folks at Colourway.co.uk are awesome. I placed an order on Monday, close to end of business day in the UK, and today — Friday — my yarn is already in California. I told them in my order that I was running out of yarn for a work in progress, but forgot to mention dye lots. They immediately emailed me to ask for the dye lots so they could try to match them. And they did, for all the three colors. How good is that?

I love it when I get good service. And this weekend, if the temperature stays the same, I'll finally get back to my Fair Isle sweater.

August 3, 2006

Cast-on tests

I've been experimenting with ways to do a tubular cast-on for 2x2 ribs, with unsatisfactory results. The best I've been able to do so far has been to cast on my usual way (tubular cast-on without the sacrificial yarn) and then switch every other stitch. This is the rather pedestrian result, with slanted stitches.
Anybody got a better idea?

July 22, 2006

109° F = 43° C

As I was driving home from our guild meeting — fortunately in good company (thanks Theresa!) — I swear, my tongue and eyeballs were sweating. We had been without AC from 8:30AM to 2:30PM. It is now 4:30PM and the temperature in Glendale, CA, is officially 109° F. I saw people I really wanted to see today and I am glad I did, but I can't imagine wanting to do this again in August. Right now, that prospect is about as appealing as a root canal.

But it was lovely to see people I like and we had new members today, including a lot of guys, which is quite unusual because so far the ratio of men to women in the guild has been very low. Show-and-tell was pretty good, but I forgot to take pictures. I blame the heat.

I had my stranded-color sweater with me hoping to get some advice on how to handle the neckline from more experienced color knitters. I got lucky. Pam invited me to follow her home after the meeting, where she looked at my pattern and then some Alice Starmore books, and gave me just the advice I needed. She also invited me to borrow one of her books: Fair Isle Knitting. I am really excited about it, because the book is hard to find and only available at collectors' prices. Thanks Pam for lending me such a rarity!

At Pam's house I got to meet two adorable Bearded Collies, seen here in front of their own private fan.

I finished the green Antique Patch socks when the camera was in the shop and forgot about them until today. I haven't even washed them yet. Here they are next to a sock in progress that will never be worn, because I worked it too tight. I used the same needle size and yarn thickness as for all my other socks, but my tension turned out completely different working with two colors; it's only 2/3 of what it should be. I also don't have enough yarn for two socks, so this one will be a Christmas sock. For the first time, I made a picot edge instead of the 2/2 rib and I can't wait to see what it looks like when it's finished.

The temperature is now down to 108° F. Hey, things are looking up. Kelvin has found a relatively cool spot and is not relinquishing it.

Although he is changing position from time to time.

Everybody should have ceramic tiles to put their butts against. Hope you are staying cool out there in the rest of the world.

July 15, 2006

Tubular cast-on without the waste

  Tubular cast-on the Italian way is done without the extra yarn in contrasting color. It's no better or worse than the way it's done in the US. The result is identical: only the process differs. I like it because there is no unnecessary waste and you don't have to worry about finding a sacrificial yarn in the same weight, but different color. Here it goes (video clip of the cast-on and first row at the bottom of this entry).

You'll need an equal length of yarn on both sides to cast on the stitches, so leave a tail as if you were doing a long-tail cast on.

Holding the yarn with both hands, place it under the needle, keeping the tail in your right hand. NOTE: I keep the needle under my armpit so I have one less thing to worry about while I cast on.

From now on, you will alternate between using left and right hand, moving the yarn with one hand and holding the last stitch in place with the other hand.

Let's start. With the left hand, bring the yarn over the needle left to right, while the right hand keeps the bottom part of the yarn in place.

Now hold the yarn in place with the left hand and with the right hand bring the right tail from right to left under the needle.

Left hand: bring yarn over the needle left to right.

Right hand: bring yarn under the needle, left to right.

You have just cast on two stitches. Repeat this sequence until you have cast on the desired (even) number of stitches.

To recap the sequence:
1. Left hand: yarn over needle L to R
2. Right hand: yarn under needle R to L
3. Left hand: yarn over needle L to R
4. Right hand: yarn under needle L to R

Basically, the left hand will always perform the same action: bring the yarn L to R over the needle.
The right hand will always bring the yarn under the needle but alternating between L to R and R to L.

When you have the desired number of stitches, make sure you hold the last stitch in place as you change hands.

Knit the first row like this: *knit one, slip one as if to purl keeping the yarn in front of the work.* Repeat those two stitches for the rest of the row.

Knit three more rows like this. (Actually, you could do just two rows instead of four. It's a matter of preference).

This is my sample with four rows of *knit one, slip one as if to purl* followed by two rows of *knit one, purl one*.

This is what the edge looks like at this stage. And now the fun part. Removing the thread from inside the "tube".

Stretch the edge to see which thread moves inside the tubular part and with a needle or your fingernails pull out a piece of that thread just enough to make sure you got the right thread. This part is the only tricky step. I usually pull out the thread at several intervals to make sure I really have the right one. Obsessive, moi?

Now pull.

Et voilà, les jeux sont faits. You have your tubular edge and you didn't waste any yarn.

NOTE: This cast-on is rather elastic and sturdy and well suited to sweaters, particularly when using 1/1 ribs. It's not indicated for thick yarn.

Special thanks to Andrea who put up with me all afternoon taking pictures and even videos. I may have a video clip to add to this entry tomorrow.



July 16, 2006
You can now watch a video of the cast-on and first row. NOTE: You'll need QuickTime to play the video. Sorry, but I didn't have time to convert to a variety of formats and QT is a free download available for both Mac and Windows.


June 29, 2006

On the needles

Monday afternoon, on my way to my UCLA class (Intro to linguistics), I started a sock in Regia Antique Patch. My Fair Isle sweater seems destined to increase my pile of UFOs unless I get back to it soon. Problem is, in this heat I can't bear to keep the sweater on my lap. A sock is ok, though, and doesn't require me to bring along charts or instructions.

June 23, 2006

More needles

My color swatch is growing. The knitting is not as even as it could be, because I am using the wrong size needle. I don't have circular needles US #3 (3.25mm) in 16" length so I am using a size smaller. BUT… last night I found out from Stranded on Fair Isle that Knitpicks has an incredible sale on Addi Turbo needles and ordered a few. They are all 50% off. Add to that no shipping charges for orders over $40 and no sales tax; you do the math.

I couldn't take a single decent picture of the swatch, but here it is anyway.

June 17, 2006

Swatching

Lately, I haven't worked on my Fair Isle sweater because I reached a point where I need to figure things out and I dont' trust myself with doing something new when I am too tired. Beside, I've done enough frogging when I started that sweater to want to risk having to do more of the same. Instead, I decided to do some color swatching to try out some Jamiesons shetland. This didn't require too much brain power. :)

Thought I'd try a bit of color cabling, but it was way too slow.

June 14, 2006

Socks done

Work got in the way of knitting lately and I haven't worked on my Fair Isle sweater in more than two weeks. I did manage to finish my happy socks, though. About time, too, considering that I had started them in London and that was back in April.

I undid the toe of the first sock — which had been finished for weeks — because the yellow bit at the very end was bothering me. I like the darker tip of the toe much better.

A perfect use for single socks

It's called second sock syndrome or single sock syndrome. It afflicts most knitters who knit one sock at a time. We get through the first sock quickly, then find all sorts of reasons for not finishing the second sock. I used to feel bad about having so many single socks lying around and somehow that made things worse. Then I found the solution: I turn my single socks into Christmas socks. Like this.


Lonely sock


Christmas sock.

This year I am going to have a bunch of these socks ready for my Christmas party, one for each friend, and maybe I'll embroider their names on them — gotta learn to embroider before Christmas of course — and put little gifts inside.

Interestingly, now that I have a use for my single socks, I find it easier to finish them in pairs.

June 13, 2006

Chinese needles

  My Chinese doctor came back from a trip home and brought me a pair of knitting needles. They are metal, but unlike any other metal knitting needles I've ever seen: they are hollow. This makes them very light and also less cold to the touch than regular metal needles. They are very long — 17.5" (44.5cm) — and still amazingly light. Apparently they are the latest rage for knitters in China. I've got to get around more.

June 7, 2006

More Norwegian beauty

It seems that lately all of my inspiration comes from Norway. After falling in love with the designs in Poetry in Stitches, I looked for more books by Norwegian designer Solveig Hisdal. I didn't find any (someone correct me, please, if I am wrong!), but found more inspiration at Oleana, a Norwegian company for whom Hisdal has been designing since 1992.

The designs are simply stunning. Here are a few photographs I received from Oleana with permission to publish. Solveig Hisdal is the designer and photographer for all of them.


Photography and design: Solveig Hisdal, Oleana


Photography and design: Solveig Hisdal, Oleana


Photography and design: Solveig Hisdal, Oleana


Photography and design: Solveig Hisdal, Oleana

I don't really need words here, do I? All I can say is: if you want to buy me something, get me a large. Takk!

May 25, 2006

Stitch markers

Since I started color knitting, I've been using stitch markers to mark the beginning of new repeats in my pattern. I had never used them before so I experimented with different kinds.

Split rings are great if you need to insert them past the point, as you don't need to tink your way back. The disadvantage is that their pointy ends can get in the way while you are knitting and I find myself keeping my hands in an awkward position to avoid them.

The safety pin markers circumvent that problem because they can be secured just like a safety pin. The downside is that they are too bulky, especially for my small gauge knitting (US needle size 3 = 3.25mm).

The simple rings are the least intrusive for me, but the ones I have come in a combo package and there are only very few of the small ones. All of these models, though, suffer from the same problem: they slide too easily and it's very common for them to fall off the needle when I get to where they are inserted. Maybe I just need more practice, but I'd like to find something that either grabs the needle a little more or has a little pendant to make it easier to stay in place.

I looked around the Web and found that a lot of knitters are making their own stitch markers, as shown in this Stitch marker tutorial. Some of these markers seem too long to me and some knitters complain that they tend to catch the yarn. I guess that depends on how they are finished. I'd like to find something along the line of these little Hearts of glass. They don't have any loose hooks at the bottom so they shouldn't catch the yarn, but I am not sure what size they come in. I realize that small gauge needles are not the most popular. Maybe I should try to make my own, but who needs another hobby?

I just found out that Clover makes some soft (non-slid) ring stich markers, but I haven't seen them in stores yet. I am going to stop at Unravelled later today to see if they carry them. If not, I'll order some online to see how they work out.


  • to tink : to undo your knitting one stitch at a time, as opposed to frogging. ("tink" is "knit" spelled backwards).
  • to frog : to undo your knitting by ripping off the yarn rather enthusiastically, rows at a time, as opposed to tinking.

May 24, 2006

Happy socks

I've been working on a pair of socks with Regia Miniringel in a very cheerful color palette. I finished the first sock in two days (most of it on the plane back from London) and the second one has been languishing for weeks now because I've been distracted by my Fair Isle sweater that is sucking up all my free time. Not that I am complaining; now that I can keep one color in each hand, I love color knitting. It's actually more relaxing than knitting with one yarn and easier on my hands.


Regia Mini Ringel Color 5217.


Slowly, slowly, but it's growing. Cat hairs lurking here and there courtesy of Kelvin, the lap cat.


This is one of the steeks after I switched to alternating colors, as suggested by a couple of fair isle knitters.


Lap cat strikes again!

I also started spinning for my SP8 pal and I really want to prepare enough fiber for her so I can mail her my first package next Monday.

May 20, 2006

My other Secret Pal

I've been thinking about my other SP8 pal trying to figure out what to get her. I just foud out that she prefers 2-3 small packages instead of a larger shipment at the end. She lives in the U.K. and told me something I didn't know: when shipping to the U.K. from outside Europe, the recipient incurs customs fees for anything exceeding a certain value, which kicks in at a very low level. That's crazy, but then, they drive on the left, don't they?

My pal is an accomplished experimental knitter who likes fall colors, er… autumn colours. I have a beautiful pencil roving in a soft mohair blend in just the right hues that I bought last year at the New York Sheep and Wool Festival, a.k.a. Rhinebeck. I am going to spin it for her as both two-ply and singles, in case she wants to experiment with energized singles, à la Kathryn Alexander.

This is the fluff. I hope my handspun will do justice to the fiber.

May 17, 2006

First steeks

I got to the part of my Fair Isle sweater where I had to decide how to proceed with the armholes:

  • split the knitting on two needles and start knitting the front and back separately, or
  • create steeks for the armholes and keep knitting in the round.

I opted for the steeks.

Since this is the first time I do steeks, I am not sure I am doing things properly. Hopefully someone will tell me if this looks right or not.

The sweater so far.

To create the armhole steeks, I casted on seven new stitches at each side using the long-tail cast-on. Then, I started knitting the stitches in the darkest color with the center stitch in the lightest color for when I have to cut.

When I took the Fair Isle workshop in London, I focused primarily on the knitting technique and didn't pay enough attention to the steeks. We didn't actually go into how to create steeks, but I saw an almost finished sweater. I remember that either the body or the sleeves had an edge where one line was purled, instead of knitted, to facilitate folding, but I can't remember which part it was. Help!

May 16, 2006

Alice in LawLand

Two knitters' lists I belong to have recently brought up an issue that I would like someone competent to clarify for me (any lawyers who knit out there?). There seems to be a consensus among some laypeople that if a book is out-of-print and unavailable at a reasonable price, then it can be photocopied, even in its entirety. The reason this topic is being hotly debated on knitting lists is the unavailability of certain Alice Starmore books. Works such as Aran Knitting and In the Hebrides have been out-of-print for a while, there doesn't seem to be a plan to reprint them, and only a few copies are available on eBay and specialized bookstores at prices that no one in their right mind would call reasonable. Today, Aran Knitting is listed from $299.85 to $794.95, and In the Hebrides from $337.50 to $1,203.43 (as seen on BookFinder).

While I wait for someone who knows what they are talking about to come to the rescue, I thought I'd look for answers from Stanford University. They ought to know. Here is a quote from the Fair Use section of the Stanford University Libraries website:

  • "Copying a complete work from the library collection is prohibited unless the work is not available at a "fair price." This is generally the case when the work is out of print and used copies are not available at a reasonable price." [Italics are mine]
Ah, don't you like that "generally"? What was I thinking, looking for something specific on a law website, however educational?

So, how "generally" is generally and what are the exceptions? For one thing, this is all within the library confine. What about me making photocopies of an out-of-print book I own and giving them to friends? I may be overcautious, but I don't automatically assume that what is within a library's rights would be ok for poor little me.

Besides, even for libraries the photocopying right doesn't seem so air-tight. On other websites, I found mention of a couple of factors that might affect them, too. One is the use of the photocopied material: strictly private study, scholarship or research. The other is the age of the work in question: how far along its copyright term is the book?

So many questions, so few answers… One thing's for sure: Fair Use is a very gray area of intellectual property law and I am eager to hear from experts. In the meantime, I doubt that Aran Knitting is up for grabs. Good thing I bought my copy when it was in print.

May 12, 2006

First contact

My Secret Pal sent me a very nice email last night (insert little spring dance here) and now I am already making conjectures about who she is and where she lives. I can't help myself; I do the same thing when I watch Law & Order or CSI, trying to be three steps ahead figuring things out. It's part of the fun.

From her email I'd say she's either bilingual or English is her first language, and I think she lives in Japan. My blog stats last night showed a steep increase of page views from Japan (don't you love technology?) and she emailed me in the evening (USA Pacific time) after having already read my blog, plus I know from my hostess' blog that she had people from Japan in her group, so I am feeling pretty confident in my guess. Of course I could be dead wrong and my SP is laughing her head off reading this.

Ha! This is fun.

May 11, 2006

Matched!

So I finally got my Secret Pal 8 match and found out who my spoilee is, and… I blew it. I must have set up my anonymous email account on Yahoo late at night when I was tired or otherwise not in the full possession of my faculties, because my emails from that address show my full name. Arrrggghhh. I haven't even started my first Secret Pal and I already screwed up. Grrr, fzzz, grumble and all that!@#$!!

I hope she is not too disappointed that the cat is out of the bag, or perhaps she has great self-control and will refrain from googling my name and putting two and two together. Apart from this, we seem to be a good match and I look forward to getting to know and spoil her.

Still haven't heard from my Secret Pal, the one who's going to spoil me, but she (I think of my SP as a she, but who knows?) might not even have seen her match notification yet since she is most likely in another continent and asleep right now.

May 9, 2006

Unraveled

I finally went to Unraveled, a yarn store in Monrovia (Southern California) that had been highly recommended by a couple of friends. I was not disappointed.

Gleaming hardwood floors, beamed ceiling, good lighting, and lots of space to move around and look at yarns, books, tools and accessories.

The store carries a good variety of brands and a yarn selection that seems targeted primarily at the new and intermediate knitter for the prevalence of thick and novelty yarns. There were thinner yarns, too, including some sock yarn, but not as much as I had hoped. It's really hard to find a good selection of small gauge yarns in physical stores these days.

Helpful staff ready to assist without being pushy: a big plus for me. I've been put off a couple of stores because the owners are either too eager (see Skein in Pasadena) or too stuck-up (see the infamous Knitterie Parisienne in LA). This one is just right.

I particularly enjoyed the book corner, with its two displays and many books and magazines including Rowan, Colinette and even a couple of issues of Rebecca, which you don't see often in stores.

And the place is so airy and inviting. You have your choice of cushy armchairs and sofa in various happy colors and a good size table and chairs, all near natural light: another winning move.

I am definitely going back.

May 8, 2006

Socks, socks, socks

The first time I tried to knit socks, I used a set of five double pointed needles (DPN); I struggled, struggled, struggled some more, cursed, and gave up. I knit for pleasure and all that struggling didn't make sense. A few months later, I ran into a booklet titled Socks Soar on Two Circular Needles and decided to give that a try.

It was night and day. Knitting on two circulars was oh, so easy! I got stuck a couple of times with the pattern and needed a little help from a friend, but that's not because of the technique. I suspect that the book was written for knitters who are already familiar with sock knitting to introduce a new, easier way of doing things, so certain basic things were taken for granted.

I've been knitting socks ever since, using both solid color and self-patterning yarn and love it. Here are some of my socks knitted with a variety of yarns: Jawoll Lang, Regia Patch Antique, Trekking and one I can't remember.

These are knitted with Regia Patch Antique.

And two of these are knitted with Jojoland yarn I bought on eBay. I love the colors, but unlike the other yarns which are specifically for socks and contain about 20% synthetic fiber, these are 100% wool, so they need to be hand washed (sigh) and they pill a lot more. They are warmer, though.

For these, I used a KnitPicks yarn called Essential.

I've tried different kinds and brands of circular needles. Hate plastic, like the look and feel of bamboo, but metal wins hands down for me and my all-time favorites are Addi Turbo, made by German manufacturer Skacel. They come in bamboo and metal and in many lengths, to fit all sorts of projects, from tiny socks to oversized sweaters. The metal ones make your knitting simply glide, which is why I like them. Other people prefer bamboo because they find metal too slippery. It's a matter of personal preference. The brand, though, is a matter of quality. The brands I tried before Addi Turbo – and I admit that I didn't try absolutely everything on the market – sooner or later gave me problems with the flexible part between the needles which tended to stiff and curl in awkward ways. Yes, you can put them in hot water and it makes a difference, but why go to the trouble if you don't have to?

May 6, 2006

First Fair Isle

I started this sweater in London with a pattern from Scottish Island Knits.

After struggling for more than a week with tangle horrors of galactic proportions, a few friends in my spinning guild helped me frog the whole thing down to the ribbing. Yes, it took four people to rip about twenty rows of unspeakable mess. Then one of them (thanks Kathy) showed me how to weave in the yarn as I knit and I was on my way to do things properly. So I started my pattern again. All went well up to the point where I had to use more than two colors per row and even my new technique was no help. Finally, I asked for help on a Fair Isle knitting list and someone pointed out that I was using a Fair Isle technique on an intarsia pattern. Duh! More frogging, all by myself this time.

Down to the ribbing again, the day before my retreat at Deer Springs where my friend Andrea was going to bring a book by Norwegian designer Solveig Hisdal, so I decided to pick a new pattern from that book. This is what I chose.

I am not sure I can call it Fair Isle, since it's not a traditional Fair Isle pattern, but it only requires two colors per row, which I understand is the basis of the Fair Isle technique. Here is the sweater now, one week later.

And this is the back, with every other stitch weaved in. I don't know if it's overkill, but I like the effect.

I am finally happy with how my sweater is going. The only problem is that now my UFOs have even less chances of getting done.

May 2, 2006

Secret Pal 8

At my last guild's meeting, four of my friends talked me into signing up for Secret Pal 8, a sort of secret Santa for knitters who blog. Now, that wouldn't have been such a big deal, if I had a blog. This was Saturday April 22 and on Sunday the 23rd I started my blog. Of all the reasons to start a blog this has to be a rather pathetic one, but the crazy things is: I am hooked. I rationalize my twelve entries in ten days with providing enough information to my secret pal, but I am really doing this because I enjoy it, and this has been a big surprise for me. I've never kept a journal and never been interested in one. In fact, if it weren't for Andrea, JoShell, Theresa and Rose (you bad, bad girls), I'd still be happily blogless. Anyway, today I received the SP8 questionnaire, so here are my answers. I can't wait to find out who my secret pal is!

  1. What is/are your favorite yarn/s to knit with? What fibers do you absolutely *not* like?

    LOVE: wool, wool and wool. Oh wait, also wool blended with cashmere, silk, and other such lovely fibers. What can I say, I am spoiled rotten; guess it comes from spinning, since I can usually make luxurious yarn at an affordable price. I do use yarns with partial synthetic content for socks, though; it all depends on the project. And, unlike some spinner friends of mine who sneer at non-handspun (you know who you are), I absolutely adore some commercial yarns.
    CURRENTLY IN LOVE WITH: Rowan Scottish Tweed 4-ply.
    PLANNING TO USE SOON: Jamieson & Smith 2-ply jumper weight yarn.
    FAVORITE YARN WEIGHT: fingering to DK, although I have knitted with lace weight and worsted.
    DISLIKE: synthetics and non-bouncy fibers like cotton and linen. I also don't use novelty or bulky yarns, because I tend to favor projects that require traditional yarn and small gauge needles.

  2. What do you use to store your needles/hooks in?

    A lot of my straight needles are in vases, and some in a fabric wrap. My circulars are a mess and I need to figure out how to organize them, especially since I am getting more and more of them.

  3. How long have you been knitting? Would you consider your skill level to be beginner, intermediate or advanced?

    I've been knitting since I was about ten, with two long inactivity gaps until six years ago, when I started knitting again and got completely hooked. I am an advanced Aran knitter, absolute beginner Fair Isle knitter, kind of lousy at sewing and putting it all together. I am also good with simple socks.

  4. Do you have an Amazon or other online wish list?

    I have two, not entirely up-to-date, but here they are:
    Amazon.com
    Amazon.co.jp

  5. What's your favorite scent? (for candles, bath products etc.)

    No scents, please. I have really awful reactions to a lot of scents. Lavender sachets are ok, but that's about it.

  6. Do you have a sweet tooth? Favorite candy?

    I love gelato, but I think that the logistics of mailing ice-cream will keep me safe from this one. :)

  7. What other crafts or Do-It-Yourself things do you like to do? Do you spin?

    I spin and I am getting interested in felting, although it seems so much more work in terms of set-up than knitting or spinning, that I am not sure I'll really get into it.

  8. What kind of music do you like? Can your computer/stereo play MP3s? (if your buddy wants to make you a CD).

    Yes, I can play MP3 on my Mac and iPod. I have rather scattered, er… eclectic, tastes. My all-time favorites are jazz and Brazilian music. I am not very up to speed with the latest stuff, but to give you an idea of other things I like, here are a few: Dead Can Dance, Cocteau Twins, This Mortal Coil, Antony and the Johnsons, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Paolo Conte, medieval, Irish, and more. Please, no rap, country or opera.

  9. What's your favorite color? Or--do you have a color family/season/palette you prefer? Any colors you just can't stand?

    I love spice colors (mustard, saffron, curry, paprika, etc.), fall palettes, earth tones, grays, moss and olive greens, blues; I dislike purples and pinks, and don't have much use for pastels. I also can't knit anything black or near black because I can't see what I am doing.

  10. What is your family situation? Do you have any pets?

    I live with my partner of seven years (Ben) and two adorable British shorthair cats (Kelvin and Piper).

  11. Do you wear scarves, hats, mittens or ponchos?

    Yes to everything but ponchos.

  12. What is/are your favorite item/s to knit?

    Socks, sweaters, wrist warmers.

  13. What are you knitting right now?

    A pair of socks and my first Fair Isle sweater. I also have several UFOs waiting on me.

  14. Do you like to receive handmade gifts?

    Yes.

  15. Do you prefer straight or circular needles? Bamboo, aluminum, plastic?

    Used to knit with 14" straight needles (one needle under my arm as I learned growing up in Italy) but I am now totally in love with circulars. I use my metal Addi Turbos for socks and now also sweaters. I still like to see my wooden straight needles around the house and there is one particular pair of straight needles I've been lusting after.

  16. Do you own a yarn winder and/or swift?

    I have a yarn winder but not a swift.

  17. How did you learn to knit?

    From a friend.

  18. How old is your oldest UFO?

    About five years old.

  19. What is your favorite holiday?

    Christmas.

  20. Is there anything that you collect?

    I wouldn't call it collecting, but I do occasionally buy stamps with maps and Japanese stickers.

  21. Any books, yarns, needles or patterns out there you are dying to get your hands on? What knitting magazine subscriptions do you have?

    Let me get back to you on the first question. As for subscriptions, I don't have any, but I just signed up with TKGA so I should start getting Cast-On. I occasionally get Rebecca with English translation.

  22. Are there any new techniques you'd like to learn?

    Color-knitting. I just started my first Fair Isle project. It's not strictly speaking Fair Isle, because it's a Scandinavian pattern from Poetry in Stitches, but it's in FI technique. I have a feeling that I'll want to do more after this. I also like some sweaters that require intarsia technique, but I don't think I can handle the tangle mess of multiple balls of yarn at the same time.

  23. Are you a sock knitter? What are your foot measurements?

    Yes, and I'll get back to you with the measurements.

  24. When is your birthday? (mm/dd)

    September 30.

  25. I should probably throw in some extra information for my secret pal since my blog is only ten days old. I was born in the UK, raised in Italy and moved to Los Angeles in 1992 where I've been a professional web designer and developer since 1995. Some of my interests outside knitting and spinning are: foreing languages, design, technology, maps, good food and wine, cats. I tend to have a short attention span and get interested in new things all the time, but knitting seems to be a constant in my life and I am very much looking forward to my first Secret Pal.


April 30, 2006

Fiber retreat

Just back from a great weekend in Deer Springs organized by my spinning guild. We were above the clouds, the weather was wonderful and I spent two days doing some of my favorite things with people I like.

Fiber retreat
Ah, the view!

Fiber retreat

Fiber retreat
Our cabin.

Fiber retreat
Una, our master felter, who gave a great felting workshop on how to make hats and bags. I hope to get pictures of some of the items from other friends who were at the retreat. When I am enjoying myself it's hard to remember to stop to take pictures.

Fiber retreat
Andrea, spinning in her jammies between coffee and pancakes.

Fiber retreat
After a painful beginning – I had to frog two weeks' worth of work – I changed pattern and I am now working on a sweater from Poetry in Stitches, although in an entirely different color scheme. I had planned on finishing my Aran sweaters at the retreat, but ended up spending all my time working on my first Fair Isle project. Now, I am very happy I did.

Fiber retreat
We had been told that there might be a llama shearing during our stay and we could have the fleeces, but in the end it was too cold for that.

April 26, 2006

UFOs

Leaving Friday with two friends to go to our spinning guild retreat in Deer Springs. Twenty girls and one guy cramped indoors for two days of spinning, knitting, felting and God knows what else. Wish I could pack the kitties, especially Kelvin, who likes to try new laps and really enjoys this kind of meetings. He usually ends up sitting for hours on someone who is either knitting or spinning on a single-treadle wheel. Double-treadle is too bumpy of a ride, even for him.

This is him on Janet's lap at the last spin/knit gathering at my place. A true bundle of nerves who doesn't know how to relax.
Kelvin and Janet

He won't be lacking laps, though, as every time I am out for more than half a day, Ben and Ed schedule a video game tournament and those guys can sit on the sofa for hours playing Halo 2.

Gotta figure out what to pack, but one thing's for sure; I will bring my oldest UFOs, *three* Aran sweaters (all from Aran Knitting by Alice Starmore) that have been in between 80% and 95% state of completion for years. I guess I fit the stereotype of knitters who hate to sew. I'd rather knit another sleeve or even larger piece than put the whole thing together. Luckily, my friends will help me snap out of it this weekend.

Here are the offending items, all from Alice Starmore's Aran Knitting:

St. Brigid
St. Brigid sweater in progress

Na Craga #1
Na Craga sweater in progress

Na Craga #2
Na Craga sweater #2 in progress

April 23, 2006

London, dahlin'

After almost seven years, I finally visited my brother in London. I got back on Easter evening and am still struggling with jetlag. I don't travel well; still waiting for the "beam me up" technology that will free me from the getting there part of travelling. It was great to almost forget about work for ten days, see the family and all that, but I am so happy to be back.

While I was there, I managed to indulge some of my fiber addictions. Took a color-knitting workshop at Loop in Islington and made several visits to Liberty's. In spite of the severe downsizing – they closed down the front building on Regent Street last month – I love the remaining Tudor building and spent some time in the needlepoint and yarn department. Their needlepoint section is amazing; I've never seen that variety of kits anywhere else. Of course, I didn't make it to Erhman Tapestry so I can't compare, but there's nothing like that in Los Angeles. The yarn section is primarily a Rowan-Jaeger affair with negligible representations of a few other brands, but then Rowan and Jaeger are my favorite brands so who's complaining?

I fell in love with Rowan Scottish Tweed 4-ply and bought quite a lot in four colors to make my first Fair Isle sweater, or so I thought. More about that later.

Rowan Scottish Tweed 4-ply

I am still in catching up mode, both on the house and work front, and I am setting up this blog so ta-ta for now.