Koochie-mama

Friday, February 08, 2008

Here are some better photos of HRM the Kooch.

Kooch from the front

Kooch from the back

(Love my little Duck to pieces, but the guy cannot for the life of him take in-focus photographs.)

I jumped the gun with all the seaming. That photo in the magazine is misleading. The awesome belt which really is the whole reason why I started this 2-year knitting sojourn, is not actually belt. WHAT? you say, if not a belt then what? Well, they are actually ties which end at either side of the waist. One tie for the right, one for the left. The right tie is attached to the waist seam of the front right panel, and vice-versa for the left. THEN the left and right front panels are seamed to the back panel.

Does not that sound entirely nutters to you? And how odd would that look, a cardigan with a half-belt? And how empty and naked the back.

So screw the instructions and the design, I'm making a full belt.

Here are some more photos of Rambling Rose to fill up space. I blocked the back and fronts and let us now bask in the glory of the awesome stitch definition. Go STR Go.

Such a fine stitch definition

Such a fine stitch definition

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Closing in

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Kooch in progressSorry for the horrible photo (used Photobooth on the macbook), but LOOK!

It's KOOCH!!!!!

ALL. SEAMED. UP!!

I have the neckband and the belt to do and then this thing is oh my god done!

I don't even care that the sleeves are turning out to be too big or that the yarn is as itchy as a rash. It's going to be finished! Woooooooot!

 

 

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This intarsia business isn't so bad

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Intarsia

The makings of the Rambling Rose cardi from IK Winter 2006, using STR heavyweight in Pond Scum and Haida. These are flying of the needles.

We now conclude this drive-by post. Better than none at all, right? :-/

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Vowing to be more like TomBrady in 2008

Friday, January 04, 2008

Me: I wonder what it's like to be T0m Brady

Kitty: It must be great. He wakes up in the morning and is all hot. Then he has half the year off.

Me: You look in the mirror and you're like, Shit. Will you look at me.

Kitty: I have such a shitty work ethic - I would be like, Shiiiit my salary for this year could set me up for the rest of my life, I'm not doing jack. Throw the ball, run the ball, who cares.

Me: Hahaha.

Kitty: Dollar dollar bill ya'll.

Me: Yeah that's why we aren't T0m Brady.

Kitty: Exactly. Bad attitude.

Me: Oh to be the T0m Brady of web development...

Kitty: I show up for football practice and check my hotmail on the sidelines.

Me: I show up to the games, sit on the bench, and IM...

Me: ...Critique my fellow teammates' work and note that I could do better if I really wanted to, but it's my choice not to.

Kitty: Hahahahaha.

Me: Damnit T0m Brady.

Kitty: T0m Brady, you are a better person than me.

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The boys would like to wish you happy holidays

Monday, December 24, 2007

Until we have actual human children...

and especially a Meowwy Christmas!

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It's a miracle

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

I finished something! And oh my god they're not socks!

Tunic

What: Tunic sweater avec turtleneck, pattern is my own
Yarn: Malabrigo worsted in Azul Profundo #150, less than 3.5 skeins
Needles: US8 and 7 circulars and dpn's

There's this sweater I got for cheaps at H&M that I have been wearing to the ground. It's black, made of soft squishy acrylic, the length of which hits just past the hips. It's body-hugging and has a large cowl-neck that could be stretched and draped over both shoulders, revealing the collarbone, or slouched just to one side, revealing just a tantalizing snippet of a neck. It is a totally simple sweater but when I wear it, I feel like if I opened my mouth to speak my voice would be husky, I might even purr, and everything I said would be witty and charming because it would also be in French.

Tunic sweater

My version of that sweater is a little less Euro and a lot more...BLUE. I cannot tell you how intense the blue really is. I used just over 3 skeins of Malabrigo and it turns out they were all pretty much consistent in color, except for that one lone skein which of course appears smack dab in the middle of the sweater. Whatever. I'm fine with it.

Because I didn't follow a pattern and I wanted it to fit a certain way, I actually swatched before starting this sweater. This is a first. I never swatch. I get lazy. Most of the time it works out, sometimes it doesn't. But in true me fashion, I've misplaced all my algebraic scribbling and notes so I can't tell you the gauge I came up with. It wasn't rocket science anyways. Basically I wanted a sweater that was about 30 inches around, using US8 needles. I also put in waist shaping in the form of darts: instead of decreasing/increasing at the end of each side, I did it about 2 inches in from each side.

Tunic sweater

I yoked the upper body part: when reaching the armpits, I bound of maybe 10 stitches for the armpits on each side, set the body aside and started knitting the sleeves separately, in the round on US7 dpns. When I was satisfied with the length (up to armpit), I bound off for the armpit and joined the sleeves with the body, and continued in the round. Standard yoke stuff. Decreased every other row for raglan sleeves, and then continued in the round for the turtleneck. This was supposed to be a cowlneck but I had decreased too much, so a turtleneck it was.

Tunic sweater

Added some cables at the raglan decreases for fun.

Soft like a bunny against my neck! I love you Malabrigo. I love you.

And that's all! Easy as pie. My first sweater since March 2006, yikes. I'll have to do this more often.

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Christmas Tree

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Over the weekend we got a tree. They were selling them just a couple of blocks from our place so we were able pick it out and then carry it back, me holding the trunk, Duck holding the tip. We pretended we had just cut it down ourselves.

Lighting the tree

We don't have a tree every year, and so we don't have a lot of ornaments. The ones we do have we bought during after-Christmas sales at Michaels, and even then I don't like spending my money that way. So I'm always trying to find other ways to decorate the tree without breaking the bank.

Letterpress gift tags

I came across these beautiful letterpress gift tags at Black Ink the other day. They come in a package of 5, complete with little holes punched at top and a small packet of pretty string. The paper is thick, the design is simple, but all in all way too nice to be used as gift tags.

So I repurposed them into ornaments.

Letterpress gift tags, repurposed into ornaments

Ornaments

Yay.

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And over here...

Friday, December 07, 2007

Here is the continuation of the Domesticat House Tour.

Living room

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