I am flying back to Washington today for the holidays. (Actually...I am bouncing all over for the holidays...Canada, Oregon, etc.) This means I need airport knitting. And, I actually need more airport knitting than normal.
I plan on arriving at the airport at least an hour before my flight, then there is the nearly 2 hour flight to Vegas, then the 3 hour layover in Vegas, then the additional 2 hour flight to SeaTac, then the nearly 2 hour drive from the airport to my parents' house...which comes to roughly 10 hours of knitting...and that is just on the way there!
After much thought and deliberation, I decided my best bet was the Eyre Wrap. It requires no pattern looking, and there is no way on earth that I will finish it and need to start another project.
The Eyre Wrap is my own adaptation of the Bridesmaid Wrap in Suss Cousins' book Wedding Knits. The pattern called for a very thin yarn to be knit on very large needles. I tried it. I tried it 4 times over the past 3 years or so with different yarns. I really did not enjoy trying to knit lace on size 11 needles. What should have been a fairly brain-free knitting project (1x1 rib for forever and a day) was horrid...also, the pattern called for the sleeves to be knit flat and seamed in. As anyone who knows me may remember, I hate seaming things up! The pattern kept going back in the queue and the yarns were repurposed.
Sister gave me a craft store gift for my birthday (thank you), and I found some Caron Simply Soft in Pagoda. It was the exact color I was looking for to make a drapey wrappy cardigany thing. Since I was gonna make it up as I went, I didn't want to spend a ton on yarn...so was willing to go with an acrylic. (I have used this yarn before for experiment projects...reasonably priced and nice to work with.) When I was drawing up the design, I kept coming back to a version of the Bridesmaid Wrap. The yarn's gauge was the same as the patterns, only the yarn was thicker so it wouldn't be a pain like the lace. This wrap should look similar to the original pattern, just less airy and lacy. (And I was actually wanting a cozier wrap anyway.)
But what about the piecing? Well, thanks to Wendy Barnard and her book/blog/patterns, I am confident in my ability to pick up the sleeves from the armscye and knit them down in the round...so we will see how that goes.
Showing posts with label frustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frustration. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Airport Eyre
Labels:
acrylic,
adaptation,
airport,
book,
frustration,
mulligan,
public display of knitting,
sleeve,
wrap
Friday, December 3, 2010
Clementine Cardigan: The Continuing Saga
And now, the rest of the story...thus far...
After ordering the supplemental yarn, I set the offending cardigan aside, and worked on something far less frustrating. A week or so later the yarn arrived, but I was still mad at the sweater, so I put the yarn on the shelf and ignored it for a while. (Which was actually kind of sad. It wasn't the sweater's fault, after all. It was the pattern designer's.)
Eventually I did pick it back up. I joined my new yarn on, and finished the body and the button bands. I picked up the stitches for the right sleeve. I knit down the sleeve. I completed the sleeve and looked at the amount of yarn I had left.
YOU'VE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME!!!! I AM NOT GOING TO HAVE ENOUGH YARN TO FINISH THE SECOND SLEEVE!!!! WHAT IS THIS THING? THE BLACK HOLE OF YARN??!!!???
At this point the entire sweater and needles and pattern went flying across the living room, and I burst into tears. I would have cursed at the sweater designer had I not been a good Christian girl. (As it is, I may have wished some horrible yarn tangles on her...)
Once again I called KnitPicks. Once again they shipped me more yarn. (Bless you KnitPicks telephone operators. You are little rays of light in a dark hole of knitting despair!)
I ordered 3 more skeins, since that is how many it would take to finish the second sleeve.
The new yarn came, and the second sleeve was finished. (By the way, please note that the pattern called for 950 yards of yarn. By the time I was finished with it I had ordered a total of 1650 yards of the Shine Worsted...and I have, exactly, 23 yards left over.)
And yet, that is not the last frustration with the sweater from...ahem...well, you know where...
I live in such a podunk little town in West Texas now, that I cannot find a single store that has 12 matching buttons to sew to this stupid thing!
Seriously?
I guess I will go button shopping when I am in WA at Christmas. Until then, I see no earthly reason why I should weave in my ends. The sweater doesn't deserve to have its ends woven in. It can just wear the tails in shame. The stinking ends can stinking wait till I'm stinking home.
I'm not even going to dignify it with a photo at this point.
Monday, September 13, 2010
Fuzzy Math
I am working on the Clementine Cardigan.The pattern calls for 912 yards of yarn.
I purchased 975 yards of yarn.
I ran out before working the button bands OR the sleeves.
What?
I immediately called KnitPicks...
(Well, maybe not immediately. I went over my math again. I threw a couple of throw pillows. I called my mom long distance to vent. THEN I called KnitPicks.)
Luckily they had some of the same dye lot still in stock.
I ordered 6 more skeins.
Which is an additional 450 yards.
I sure hope that's enough!
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Clementine Cardi
As I mentioned in my last post, I have started work on a version of the Brompton Cardigan out of Knit Picks Shine Worsted in Clementine. (And let me just say, this yarn is a DREAM to work with. It has amazing stitch definition, and is very soft. It doesn't dry my hands out like some yarns have a tendency to do.)
I cast on the cardigan while I was at my grandparents' house last weekend.
I cast it on, and merrily started working on the basketweave collar. I knit about 6 rows. It did not look right. At all.
I figured that I had messed up back towards the beginning. At this point it was going to be faster to rip it all out and start over than to try to frog back 5 rows.
So I ripped it all out.
I started again. This time I paid more attention and realized by the fourth row that it did not look right. At all.
I read the pattern carefully. Hmmm...if the pattern is a multiple of four, then this stitch pattern has an error in it. It appears to be written for knitting in the round, but I am knitting the collar flat. Huh.
I checked the pattern online, looking for links to any errata. Someone else had commented that the basketweave pattern appeared to be mistyped. The designer disagreed, but stated that it was basically a 2x2 rib that alternated every 3 rows.
If that is the case then the pattern WAS written wrong!
I ripped it out again, and this time IGNORED the stitch pattern and knit a 2x2 rib, alternating every 3 rows.
Success!
I don't know which was more frustrating, that the designer wouldn't admit she typed the pattern wrong...or the fact that I knew it was wrong, but kept trying it anyway.
(I have now moved on, and am trucking my way through the raglan shaping and stockinette...with fingers crossed that the remainder of the pattern is written correctly.)
I cast on the cardigan while I was at my grandparents' house last weekend.
I figured that I had messed up back towards the beginning. At this point it was going to be faster to rip it all out and start over than to try to frog back 5 rows.
So I ripped it all out.
I started again. This time I paid more attention and realized by the fourth row that it did not look right. At all.
I read the pattern carefully. Hmmm...if the pattern is a multiple of four, then this stitch pattern has an error in it. It appears to be written for knitting in the round, but I am knitting the collar flat. Huh.
I checked the pattern online, looking for links to any errata. Someone else had commented that the basketweave pattern appeared to be mistyped. The designer disagreed, but stated that it was basically a 2x2 rib that alternated every 3 rows.
If that is the case then the pattern WAS written wrong!
Success!
I don't know which was more frustrating, that the designer wouldn't admit she typed the pattern wrong...or the fact that I knew it was wrong, but kept trying it anyway.
(I have now moved on, and am trucking my way through the raglan shaping and stockinette...with fingers crossed that the remainder of the pattern is written correctly.)
Monday, August 23, 2010
Life without a LYS
Abilene, Abilene,prettiest town I've ever seen...
...has NO YARN SHOP!!!!
Now, there are places to buy yarn in town. You can get yarn from Wal-Mart. You can get yarn from one of the two craft stores...Michaels or Hobby Lobby. However selling yarn does not a yarn shop make.
At first this was disconcerting to me. I was going to have to drive at least 2 hours into Dallas to find a "local" yarn shop. (Can one call it local when it is over 100 miles away?)
There were solutions. I adore KnitPicks. Jimmy Beans Wool is also nice. I could order yarn and have it shipped to me. I could make sure and ALWAYS find a local yarn shop to visit when I traveled. But what about when I just wanted to squeeze a skein of cashmere? Yarn shop trips are major stress busters for me!
Then I unpacked.
Hmmm...
I guess I do have a local yarn shop.

My stash!
...has NO YARN SHOP!!!!
Now, there are places to buy yarn in town. You can get yarn from Wal-Mart. You can get yarn from one of the two craft stores...Michaels or Hobby Lobby. However selling yarn does not a yarn shop make.
At first this was disconcerting to me. I was going to have to drive at least 2 hours into Dallas to find a "local" yarn shop. (Can one call it local when it is over 100 miles away?)
There were solutions. I adore KnitPicks. Jimmy Beans Wool is also nice. I could order yarn and have it shipped to me. I could make sure and ALWAYS find a local yarn shop to visit when I traveled. But what about when I just wanted to squeeze a skein of cashmere? Yarn shop trips are major stress busters for me!
Then I unpacked.
Hmmm...
I guess I do have a local yarn shop.
My stash!
Labels:
distance,
frustration,
moving,
organization,
shop,
stash,
Texas,
unfortunate,
yarn
Monday, June 21, 2010
Epic Fail
ARGH!!!!
I have been knitting happily along on the Tilney Sweater...in fact, I am this close to finishing. Or, at least, I was this close to finishing.
I knew going in that I needed to lengthen the sweater(I like my sweaters a little longer than normal), so I bought an extra skein of yarn. Then, just to doubly ensure that I had enough yarn for the length, I went ahead and finished the sleeves and neck ruffle before I did the body's lower hem ribbing. I figured I would try it on before I moved the body back over from the waste yarn, and see how much longer exactly I needed to make it.
I tried it on at Blondie's house the other night. Epic Fail.
The sweater is INCHES bigger around than I need it to be.
I have no idea why this is.
I actually did a gauge swatch this time...and I got gauge.
I even made it a smaller size so that it would have negative ease...just like Wendy Bernard said to do in the lovely, well-written text.
(I have a 39" actual bust measurement...she recommended having 2-3" negative ease...so I made the size for 37"...)
I am flummoxed.
I will clearly need to unravel the majority of the work. I think I will just unravel the WHOLE THING, and reuse the yarn for a sweater vest. The yarn, while the right gauge, is...sturdier?...than I would like. Wendy's version in the book is made from an alpaca/silk blend, and mine was 100% merino. I still really want to make Tilney. I love it. I adore it. It is the reason I bought the book. I just need to find a drapier yarn to make it from.
And clearly, I need to make a MUCH smaller size, and try it on FREQUENTLY.
I have been knitting happily along on the Tilney Sweater...in fact, I am this close to finishing. Or, at least, I was this close to finishing.
I knew going in that I needed to lengthen the sweater(I like my sweaters a little longer than normal), so I bought an extra skein of yarn. Then, just to doubly ensure that I had enough yarn for the length, I went ahead and finished the sleeves and neck ruffle before I did the body's lower hem ribbing. I figured I would try it on before I moved the body back over from the waste yarn, and see how much longer exactly I needed to make it.
I tried it on at Blondie's house the other night. Epic Fail.
The sweater is INCHES bigger around than I need it to be.
I have no idea why this is.
I actually did a gauge swatch this time...and I got gauge.
I even made it a smaller size so that it would have negative ease...just like Wendy Bernard said to do in the lovely, well-written text.
(I have a 39" actual bust measurement...she recommended having 2-3" negative ease...so I made the size for 37"...)
I am flummoxed.
I will clearly need to unravel the majority of the work. I think I will just unravel the WHOLE THING, and reuse the yarn for a sweater vest. The yarn, while the right gauge, is...sturdier?...than I would like. Wendy's version in the book is made from an alpaca/silk blend, and mine was 100% merino. I still really want to make Tilney. I love it. I adore it. It is the reason I bought the book. I just need to find a drapier yarn to make it from.
And clearly, I need to make a MUCH smaller size, and try it on FREQUENTLY.
Labels:
book,
fix,
frustration,
gauge,
progress,
size,
sweater,
unfortunate,
yarn
Sunday, June 13, 2010
Technology Failure
That's fine. I have an iPhone. It has a handy dandy notepad feature. As you may recall from an earlier post, I had previously typed the pertinent parts of the pattern into my phone. And by previously, I mean over a week ago.
Epic fail.
By the time I got past the first notation for decreases, I couldn't remember whether or not the number of completed pattern repeats I had listed were cumulative. The first decrease came after seven repeats. Then I had written 10 repeats, second decrease. Did this mean that I needed to knit 10 more repeats before the decrease, or that I needed to decrease after the 10th from the cast on?
ARGH!!!
Luckily I have a tendency to overpack knitting-wise, and have other projects to work on.
Maybe I will get a chance to glance at a copy of the book at a store today or tomorrow.
If not, I just hauled 7 skeins of yarn across 2 state lines for nothing!
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Sometimes Life Gets in the Way
I didn't post on the 5th.
I know. That is HORRIBLE.
But sometimes life happens.
I am graduating on the 12th from my Masters of Library and Information Science program. I had final projects due.
I have had other life things arise suddenly that require time/energy/travel.
I can knit through it all.
I just can't always blog.
Sorry.
I know. That is HORRIBLE.
But sometimes life happens.
I am graduating on the 12th from my Masters of Library and Information Science program. I had final projects due.
I have had other life things arise suddenly that require time/energy/travel.
I can knit through it all.
I just can't always blog.
Sorry.
Saturday, May 29, 2010
A Few Needles Short of a Commission
On Wednesday night, Perky asked me if I could make her another (Fort) Knox beanie. This time she wanted it in black.
I thought about it, for maybe a millisecond, and agreed. They are fairly quick knits, they make for good movie/social knitting, and I had plenty of good black wool in the stash. In an impetuous moment (so out of character for me...), I told her I would have it Sunday morning.
Then I got home.
I found the yarn.
I could not find the needles.
I went through my entire bag of needles.
Then I saw them. My 16" US size 6 circular needles.
They were attached to half of a rust (Fort) Knox beanie that I had cast on a couple of weeks ago.
I had two options:
1. I could move the rust beanie over to waste yarn and recover the needles.
2. I could finish the rust beanie, and then cast on the black one.
Option 1 was probably the smarter and more practical choice.
So of course I chose option 2! (I knew in my heart of hearts that once that rust beanie was on waste yarn, it would languish in the stash...never to be heard from again.)
Luckily I knit FAST!
I finished the rust beanie Thursday night at Preach and Psych's house.
I cast on the black one Friday night.
I finished the black one Saturday night.
I even wove in the ends!
I thought about it, for maybe a millisecond, and agreed. They are fairly quick knits, they make for good movie/social knitting, and I had plenty of good black wool in the stash. In an impetuous moment (so out of character for me...), I told her I would have it Sunday morning.
Then I got home.
I found the yarn.
I could not find the needles.
I went through my entire bag of needles.
Then I saw them. My 16" US size 6 circular needles.
They were attached to half of a rust (Fort) Knox beanie that I had cast on a couple of weeks ago.
I had two options:
1. I could move the rust beanie over to waste yarn and recover the needles.
2. I could finish the rust beanie, and then cast on the black one.
Option 1 was probably the smarter and more practical choice.
So of course I chose option 2! (I knew in my heart of hearts that once that rust beanie was on waste yarn, it would languish in the stash...never to be heard from again.)
Luckily I knit FAST!
I finished the rust beanie Thursday night at Preach and Psych's house.
I cast on the black one Friday night.
I finished the black one Saturday night.
I even wove in the ends!
Labels:
beanie,
commission,
decision,
fast,
finish,
friend,
frustration,
funny,
needle,
yarn
Saturday, April 17, 2010
What do you mean she had her baby?
Approximate Transcript of a Recent Phone Call:
Mom: Well, AVB had her baby this morning. It is a beautiful, as of yet unnamed, little girl.
Me: What? Already? No! I thought she was due the middle of May!
Mom: Nope, she was due the middle of April.
Me: Well, shoot. I thought she was due in May. Guess I'd better get going on her baby gift. Ugh!
I am frustrated with myself for several reasons. First, I purchased the yarn for the little girl burp rags several months ago. AVB loves my burp rags...she is the burp rags biggest fan! I kept thinking to myself, I should go ahead and make those girly burp rags for AVB, but I kept putting it off and doing other things because I thought I had lots of time still. In fact, I had planned on taking them as one of my airplane projects on my trip to visit Sister next week...because I thought she was due in MAY! Had I remembered that she was due in April, I would have had them done and mailed before the baby was born. Now I look like a last minute Johnny Come Lately...when really I was very prepared...just very blonde!
UGH!!!!
Mom: Well, AVB had her baby this morning. It is a beautiful, as of yet unnamed, little girl.
Me: What? Already? No! I thought she was due the middle of May!
Mom: Nope, she was due the middle of April.
Me: Well, shoot. I thought she was due in May. Guess I'd better get going on her baby gift. Ugh!
I am frustrated with myself for several reasons. First, I purchased the yarn for the little girl burp rags several months ago. AVB loves my burp rags...she is the burp rags biggest fan! I kept thinking to myself, I should go ahead and make those girly burp rags for AVB, but I kept putting it off and doing other things because I thought I had lots of time still. In fact, I had planned on taking them as one of my airplane projects on my trip to visit Sister next week...because I thought she was due in MAY! Had I remembered that she was due in April, I would have had them done and mailed before the baby was born. Now I look like a last minute Johnny Come Lately...when really I was very prepared...just very blonde!
UGH!!!!
Friday, April 9, 2010
How to Knit in Theaters
Twilight and I took Whiz to see the movie "How to Train Your Dragon" this afternoon. (Bonus: since Whiz's uncle works at the theater...our tickets were FREE!!!)I took knitting. (Big surprise.)
Specifically, I took a pair of wrist warmers that I am making out of the yarn leftovers from the Martinelli sweater. I cast them on before I got to the theater, but only had time to knit one round.
During the previews, I did the rounds for the knuckles, and successfully navigated the button hole for the thumb. (I'm debating whether or not to pick up stitches for an actual thumb later.)
Once the film itself started, I merrily knit my 2x2 rib down the rest of the warmer. I figured I could get the sleeve finished by the end of the film.
Then...
...disaster.
I came to end of a round and realized that I had ended with a P1 instead of a P2. Somewhere I had messed up. But where? How far back? (and frankly...this occurred during an especially poorly lit portion of the film...night time, fog, smoke...so I didn't even have bright light from the screen to help me.)
Aside from the inherent headache of tinking when using 2 circular needles in the round...I was trying to tink in the dark. In a theater. During a movie that I wanted to pay attention to! The whole point of movie theater knitting projects is that they are not supposed to require ATTENTION!!!
I had to make a choice. Enjoy the film and have fidgety fingers, or fix the error and miss some of the movie.
In the end...the movie won. And it was a great film. Absolutely nothing like the book...but great in its own right.
(Incidentally, I fixed the error in the theater hallway while Whiz and I waited for Twilight to use the restroom. The mess up, it turns out, had only occurred 3 ribs back.)
Labels:
children,
crazy,
decision,
fix,
friend,
frustration,
mistake,
movie,
public display of knitting,
wrist warmers
Saturday, March 27, 2010
What do Berets and Breasts Have in Common?
I was watching Project Runway again last week, and inspiration hit. So rather than work on the plethora of started or planned projects I have piling up, I decided to freelance through my stash!
Unfortunately, once I had cast off, I noticed that the beret had developed a bit of...well...a nipple. Where the ribbing joined in the decreases, a lovely little peak had formed. Not exactly an attractive feature in a hat.
Frustrated, I set it aside. I have often found it helpful to sleep on this sort of problem rather than immediately starting to freak out. (Freaking out seems to be my first and natural inclination! Dreaming Me came up with two solutions:
- frog it back to where the bulge begins and tinker with the decreases
- try to block it out
Blocking wins. Blocking is, ostensibly, an easier solution. I tried to use a dinner plate...but that wasn't working, so I switched the beret over to an upside down mixing bowl. Now I am waiting for it to dry. If this doesn't work, we'll move on to the more work intensive and obnoxious solution of frogging. Ugh.
(On the plus side, I used up the rest of the yarn from Twilight's birthday beret. I feel a little twinge of satisfaction every time I use stash yarn instead of making a purchase. Its like my own personal Knitters' DARE program...just say no to non-essential yarn shopping!)
Labels:
beret,
decision,
finish,
fix,
frustration,
funny,
improvise,
inspiration,
original,
projects,
stash,
television
Sunday, March 21, 2010
Homeless No More
You may recall that I knit myself a lovely sweater last spring using the February Lady pattern.
I loved it.
I loved the color.
I loved the buttons.
I loved the stitch pattern.
...I did not love the fit.
The transition between the garter stitch yoke and the gull lace peplum skirt hit me in exactly the wrong place. I tried to ignore it. I tried to wear it anyway. I loved it so.
Alas, it was not meant to be.
I tried to give the sweater to Mom when she visited me a month or so ago. It fit her better than it fit me, but wasn't exactly her style aesthetic. She was honest. Said it was lovely. But she probably wouldn't wear it.
I sent it to WA with her for Aunt #2 to try, since she wore that style of sweater. She had the same fit problem I had, so Mom brought it back down last week.
I was determined that the sweater should find a home.
Enter Miss-A. Miss-A has a couple of sweaters that are similar in style to the February Lady. She looks lovely in lilacs and lavenders. She appreciates the effort and time involved in hand knitting. AND, we are built differently. It was the ideal solution. I would give the sweater to Miss-A!
There was only one tiny problem. I knit the February Lady out of Cascade 220 wool. Miss-A is allergic to wool.
I bemoaned the fact that she had such an unfortunate allergy. She asked which sweater I was referring to. I told her. She said she could make it work. (Since it is a cardigan with a scoop neck, she can wear it over another top and prevent any itchy/rashy reactions!)
I brought it into work. IT FIT HER!!!!!
I think she looks divine!
And the sweater now has a happy and appreciative home!
I loved it.
I loved the color.
I loved the buttons.
I loved the stitch pattern.
...I did not love the fit.
The transition between the garter stitch yoke and the gull lace peplum skirt hit me in exactly the wrong place. I tried to ignore it. I tried to wear it anyway. I loved it so.
Alas, it was not meant to be.
I tried to give the sweater to Mom when she visited me a month or so ago. It fit her better than it fit me, but wasn't exactly her style aesthetic. She was honest. Said it was lovely. But she probably wouldn't wear it.
I sent it to WA with her for Aunt #2 to try, since she wore that style of sweater. She had the same fit problem I had, so Mom brought it back down last week.
I was determined that the sweater should find a home.
Enter Miss-A. Miss-A has a couple of sweaters that are similar in style to the February Lady. She looks lovely in lilacs and lavenders. She appreciates the effort and time involved in hand knitting. AND, we are built differently. It was the ideal solution. I would give the sweater to Miss-A!
I bemoaned the fact that she had such an unfortunate allergy. She asked which sweater I was referring to. I told her. She said she could make it work. (Since it is a cardigan with a scoop neck, she can wear it over another top and prevent any itchy/rashy reactions!)
I brought it into work. IT FIT HER!!!!!
I think she looks divine!
And the sweater now has a happy and appreciative home!
Sunday, March 7, 2010
And the Oscar GoesTo...
What did I do during the Academy Awards? (Besides throw pillows at the television when the program ran longer than the DVR...?)
I knit an entire Envy Beanie for Jester!
Pictures will be posted after I deliver it on Friday.
Labels:
beanie,
finish,
friend,
frustration,
movie,
television
Friday, February 19, 2010
Knitting While Petsitting...
I have to convince Sadie that german shepherds are not lapdogs, and Tara that cats are not supposed to sleep in my knitting bag!
Still, at least I have cable...I can finally watch the actual Olympics while doing the Knitting Olympics!
Labels:
frustration,
funny,
knitting olympics,
pets,
television
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Knit 'n Knibble
Jester stole her boyfriend's car while I was in Florida, and took me into a Tampa yarn shop...Knit 'n Knibble. (Isn't that a great name?) It was raining so hard that we could only see a few feet in front of the car, and were driving 20 MPH down the interstate. The roads in town were flooded. We passed some smaller cars that were stalling out in the deep water...luckily we were in an SUV. It was pretty scary. (I bought Jester a Krispy Kreme to make up for the terror that I put her through!)We eventually found the yarn shop...it had moved, and google hadn't updated the address for it. It was on the same street, just a few blocks further south than we thought.
The shop had two major drawbacks:
The staff were obnoxiously intrusive. When we walked in, Jester and I were greeted by a chorus of hellos. That was fine. An employee asked if they could help us find anything, which was also fine, and actually nice. But then I said no...I was from out of town and just wanting to browse. This means, to those of you unfamiliar with the English language, that I just wanted to look around and see what they had. I wanted to squeeze the skeins and meander about. However, rather than letting us be, two other employees, essentially back to back, came up and asked us the same questions. Now, had this been a large store, like a Michael's or JoAnn's, I would have understood. But it wasn't. I could hear all of their conversations, and knew that they could hear Jester and I turn down help. They went from being friendly and helpful, to being annoying and obnoxious. (Jester actually asked me why they wouldn't leave us alone, and if they thought we were going to steal something. I don't see why they would think we were non-knitters...I was wearing a handknit beret, scarf, and socks...I even told them which book the beret pattern was out of...ugh.)
There were no snacks. The shop is called Knit 'n Knibble. It actually says on it's webpage :“Knit” in a comfortable place where you can enjoy a latte or cappucino while you “Knibble” on cookies and biscotti. This led me to believe that it was a combination coffee shop/yarn shop...also known as heaven on earth. But when we arrived, though we saw lots of tables to work at...there was no "coffee shop" area. Jester finally saw a coffee pot/espresso machine in a corner, but it was a standard home use one. And we never saw any food. (Another reason for the Krispy Kreme run on the way home.) False advertising? Definitely.Despite this, it was a nice yarn shop with a great selection. Their exotic fiber collection was especially impressive, as was the wall of sock yarn. I bought some Cascade 220 for felted purse samples since they had it priced way below anywhere out here in CA. I also bought two skeins of black fingering weight that is 100% sugar cane. (Blondie licked it when I got back to the dorm. She said it didn't taste like sugar...) They also had some gorgeous samples. Jester fell in love with a sample beanie that was just beyond her ability...it was essentially an adult version of the Envy beanie, so I am going to make it for her. (Well, I am going to make a version of it, since the sample was made from an alpaca, camel, silk blend that was $60/skein...)
To sum up: nice selection, annoying staff, no food...but an afternoon well spent with a wonderful friend!
I didn't take any pictures in the shop...the staff made me too uncomfortable...but I found the one's here on another blogger's site.
Monday, January 25, 2010
How Did That Happen?
Somehow I have a pressing queue of time sensitive projects.
A queue which is bordering on the insanity of a Christmas queue!
It includes:
In addition to these items...I also have several things that I would like to make for me!
I am only one knitter. I can only do so much.
(Breathe in. Breathe out. Remind myself that the fate of the world does not depend on my completing knitting projects. And be grateful for it.)
A queue which is bordering on the insanity of a Christmas queue!
It includes:
- Additional samples for the felted purse class
- Baby burp rags for friends who continue to reproduce
- The birthday gift for Sis-In-Law, which I am really enjoying making
- Commission wrist warmers and fingerless gloves (technically these don't have a due date...but it would probably be best to deliver them while it is still cold!)
In addition to these items...I also have several things that I would like to make for me!
I am only one knitter. I can only do so much.
(Breathe in. Breathe out. Remind myself that the fate of the world does not depend on my completing knitting projects. And be grateful for it.)
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Well...That's Interesting...Now What?
I have completed the body, and the straps.
The whole pattern was very clear and straightforward, so I didn't encounter any real snags...until now...when I tried it on before picking up the sleeve stitches...
I had known all along that I was going to have to a camisole under the sweater because the lace pattern is fairly open. What I hadn't banked on was the immensity of the neckline. I feel very exposed. The neckline is high enough that it covers all the important bits...it is just very very very wide. There is no way to not show bra and cami straps. I would have to wear a strapless and a tube top.
Had I realized earlier that this would be the case I would have knit much wider straps.It wouldn't have been that big a deal. Now I am wondering if I need to un-graft the straps, unravel them, and start over with 20-30 stitches instead of the 9 the pattern called for. I hate working backwards. I would rather just cobble together a fix than backtrack. (Remember the peach baby kimono that I put off frogging for a year or two? Yeah. I don't backtrack well or willingly!)
I think I may have a solution...but if it doesn't work, it will just aggravate the problem. The sleeves, which are stockinette, have a six row garter stitch border. So, I'm thinking, that I can pick up stitches all around the neckline and do a 6 row garter there too. I think that I will need to mark the corners, since the neckline is kind of square, so that I can miter there...otherwise the border will poof out. Not sure.
I guess I will go ahead and knit the sleeves, see how it looks with them on...like somehow the problem will magically fix itself (I am the queen of wishful thinking)...and then reevaluate.
Ugh.
Labels:
daunting,
decision,
fix,
frog,
frustration,
garter stitch,
improvise,
progress,
sweater
Friday, January 15, 2010
I wish I were...
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Crisis Averted...Sort Of
Thought I would give an update even though it is an "even" day.
After taking a major chill pill last night, I re-evaluated my situation.
I could either unravel the whole project and start over, adjusting it so that the yarn I had would be sufficient. (So not going to happen...)
OR
I could go to different stores and try to find more yarn and hope that the dye lots were close enough that it wouldn't matter.
I obviously went with the second.
Without divulging what the project is, since it is a commission for a GIFT...I can say that it has stripes. So, I am going to intersperse the new skeins with the old skeins until the old ones run out. The new skeins appear to be identical to the old ones, but better safe than sorry. Luckily they should be separated by enough space that any minute differences won't show.
I hope.
(Postscript for my mother: I know I told you yesterday morning that I had purchased the rest of the yarn. But it turned out that it was the wrong brand. I hadn't taken the ball bands in with me at the store, and they had moved stuff around to mask how low their stock was. I grabbed yarn from the right aisle that was the right color, but the yarn I needed was wool/acrylic blend and the stuff I bought was 100% acrylic. I realized the error when I got to work. Called my friend, she told me they were out of what I needed. So...I got the right stuff at another store after work tonight, and will return the wrong stuff tomorrow.)
After taking a major chill pill last night, I re-evaluated my situation.
I could either unravel the whole project and start over, adjusting it so that the yarn I had would be sufficient. (So not going to happen...)
OR
I could go to different stores and try to find more yarn and hope that the dye lots were close enough that it wouldn't matter.
I obviously went with the second.
Without divulging what the project is, since it is a commission for a GIFT...I can say that it has stripes. So, I am going to intersperse the new skeins with the old skeins until the old ones run out. The new skeins appear to be identical to the old ones, but better safe than sorry. Luckily they should be separated by enough space that any minute differences won't show.
I hope.
(Postscript for my mother: I know I told you yesterday morning that I had purchased the rest of the yarn. But it turned out that it was the wrong brand. I hadn't taken the ball bands in with me at the store, and they had moved stuff around to mask how low their stock was. I grabbed yarn from the right aisle that was the right color, but the yarn I needed was wool/acrylic blend and the stuff I bought was 100% acrylic. I realized the error when I got to work. Called my friend, she told me they were out of what I needed. So...I got the right stuff at another store after work tonight, and will return the wrong stuff tomorrow.)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
