Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Leather Buttons & Toories


Well, here's the finished Puff Sleeve Feminine Cardigan.  The peplum gave me some trouble due to me goofing one stitch and I couldn't figure out how to unknit and reknit a YO... which led to me ripping it back to the garter rows and starting over.  THEN when I got to row 17 in the peplum (which I was already aware had an error in it) I kind of starting winging it.  Never smart.  It mostly worked out though.  I love the leather buttons.  It looks fine on a hanger but really darling on a body.  It is a little cropped but not in an unflattering way.
Once the cardigan was behind me, I decided it was time to revisit a recent knitting disaster a la Malabrigo Silky Merino.  I bought this wool in Cloudy Sky along with a handmade glass button with the intention of making another Indian Summer hat like the one I had made for my mother for her birthday last year.  I had no problems whatsoever the first time I did that pattern.  This time however I think in the middle of all those YO's (again with the YO's!) I think my stitch marker may have moved under one of them at the beginning of the row which would have made me start to YO one stitch to soon.  The result was that four or five inches of the netting where going in one direction then it started going in another.  It was bizarre-O.  I decided to walk away from it for a while so I put it away to do my shrug and cardigan etc.  So Sunday I decided to try to correct and finish it.  I tried to fix the bad rows only to make the exact same mistake again.  Ripped back to the ribbing and at that point I think I had one of those mental blocks where I just kept making the same mistake over and over.  So I decided to scrap Indian Summer and make something else.  I went with a Toorie.  (The pom pom hat <<< is a Toorie.)
This is a really fun pattern.  You start with a provisional cast on-- which I had never done before.  I used a crochet provisional cast on (thank you youTube!)  So, what that means is you use scrap yarn to crochet a series of loops onto your needle then you go to your real yarn and start working off of those loops.  This shows how to to that.  What she's not explaining in the video is that the whole point of this cast on is later you will unzip those loops and the bottom of your work becomes live stitches again.  talk about burning the candle at both ends.  The way all of this happens in the context of the pattern was a little odd for me though.  She has you unzip the stitches and but them on a dpn and then you bring it up with your stitches at the top and knit them together (meaning two stitches, one front one back, at a time.)  This creates a tube-like hem at the bottom.  I can't even tell you how weird it was for me to follow those instructions!  I kept thinking, "Why am I doing this?  Is this even right?"  Well, it turns out the point is at the end you run yarn through that tube and drawstring that mother.
Okay, so I finish the hat except for the pom poms at the end.  I don't like pom poms.  I want to use my dang button.  So I made individual petals from a pattern called For Joana (four because I ran out of yarn.  Five or six would have been nice.)  I assembled them on the pom pom/ tube casing side and put the button in the middle.  TAH DAH!!!

So, not really sure what to do next.  I have black Mohair and black lace weight and I need black clothes for the new job.  Those sound like two exceedingly frustrating yarns though.  Errrrr...

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Project Updates:

I've been busy.  First I did another Two-Tone Shrug (but not with two tones.)  This is a pattern from the book "Fitted Knits" by Stefanie Japel.  This is the 2nd time I've done this pattern and IT IS A WINNER.  This stupid thing is universally flattering, practical and doesn't really require a perfect fit.  I knit this one in Noro Aya.  I was really unsure of the colors at first-- they seemed too pastel for my taste but the further I got into it, the more I liked it.  The photo is from when I was maybe 20% into the project, just to show the yarn, but I need to take a decent completed photo.  So, so pretty.

I finally did a Buttony Sweater.  I decided to do short sleeves (which I almost always prefer) and am thinking of maybe adding a collar... maybe not.  I still have to weave in the ends and sew on buttons and then I'll take a picture.  More later in it's own post, I think.

I started the striped hand warmers and I think I'm going to frog them.  Not sure what the problem is, maybe too many color changes, but I just don't like them.  The thumb gussets are wonky and the color change looks odd because I was knitting them on dpn's and the tension is bad.  Maybe should have made the color change in the middle of a needle instead of between them.  Erg.

So, I was going to do a Japanese pattern next simply called "Empire Waist Pullover."  It's a tunic with several different lace patterns going on-- very pretty.  So, I was excited about doing this and ordered yarn.  I got Rowan Pure Wool DK in Mimosa which is a nice butterscotch-y color.  Luckily, it was inexpensive as I got it on clearance as that particular colorway has been discontinued.  Bought the needles I needed and sat down to start.  The pattern begins with the waist band then you pick up stitches to do the bodice, then again for the bottom.  I had to start over maybe five times on that stupid waist band.  I kept doing left slanting decreases as right slanting and when I finally got about three or so pattern repeats in there and could see how it was going to look, I didn't even like it.  And what did I not like about it?  It looked too much like crochet.  Have I become one of those people?  When I only knew how to crochet, it irritated me to no end when I would hear knitters get an attitude about it, like it was an inferior craft.  Now, I want to avoid it myself unless I can work with fingering weight yarn-- because it won't be so bulky and granny-looking.  (Self-loathing.  Yes)

So, I abandoned the Japanese tunic but now I have 11 balls of Rowan.  I did a random pattern search for pretty much anything knit with dk weight that I can use up a good amount of what I have.  Might as well.  One of the top results was a pattern called "Puffed Sleeve Feminine Cardigan."  It's from "Fitted Knits"-- the same book the two tone shrug pattern came from.  Well, why not?  I've only done the one Stefanie Japel pattern, but it was so good I did it twice.  The really nice thing about ravelry is when you look at all the projects users have done from a particular pattern, you can usually get a feel for how good the pattern is.  They either look universally good or bad.  This one looks pretty good.  So, puffy sleeves it is.  I've done the collar and almost half of the yoke so far and I'm pleased. I think I want more Stefanie Japel books.