Monday, February 23, 2009

Began Lace Ribbon Scarf and hate the needles

Lace Ribbon Scarf unblocked

Well, it was back to Dallas this last weekend for Squirt (9-11 year old) quarter finals in youth hockey. They won all their games and advance to the semi-finals in Dallas next weekend, meaning I will miss the Stitch-n-Puck at the Blazers game next Friday night. Wah!

The Sideways Spencer is now too large to tote around, so started the Lace Ribbon Scarf on the Kollage square circular needles in size 3. Yarn I'm using is J. Knits Creative Hand-Dyed Superwash Me Light yarn in Washington DC colorway (screaming coral). I had a lot of trouble with the needles, coaxing the YOs back onto the needle from the cable was a tedious process. The Kollage needles have a rough join, at least my pair does when compared to the Addi Turbos. I think I'll either knit this onto an Addi set, or go buy a cheap set of straight metal sock-length needles or I'll never finish this. And the square needle, while a nice idea, means you practically have to line up the flat sizes of the needles when you're trying to dig into a K2tog or SSK. So, these were a poor choice for lace knitting, as far as I'm concerned, but I'm still willing to give them a try on other projects, if the store will let me feel the join before I buy another pair of them (ha).

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

The Knitting Gods have farted in my general direction

The Knitting Gods have farted in my general direction (to paraphrase Monty Python). I just returned from our 4-day trip to St. Louis for a hockey tournament. Now, you'd think that being gone from home for 4 days and living in a hotel, where there's no office, no phones to answer, no cooking, no laundry to wash or dog hair to vacuum off the kitchen floor, would practically guarantee long stretches of knitting time. So I planned for this. (Okay schemed would be a better word.) I wouldn't want to (gasp!) run out of knitting, so not only did I take ALL the yarn for the Sideways Spencer, I convinced myself that I'd get so much done on the Spencer that it would no longer be portable (since it's knit side-to-side all in one piece) and that I really needed a Backup Project to take to the rink with me. So I managed to squeeze in a trip to Gourmet Yarn during my Leaving Town Errands Run and bought J. Knits Superwash me Light Sock Yarn in the Washington DC colorway (shrieking salmon pink) to knit the Lace Ribbon Scarf on Knitty by Veronik Avery. I mean, a scarf is the ultimate portable project, next to socks, right? I even moved the Lace Ribbon Scarf from the queue to cast-on status in Ravelry.

As usual, stuff always takes longer than I think it will. Incorporating the sleeve
increases into the lace pattern took some thought and fiddling. Then, the pattern tells you that you HAVE to end on row 48 of the pattern before casting on for the body and your sleeve will be 16". Liars! 18-1/2" is my sleeve length, which just means I'll have to shorten the ribbing on the cuff when it's added later, I'm not stopping now!

Of course, you Knitting Police out there (you know who you are) are smirking and nodding wisely, muttering "She didn't meet Row Gauge with that yarn she substituted." If I meet row gauge it's a complete freaking accident. Patterns are usually written with lengths in inches specified instead of number of rows worked for poor knitting wretches like me. I'm convinced that the only person who ever met stitch AND row gauge on any project was the proverbial "little old lady from Pasadena, who only drove the car on Sundays to church" because she spent the REST OF HER TIME trying to meet both stitch and row gauge. Enough said.

And no, I didn't even START the damn scarf and Ravelry won't let me move it back to the queue, so it sits there, mocking me. Dammit.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Center Cable V-neck Sweater Finished but too small





Well, I'm bummed. This is the Center Cable V-neck Sweater by Treva Durham in November 2008 - January 2009's Cast on magazine. The sweater is finished, I like it and think I would wear it, but the armholes are too small. I had noticed in the directions that the arm scye shaping was a little different than usual, but forged on ahead. Usually for the arm scye you bind off 3 or so stitches on each side, then another two or so stitches each side, and then start decreasing. This pattern you only bind off 3 st each side and then start decreasing, making a narrower arm scye that evidently my "healthy" armpits can't squeeze into. Oh well, onto the Sideways Spencer!

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Crazy Guilty Gleeful


Sale Sale! I've been a bad, bad girl. The Gourmet Yarn Co. had all their Berroco yarn on sale for 25% off! Isn't it beautiful? It's for the Sideways Spencer by Annie Modesitt. Now, of course, I'm ready to kick the poor Center Cable V-Neck Sweater to the curb and start the Spencer. How fickle am I. Luckily I knit the sleeves and back first, so at least I'm knitting the most enjoyable part of the sweater now, saved the best for last like dessert.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Ljod - finished and wearable!

















It's finished and it's actually wearable. A little snug around the middle, but still flattering. It's Ljod, from Elsebeth Lavold's Viking Knits books. I really wish it had a diagram, I had to really stretch the waist to make it fit, yet the shoulders fit great and the hem is actually so big it ruffles a little, which I think is intended.