Author Archives: Heather

Trekking socks and adventures with contact lenses

Yet more socks! These ones were knitted out of Trekking colour 100. This colour was very popular some time ago but for some reason I missed it then. After seeing the yarn actually being knitted, I knew I had to have some! It is definitely one of those colours which looks much better knitted up than it does on the ball.

Trekking socks

Yet again the pattern is my basic ribbed sock pattern, these were knitted in my tired-and-brain-dead phase 🙂 I do love the colour, just putting them on makes the day a little brighter.

As well as my nice new glasses, I have been trialing contact lenses for the last week. It turns out that I am probably the most inept contact lense wearer on the planet. Never mind the first hurdle, I fell before I had even got out of the starting gate. The poor assistant who was teaching me how to put the lenses in and out had to put up with me taking nearly an hour to manage it, and then throwing my right lense on the floor. It turned out that that was the only one in my prescription that they had in the shop so they had to order me a new one. I am improving and have got it down to only (!) 20 minutes now, although I did spend 2 hours on Monday with my left lense inside out. These are toric lenses so I think this is actually quite an achievement! I am persevering (or possibly just very stubborn) and after my appointment today they are ordering me in another set of lenses in what I hope will be a slightly better prescription than the trial set. All good (moderately) clean fun 🙂

The teal top is jogging along, I will try for another photo or two tomorrow. I am hoping that the sun will come out (the eternal optomist that I am). It is lovely now that the days are getting longer. It makes so much difference to my enthusiasm to actually do things, although a bit of sun too wouldn’t go amiss. I have been a little distracted from the knitting by the yummy looking silk and bamboo yarn that Elann has on sale at the moment. Both Cassis and Arles Teal have been looking at me since yesterday and my will is weakening, the only decision left is how much to order? I think it would make a gorgeous lacey summer top.

Racing along with new specs

Well they aren’t really connected but never mind.

I am racing along with the Teal Top, I have finished the back, and have just started the waist shaping on the front.

Teal Top Back

I am still really enjoying it, and it is lovely to be able to actually see progress! I am also really looking forward to wearing it, I think it will be a really useful wardrobe item and very comfy.

The only problem is that I am becoming worried about the amount of yarn I will need. I bought 10 balls because that was what was available in the same dye lot, but I have just started the 5th ball, which means that the back used slightly more then 3 1/2 balls. I think it will be very close as to whether I will have enough or not. I went down to the Interknit Cafe yesterday just to double check that there weren’t any more balls left of the dye lot that I had got, but there weren’t. She had 4 balls of a second dye lot, but as she said this was a colour that she would keep in stock, and that whatever I get wont match the first dye lot I thought I would knit on for a bit until I have more of an idea of exactly how many extra balls I will need. If I am fairly close then I can just undo my tension swatch and use that yarn, or can use a different dye lot for the neck band. We shall see. It is strange how knowing that the yarn quantity is going to be a bit tight makes you knit faster 🙂 I’m not convinced that quicker knitting is going to help!

On my way down to Farnham yesterday I dropped into Specsavers in Guildford to pick up my new glasses. They are quite different to my last set and Paul is still getting used to them 🙂

First up, the more sensible pair:

Brown GlassesBrown Glasses

And now the fun pair:

Purple GlassesPurple Glasses

And finally, to make you smile on a wet Saturday, this is the most hilarious of the out-takes, and the reason that I really shouldn’t be allowed out:

Maltesers

Paul had just said “less teeth” and I’m afraid that was what he got. It rather reminds me of the old Maltersers advert with the wide mouthed frog and the crocodile 🙂

Riverside Socks

I have managed to drag myself away from the Teal Top long enough to sort of some pictures of things I have actually finished (sadly not a long list!).

First up in my catalogue of socks I have recently finished, is this green pair.

Riverside Socks

The yarn used was wool on a cone from Riverside Spinning (no internet prescence that I am aware of, they seem to only exist at shows), bought at the NEC last September. I finished the socks in January, and gave the rest of the cone to my Mum. When we were at the NEC there were just two cones in this colour. I bought one and my Mum the other, she isn’t quite sure what hers is going to be but now she has a bit more to play with 🙂

Riverside Socks

I am wearing these socks as I type and they are very comfortable, and I like the randomness of the colours, although they are a little more somber than my usual choice of colour 🙂

Happy Easter!

I can’t believe it has been nearly two months now since I last posted, time has certainly been moving very quickly around here.

There have been some very long workdays (and evenings and weekends) here in the last couple of months, but I am very happy that I have now caught up with all the desperate stuff, and am left with catching up on my City and Guilds homework and plodding along with the Great Tidy Up of 2008, and catching up on emails and ravelry.

There hasn’t been an awful lot of knitting going on, apart from some socks and my samples for my course homework. My knitting seems to be a good barometer for how I am feeling, I like to knit socks when I am tired, they are lovely and therapeutic as you knit round and round, and also nice and portable. It has been interesting to see that as things have started to calm down, although I am still knitting socks I have branched out a little from my very boring rib socks. Now I think I am ready for some knitting which actually requires my brain 🙂 The main problem I am having is stopping myself from casting on for a thousand things all at once.

My resistance has been quite strong, but I have succombed to the lure of a T-shirt. The pattern is called Go Vertical and is from Classic Elite and I bought it on a trip to the US several years ago, but have been waiting for the right yarn. A couple of weeks ago I found it, in the Interknit Cafe in Farnham. The yarn is Patons Washed Haze, and is a DK weight, 50% cotton, 50% acrylic. It is not as hand-killingly inelastic as a 100% cotton yarn, and is also lighter and a bit more flexible, yet not as plasticy and sweaty as a 100% acrylic, so the best of both worlds! It is nice to be working in a DK weight yarn for a change, since I can actually see progress. I have got a little carried away with it over the weekend and have knitted up past the waist shaping on the back, my shoulders are protesting a little so I will try and add in some other knitting for a change.

The pattern itself is multi-gauge which is a really good idea – the same pattern with variations of sleeve-length and neckline, written for four different tensions. Unfortunately in typical Heather fashion, the tension I get with my yarn is none of those given. Also the sizing on the pattern assumes that the wearer has a larger chest than tummy which sadly I don’t 🙂 So I have spent the weekend happily with my calculator working out the numbers which will hopefully generate a top which will fit me (if not I will be quite cross!).

I will end the suspense now and show you the progress so far.

First my swatch:

Teal Top Swatch

This is the progress so far:

Teal Top

And this is a detail of the waist shaping:

Teal Top Waist Shaping

I am going to go and organise some of the sock pictures for future posts. I seem to have a lot of future posts backed up now, unfortunately they are almost all in my head rather than on the computer. I could do with a cable like the camera has so that I can plug myself in and download my brain (or what is left of it!)

Happy New Year!

I hope you all had a lovely Christmas and New Year. We went to Paul’s parents for Christmas and had a wonderful time. Lots of food, lots of board games, quite a bit of knitting, and an opportunity for me to admire P’s mum’s tapestry weaving which looks great fun. I have also introduced her to the delights of Texere, it wont be long before her house is full of yarn too 🙂 I even actually finished knitting a Christmas present for my sister. I’m hoping to take a picture of it in situ this weekend. We had a quiet New Year at home which was great, and I was greatly amused by some of our neighbours having their fireworks at the slightly unconventional time of 10.45pm, perhaps it was so exciting that they just couldn’t wait, or that they were tired and wanted to do the fireworks and then go to bed.

This year I think is going to be the Year of the Big Tidy Up and Sort Out. Things have rather got on top of me over the last couple of months (actually over the last 3 or 4 years, but glossing over that aspect slightly) and it is getting to me. I have started, and am making progress although it is slow going. We now have a clear dining table, which in itself is nigh-on miraculous. The dining table in particular had become a dumping ground for various things which needed attention, and before I started sorting it was covered all over to an average depth of around 18 inches. The novelty of actually being able to eat off the table hasn’t worn off yet 🙂 I am on to the lounge now which is a major task. The pile on the coffee table is shorter but not gone yet, and the floor is still pretty horrendous, but I will get there in the end.

The sort out will also extend to my knitting. I have come to the conclusion that I don’t really like having that many works-in-progress. I just forget what I am doing on them. I think ideally I would like to have 2 or 3, to give a mixture of portable and knit-at-home, and complicated and pleasantly mindless. So as part of the organisation I am going to find all my notes on the various works-in-progress I have, and try and remember where I was with each of them in order to finish them off. I am also going to catch up with blogging about my works-in-progress. I will be back soon with photos!

So, what are your thoughts for 2008? Do you have a theme? Or a particular something you would like to do? I don’t really do New Year Resolutions, so I suppose this theme for the year is as close as I get.

Happy Christmas

This last couple of months has zipped by horrifyingly fast as is often the way with the run-up to Christmas. Apologies for not posting for ages, and also for having fallen behind on my emails.

Work has been hectic, but is hopefully a bit more under control now. After weeks of feeling smug that I was the only person I knew who hadn’t had the nasty cold going round here, rather inevitably I came down with it in the week where I was playing in four Christmas concerts – two of which were outside! I’m feeling much better now although P is still sniffling.

There has been time for a bit of knitting, although it has been rather late at night. I finally finished the Christmas stocking for a friend’s son at 5am this morning, it is now in the post, and will hopefully make it in time!

Christmas Stocking for Ted

Anyway, off to do some of the many things on my do-before-Christmas list! Hope you all have a lovely Christmas and New Year. I will catch up with the rest of my Stitches report in the new year.

Stitches East Part 3

On Friday I had signed up for an all-day class (6 hours in total) on Seamless Argyle Socks with Suzann Thompson.


Argyle Sock Class

This was such a clever technique, I am incredibly impressed. Suzann had figured out a method of knitting argyle patterns in the round without seams by taking apart commercially made socks to see how they were constructed and then experimenting with ways to adapt this to hand knitting. You use a method similar to entrelac to knit each coloured diamond individually, and then knit the next diamond onto the previous one, using a method similar to that used when working short rows to eliminate the gap between the diamonds. A great fun class, and the brain certainly got a good work-out!

I loved all the different colours and yarns that different people had used.

Argyle SocksArgyle Socks

And here is mine:

Argyle SockArgyle Sock

I am so proud that I was the only one to finish their sock in the class 🙂

Friday evening was the fashion show and dinner, the items from the fashion show were provided by the people who had stands in the market. A great idea since it meant you could have a proper look at how a garment would hang and an opportunity to see things that I had missed in the market. I was very organised and made notes on my program about which stands I needed to go back to.

On Saturday morning my class was It’s Not Over ‘Til It’s Finished with Edie Eckman. We covered what aspects of finishing you needed to plan for before you even start knitting, along with some tips for during knitting, and blocking, seaming, and picking up stitches. A lot of these were things I already knew a bit about but it is always interesting to hear new opinions, and to have your existing thoughts confirmed.


Finishing Sample

The swatch looks a little wonky partially because part of Edie’s method is to have us try things and discover for ourselves whether a certain approach works or not. You certainly remember it! I also liked her attitude that there is rarely ever one correct way to do something, and that you need to experiment with what will work best for each particular situation. For instance, for a neckline whether you work the decreases on the edge stitch or a couple of stitches in from the edge. If you work them right on the edge it can make an untidy edge which is sometimes more difficult to pick up from. However working the decreases a couple of stitches in from the edge, although it makes the edge stitches neater and easier to pick up from can also make them tighter, and can mean that you can’t get the garment over your head.

All in all a very practical and useful class.

On Saturday afternoon it was back to Maureen Mason-Jamieson for her class called Short Row Savvy.

We tried out 3 different methods of short rows, and worked them from both the knit side and the purl side of stocking stitch fabric.


Short Rows

My sample was knitted from left to right of the photo above (I did try rotating it so the cast on was at the bottom, but because of the angle I took the photo at, it looked weird). The stripes were used so that I could easily tell where I swapped method.

From left to right we have: YO (yarn-over), two methods of wraps, and Japanese short rows, each worked on the knit side, followed by the same sequence worked on the purl side. I added in the second wrap method since I usually work my wraps the other way around to the way Maureen described in the instructions, and I wanted to make a direct comparison. Maureen’s method involves bringing the yarn to the other side of the work, slipping the stitch, moving the yarn back again and then slipping the stitch back. I slip the stitch first and then move the yarn, slip back and then move the yarn back. I reckon my method is slightly neater, but then I am biased 🙂

This was the first time I had tried the yarn-over method so it was interesting to add that to my repertoire of techniques. My favourite method of all is the Japanese method, I think this is the most unobtrusive method I have tried so far. I am still experimenting with different ways to use this with socks. At the moment I am still using the safety-net of safety pins but think that with a bit more practice I should be able to dispense with the safety pins, which will make the whole operation a bit more portable.

On Saturday evening there was the student banquet, where those who wanted to could show off their creations. I volunteered to show off my Patchwork Sweater. I always forget when I volunteer for these things quite how nervous I get when it actually comes to standing up in front of people. I hadn’t put enough info on the information sheet (next time I will know better), and I’m afraid I was totally inane when Rick (Rick Mondragon, editor of Knitters magazine) asked me questions. Here is a photo of me and Rick:


Rick and Heather

Luckily you can’t hear me 🙂 or see me shaking. One of these years I will learn that I am not a born performer.

The rest of the banquet was very enjoyable, the food was good, and we met the lovely Debbie Radtke from Fiber Trends (she who designed the felted hedgehog), who sat at our table. At the end of the meal they handed out gifts for everyone, which had been donated by the Stitches sponsors. Paul chose a kit with Kaffe Fassett sock yarn, and I chose a bag from Skacel.

Regia Sock YarnSkacel

The Skacel bag included yarn, a pattern booklet and an Addi circular needle. The needle is unusual because they were made as a mistake and so aren’t commercially available. It has the sharp point of an Addi lace needle, but the finish of an Addi Turbo. I am looking forward to trying it out.

I think we did very well :-) 

Details of my last day at Stitches, and of what I bought at the market will follow soon.

Stitches East Part 2

After lunch on the Thursday I went to my first class of the event. Each class is 3 hours although there are also some double classes which are 6 hours long. There are 7 slots for classes (one on Thursday, and two each on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday) so a maximum of 21 hours of classes. I signed up for all 21 hours since it is a long way to travel and a great opportunity to take classes from so many different teachers.

My first class was Collar Obedience Training with Maureen Mason-Jamieson (she is in the pink below).

Collar Obedience TrainingCollar Obedience Training

We learnt about the different sections that make up a collar and the properties and functions of each section. In the class we knitted a shirt style collar for a round neck cardigan, but Maureen’s notes had a lot of information on how you could adapt this for other situations. The collars we knit did, sit, stand, and roll over on command as advertised!

Collar sampleCollar sample

Good fun and the instructions were well written and contained a lot of information. I haven’t really knitted collars much but really enjoyed this one. I think also it will be an interesting alternative for a neckline. I have a rather short neck so polo necks and high rolls don’t look good (and also prevent me turning my head around which is a little irritating – you may have noticed I am not into suffering for fashion 🙂 ), but I like the way this collar adds interest while also lying flat at the front.

Also on the right hand side of the sample you can see where we had a go at a double pick up. This is a technique where you pick up stitches on both sides of your edge, so enclosing the edge of the knitting – good for an edge where both sides will be seen. I will definitely be using this edging on cardigan bands in the future.

After the first workshop I went to a talk given by Kaffe Fassett.

Kaffe Fassett

Apologies that the photo is a little blury. Flash wasn’t allowed, and Kaffe moved a bit fast for my camera in that light.

This was the first time I had ever heard Kaffe talk, he is very engaging and an entertaining speaker. He talked about his new book Kaffe Knits Again, but also more generally about designing in various media and about his life as an artist and designer. He has an exhibition coming up in Bath that he mentioned but he didn’t say where, I think it was going to be some time in the new year so I will try and find out more information. He has a totally different approach to knitting to me, he isn’t really at all interested in the technical side (which I find fascinating), but it was really interesting to hear him talk and to see his slide show of his work and inspiration, a totally different perspective on knitting for me.

After the talk it was time to make a beeline for the opening of the market. The market opened for 3 hours on Thursday night just for people who were registered for classes. Then was open generally Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. This is the snaking queue of knitters waiting for the doors to open.

Market Queue

Every one was very well behaved and queued nicely, and there was no utilisation of sharp elbows, although there was a bit of a stampede to the Blue Moon Fiber Arts stand. Photos weren’t allowed inside the market but suffice it to say while it wasn’t as big as Ally Pally, there were certainly a nice lot of stands to visit selling a good variety of bits and pieces. More on the stash aquisition in a later part.

There was a KnitU meeting in the market later on that I had really hoped to go to, but was unfortunately too wiped out to manage. So I crawled off to bed at an appallingly early hour, so as to be prepared for the delights of Friday.

This message has also become rather epic, so I will save Friday for the next post, and go and sort out some more of my pictures. I am hoping to put them all in a flickr set when I get my act together, but it may take some time.

A learning experience

Now that the moment as passed I can tell you all about the project I was attempting for yesterday. One of my friends is getting married in November and her three bridesmaids organised her hen night (or day really) for yesterday. One of the bridesmaids (also a friend) mentioned some time ago that it would be rather fun if I could make a tea cosy in the shape of a wedding cake which could also double as a hat for the hen for the occasion (I should perhaps explain that the hen is a big tea drinker so this is perhaps less odd than it sounds). I thought the idea sounded entertaining and set to.

I managed to find some nice white yarn which reminded me sufficiently of royal icing (Sirdar Spree, 60% cotton, 40% acrylic, chunky weight). I did a nice big test swatch to see what the fabric it produced would be like. The ball band recommends 6.5mm needles, but I wanted a very firm fabric, I was thinking I would probably make an internal skeleton out of plastic canvas (so keeping it washable and still flexible) but still wanted the knitted fabric to be quite dense, so I went down to 4mm needles. Being mostly cotton, and also being quite loosely spun it is a very inelastic yarn and knitting it on such small needles was what had been hurting my left hand. The way I knit means that I push the knitting along with my left thumb, and dealing with such resistance from the fabric (even though I was using my KnitPicks needles – nice and slippery, but the pointiness means I also have a sore spot on my left index finger!) gave me a pain in the base of my left thumb. Thank you for all your comments and suggestions on this. I am very happy that now I have stopped knitting on this my hand is fine, and no other knitting causes any problems.

So anyway, armed with the tension measurement from my swatch, I measured my collection of teapots (I have 6, I thought this would be a representative sample 🙂 ) and I also measured my head, with a thought to it doubling as a hat for the festivities. A few calculations were made, and I cast on for the bottom tier. My plan was for a three-tier cake made all in one piece, large enough to fit over a teapot, so it wouldn’t have slits in the sides for handle and spout.

I made a nice reverse stocking stitch hem, and worked in stocking stitch for the first tier, again with a reverse stocking stitch roll before the flat section to go into the second tier. I fiddled around a bit to get a good stitch to make the delineation between the horizontal top of the first tier and the vertical side of the second tier, and in the end decided on a round of purl, then on the next round I picked up the purl bump from the front and worked it together with the next stitch on the needle through the back of the loop. This bent the fabric forward on itself and created a good 90 degree fold line. So I motored along up the second tier, and had done about 20 rounds when it became apparent that things weren’t working out.


White Teacosy
White Teacosy

The proportions were all wrong and it wasn’t looking like a wedding cake. The top tier was too narrow, the diameter was too small, but even apart from that I could see that it was going to be too tall for its width. The difficulty was that the bottom tier needed to be that tall to go over the shoulder of the teapot, but that meant that the upper tiers would also have to be tall to balance the lower one, and it all got out of proportion. To counteract this I could have made all the tiers much wider, which would have made an abnormally large teacosy, rather scuppering the option of it doubling as a hat. Also time was running out and so I reluctantly admitted defeat.

However, I have never been particularly good at letting go of something once I start thinking about it, and so today I sat back down and finished the tea cosy off.

White TeacosyWhite Teacosy

It may not look like a wedding cake but it is a perfectly functional teacosy so I shall keep it. It rather reminds me of a strange bit of architecture. It was certainly fun to experiment with even though it wasn’t a roaring success.

The hen day itself was great fun, we made chocolates at My Chocolate, and then went for tea and sandwiches. The others then went onto dinner and a club and I came home.

Intermission

There will be a short intermission from your regularly scheduled programming on Stitches East while I knit like a maniac on a project for a friend’s event on Saturday (more of which later). Programming will be resumed when (if??) I finish.

Please send new left hand, mine hurts.

Panic, panic, panic.