Oncoming Storm

Over the summer while I wasn't blogging I released a new Doctor inspired colorway, Oncoming Storm


It's a great stormy blue/black/grey color of a stormy night sky.

And while I'm talking about Doctor Who inspired yarn I have to share this shawl with you all





This is The Doctor Shawl, made from the new Stephen West pattern Earth & Sky.  It's called that because it's made with Gallifrey, Screwdriver, and Oncoming Storm.  It never even occurred to me to put those colors together but they look great!  Awesome job Jeff!

In other news, I can't seem to stop making Hexapuffs

A Tale of Two Sweaters

Earlier this year, around the same time, I started working on 2 sweaters.

The first was a handspun Tappan Zee



















I'd wanted to make this sweater since I first saw it (which was before anyone else because it was in the same issue of Knitty as Summit and I got a peek at it when I was proofing my own pattern).  I got the fiber (a merino silk blend) almost immediately after at a fiber festival, but it took me a while to actually get it spun.

The second sweater was Molly's VERY yellow Shalom cardigan, which I turned in to a hoodie and knit at a different gauge than the original.




























































It wasn't until I started working on these 2 patterns that I realized something

















Yeah that's right, they are pretty much the same sweater.  One is sport weight with lace diamonds, and one is super bulky with twisted rib, but they're both top down, short sleeved yoke sweaters with concentric rings of increases and garter stitch edges.

Same. damn. sweater.

It's ok, I love mine and Molly loves hers so it's all good.  


SCHOOL!

I have a lot to catch up on, but school started on Wednesday



  





3rd, 6th, and 8th grade (how did THAT happen???).  Molly mistakenly took her bedtime medicine (melatonin and some vitamins) instead of her morning medicine the first day, so she was a complete zombie in the morning.  The next 2 days have been better. 

I've spent the past 2 days cleaning out and off my desk and organizing files.  Look for more regular (weekly) blog posts from me from now on. 

Badmittens

A few months ago a man named Jack contacted the Indianapolis Knitting Guild looking for someone to knit him some mittens.

Well usually people who want something knitted run away when you tell them how much it costs, but the email he sent mentioned that they used to have a sheep farm and he had yarn from his sheep.  It seemed like there was a better than average chance that he'd know what he was asking, so I met with him.

He brought me a couple pairs of these mittens that he and his wife had had knit from their wool 25(?) years ago. 

They were awesome.  Double thick, soft, and warm.  And you could definitely tell that they had been loved for 25 years.



So Jack gave me some of his really lovely yarn (millspun Finn blend), and we agreed on some terms and I sent about remaking his mittens.  He wanted to surprise his wife for Mother's Day and I finished them in the nick of time. 



If you'd like your own pair of double thick mittens, here's how I made them:

Yarn: about Aran weight.  I don't know the yardage used, however the finished mittens weighed 6.5 oz.

Gauge: 4.5 stitches per inch

Needles: I used size 8 DPNs but you could use magic loop or 2 circs.  Use needle size to get gauge.

Note: Since when these are finished the inside is entirely enclosed, you will want to weave in all ends as you go.  

Cast on 4 stitches.  Slide stitches to other end of needle (as you do with i-cord).

Round 1: KFB of every stitch, and split stitches onto 3 needles (2, 2, and 4) if using DPNs.

Round 2: KFB every stitch (16 sts)

Round 3: *K2, m1, repeat from * (24 sts)

Round 4 and remaining even rows: Knit every stitch

Round 5: *K3, m1, repeat from * (32 sts)


For larger mittens work an optional round 7: *K4, m1, repeat from * (40 sts)

Continue knitting every round until mitten measures 5 inches from tip (or desired length.  Take this opportunity to weave in the yarn from the fingertips. 

Thumb: Knit 7 stitches and place onto waste yarn.  Knit rest of round.  Cast on 7 stitches over thumb hole.  Continue knitting every round for an inch or 2 and then go back to work afterthought thumb.

Either use another set of needles or put main mitten stitches on waste yarn and use the same needles to knit the first thumb. Put thumb stitches on needles, and with new working yarn pick up and knit 11 more stitches around thumb hole.  (18sts)
*SSK, k5, k2tog, repeat from * (14 sts).


Knit every round until thumb measures about 2 inches or as long as desired.  K1, k2tog, k2, k2tog, repeat from * (8sts)
K2tog every stitch (4 sts).  Break yarn and pull through remaining stitches.

Weave in both ends from thumb before continuing on with mitten body. 

Knit every round on remaining stitches until mitten measures 18 inches.

Work second thumb hole in same manner as first (place 7 stitches on waste yarn and then cast on 7 stitches in the next round.  Knit even for an inch or 2, then work second thumb as first one.

Continue working down fingertips 3.5 inches from second thumb (or same length as palm on other side). Weave in ends from second thumb. 

If you worked the larger size start with *k3, k2tog, repeat from * for 1 round, and then knit 1 round. (32 sts)

Decrease round 1: *K2, k2tog, repeat from * (24 sts)

Round 2: Knit

Round 3: *K1, k2tog, repeat from * (16 sts)

Round 4: K2tog every stitch around. (8 sts)


Break yarn and run through remaining stitches.  Pull tight. 

It's kind of strange to weave in the last end from the outside, but you can kind of run it through a few places to make sure it won't unravel.

Push 1 hand inside the other hand.  Voila!  A double knit mitten.

Complete second mitten as first one.



This pattern is completely not tech edited or test knit, I just thought I'd share my notes.  If anyone finds a mistake please let me know!

These could really be modified quite easily to be worked with almost any yarn.  Keep working the increases until the hand is the size that you want, and adjust the number of thumb stitches accordingly.  When it's time to start the second hand, measure the distance from the thumb to the end of the increases on the first hand, and knit the same distance from the second thumb before starting the decreases.

I know it's free but this pattern is still Copyright Mandie Harrington.  You may knit as many pair as you'd like and sell the finished product if you can find someone willing to pay you for them, but please don't sell or give away copies of the pattern.

Stringtopia and other things

At the very last minute I ended up going to Stringtopia.  I haven't blogged it yet, mostly because I didn't bring my camera (it's a DSLR and I didn't want to have to worry about where it was all the time).  But also because I just didn't have the words for it.

Life has been really hard the past few months and I have had a hard time talking about it.  Rob is still not working a regular job.  He's been subbing for someone who is out on extended medical leave, for we don't know how long, without benefits and the agency takes a huge chunk of his income.  And I got a virus which turned in to pneumonia and camped out in my lungs for several months.  And the girls have been particularly challenging and hard to be around.  (We just figured out why, and that's the most I'm going to post about that on the internet, but you can probably figure it out.  Both of them.)  And some other stuff I won't bore you with, but there was/is a lot of it.

Plus I just had a 40th birthday which was hard.  And it may have been really the other stuff that was hard but I was channeling it all into birthday feelings, which is probably more accurate. 

So less than a week before Stringtopia while I was moping about it Sarah said I should try to go.  I really thought it was all sold out and I couldn't afford it anyway, but it turned out it wasn't, and then Janet said I could share her room because she's awesome like that (and also maybe because I made her socks- it's definitely good karma, anyway).

So just like that, I was going.  It was awesome and overwhelming, and I cried over lunch (but not really over lunch) and completely embarrassed myself.  I must have some kind of breakdown at all major fiber events, apparently. I met and ate meals with Sandi Wiseheart (yes That Sandi Wiseheart) which was so cool, and she turns out to be just as charming and awesome as she is online, and didn't freak out too much when I started to cry over lunch, and made let me wear her crown because it was my birthday. 

I won some pretty sweet door prizes, including this gorgeous merino silk bamboo from Miss Babbs
Also a cool pocket knife/scissors thing from Abby's husband, which I don't have a picture of, but it's cool.

And I bought one tiny Abby Batt
 
Which is YUMMY and totally my color.

I had really wanted to take Abby's class, but that class was sold out a long time ago, so instead I got to be in Jacey's class, which was totally just what I needed.
Jacey Boggs is a rather brilliant spinner and all around awesome.  I have never really been very interested in spinning "art" yarns, but she has maybe convinced me that textured yarns are pretty cool.

(Pictures of Jacey and Jacey's yarn stolen with permission from Melissa's blog.  She has many more good pictures of Stringtopia here and here.)
Here's what I ended up with at the end of class
Kind of a hot mess with a few good coils in it.  It's hard, harder than I thought it would be to get my hands to do all those new things at once.  But I went home and practiced all week and got this
 
Which is actually pretty good.

 
 
























I am pretty pleased with myself.  Coils!  I made them.