Monthly Archives: June 2012

Bavarian twisted stitches

Today luckily started with less panic than yesterday. Yesterday my alarm clock didn’t go off, and I ran round like a headless chicken trying to get ready to go out. This morning the alarm clock seemed to have got over its tantrum, and I set the iPod alarm too just to be on the safe side.

The weather today has been beautiful, hot and sunny, but with a bit of a breeze. We have been back at base working hard (in amongst enjoying the sun). Today has been continuing with the patchwork knitting, and also starting some Bavarian twisted stitches. Here we are concentrating hard.

20120614-162752.jpg

20120614-162813.jpg

20120614-162829.jpg

Some people have been making patchwork knitted slippers, some patchwork cushion covers, some have started a twisted stitch beret, and some have been experimenting with samples of different twisted stitches. Everyone has achieved a huge amount, I have been very impressed. Here is some of the knitting so far.

20120614-162846.jpg

20120614-162856.jpg

20120614-162906.jpg

20120614-162917.jpg

20120614-162933.jpg

20120614-162949.jpg

20120614-162959.jpg

20120614-163006.jpg

20120614-163014.jpg

20120614-163025.jpg

20120614-163035.jpg

20120614-163046.jpg

We are going out for dinner tonight so I had better prise myself out of my prime wi-fi-ing spot on the covered patio outside our cottage (it’s a hard life!) and put on my (moderately) posh togs.

La Rochelle

Today we went to La Rochelle, our nearest large town,immortalised by the French books I learnt from at school. Luckily Fiona had a map:

20120613-171233.jpg

So we all followed her to the yarn shop ๐Ÿ™‚

20120613-171255.jpg

We managed to find three yarn shops selling a variety of French and foreign yarns.

We also managed to fit in a bit of sight-seeing. It is an interesting old town, beautiful on such a lovely day. There were quite a lot of people around, some locals but quite a lot of tourists, particularly English. Here is the harbour:

20120613-171318.jpg

And there were several interesting buildings. The lines on this aren’t timber but are actually slate tiles, which seems to be a local style.

20120613-171342.jpg

Here we all are at the harbour side, looking very pleased with all our new purchases.

20120613-171356.jpg

Speaking of purchases, I bought two balls of Bergere de France Sport, which is a DK weight washable wool and acrylic mix. I am planning a hat for my niece for her Christmas present (or possibly her birthday in September if I am fast enough!) I hope she will like the colour.

20120613-171413.jpg

In the Phildar shop I bought four balls of Terre Neuve, which is a chunky wool, and will be a hat for me. I think the colour is fantastic!

20120613-171429.jpg

The third knitting shop sold Pinguoin and Anny Blatt yarns but I didn’t buy anything there. I was saving my cash for a very nice creme brรปlรฉe ice cream, no photo I’m afraid, I ate it too quickly ๐Ÿ™‚

La Roche Courbon and some more Patchwork knitting

Yesterday afternoon we had an outing to La Roche Courbon, a local chateau.

20120611-174850.jpg

The weather cooperated and stopped raining just as we arrived. The guided tour was very interesting but did make me realise how rusty and primitive my French is, I must look for a class to join again soon.

Today we have been doing some more patchwork knitting. Here are some of the samples everyone has been working on.

20120612-204305.jpg

20120612-204334.jpg

20120612-204353.jpg

20120612-204405.jpg

20120612-204427.jpg

20120612-204446.jpg

20120612-204502.jpg

20120612-204529.jpg

Before dinner Mummy and I went for a little walk up the road. This is the view back across the wheat field to Le Vieux Monastere. The three right hand windows on the ground floor before the corner are the workroom where we are having our workshops. My bedroom is the first window round the corner upstairs. It is pretty idyllic as you can see ๐Ÿ™‚

20120612-204541.jpg

Bienvenue en France

We arrived yesterday in a slightly damp Charente-Maritime region of France for a week’s knitting on the French Treats holiday at Le Vieux Monastere. I am Fiona’s little helper for the week.

I am not sure which order the photos are going to come out (oh the technology!) but there will be (in some order) the view from the front of our cottage, the view from the back of our cottage, and some of our knitting workshop this morning. This morning we started with patchwork knitting, which we shall continue tomorrow. This afternoon we are going for a visit to a local chateau. Hopefully the rain will let up a bit!

20120611-135506.jpg

20120611-135452.jpg

20120611-135516.jpg

Mini moebius waistcoat

At the end of April Tricia Holman (Elizabeth Zimmermann’s niece) came to the Ash knitting group to do a workshop on Elizabeth’s moebius waistcoat.

Here is Tricia (on the right) wearing her waistcoat, and with some of her other yarns and patterns.

During the day we knitted (or at least started knitting) our own little mini waistcoats.

I used 4mm needles, and some Manx Loaghtan handspun I had left over from my Handspun Leaves Waistcoat, and some red merino handspun for the edging, again another left over from my waistcoat.

It was good fun, and I am keen to make a full sized one at some point, although I think I may need to fiddle with the pattern a bit to get it to fit me. I am not very pleased with the way my icord edging came out. You can see the background colour through it, so I think I need to experiment with other ways of doing the join. Usually I do my icord from the inside, but this pattern with only one surface doesn’t have an inside and outside so both sides of the edging need to look good.

Colour blending in Stourbridge

Back in the middle of April I took myself off up to Stourbridge for some woolly fun organised by wrigglefingers (aka Jill). There were a small but select bunch of us, and we all brought what we were working on at the moment, or things we were keen to learn more about. I bent Jill’s ear about drum carding for colour blending, and she was kind enough to let me use her carders and lots of her lovely coloured fibre for two days, and give me lots of helpful info in the use thereof.

As you can see Jill has a fair bit of fibre:

I had a fabulous time playing with it all, and was definitely getting better by the end of the second day, fewer lumps and feeding the fibre in more smoothly. I made 8 little skeins – they are each only abot 10 – 15g.

They are mostly merino, but a couple have silk in, and a couple trilobal nylon sparkle. My favourite is the green 3rd from the right. This is an optical illusion (which I dreamt up at 6am on the second day of the workshop!) and actually contains no green fibre, only yellow and cyan.

I loved it so much that I have ordered a drum carder as a birthday present to myself and am eagerly awaiting its arrival.

The mini skeins are all around 4ply weight, and I am planning on using them as the contrast colour in mittens.

Cathedral Socks

Back to a spot more catching up ๐Ÿ™‚

In the blog silence I have been doing a bit of knitting as well as being busy generally.

I fnished these socks back at the beginning of April and am now finally sorting out photographs of them.

The yarn is some 70% merino, 30% silk blend from Wingham Wool Works, that I handspun, I think it was last year.ย  The pattern is Cathedral socks from Knitty a few years ago. I used 2.25mm needles and about 92g, 350m ish of my yarn which meant I have plenty left over ๐Ÿ™‚

I tinkered with the pattern a little bit, removing some of the internal ribs on the leg pattern:

And I fiddled with the toe pattern to make the cables flow into the stocking stitch:

I love the way the cables continue down the back of the heel:

They fit really well too:

Please excuse the slightly odd photo. This was taken by me standing on the windowsill of a B&B in mid-Wales while we were on holiday. The other half thought my antics were hilarious.

A really nicely thought out pattern which was fun to knit.