Love/Hate Relationship

Thursday, March 30, 2006

Clearly something has happened and I now love socks, right, because how else do you explain this little pile, this little pile that some might call the beginnings of a stash, of sock yarn?

Regia Crazy Color in Bonbon and some Koigu

At the same time, why do I find myself again straining to finish the rest of my first PotamtowoasjfsPochahontas sock? (Maybe because I can't ever friggin remember what it's called??)

Look at my pretty pretty scales.

For whatever reason I am just determined to make a pair of socks. It. Must. Happen. Truth be told I'm enjoying Potomac quite a bit. Thumbs up on the merino sock yarn (so soft), love the twisted ribbing, love the scallops. My problem seems to be when I turn the heel, I feel like I'm on the home stretch, woooo yeah a finished sock is in sight! but really the party is only getting started. One is in for the long haul when one finishes the heel and the gusset, and is faced with finishing the rest of the foot. That part is murder on my psyche. It's where I am now.

But I will finish I will I WILL.

So what's up with the yarn stash, you ask. Well for one, I am super obsessed with self-striping yarn. Even though I'm not 100% about knitting socks, I am 100% about self-striping sock yarn. I approve of the concept. That you see up there is Regia Crazy Color in Bonbon! which I got on sale at littleknits.com. The good thing about this yarn, aside from the color which is like hundred million gazillion times better than the first sock yarn I bought, is that it's 6 ply. Yes my friends, read it and weep. I can knit fun socks in well-mannered stripes using #3 or #4 needles and my knuckles will be happy.

I also recently bought Koigu sock yarn. I will admit this was more of a "charity" than a gotta-have-it purchase. Sigh. Do I even want to get into this...? OK, long story short, I was out walking on NewburyStreet and decided to duck into N3wbury Y4rn$. (Sorry for the f'ed up typing but I don't want this page to come up on a search. Because I might say some sad things about the store. Henceforth I will refer to it as NY)

I go in this store, praying that there is at least one other patron in there so that I don't feel totally guilty if I walk out of there empty handed. Does that happen to you? Go into a tiny store, two pairs of eyes watching you, wondering what you'll do next, and you feel obligated to make some sort of move that will ultimately involve an exchange of money? Or am I the only sucker here?

95% of the time I go in, NY is devoid of patrons but stocked to the ceiling with yarn. On this day, the store was empty save for the owner, her daughter who was at the table planning her wedding, and her mother who was knitting. The owner's on the phone with a supplier, telling supplier to "hold my order on such-and-such because it has been so slow and I'm not moving inventory. I'm sorry to have to do this to you again."

A little family business without any business! It makes me upset.

So there's the Koigu sitting in my stash.

Seriously I don't understand what she's doing wrong. But something is amiss. W00Lcott & Co in Harvard Square isn't much bigger, isn't any better stocked than NY. But there are always people in there. I'm actually not a fan of W00Lcott because they never have what I'm looking for, and most of all, their inventory/cash register system is a bloody nightmare. Lady spent 20 minutes once trying to process a return of a single ball of yarn because she couldn't find it in the system, and this for Cashmerino Aran.

She's like, "I'm sorry, people just enter yarn names differently and so I'm having trouble finding it." I'm like, WHERE IS YOUR LASER BAR CODE READER? Why is there SO MUCH TYPING?

Anyway, what is NY doing wrong? Aside from arranging her yarn by color so it's hard to find shit? Can that be its only downfall? It's in a great location, center of town, steps away from the subway, coffeeshops, antique shops, and other fine stores like...Cartier and Burberry. Is that the problem? All the people roaming up and down Newbury won't give a little knitting store even a single glance, among all the 'glitz'?

Whatever the case, I'm not married to any one local yarn store in my area, so I might as well try to go to this one more often (I have definitely said this before). And curb the online purchases.

Maybe you area knitters could patron NY a little now and then too? You know, before your lunch date at the Armani Cafe?

In some fun, positive, feline news...Kitty has finally gotten with the program and started writing about her knitting endeavors on her blog. Check it out. It seems like just yesterday that she showed me a picture of her wobbly stitches, and now she's already making her first adult-cat sweater. And some other cool stuff. You just know that as a kitten she was the first in her litter to climb to the very top of the tree. Makes a mama cat proud.

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Kitty's Useful Knit

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

(The scene: Kitty's boyfriend has just had several wisdom teeth wrassled out of his mouth. He is swollen and groggy.)

Kitty: HAHA I've just employed some practice knitting to hold his ice packs in place.
Me: Oh yeah?
Kitty: I made a nice little tube the other day, just the right size for his head and two bags of frozen cranberries.
Me: Take a picture PLEASE. Then I will put it on website for all to see
Kitty: I have to ask permission... he's a little grumpy right now.
Me: I'll black out his eyes to protect his identity.
Kitty: I just asked permission and he flipped me off. I'll wait until he's asleep.

A few moments later...

Kitty: He's asleep now. Maybe it's camera time.
Me: Heh heh do it do it. Turn the flash off. Shhhhh.
Kitty: Just did it.

Sends photo...

Kitty's Brace Holds the Crans in Place!
Taken without consent due to unconsciousness.

Me: HAHAHA!
Kitty: HAHAHA!

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Cate

Friday, March 17, 2006

Remember this, my knitting muse?

Left: Blouse from anthropologie. Right: Beginnings of Cate in Kidsilk Haze

This is progress from the last 3 weeks. Whadya think so far? Kinda sorta like the original? I spent 2 of that swatching about a dozen different patterns for the hem, all of them some type of lace, all of them abandoned because I just couldn't make up my mind which looked best. It was hard to judge with the black yarn. Then I reminded myself that the reason why I was drawn to this blouse in the first place was because of its minimalist straight lines. It was settled: plain ol' stockinette and reverse stockinette.

For the reverse stockinette rows in the hem, I held yarn double for more visible stripes. Same for the thick vertical stripes in the body.

I worked the hem in size 3 needles, then switched to size 6 for the body, which I will make a little long, and no shaping. I want it to drape some over the hem/obi. I might make this a boatneck too.

It'll be interesting to see how this turns out. Honestly at the start, after finishing the hem, I was feeling rather unenthusiastic about it. But as the fabric grows, so does my opinion of it.

And I've named this Cate, as in Cate Blanchett. I love that actress and the name. Simple and clean. Normally I'd say that "Kate" looks better than "Cate", but "Kate" now leads me to "Katie" which then leads me to "Tom" which then makes me think "crazy wackjob" and my knit deserves better associations.

In other news, I just discovered through my referral logs that I am a member of some "Southern Knit Bloggers" webring. How odd, considering I never signed up to join and I am not southern. Not at the moment. Not southern geographically anyways. (I grew up in various parts of the Deep South: Tennessee, Louisiana, Georgia)

I'm not politically southern either. Most definitely not religiously southern.

Nor linguistically, for that matter, although I did use to say things like "fixin' to," like "I'm fixin' to go to the store," but then I came up North for college and got laughed at.

Maybe I'm a little southern gastronomically speaking...but only for very NICHE southern dishes like boiled crawfish and beignets.

But Oh I'm DEFINITELY southern climatically speaking. Every single year around this time, when March rolls around, I begin hyperventilating because March up north heralds not the start of spring, but the start of THREE MORE MONTHS of cold, hard, barren and perhaps even snowy blizzardy weather. Spring is what, this Monday right? I'm going to be scratching my eyes out in 30 degree weather. Where are all the bees? Where is all the pollen? The wonderful faint scent of WISTERIA in the air? Not here my friends, not here. And then I threaten to move back south.

Sigh. If only Boston had Atlanta weather, or if only Atlanta looked more like Boston.

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I'll pay you to knit the other

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

How do you guys do it? How do you guys start a sock on a Friday night and have a finished pair by Saturday morning?

This lone sock took two loooong weeks. It just wouldn't finish! I think I despise working with size 1 dpns. I probably won't like size 0 or 2's. Which makes me think that my sock knitting days are over.

Just let it be known that my lack of fun while knitting this sock has nothing to do with the pattern. Besides the toothpick needles, it might have to do with the color of the yarn. But only slightly, really. I have some cashmere fingering yarn (I have no idea when/where I got them) that I had thought about turning into socks, like to wear on long plane flights or something, but I shiver now thinking about going through the process again and wrestling with tiny needles.

I'm happy to have made it through one though. At least the construction of socks themselves is no longer a complete mystery, even if the pleasure of knitting them eludes me.

Don't look directly into the light, Veebs!

DAMN it's so bright!

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Cabled Toad

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Pattern: Natasha Cabled Pullover from Adrienne Vittadini Fall 2003, size xs
Yarn: Filatura di Crosa 501, 7 balls
Needles: US5 in rib, US6 rest of body, approx 26 st/4in in cable, stretched

I finished the Toad last week. The photo of this sweater in the book misleads. The collar doesn't flap wide open, nearly off the shoulders like mine does. Dirty, rotten photo. I see why they have the sleeves pushed up. It shifts the weight upward so that minimizes any pull downward on the neck. I am constantly adjusting the sleeves, tugging the bottom down, pulling at the collar to get this thing to stay on right.

The wide-collared shirt makes yet another appearance underneath this sweater to keep skin exposure at a minimum. The distibution of weight on this sweater is all wrong. The problem I think has to do with the construction of the raglan sleeves. The stitches that make up the neck is distributed rather lopsidedly. Or, too little raglan decreases on the body, and too much raglan decreases on the sleeves. There were only 4 stitches on each sleeve that contributed to the final collar. As a result, the neck is more boatneck, but with that v-neck opening, the ends of the v-neck is pulled open by its own weight and folds over like a lapel. Does that make any sense?

The accidental lapels don't look TOO bad actually. At first I was like UGH! WTF! but then I thought, OK I can live with this. It looks a little interesting when the collar folds over slightly. I just hate having to readjust. If I don't tug at the sleeves the "lapels" will just keep opening up, until the thing is nearly off the shoulders.

Naughty, naughty toad.

The color isn't usually my style but I like it. And the cables are yummy. I went down 2 needle sizes, from 8 to 6, on the body and sleeves. It worked nicely for the body, but the sleeves were really tight. Maybe that's not such a horrible thing as it really shows off the cables.

I guess I'm happy with this. Not absolutely positively can't-sleep-at-nights THRILLED, but happy enough to wear it.

A wiggly cabled toad and a wiggly orange cat

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A new knitty kitty!

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Kitty: dude i keep looking at your knitting today and by god i want to try knitting
Me: do it kitty do it!
Kitty: maybe i'll try
Me: yay! i'd start with a scarf

* 30 minutes and quick trip to yarn store later *

Kitty: mission accomplished! three balls of rowan cashsoft baby DK in a nice lavender. they were really nice in there. the girl who rang me up was wearing a horrible loose knit yellow SHRUG though
Me: Ha ha
Kitty: i was disheartened by the shrug
Me: did it look like she made it
Kitty: oh yeah it looked like a MONKEY made it
Me: dude you could potentially go down a bad road with knitting
Kitty: what road?
Me: a bad one kitty. a bad one. like one day you'll start wearing that shrug simply because you MADE it, not because it's NICE.

Kitty: um.  mayday?  my scarf is getting wider.  i cast on like 75 and i'm at 100 wide now.  what's happening.

* sends photo *

Kitty's first attempts. On the left is the beginning and end of a very wide, lacy, curvy scarf. On the right is a more advanced sampler scarf. All on the same day!


Me: I JUST REALIZED
Me: i thought you turned the scarf 90 degrees when taking the pic. THAT IS A WIDE MOFO
Kitty: YES THAT WAS HORRIBLE
Me: HAHAHAHA
Kitty: and I was like, it's taking me 15-20 minutes to do a ROW what the hell. on my little needles. oh it was so cramped
Me: HAHAHA!
Kitty: everything JAMMED together. i was like, is this how it has to be?
Me: what made you cast on so many stitches. what made you
Kitty: it looked too little and I like my scarves to have width
Me: i'm surprised it didn't come out worse actually. all those stitches jammed together makes it hard to see
Kitty: it didn't help that i added like 30% over the course of 12 rows or something, hahaha
Me: no wonder you have lace
Kitty: yeah well, i kept busting through strands and being like what happened there
Me: so how many did you cast on?
Kitty: if you blog about me you'd best paint me in a good light
Kitty: yeah i cast on like 70. but ended up with 102
Me: HAHAHAHAHA

But look at the improvement from just a few days later.

Seed stitch! I'm so proud. Welcome Kitty to the so fun and the so obsessive world of knitting!!!!

I have made hardly any more progress on the sock. I have a feeling if I finish this one I will not make its pair. I'm SORRY I'm just NOT INTO SOCKS!

Cabled Toad is finished. I wore it to the office yesterday. There is a major flaw in it but I am viewing that flaw as a special feature. Pictures forthcoming.

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