I wish I could talk about something other than socks

Friday, April 28, 2006

I've started another pair of socks using the other skein of Sundara Yarn I have, in colorway Troubador. Again the colors are super saturated and super shiny, like silk almost. How'd she do that?

And yes I'm on a sock-knitting rampage ;)

Well it appears that this skein of yarn is much less variegated than the one I used for the Spring Anklets (colorway Fern). In fact the color changes aren't quite so random and are more distinct, so much so that I was getting quasi-striping in the toes.

Striping on the sole

Then as I got to the foot, massive external bleeding of the color blue. Gah! I suppose this is what you sock experts out there call pooling?

My initial start of the sock had the blue pooling precisely on needle #1 and only one needle #1, every single round. Couldn't have done that if I had tried. 

I ripped it out and tried again, this time casting on at a spot several inches further in, to maybe break up the pooling or at least to have the pooling be distributed on two needles like an instep and a sole. This time I got a diagonally traveling blob of blue, pictured above. Kind of cool.

The original stitch pattern I was going to use to with the variegation didn't work with Troubador, so I switched to the Pomatomus pattern. It looks funky no?

We're flying South tonight. I'll be in Atlanta for nearly three weeks. It's been nearly a decade since I've been home that long. (Oh god really is that true? I'm so old.) But I'm going home with a new attitude, my friends. I'm going to treat my hometown as a tourist attraction. Me the tourist, Atlanta and environs the destination. In reality I don't know anyone who would ever voluntarily pick Atlanta as a vacation spot - it's so corporate and new and flat despite all the Coca-Cola carbonation - but I'm going to overlook that sad fact for this trip. The goal is to see/learn/do/eat/appreciate things I never did before.  

I will have to find some yarn stores too.

My mom is a knitter and a fantastic seamstress. Perhaps I'm ready for her to teach me how to sew as well...I want to make a needle case, especially with all the DPN's I've aquired lately. Hm.

Nah, on second thought, I just now searched deep within my soul and am not yet truly ready to learn how to sew. I'll just commission one from her, heh.

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Spring Anklets

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Spring Anklets
Yarn
: Sundara Yarn in Fern, one hank at 185yds with several yards left over.
Size/Needles: 30 stitches instep, 26 stitches sole = 56 stitches on US2

Here before you are my own Spring Anklets, using Sherman Heel and a leaf pattern from my Japanese pattern book. Leaf pattern is obscured by the variegated color which I knew would happen but decided to do it anyway. I had started off using a mini-cable pattern that looks like the stitch from My So-Called Scarf I've seen floating around the internet. It was really flattering with the variegated yarn. The way one stitch stretches and crosses over another made the individual colors pop, but it was a total pain to execute. I think I'm going to try it again though on my next pair, because I'm still rather 'eh' about the way variegated yarns knit up straight.

The yarn was scrumptious though. Colors were shiny and intense and the wool so soft.

I will also take care to really decrease for the ankle area. It's a bit roomy, even though I went down a needles size and did a 2x2 rib. If I decreased the number of stitches as much as 20% it would be nice and tight.

Check out the pretty Sherman toe and heel. No holes!

There was more than enough yarn in the one skein to make a pair of anklets. The colors of the greens in the yarn are the same shade of those of the spring blooms popping up, hence the name. Fresh, vibrant and new.

Today is my and Duck's happy 4th anniversary! As usual we have nothing planned. So romantic!

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Finished Sock, and Upcoming...

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Aw yeah I finally have a finished matching pair of socks.

Jaywalker socks. The stripes don't match.
Yarn: Regia Crazy Color 6ply
Needles: US3

I knit these toe-up using short row toes and heels, 13 stitches each on 4 needles. The first sock I did the usual wrapped stitches method; the second sock I used the Sherman Heel method, which was so much easier to execute and looked much neater. On the first sock I bound off normally but loosely, however it was still a little tight. So on the second sock I tried the knit two, purl two bind-off as described in Vogue Knitting. Is this a tubular bind-off? It was definitely much stretchier but I'm not sure I like how it looks.

These socks have been perfect for the chilly weather we've been having lately. But from now on, any socks I make will be ankle socks. Completing 6 inches of the leg even on big fat size 3 needles still felt like an eternity, I tell you.

***

Last year, my knitting raison d'etre was all about finished sweaters. As many sweaters as humanly possible in the least amount of time. I was going at a rate of one completed sweater per month, and accessories like scarves, hats, socks were deemed an inefficient use of knitting time.

And now, this year, after finishing Cabled Toad, not only have I not even wanted to complete another sweater, I have knit five whole socks (only one matching pair, see above), two half socks, and am about to dive headfirst into the geriatric world DOILIES, TABLE RUNNERS and TEA CLOTHS!

For chrissakes what's going on?!

Enter Thistle, Daffodil, and Rose.

Thistle Lace 
Daffodil Rose of England


Modern Lace Knitting is what's going on. While at a fellow knitter's house for dinner this weekend, our hostess brought out these knitting books for me to leaf through. Wow. WOooooOOoooow. The lace is so unbelievable that it doesn't even look like knitting anymore. It looks like...a station wagon. A grizzly bear. A sunset! Might as well, it's so ridiculous.

She let me take the Second Book home and I have been carrying it from room to room like a teddy bear, never far from my side, leafing through it more than occasionally while I try to decide which I would like to try.

And I don't even like table runners or doilies! But that's not the point anymore. It's about making works of art, which these lace pieces definitely definitely are. I accept the challenge!

Lilac Time

What kind of yarn should I use (and which pattern?)? I don't want to turn any of these into shawls. I'll never wear them, and draped decoratively on a table is better than being hidden away in a closet. But I don't want to use cotton thread. I know I won't enjoy working with it, even if it is more appropriate as a table cloth, etc. Would a silk/wool lace blend work? All silk? Hmmmmmmm.

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Even More Sock Goodness

Monday, April 17, 2006

This has suddenly become a sock blog.

This weekend the Easter bunny (me) left sock yarn in someone's Easter basket (mine). Presenting more Koigu, more Regia sock yarn in various crazy colors. These are from C0l0rful St!tches in Lenox, Mass. I had a gift certificate burning a hole in my pocket since Christmas. Only one skein of each color because I plan on making footies/ankle socks from now on.

Progess Shots:

Second Pomatomus and Jaywalker sock

Pair almost complete. The toes are different. On the finished sock I used short row shaping with wrapped stitches. On the second sock I used the Sherman short row shaping.

Again drastically different toes. On the finished sock I knit cuff down per given instructions. On the second I knit toe up, using short row shaping with wrapped stitches, which gave a rounder toe. So when I finish I'll have a matching pair that don't really quite match. Heh. The scallops are nicely mirrored though.

I do prefer working the Sherman short row over the usual wrapped stitches short row. More on that later.

Socks + Domesticat = BFF

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The Start of an Addiction

Friday, April 14, 2006

The sound of the postman's truck got me out of bed early this morning. PACKAGE!

Sundara Yarn, in Fern and Troubador ordered from pureknits.com. It came fast, packaged all nice with a pretty little ribbon and a lovely handwritten note. Hooray for supporting small online businesses, hooray for partnerships, hooray for me, hooray for DELICIOUS, CANDY-LIKE SOCK YARN.

Holy crap. 

Must...restrain...self...Must...not...eat...sock yarn...

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Mama's got a brand new toy

Monday, April 10, 2006

Koigu yarn, all wound up

So I'm a little late to the party, but better late than never. The winder is to a knitter like the Kitchen Aid is to the baker. Why did I wait so long to get one why?

Spring is in the air you guys. I can almost smell it, I can almost taste it. I was just out on the town (buying this winder and having sushi for lunch, yum) and there are daffodils in places where there was just dirt, and pink magnolias on once barren trees, and in my own backyard, the fluffy heads of peonies making a showing. Woooooooo. I am in a grand mood at the prospect of nice weather, that it has prompted me to devise a What I Will Do This Spring/Summer List, 2006:

  • Go to at least 5 Red Sox games.
    I'm totally into baseball this season, don't ask me why. I don't usually start following or caring in earnest until around August, but this year I've already watched/listened to all six games so far.
  • Have a clambake.
    Or at least, boil own lobster in kitchen.
  • More weekdays lounging at Singing Beach.
  • Knit a three-quarter sleeved cardigan using Mirto yarn, in a chevron pattern.
    I've been thinking about this one a lot. I want to use Mirto yarn again very badly.
  • Go biking on Carriage Road in Acadia National Park, Maine
  • Go sea kayaking.
  • Go strawberry-picking.
  • Bake a strawberry banana cake.
  • Attend at least one Tanglewood concert.
  • Plant more mint for mint juleps and mojitos.
  • Throw at least two barbeques.
  • Eat more peaches.

Speaking of peaches, I'm headed to Georgia for an extended stay at my parents' at the end of the month. They are (possibly) putting the house on the market by the end of the year, and I thought it would be nice to hang out in my hometown for more than a couple of days like I usually do. You know, just relax, cook, knit and sew (?!?) with my mom, garden with my dad, go to a Braves game with my high school friends...And I'll still be able to work from my parents' house. While there we're going to make sidetrips to Savannah and the GA islands. I haven't decided which. Mmmm, Spanish moss...bumblebees...azaleas...magnolias...warm southern rays...

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Short Row Heel

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

The bad news is it's snowing, the biggest, fluffiest snow all year. Hi it's April. 

The good news is, I have heel, and it's a short row heel!

I had been following this pattern for the toe-up Jaywalkers. I was 2 rounds into the gusset directions, when I thought to myself, Blah blah blah so much instructions for the heel. Must I have a gusset/turned heel/heel flap? Just because the original pattern had it cuff-down, must it be mirrored toe-up?

'Course not! I'm a rebel!

So I ripped back the two rows, and using these great instructions for a generic toe-up pattern, started a short row heel. It turned out great, fit great, and was so EASY I couldn't stand it. Hells yeah I'll do another short row heel! Give it to me! No more finagling with heel flaps, or picking up stitches.

However, I didn't much like knitting the wrapped stitches - TWO wrapped stitches really - which you do when you start increasing back to your original number of stitches. Knitting three stitches together was a pain in the ass and didn't look all that great. I still had little holes.

Gappy short row heel.

I quick search on the Internet and I found another short-row method called the Sherman Heel that works for both the toe and the heel, and involves only 2 wrapped stitches. (There's another tutorial here, for knitting cuff-down.) I'll see how it works on the matching sock.

La la la la I love you short row heel!

Elemmaciltur called it way back when, he did, when he said that I would unevitably be bitten by the sock bug. I really doubted it, but I underestimated just how big and virulent this bug would be. So OK YOU'RE RIGHT I ADMIT IT SOCK ARE FUN YOU HAPPY NOW?! Hee hee. And no I haven't increased my sock stash any more. I did trade in the two skeins of lavender Koigu I bought last week for two skeins of CORAL Koigu. It's lovely and the color is so strawberry-daiquiri edible.

OK I have got to get back to work. The sock has been banished to the next room to avoid distraction and temptation...

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I've got sock fever. Maybe.

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

It's a dreary spring day out, but inside it looks pretty cheery, with my vase of daffodils, and new Jaywalkers, toe up!

I wanted to see how the Regia crazy color would knit up, and just had to try the toe up method, so I set aside starting my second Pomatomus sock and casted on my first provisional cast on for the toe. What fun! Before I knew it, 4 episodes of 24 had passed and I had nearly an entire foot.

I give knitting toe up a big toes up. See how I did that there? Heh heh. I like being able to try the sock as I go along, but most of all I like that I'm starting right off the bat with the actual "socky" part of the sock when knitting toe up. Part of my problem with knitting socks, besides the toothpick needles, is the ribbing for the cuff - so slow and boring - and then working down the leg when I all want to do is get to the heel, foot, toe already. The juicy meaty parts of the sock.

Changes I made to accommodate using 6ply yarn and size 3 needles: I casted on 24 stitches and short-rowed to 8 for the toe. For the sole I have 24 stitches and for the instep I have 26, which means I work chevron pattern over 13 stitches. When I reach the cuff I plan to have 52 stitches total.

So far it fits well. Actually it fits amazingly well, considering I dived right in without nary a swatch, heh heh. My approach for better or for worse is that while I modify every pattern I do - yarn change, needle change, width change - I never swatch before I do it. I eyeball a little, guestimate a little, scratch out some algebra a little, then jump right in a lot, and the end results almost always come out fine. That is my one little knitting superpower :)

I am approaching the gusset now. I might have knitted the foot too long before getting to this point but we shall see. And we shall really see if my haphazard pattern modifications hold up. If all goes swimmingly I will have a MATCHING pair of socks in record time, and might even begin to admit that I enjoy knitting socks, heh.

In case you're wondering about the progress of Cate, there hasn't been any. At all. Sad face. Soon Cate soon.

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