Monday, August 29, 2005

So close

I've got about 12 rows left to finish the last sleeve of the Mad Aunts sweater...
and I'm out of yarn. How iritating is that?! Worse, is I can't seem to find any online stores that carry it. I did find one, Woodland Woolworks. I've shopped with them before and they have great service, but they are closed for inventory so it wouldn't ship till next week. I really was hoping to finish it this weekend. Mom suggested I try calling the store I bought the yarn from originally and seeing if they'd be willing to mail me a ball. They are closed until the middle of the week. If I don't find any by then, I'll try calling.

Meanwhile, I knit a swatch with the Sockotta (needed car knitting over the weekend)
See how pretty the colors are? The picture is a little washed out, but the colors are really soft and subtle like that. I'll be casting on my socks this weekend for sure.

Since I can't finish MA, I figured there was no harm in starting the mini Weasley awhile. I only got the cast on done, so nothing to show yet. I'm hoping to get a few rows knit tonight. This should be pretty quick knitting.

More soon.

Saturday, August 27, 2005

Tribute

My grandma Miller died this week. She was my father's mother. She lived to be 94, would have been 95 next month. She died peacefully, in her sleep. She lived a long, full life, though over the last year Alzheimer's had claimed her mind. I have decide to list some of my favorite memories of her here (most are from when I was pretty young).

15 Things about Grandma
1. She had Christmas Elves that sat over her fireplace every Christmas. When I found a pair in an antique store, I snatched them up and now I have Christmas Elves too.

2. She babysat my sister and I when we were little.

3. She would make popcorn on the stove and take the lid off the pot to let the kernels fly all over.

4. She always had copies of old movie-star photo magazines around (I wish I could remember their names...)

5. She used to sunbathe all the time...and later had to deal with skin cancer spots as a result.

6. I remember her pulling a shotgun out of the kitchen coat closet on the farm to shoot the groundhogs in the field.

7. She made the absolute BEST pork roast ever. EVER!

8. Actually, all of her cooking was good. Sandtarts, ham, fried cornmeal mush (yeah, sounds bad. Is bad when I make it. Hers? Perfect.)

9. When I was little, she lived on a farm with my grandpa. The farm had an orchard, a stand of pine trees (which were magical to play under), an awesome barn (which we probably weren't supposed to be playing in), and a huge field around it. It wasn't a "working" farm then. But a wonderful place to spend time at as a kid.

10. She always had lovely scented glycerin soaps in the bath. This was probably the seed that sprouted into my current soap fixation.

11. There was a water pump outside the kitchen door on the farm with an enameled basin and icky lifeboy type soap. We always had to wash up out there after playing.

12. She had (I believe) 10 children. Three died in childhood. 4 still live here in Pennsylvania, 2 in Virginia and 1 in Florida.

13. She used to do beautiful embroidery work.

14. She kept a garden and had a cellar stocked with home-canned veggies.

15. She had a spinning wheel. I had asked my aunts about it recently, but they don't think she used it.

I have, of course, hundreds more memories of this woman and the times spent with her. There are just some of the best. I'm glad to have known her and will miss her.

Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Not knitting

I'm having to lay off knitting for a few days due to pain in my left hand. It happens every few months, my hand aches for a few days until I finally put a brace on and give it the rest it's demanding. Tried knitting with the brace, not working. Stupid left hand. Doesn't it know I want to finish MA so I can start the Mini-Weasleys? And the socks? And that the situation has just gotten worse since these just arrived in the mail?The mitten book came yesterday (which greatly improved my mood). I'm so inspired. I'm thinking Christmas gives galore. Wait a minute...any family members who read my blog, just ignore that. In reality, though, I've never been a huge fan of multi-color (as in multi strand) knitting. So I'll probablly lose interest within 3 inches of the first mitten. Will keep you posted. (Note to self, one must challenge themselves to grow as a knitter. Get over fear of fair-isle.)

The yarn is dreamy Cherry Tree Hill Supersock merino in a colorway called Earth (dark blues and burgundys). So soft and cuddley. I got it for an absolute steal off Ebay (I thi
nk it may be a discontinued colorway since it's not on the CTH website.) I hope this isn't the start of a bad pattern, acquiring tons of sock yarn before even casting on my first sock.

I finally got my hands on a copy of The Principles of Knitting. This book seems to be held in
the highest esteem by any knitter that's had the pleasure of reading it. Talk has been rampent on the KnitList about it lately. I checked the local library system and sure enough, they had a copy. I'm anxious to see what all the talk is about. And since I can't knit right now, might as well spend my time reading about knitting. I'm kind of hoping I don't like it though. Seeing how it sells for upwards of $200 now! But then, maybe the rumours are true and there will be a rerelease soon.


Thanks for all the nice compliments on the project pictures yesterday. It's nice to get opinions from fellow knitters since I don't know any in the "real world".

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Pictures

Work sucked today. So to cheer myself up, I borrowed a digital camera and got some pictures to dress this place up.

First, Quinn and Stuart in the window, (Quinn's pretty hard to see, she's the black spot on the left) wondering why the heck mommy dragged all her knitting out into the yard. (light's much better out there and it is a GORGEOUS day!)




Here is the lovely Sunset Malabrigo purse along with the felted
eyeglasses case I made over the weekend (thats done in Cascade 220).

The purse has been pilling pretty badly, the nature of the beast with such soft spun merino. No worries, a minute or two with the sweater shaver and it's good as new.



Since there's been so much talk about Malabrigo on the KnitList the last few days, here's a picture of my other Malabrigo project, a sweater in a color called Dark Earth. The picture is pretty washed out, the colors are green, brown and purple. I did not follow the rule of alternating balls of yarn every few rows, and you can probably see the pretty obvious color differences between balls. Doesn't bother me, but some might prefer a more homogeneous mix and want to switch between balls as they knit.

Here's the mitten from last week.

I've been working diligently on MA, so there's only a few rows on the needle of mitten 2. Pretty yarn though, isn't it? It's Manos. Everyone compares Manos and Malabrigo. For me, there's no comparison. Malabrigo is the hands down winner. Manos is nice, but it's not evenly spun and a bit scratchy (ever so slightly). Plus Malabrigo is so affordable!

No pictures of Mad Aunts. It looks like a blob now so pictures must wait until it's finished. I will leave you with one final picture. My glorious shawl...

I love this project beyond words. I can't seem to get a decent picture (even with a good camera) but it is lovely. So soft, a pretty lime green (Knit Picks Elegance in Grass). Now that it's finally cooling off, I'm excited to get back to work on it. Maybe this weekend.

Hope you enjoyed the photoshow. I'll try to get pictures up here on a more regular basis.

Sunday, August 21, 2005

Not much going on this weekend. I recovered from my bad day Thursday. Made yummy, lowfat chocolate chip cookies (which I left at work Friday so I wouldn't eat the whole batch this weekend). And found these to make my mini-Weasley sweaters...

They are Rowan Yorkshire Tweed 4ply in Butterscotch and Knight. Ordered from Jimmy Beans Wool. I've shopped with them before and highly recommend them. Great customer service and fast, cheap shipping. I worked out the graph for the "H" (much easier than I expected). I picked up some size 3 double points on Saturday, so I'm all set to go when the yarn arrives.

I've spent nearly the entire weekend watching James Bond on AMC and knitting on MA. I finished the first sleeve. It's going to be REALLY close with the yarn I have to finish. I think I should just make it, if I'm lucky. I'm holding all my scraps just in case! I sewed on the sleeve and seamed the left side. I do all my seaming on the sewing machine whenever possible. I hate sewing up with yarn. Now I'm able to get a good look at what the sweater is going to look like. I'm liking it better now that it's mostly sewn up. Chuck thinks it looks great and he's usually a better judge of these things than me. With any luck, I'll have it finished and post a picture by next weekend.

I frogged the wool purse I had started for car knitting the other week and reknit it on my Bond. Threw it in a super hot wash with an hold pair of jeans and in no time had a felted purse. The Cascade 220 shrank by about 50% lengthwise, but hardly at all widthwise. I suspect that's partly do to the effects of machine knitting putting a lot of lengthwise stress on the knitting. Since the purse ended up being way too wide, I just wacked a couple inches off the one side after it was felted and sewed the side back up (I LOVE that you can do that to felt!). I used the extra little piece to make an eyeglass case. Worked like a charm.



Thursday, August 18, 2005

Weasley-along

Allison at The BlueBlog is starting another Weasley Knit-Along and I joined right up. (Even got the button on my bar!) I think that it is highly appropriate for my first knit-along to be Harry Potter related. Since my yarn budget is blown right now, I won't be making the full blown Weasley sweater. Instead I'm going to do little mini-Weasley's for Christmas ornaments (see Allison's here). Aren't they cute? I don't have the pattern she used, but think this one will work perfectly. Just need to work out a chart for the initial and I'm golden. That shouldn't be too hard (she says knowing full well that that statement has probably just doomed her to hours fighting with the chart!) I think I'll do the traditional "H" first, see how it goes. Tonight I plan on doing some surfing to find the right yarn. The pattern calls for sock/fingering weight yarn. Anyone know of a tweedy looking sock yarn? Will keep you posted of how I make out. And if you're a Harry Potter fan, hop over to Allison's site and sign up!

Meanwhile, I mangaged to unpick the neck on MA and re-bind-off. Much better now. I can get it over my head. Downside is, now that I can see it on and get an idea of how it will look, I'm not loving the fuzziness. Feels like heaven, doesn't look so good though. I've started the sleeves and I will finish it, but the last few days have really knocked the shine off my highly anticipated sweater. Bummer. Has this ever happened to you? I'm leaving final judgment until it's finished, but I'm not as gung-ho has I had been. Maybe I'll just knit a little on the mittens, maybe even work on the shawl (I must get you a picture of the shawl. Gorgeous. Truly. No doubts about that one!).

Shopping for my Weasley will certainly make me feel better...and chocolate...must find chocolate. I think I'll go now.

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Payback

The biggest side-effect of KADD is apparently the jealousy of the neglected knitting. Mad Aunts lived up to her name last night. I allowed myself an hour to work on the mittens last night. In which time I finished my first mitten and cast on the second. Then I went back to finishing the neck of MA. Everything went fine. I finished the ribbing in no time and cast off. Sure enough, the cast off was too tight and the thing won't go over my head. Not even close. Apparently neckbands in knitting feel the same way towards me as collars in sewing, they hate me. I was so ready to show that sweater a thing or two and chuck it in the trash. But, after spending all that money and time, I just couldn't do it. So I started the horrible task of unknitting the bind off. It isn't pleasant. At all. The yarn is so slippery and fuzzy, my needle keeps slipping right out of the picked up stitches while I'm trying to unknit the next stitch. I think I got about 10 stitches undone when I gave up and went to bed. I'll give it another try tonight. And hit the books to find a STRETCHY bindoff!

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

Diagnosis: KADD

While perusing blogland the other day, I found a name for the affliction under which I suffer on Abbey's blog. KADD, short for Knitter's Attention Deficit Disorder. I had been keeping the ugly little monster under control lately, faithfully working on Mad Aunts. But we went away last week and I needed car knitting, so I started another purse. Totally hating it, though. Not the pattern, the yarn. The yarn is Cascade 220 and it feels so rough I can't stand it. This will be frogged and machine knit when I have the chance. Then I purchased the lovely skein of sock yarn. It's been taunting me since it entered my house. But I was good, I put it aside until I had a proper set of sock needles (which, by the way, arrived yesterday. We'll see how long I can resist the temptation now!) Still the KADD won't let me concentrate on MA. Even though I have finished the front (gorgeous!), sewn the shoulders and have started picking up the neck. Didn't even let me get once around the neck and KADD tugged me to the stash and the bookshelf until I found a suitable diversion. Hence, I'm now knitting mittens. (Sorry no pictures, it's raining and my POC digital camera has no flash). I'm totally loving the mittens. I'm using a pattern from Yankee Knitter and Manos yarn in a dark evergreen. The pattern has no schematics and only general sizing (child s, m, l, women, men). I'm knitting the women's size and it's going to be way too small for me. However, my husband pointed out they will be perfect for his sister. Score! One Christmas present down. And the mittens are so easy and fast to make, I'm sure I'll finish these without starting something else. Maybe mittens are the cure for KADD?! Who knew?

Friday, August 12, 2005

The heat continues with another plus 90 day. Had off work today (YEAH!) Chuck and I visited the yarn store in Lebanon this morning. It's under new ownership. Now called Yarn Over Ewe. A friendly little shop stuffed to the rafters with yarn. I really didn't need anything, what with the Frisky yarn I just bought still on the needles and a batch of merino/cotton/silk blend waiting in the wings. But those socks I received the other day really have my interest sparked to try sock knitting again. So I got this...


Of course my dinky digital camera doesn't capture how cool this yarn is. It's got denim blues and light and dark pinks. The Plymouth website describes it as "bold stripe effect". They didn't have a knitted sample at the store, so I'm excited to see how it knits up. I ordered a set of the Susan Bates sock needles which should be here by the beginning of next week. I'm reading every website I can find that talks about sock knitting. Maybe this time I'll get the hang of it and actually complete a pair!

Meanwhile, I kept my plans of working on the Mad Aunts while watching James Bond last night. I finished the first repeat of the chart. Here's how it looks so far


The fuzziness obscures the cabling somewhat, but in person it is pretty neat looking. I love the drape of this fabric. Can't wait to see how it looks on. This huge gauge is such a plus. I might actually finish this sweater before losing interest and being drawn to another project.

Thanks to Donna for the advice on freezing tomatoes. I was dreading canning in this heat and she suggested just freezing them whole. I had completely forgotten mom telling me they had done this with their Roma's the other year. Donna said just stick them in a freezer bag and freeze. When you need them, run a little warm water over them and the skins should peel right off. You can't even imagine what a time saver this is. And, she says, the flavor is better than canned. Coolness all around!

Thursday, August 11, 2005

Cabling at last

Hurray! I finished the back of the Mad Aunt's sweater on Tuesday and just finished the ribbing. Now I can finally start the fun part, the cabled front. Thunderball is on AMC tonight. Good James Bond, fun knitting, and no work tomorrow! Sounds like a plan.

Now, if you'll all excuse me, I hear my knitting calling.