I had had a really great time. That mushroom had been picked by someone and left by the side of the trail, Eli and I decided to goof around with it.
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Beautiful Fall
Last Friday I went with Eli's family to Starved Rock State park for some hiking. It was so, so beautiful there. I thought I would share some of my favorite photos from the trip.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
New Everything!
Hello welcome to the new version of the blog! I just got it live and linked up today and I'm really excited. The new layout is prettier and more flexible and now I can have pages! Like a I have a REAL webpage! Oh boy! I had an exciting time making up a logo yesterday which I'm going to put in this post so I can link it to facebook. I have a lot of exciting patterns coming down the chute and look for class schedules and and about me pages coming whenever I can get over my loathing about talking about myself. I hope everyone enjoys the new blog! Now here's the logo I promised.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Susie's Long Stockings
The test knit for these socks finished on the 19th and it has been a looong ride. It started when I saw these socks in the Christian Dior Fall show by John Galliano. I had to make something similar, I just loved them.
I bought the yarn way back in March and began swatching, which did not go smoothly. I had an good idea of what I wanted the finished product to look like, I just didn't know how to get there. I also had the idea that I wanted to do some of the shaping with needle size changes. I wanted a lot of verticality like the Dior socks. The Dior socks had faggoted rib obviously but I didn't think it would look the way I wanted at the gauge I was going to get out of sock yarn. I tried a lot of lace patterns that had vertical orientations but they all seemed too stretched out on larger needle sizes, I needed it to be polished looking, smooth and sophisticated. After another failed swatch of star-mesh lace from one of the Barbara Walker Treasuries I sat stumped. My knitting buddies liked it but it had too much air, and too much bias to be what I wanted. The ribs on it looked too messy for my taste as well. Then it hit me that a twisted rib might be my answer. It pulls the rib in tight and attractive when stretched out and when you do the purl stitches plain it gives and orderly but slightly lacy look in between. I made a few swatches and KNEW I had it. I also had a pattern that had a sort of diamond orientation going up the side of the legs to get a similar look to the Dior socks. I chose the Vandyke Leaf Lace from the Second Barbara Walker Treasury.
I had to make charts for the beginning of the lace, the ending of the lace and the repeating portion. The difficulty was in writing the chart on a background of twisted rib. I did accomplish it well though and I changed some of the clunkier looking portions of the Vandyke Leaf Lace so that the pattern flowed better to my taste. I used Open Office's spreadsheet program and a knitting font I picked up on the internet. I was also going to do these socks toe-up as it is usually my preference but the leaves on the Vandyke Leaf Lace looked weird going from the bottom up. This probably worked out for the best as the back of the calf decreases I used look really stunning in the twisted rib.
I decided I would make 3 sizes so that almost anyone can make a wear these socks and I also made a video explaining the double decrease I invented so the the decreases stayed in pattern.
I decided that since there was going to be no way for these socks to stay up on their own I should make a hem for some elastic to be inserted. I had seen a folded over hem done on a child's skirt so I just used the same idea, and in pattern. It worked surprisingly well. So I had all the elements I needed and I knit the first sock, and it looked wonderful! I started the test knit after writing it out and doing a preliminary layout. I stalled on the second sock. I had terrible second sock syndrome. I'd already done it, why wasn't I finished? There were other things I wanted to knit! Why did nature give me 2 legs? But I eventually got around to it and took photos in wool thigh-highs when it was 90 degrees outside. I'll tell you though, the sweat really held them in place!
I have to give kudos to my wonderful test knitters who found all the mistakes in my written version of the chart (boy writing that sucked) and various other problems with clarity and and suggested what photos would be most helpful to them. This pattern wouldn't be nearly so great with out them.
Here is the relevant info if you are looking to make these socks:
Yarn : Trekking Pro Natura - 3 skeins
Needles : US 4, 3, 2, 1
3 sizes, s, m, l - Medium will fit almost everyone, small is for size 4 and lower and large is for size 16 and up.
It was really important to me to be inclusive with my sizing, I want as many people as can be to show off their awesome gams in my lovely socks.
I bought the yarn way back in March and began swatching, which did not go smoothly. I had an good idea of what I wanted the finished product to look like, I just didn't know how to get there. I also had the idea that I wanted to do some of the shaping with needle size changes. I wanted a lot of verticality like the Dior socks. The Dior socks had faggoted rib obviously but I didn't think it would look the way I wanted at the gauge I was going to get out of sock yarn. I tried a lot of lace patterns that had vertical orientations but they all seemed too stretched out on larger needle sizes, I needed it to be polished looking, smooth and sophisticated. After another failed swatch of star-mesh lace from one of the Barbara Walker Treasuries I sat stumped. My knitting buddies liked it but it had too much air, and too much bias to be what I wanted. The ribs on it looked too messy for my taste as well. Then it hit me that a twisted rib might be my answer. It pulls the rib in tight and attractive when stretched out and when you do the purl stitches plain it gives and orderly but slightly lacy look in between. I made a few swatches and KNEW I had it. I also had a pattern that had a sort of diamond orientation going up the side of the legs to get a similar look to the Dior socks. I chose the Vandyke Leaf Lace from the Second Barbara Walker Treasury.
I decided I would make 3 sizes so that almost anyone can make a wear these socks and I also made a video explaining the double decrease I invented so the the decreases stayed in pattern.
I decided that since there was going to be no way for these socks to stay up on their own I should make a hem for some elastic to be inserted. I had seen a folded over hem done on a child's skirt so I just used the same idea, and in pattern. It worked surprisingly well. So I had all the elements I needed and I knit the first sock, and it looked wonderful! I started the test knit after writing it out and doing a preliminary layout. I stalled on the second sock. I had terrible second sock syndrome. I'd already done it, why wasn't I finished? There were other things I wanted to knit! Why did nature give me 2 legs? But I eventually got around to it and took photos in wool thigh-highs when it was 90 degrees outside. I'll tell you though, the sweat really held them in place!
I have to give kudos to my wonderful test knitters who found all the mistakes in my written version of the chart (boy writing that sucked) and various other problems with clarity and and suggested what photos would be most helpful to them. This pattern wouldn't be nearly so great with out them.
Here is the relevant info if you are looking to make these socks:
Yarn : Trekking Pro Natura - 3 skeins
Needles : US 4, 3, 2, 1
3 sizes, s, m, l - Medium will fit almost everyone, small is for size 4 and lower and large is for size 16 and up.
It was really important to me to be inclusive with my sizing, I want as many people as can be to show off their awesome gams in my lovely socks.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010
Meta Mittens
On our way home from Buckhorn State Park last month Eli suggested we stop at a yarn store in Madison. I am not one to say no to that so I did a google search on my iPhone and came up with Off the Beaten Path. It wasn't too far from the highway and their website said they had locally produced yarns. I ended up with some crochet thread and some rough, rustic wool that immediately said "make mittens out of me". The yarn was Yaeger's Acres 2ply medium weight wool. I got the natural and the black-brown I felt like I wanted to have something related to knitting or wool on the mittens but I decided a yarn ball would be too abstract. I decided on sheep and did a big google image search on sheep so I could get a handle on what they look like and for illustrations of sheep so that I could understand how they are generally abstracted. I knit up a swatch in the round later in the week. This swatch lied horribly, I must have been knitting incredibly tight because I ended up with 7 sts/inch on US 3 needles which I was never able to replicate. Swatches Lie. Do them anyway. Always make a swatch especially if you are working with a yarn you have never used before, if only to get a feel for what needle size will go with it best.
So once I had my horribly off gauge I went and made some graph paper from my favorite graph paper making website (What? You don't have one?) Incompetech (see it even has a punny name) and input my gauge. The website makes a pdf of the graph paper which I then opened in adobe photoshop. I marked out the parameters of the mitten using the dimensions of a pair of Norwegian mittens I made a few years ago and liked. Then I spent about a day or so dinking around with the chart. The palm was easy, as was the thumb, but making sheep that looked like sheep and made a good composition on the back of a mitten took a bit longer. Once I was satisfied with the chart I knit up a prototype. Which was sized for a child.
Good thing it doesn't take too long to knit a mitten, I thought, I'll just go up a needle size and add a little length and it'll be fine...
Nope!
Still Tiny! Urg! I felt pretty frustrated with myself, but luckily I had plenty of yarn so I didn't have to frog either of them. I went back and counted how many stitches were in that old Norwegian mitten I mentioned earlier and went with those stitch counts. I finally finally got it the right size, yay! Here is a prototype progression photo with a 5" ruler at the side to show how tiny the small ones really are.
So, after knitting 4 mittens, only 2 of which were any good, I was ready to take some photographs. It was 90 degrees outside so bundling up and going outside were a bit out. I didn't want to get heat stroke, even for my work. So I plopped on a matching hat and sat on my workroom couch and used the self timer gratuitously. I think they came out pretty well all things considered
I really upped my game with photoshop on these photos. I generously used the dodge tool to brighten and emphasize the mittens and to make the eye in shadow more visible. Plus I was having a really good hair day. So I wrote and laid out the pattern, I went with a vaguely German, 70s medieval revival sort of style that I think went really well with the mittens and made the pattern pretty to look at. It's for sale, if you'd like to buy now
So once I had my horribly off gauge I went and made some graph paper from my favorite graph paper making website (What? You don't have one?) Incompetech (see it even has a punny name) and input my gauge. The website makes a pdf of the graph paper which I then opened in adobe photoshop. I marked out the parameters of the mitten using the dimensions of a pair of Norwegian mittens I made a few years ago and liked. Then I spent about a day or so dinking around with the chart. The palm was easy, as was the thumb, but making sheep that looked like sheep and made a good composition on the back of a mitten took a bit longer. Once I was satisfied with the chart I knit up a prototype. Which was sized for a child.
Good thing it doesn't take too long to knit a mitten, I thought, I'll just go up a needle size and add a little length and it'll be fine...
Nope!
Still Tiny! Urg! I felt pretty frustrated with myself, but luckily I had plenty of yarn so I didn't have to frog either of them. I went back and counted how many stitches were in that old Norwegian mitten I mentioned earlier and went with those stitch counts. I finally finally got it the right size, yay! Here is a prototype progression photo with a 5" ruler at the side to show how tiny the small ones really are.
So, after knitting 4 mittens, only 2 of which were any good, I was ready to take some photographs. It was 90 degrees outside so bundling up and going outside were a bit out. I didn't want to get heat stroke, even for my work. So I plopped on a matching hat and sat on my workroom couch and used the self timer gratuitously. I think they came out pretty well all things considered
I really upped my game with photoshop on these photos. I generously used the dodge tool to brighten and emphasize the mittens and to make the eye in shadow more visible. Plus I was having a really good hair day. So I wrote and laid out the pattern, I went with a vaguely German, 70s medieval revival sort of style that I think went really well with the mittens and made the pattern pretty to look at. It's for sale, if you'd like to buy now
buy now |
Monday, September 13, 2010
Gilly's Big Bow
Way back in July I was sketching out an idea for a superbulky cardigan and the lady I sketched needed a big bow in her hair.
The next night, deep in the night, something silly was born.
You can download the pattern for yourself here: download now
The next night, deep in the night, something silly was born.
I went overboard. Waaay overboard. The thing weighed like a pound and would barely stay on the headband I put it on. I decided I needed to downscale a bit.
So I finally ended up with this
Yay! It only looks slightly silly! I wrote up the pattern, had it tested, and put it out as a fun little free pattern.
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
Camping at Buckhorn State Park, WI
Last Monday afternoon we took off for Buckhorn State park. This is a fabulous place to camp with many campsites having their own private beaches. When we arrived we set up our campsite made dinner and jumped in the water. I think I spent the most time swimming since I was a kid. The water was lovely and warm.
The next day we rented a canoe for the morning and explored the shore. There were a lot of interesting fungi and tiny moss and lichens. I love taking pictures of little things the best.
Lovely Grassy Forest |
Our little red Canoe where we beached it to explore |
My silly sun hat! |
Adorable mushroom in the moss |
This one has grass growing through it! |
Phallic |
the ur mushroom |
It was really really windy when we were out on the lake so we didn't get far and it started to get really hot so it wasn't the best canoeing time ever but it was still fun. Eli didn't like it as much as me, he made faces.
Oh Eli! |
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Lady Jane Gloves
So I heard back from Knit Picks today that they are going to publish my very first for-pay pattern! I went ahead and uploaded it to Ravelry at the 1.99 price point. I was waiting to upload it until I heard from them so I could decide what price to place it at. The whole experience ended up being really fun. My pattern testers were great, my model was awesome and things just really clicked with the whole project. I think I've learned a lot and have really gained some confidence in my skills. I have also sent 2 proposals to Twist collective that I'm really excited about so I'll get working on them either way once I know if they are interested. So anyway, without further ado, here are some of photos of the lovely Michelle wearing the Lady Jane Gloves.
buy the pattern now
The photo shoot was fun but it was so hot and humid. I'm glad I didn't do a heavier makeup on her because it would have just run everywhere. The wind was a bit high too, but that just ended up giving the shots some drama. These were taken in the area right outside my back door. I love it because there are so many interesting buildings and alleyways to photograph.
Friday, April 23, 2010
I'm Turning Japanese Story and (limited) Tutorial
So a while back I watched this video produced by artist Takashi Murakami and directed by McG. The video starred Kirsten Dunst dressed like a Sailor Moon type character complete with magic wand dancing and singing "I'm Turning Japanese". (with sparkles!) I have loved the work of Murakami since being introduced to it about 5 years ago by Eli. The colorful characters that seem happy and silly, but always with just a bit off about them that makes it all a bit creepy. The highly graphic and commercial aspects of his work simultaneously revel in and poke at anime and fan culture in Japan. The light bulb went on in my head as I'd been thinking about doing a new project since my McQueen tribute was on hold due to back-ordered yarn.
I decided I really needed to make a Murakami inspired sweater. (Also watching the video about 20 times) Fresh off the toil of Eli's vest I was ready to take on another intarsia project and I thought the graphic flowers that populate Murakami's work would make an excellent motif. So I sat down and began to plan. I did a gauge swatch in some yarn I had left over from Eli's vest as I wanted to use Brown Sheep's Lanaloft Sports weight again. I've been a bit obsessed with this yarn and the colors were too perfect so I went with it. The gauge came out at 6 sts and 8 rows per inch on size five metal needles. So I went here to get some proportional graph paper to plot out the sweater and make the charts for the flowers. I particularly like this website because you can make the paper vertical or horizontal, can have 2 different line weights and make paper exactly your gauge. My grid was exactly half size of my gauge so when I plotted the shaping of the sweater it was exactly half size. Before I did that with any degree of accuracy I sat down and spent and entire day making the 2 color charts for the flowers. Using photoshop and a googled reference image I made full color charts for myself to work from. I made 1 extra chart of the big flower without the black so would know where to put the colors exactly as I intended on embroidering the black in after.
After making the charts I went to Interweave's waist shaping calculator (which is awesome) and made the required measurements of myself and input them. The calculator is for knitting in the round so I had to do some fiddling with the numbers to make them even so the corrugated rib worked nicely. I also input no ease into the calculations as I wanted this sweater to be fitted. I knew it would relax over time and be very comfortable with a small amount of positive ease. Taking these stitch counts and two pieces of graph paper I printed off I set to work plotting the back and the front onto the graph paper so I could place where and how many flowers were going to go on the sweater. I had a few false starts. I had printed the graph paper wrong the first time so the squares were taller than wider which started to shape up into a very tall sweater. Oops. I'm glad I caught it. When I finally had the back plotted out to the bust I started thinking about the shoulders. I recently bought Ann Budd's book The Knitters Handy Book of Sweater Patterns and I chose the set-in sleeve sweater size that was closest to the stitch counts from the waist shaping calculator. This was a mistake! The ease and size of armscye were huge! The chest size that was the same as mine had a 9in armscye. I'll get to how I fixed this later.
I dutifully plotted out giant arm holes and placed the flowers on the sweater. For the small ones I cut out their size square out of some extra graph paper and traced them onto the sweater until I was happy with the placement. Then I drew some leaves in as the sweater looked a little bare and I didn't want to add more flowers. With the stems and leaves the front and back looked good and I cast on. I finished the back and realized looking at it and holding it up to my body that the armscyes were way too long! the waist shaping wasn't hitting at the right point the sleeves would have had to be HUGE. So I took my favorite and best fitting hoodie and measured both the armscye length and the shoulder rise and calculated that into stitches and revised my graphs. Then I fixed the back. The back flower is too close to the top now because of this, but it wasn't bad and I didn't want to reknit half of the back with some of the more difficult color work. I decided I could live with it. If I had it to do again I would have moved down out of the way of the collar.
Another thing I did when plotting out the back of my sweater was to make the back narrower than the front by increasing 4 fewer stitches after the waist than the front. I find that if I do this my sweaters fit better and after some measuring I have figured out that my back is narrower than the my front. Your mileage on this may vary of course, but having a good knowledge of the size of various parts of your body to other parts and of how this may be different than "standard" is really helpful in getting a good fit.
And so I finished the front and the back and sew them together for a fitting and it was good and I was happy. I was feeling flummoxed by how to make the puff sleeves I wanted as I couldn't really find any good info on what shape they needed to be in order to look the way I wanted them to look. So I started on the embroidery and it took what felt like forever. I think my knit buddies wanted to strangle me. I had this terrible compulsion to whine about it, all the time. Silly me!
So I eventually got bored bored bored of embroidery and decided to tackle the sleeve o' doom. Seriously folks I think by the final edit I had done the sleeve about 7 times. Really. I had knit the entire stupid cuff about 3 times and after trying it on deemed it wrong in some way.
So for those of you skimming this for the tutorial here it is. How to make a puff sleeve in a set in armscye by picking up and knitting and short rows. ( Make sure all your seams are sewn before hand)
1. Starting in the middle of the underarm pick up and knit a stitch for every row all the way around the arm hole. For the underarm this will be 1 stitch for every underarm stitch. This is going to give you a lot of stitches and allow the sleeve to "puff"
2. Knit back to the top of the sleeve (in the round) and knit to about 1.5 in after the shoulder seam. You are now going to begin short rows by wrapping and turning every row until you've consumed enough stitches to be just short of halfway down the armsyce measuring from the shoulder seam to the underarm.
3. Now you are going to continue to knit back and forth but instead of wrapping and turning you are going to ssk on the knit side and p2tog on the purlside. Do this for about 1.5 in or so. This will give the sleeve some length. You may want to do this more or less depending on your arms and where you wan the sleeve to end. I did it 8 times.
4. Now knit plain in the round for about 2 inches.
5. Place marker for underarm stitches and decrease all other stitches by half by k2tog. I used a trick I learned from Sweater Design in Plain English to wrap the ribbing from the bottom of sweater around my arm at the tension I wanted and count the stitches to know how many to have for the ribbing. Mine was 64 which was about 4 stitches less than I got by halving the stitches not part of the underarm so I decreased the extra in the next row. Regardless of weather you need to decrease a few more stitches you should do another row before starting the ribbing so the great number of k2togs don't interact badly with the ribbing. It can look like there are holes.
And that is how after much trial and error I finished the sleeves. I did a nifty little i-cord bind off that prevent the corrugated ribbing from curling and kept it tight. If you use one color ribbing this wouldn't be necessary.
After finishing the sleeves I picked up stitches in white around the neck to start the collar. I picked them up from the outside in so that it wouldn't show when you look at it. I decided on reverse stockinette with garter borders because it would curl over the neckline nicely and lay flat (because the border) I knit it flat with a circular needle and slipped the edges to make a little bit lacy decorative edge. I increased every fourth row every ten stitches with a lifted increase so it would be as invisible as possible. Its about 2.5 inches long with 4 rows of garter stitch at the edge and 2 edge stitches in garter stitch. I bound off a bit too tightly and make go back and fix it at some point but for now I'm pretty happy with the way it came out overall and it fits like a dream.
I decided I really needed to make a Murakami inspired sweater. (Also watching the video about 20 times) Fresh off the toil of Eli's vest I was ready to take on another intarsia project and I thought the graphic flowers that populate Murakami's work would make an excellent motif. So I sat down and began to plan. I did a gauge swatch in some yarn I had left over from Eli's vest as I wanted to use Brown Sheep's Lanaloft Sports weight again. I've been a bit obsessed with this yarn and the colors were too perfect so I went with it. The gauge came out at 6 sts and 8 rows per inch on size five metal needles. So I went here to get some proportional graph paper to plot out the sweater and make the charts for the flowers. I particularly like this website because you can make the paper vertical or horizontal, can have 2 different line weights and make paper exactly your gauge. My grid was exactly half size of my gauge so when I plotted the shaping of the sweater it was exactly half size. Before I did that with any degree of accuracy I sat down and spent and entire day making the 2 color charts for the flowers. Using photoshop and a googled reference image I made full color charts for myself to work from. I made 1 extra chart of the big flower without the black so would know where to put the colors exactly as I intended on embroidering the black in after.
After making the charts I went to Interweave's waist shaping calculator (which is awesome) and made the required measurements of myself and input them. The calculator is for knitting in the round so I had to do some fiddling with the numbers to make them even so the corrugated rib worked nicely. I also input no ease into the calculations as I wanted this sweater to be fitted. I knew it would relax over time and be very comfortable with a small amount of positive ease. Taking these stitch counts and two pieces of graph paper I printed off I set to work plotting the back and the front onto the graph paper so I could place where and how many flowers were going to go on the sweater. I had a few false starts. I had printed the graph paper wrong the first time so the squares were taller than wider which started to shape up into a very tall sweater. Oops. I'm glad I caught it. When I finally had the back plotted out to the bust I started thinking about the shoulders. I recently bought Ann Budd's book The Knitters Handy Book of Sweater Patterns and I chose the set-in sleeve sweater size that was closest to the stitch counts from the waist shaping calculator. This was a mistake! The ease and size of armscye were huge! The chest size that was the same as mine had a 9in armscye. I'll get to how I fixed this later.
I dutifully plotted out giant arm holes and placed the flowers on the sweater. For the small ones I cut out their size square out of some extra graph paper and traced them onto the sweater until I was happy with the placement. Then I drew some leaves in as the sweater looked a little bare and I didn't want to add more flowers. With the stems and leaves the front and back looked good and I cast on. I finished the back and realized looking at it and holding it up to my body that the armscyes were way too long! the waist shaping wasn't hitting at the right point the sleeves would have had to be HUGE. So I took my favorite and best fitting hoodie and measured both the armscye length and the shoulder rise and calculated that into stitches and revised my graphs. Then I fixed the back. The back flower is too close to the top now because of this, but it wasn't bad and I didn't want to reknit half of the back with some of the more difficult color work. I decided I could live with it. If I had it to do again I would have moved down out of the way of the collar.
Another thing I did when plotting out the back of my sweater was to make the back narrower than the front by increasing 4 fewer stitches after the waist than the front. I find that if I do this my sweaters fit better and after some measuring I have figured out that my back is narrower than the my front. Your mileage on this may vary of course, but having a good knowledge of the size of various parts of your body to other parts and of how this may be different than "standard" is really helpful in getting a good fit.
And so I finished the front and the back and sew them together for a fitting and it was good and I was happy. I was feeling flummoxed by how to make the puff sleeves I wanted as I couldn't really find any good info on what shape they needed to be in order to look the way I wanted them to look. So I started on the embroidery and it took what felt like forever. I think my knit buddies wanted to strangle me. I had this terrible compulsion to whine about it, all the time. Silly me!
So I eventually got bored bored bored of embroidery and decided to tackle the sleeve o' doom. Seriously folks I think by the final edit I had done the sleeve about 7 times. Really. I had knit the entire stupid cuff about 3 times and after trying it on deemed it wrong in some way.
So for those of you skimming this for the tutorial here it is. How to make a puff sleeve in a set in armscye by picking up and knitting and short rows. ( Make sure all your seams are sewn before hand)
1. Starting in the middle of the underarm pick up and knit a stitch for every row all the way around the arm hole. For the underarm this will be 1 stitch for every underarm stitch. This is going to give you a lot of stitches and allow the sleeve to "puff"
2. Knit back to the top of the sleeve (in the round) and knit to about 1.5 in after the shoulder seam. You are now going to begin short rows by wrapping and turning every row until you've consumed enough stitches to be just short of halfway down the armsyce measuring from the shoulder seam to the underarm.
3. Now you are going to continue to knit back and forth but instead of wrapping and turning you are going to ssk on the knit side and p2tog on the purlside. Do this for about 1.5 in or so. This will give the sleeve some length. You may want to do this more or less depending on your arms and where you wan the sleeve to end. I did it 8 times.
4. Now knit plain in the round for about 2 inches.
5. Place marker for underarm stitches and decrease all other stitches by half by k2tog. I used a trick I learned from Sweater Design in Plain English to wrap the ribbing from the bottom of sweater around my arm at the tension I wanted and count the stitches to know how many to have for the ribbing. Mine was 64 which was about 4 stitches less than I got by halving the stitches not part of the underarm so I decreased the extra in the next row. Regardless of weather you need to decrease a few more stitches you should do another row before starting the ribbing so the great number of k2togs don't interact badly with the ribbing. It can look like there are holes.
And that is how after much trial and error I finished the sleeves. I did a nifty little i-cord bind off that prevent the corrugated ribbing from curling and kept it tight. If you use one color ribbing this wouldn't be necessary.
After finishing the sleeves I picked up stitches in white around the neck to start the collar. I picked them up from the outside in so that it wouldn't show when you look at it. I decided on reverse stockinette with garter borders because it would curl over the neckline nicely and lay flat (because the border) I knit it flat with a circular needle and slipped the edges to make a little bit lacy decorative edge. I increased every fourth row every ten stitches with a lifted increase so it would be as invisible as possible. Its about 2.5 inches long with 4 rows of garter stitch at the edge and 2 edge stitches in garter stitch. I bound off a bit too tightly and make go back and fix it at some point but for now I'm pretty happy with the way it came out overall and it fits like a dream.
Monday, March 22, 2010
So I finally finished that vest
So I finally am totally done with the argyle! After finishing the first vest and having it come out 4" too big in the chest, and doing it all again in a different color, I am very happy with the result. Eli doesn't like having his picture taken but I explained it was the price he had to pay for hand-knits. For what it's worth I think he's handsome but he loves to make put-out faces for the camera. Here is a nice close up of the vest.
The crisscross lines on it are duplicate stitch embroidered after the knitting and sewing together and pretty much everything was done. It was a bit of a slog, that last bit, I just SO wanted to be done with it! And so I am. I really think this was one of the nicer things I've made. I did make a big modification to the pattern by making it 6 stitches smaller on the front and the back. I basically followed the directions but just decreased the size. The pattern was nicely done but I don't know why you'd want a vest like this to have 4" of ease. My vest of fail showed that clearly it isn't very attractive. Who knows? Do most men really like everything 2 sizes too big? Anyway here are a few more photo's of Eli hamming it up.
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
Busy busy!
So I've been obsessively reading the forums on Ravelry and ordered 4 books through inter-library loan and all of this has been about learning to be a designer. I really want to beef up my skills on designing my own garments and learning to make the things I knit fit better. The books I got from the library are Elizabeth Zimmermann's Knitting Workshop, Reader's Digest Knitter's Handbook by Montse Stanley, The Essential Guide to Color Knitting Techniques by Margaret Radcliffe, Sweater Design in Plain English by Maggie Righetti, and The Principles of Knitting by June Hemmons Hiatt.
I spent the afternoon browsing these books and I think the most helpful one is going to be the Sweater Design in Plain English. It seems like a really straightforward guide to making garments that fit and work the way you want. The other books certainly have value (The principles of Knitting had 30 types of cast on) but turned out to be in short supply of the things I really wanted to know. I used reviews on Amazon to decide what to get from the library because I think I'll likely want to buy the ones that seem most useful.
The Principles of Knitting is out of print and very expensive to get so I feel lucky that another library was willing to send it here so I could take a look. It was very talked up but it seems persnickety (she is convinced that there is only one right way to knit) and somewhat dated. It has a lot of information but most of it I already know and or have for reference in other books. I'm glad I didn't shell out for in all honesty.
Of the books I got I think the Color knitting book is the most useless. There is a little info in there but I think I'd much rather have a book of stranded/fair-isle designs. A lot of what is in the book is god-awful ugly and will make me not want to use it. To be fair it did give me the idea to use shaping to make intarsia patterns more than cross-stitch looking. That was worth walking it home from the library anyway.
On other fronts I've finished the back of Eli's vest and have a few inches done on the front.
I have a few ends to weave in on the back still and of course the argyle lines to embroider on but this vest is very much actually the right size this time. I measured. And measured. The first one I made came out 4" too big and looked like a really ugly argyle sack on the poor man. Maybe I'll feel ok enought about someday to take some funny pictures.
The Alexander McQueen tribute is on a bit of a hold while I wait for more yarn to arrive. I'm terrible at estimating yardage, but it usually works out ok because I work at the Yarn Exchange and live a block away so I just run and get a bit more. This time though I bought all 3 skeins that we had of the Lanaloft Bulky in Cottage White so I'll have to wait until we get more in. I did have to frog a bit of it because of an irredeemable and complicated-to-explain mistake so I took some pictures of my progress off the needles. Its coming along just like I planned! What a good feeling despite the mistake. It was a bit fun to frog it on the floor like that.
I spent the afternoon browsing these books and I think the most helpful one is going to be the Sweater Design in Plain English. It seems like a really straightforward guide to making garments that fit and work the way you want. The other books certainly have value (The principles of Knitting had 30 types of cast on) but turned out to be in short supply of the things I really wanted to know. I used reviews on Amazon to decide what to get from the library because I think I'll likely want to buy the ones that seem most useful.
The Principles of Knitting is out of print and very expensive to get so I feel lucky that another library was willing to send it here so I could take a look. It was very talked up but it seems persnickety (she is convinced that there is only one right way to knit) and somewhat dated. It has a lot of information but most of it I already know and or have for reference in other books. I'm glad I didn't shell out for in all honesty.
Of the books I got I think the Color knitting book is the most useless. There is a little info in there but I think I'd much rather have a book of stranded/fair-isle designs. A lot of what is in the book is god-awful ugly and will make me not want to use it. To be fair it did give me the idea to use shaping to make intarsia patterns more than cross-stitch looking. That was worth walking it home from the library anyway.
On other fronts I've finished the back of Eli's vest and have a few inches done on the front.
I have a few ends to weave in on the back still and of course the argyle lines to embroider on but this vest is very much actually the right size this time. I measured. And measured. The first one I made came out 4" too big and looked like a really ugly argyle sack on the poor man. Maybe I'll feel ok enought about someday to take some funny pictures.
The Alexander McQueen tribute is on a bit of a hold while I wait for more yarn to arrive. I'm terrible at estimating yardage, but it usually works out ok because I work at the Yarn Exchange and live a block away so I just run and get a bit more. This time though I bought all 3 skeins that we had of the Lanaloft Bulky in Cottage White so I'll have to wait until we get more in. I did have to frog a bit of it because of an irredeemable and complicated-to-explain mistake so I took some pictures of my progress off the needles. Its coming along just like I planned! What a good feeling despite the mistake. It was a bit fun to frog it on the floor like that.
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