Jester

Here’s my other project, a Jester hat from Knit Baby Head & Toes. A dear friend is having her first baby so it’s time to whip out some baby items even though I’m about to start a sweater project.

jester_hat_swatch I chose Rowan Wool Cotton, which is so soft, and such a pleasure to knit. The first swatch was done on size 6 needles at 5.5 stitches per inch as specified in the pattern. However, I think this yarn might look better at 6 stitches per inch. Tonight I’ll do another swatch with a size five needle. If that gives me 6 stitches to an inch I’ll just knit the larger sized hat. Heck, I just found out that I didn’t quite follow the directions on the Shining Star hat. It should acutally have five points instead of six. I saw “six needles” and translated that into six points.

So, I think there’s only one thing wrong with this Jester hat. Should I really attach small bells? Seems like a choking hazard to me. After spending last weekend with a couple of babies I learned, “if it doesn’t fit in a toilet paper tube then it shouldn’t be given to small kids”. We were all laughing about how we survive childhood despite having tons of small Fisher Price Play People.

Another Seattle Store?

I’ve counted six yarn stores within the Seattle city limits and just spotted another one that will be opening downtown. Apparently the Belltown shop on First Avenue that recently housed the Italian pottery shop RiFlessi will be the new home of So Much Yarn. Wow, I’ll actually be able to buy yarn and supplies during my lunch break. Oh, it’s just too much.

Look what I picked up at the post office. Despite six yarn stores in the city I still order some yarn via mail.

gilet_lace_yarn Yep, it’s Bergereine yarn and the 2003/2004 instruction booklet from Club Direct Laine (the only place to get Bergere de France yarn in North America). This yarn is destin for Gilet Lace. I guess this will be the next sweater project since I haven’t yet found a men’s sweater to make for my husband. Oh yea, I also can’t forget to finish the Christmas stocking that I started last December. That will come out of hiding soon.

Pretty in Pink

Lily was so excited to finally get her bright pink socks this weekend.

Lily

Lily

We started our first lesson today.

I casted on the stitches and she worked a few knit rows while I sat behind her directing her hands. She came up with a unique way of holding the needles so that she could throw the yarn and not drop stitches. Hopefully grandma will keep up the lessons.

While I was away the postal service attempted to deliver a package from Club Direct Laine. It’s got to be my order of Bergereine yarn!

Possibilities

Spinning_wheel Here’s the new wheel

Oh, I love my local libraries. Even though I haven’t had time to spin I’ve been reading “Handspinning, Dyeing and Working With Merino and Superfine Wools” to get some tips on how to spin up all the merino that I got for Christmas. So this weekend I’ll be spend time getting more acquainted with my new toy and practice spinning merino.

I’ve been trying to decide whether I should get the super high-speed whorl to spin merino. From what I’ve been reading, it looks like I  have two options. Two get the right amount of twist I can either use the fast speed whorl that comes with the wheel and do more treadling or I can buy a smaller whorl and treadle less. I need exercise so I’ll pass on the smaller whorl for now.

Folded Picot Edge

Samina asked if I could show how I did the picot cuff on the Whisper Rib socks.

picot_done

The folded picot edge is actually quite simple. Start with a provisional crochet chain cast on, knit a few rows, knit a row of *yarn over, knit 2 together* stitches, knit several more rows and then fold the cuff in half and knit the cast on stitches together with the current row. Pictures are worth a thousand words so if you’re interested I took several pictures of the process.

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I didn’t come home with sheep but …

Here’s the completed Shining Star hat.

shining_start_finished.jpg

Occasionally I come across Elizabeth’s Fiber & Yarn Store while searching for spinning products and have thought that I should make a trip down there to check it out in person. I love the idea of visiting a fiber store located on a farm. Yesterday I finally made the trip. My husband joked that he didn’t want me to come home with any sheep.

It was a pleasant hour drive from Seattle to Buckley. The shop is located in a renovated green farmhouse next to a goat pasture. I was pleasantly surprise at how large the shop is. Her yarn selection includes a variety of Cascade Yarns, Manos del Uruguay and various other brands. Not a huge selection but respectable. She also carries a full range of knitting tools and books. I picked out several balls of Cascade Fixation to knit another Shining Star hat.

Besides yarn Elizabeth carries fiber and three brands of spinning wheels.  I mentioned to her that I was interested in spinning wheels and have my name on waiting list for a Lendrum wheel at a shop in Seattle. I also mentioned that I hadn’t tried a Schacht wheel because I was afraid that I would like it but didn’t want to spend that much on a wheel. Well she invited me to try one. I spent a couple hours chatting, spinning and watching the goats in the pasture. The wheel was just too hard to resist. It’s just so smooth, beautiful and conveniently ready to take home. So now I’m a proud owner of a Schacht spinning wheel and a Strauch stool.

I look forward to returning to Elizabeth’s shop. She has started a monthly spinning group that I hope to attend in the future.

Twinkle Twinkle

Here’s my version of the Shining Star hat. It might be hard to see but there’s a star on the crown with lines radiating from the sides.

shining_star_half.jpg

Kate mentions in the pattern that she uses 6 double point needles but I decided to use the “magic loop” since I only have one circular needle in the correct size. While the “magic loop” can be a little cumbersome to handle at times, I happy to make due with one needle.

The start was a little challenging. Although the pattern doesn’t mention that the hat is knit from the top, I quickly surmised this bit of info from the small number of cast on stitches. The biggest puzzle was how to cast on with so few stitches. It took a little thinking but I finally remembered the figure 8 cast on that I learned in a sock class with Sarah Hauschka. She mentioned that this cast on could also be used to start lace patterns from the center.

Once I figured out the cast on, my needles started flying and after a couple of hours I got half way through the pattern. Kate’s innovative approach to color coding the stitch counts is ingenious. This pattern comes in six sizes and each size is denoted by a different color to easily keep track of which size is being knit.

For more information on the figure 8 cast on check out The Magic Loop or Wendy’s article (with double point needles) in Knitty.

Yarn Auditions

I was going to continue working on the Christmas stocking that I started last year but got side tracked by this cute Shining Star hat pattern by Kate Gilbert.

shining_star.jpg

My small yarn stash didn’t have any soft worsted weight yarn so this weekend I made a trip to the yarn store and came back with a couple of skeins of dark blue Classic Elite Inca Alpaca. It seemed like the softest worsted weight yarn in the store but now that the swatch is finished it doesn’t seem soft enough for a tight fitting child’s hat.

Yesterday I looked through my stash again and found a lone ball of Classic Elite Lush that was originally auditioned for the Tea Tree sweater. This green three-ply yarn, made of 50% angora and 50% wool, is definitely soft enough but I’m disappointed with the quality. I keep finding spots where one out of the three strands is frayed. Gosh, this reinforces the fact that swatching is a good thing. I’m so glad that I decided against using this yarn for a sweater.

I was hoping to join a local knitting group this evening but I’ve been sniffling the past few days and don’t want to pass around my germs.

Lily, your socks are done!

Whisper Rib & Sheperd's Lace Socks As I write this entry I’m listening to French hip-hop rap accordion music  by Java. I acquired this unique CD after listening to an NPR music review while on the way home from a Java programming class a couple years ago. At that time, I appreciated the music as well as the coincidence between the group’s name and my choice of programming languages.

This morning I noticed that the coincidences continue.  The woman on the cover is holding knitting needles and yarn although she doesn’t appear to actually know how to knit. On the back cover there’s a picture of her grasping the needles in an “X” position and the yarn is draped around the needles in a tangled mess. Not to take this too seriously, but it’s funny how others perceive knitting as only a kitschy thing. I guess we can blame that on knitted toilet paper covers and the like.

Here are the completed socks. I’ll be giving them to Lily in a couple of weeks and hope to get better photos then.

Since I started from the cuff I had to close the toes using the Kitchener stitch. I can never remember how to do this from memory so I decided to capture pictures of the process.

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