Archive for knitting

Henry Scarf I: Henry Will Be the Death of Me
October 16th, 2007 | Link

I started work on the Henry scarf pattern from the Fall 2007 issue of Knitty, which somehow ended up at the top of my knitting queue. My yarn choice is Elann Peruvian Baby Cashmere, which is an alpaca/merino/cashmere fingering-weight yarn. It’s been a while since I knitted with such fine yarn and the needles (2.75mm and 3.25mm) seem tiny compared to what I’m used to.

But last night I got the cast on done (227 stitches, which are almost doubled in the first row thanks to a yarn-over for every stitch), and I got the first three rows done on the smaller needles, which involves a bunch of slipping and yarn-overs… and I realized after about 440 stitches on the third row that I misread the pattern and had slipped stitches throughout the entire row instead of only slipping the first few stitches and then purling to the end. And after trying to back out a few stitches it seemed like it would be easier to rip everything out and start over. So there was more than two hours of work, gone. So frustrating!

The yarn is very soft but I’ve been having problems with it splitting, which I think is mostly due to the small needles and trying to pick up the yarn-over stitches to knit them. I’m hoping that once I get into the herringbone pattern that won’t happen any more.

Stitch Markers
October 14th, 2007 | Link

I’m still not sure whether I like my stitch markers to dangle, but darn it, they are a lot of fun to make. I used the Crafty Daisies instructions and whipped up the following over a couple of hours.

Stitch marker sets 1 and 2
More random stitch markers

I foresee all the knitters in my family getting stitch markers for Christmas.

Lessons learned:

  • It’s difficult to find cheap, plain toggle clasps online: most are either real silver or gold and therefore pricey, and most have more embellishment than I wanted for sliding onto a knitting needle with my yarn. I found that the Better Beads brand (available at Michael’s stores, six clasps for $1.50) were the plainest. (The beads in the first photograph were also from Michael’s and come from Blue Moon Beads.)
  • For head pins, it’s worth the extra money to use real silver head pins. I bought a bag with 50 silver-plated head pins from Michael’s and used those to make the markers with the black swirly beads, and got so frustrated trying to bend them into place that I almost gave up on the whole project. Today I was in the Castro (buying knitting needles at Imagiknit, my favorite knitting store) and picked up silver head pins from The Bead Store, and although they were 45 cents each (as opposed to five cents each), they bend more easily and the plating doesn’t flake all over everything. (The beads in the second picture are all from The Bead Store.)
  • Miniature tools are a mistake, especially when it comes to wire cutters. I bought a set at Michael’s that had 4″ jeweler’s pliers (with the rounded nose), wire cutters, and needle nose pliers. I couldn’t get enough torque on the wire cutters to cut unless I held them a certain way, and I couldn’t hold them properly while dealing with the stitch markers (they may also have simply been dull – they were cheap). My experience improved greatly when I replaced them with real, normal sized wire cutters.
  • You want to roll the loop of wire closed around the toggle clasp, not crimp it. Rolling rounds the loop, allowing the clasp to move inside it. Crimping tends to constrict the clasp and then the beads stand straight out.

Stitch and Bitch and Shimmer
October 3rd, 2007 | Link

Somehow I got the idea that it would be fun to start up a stitch and bitch group for my condo association, which has around 800 people. The Events Committee loved the idea, so I’m on starting November first. I think it will be fun, actually: we get to use the association’s club house, so I don’t have to go very far, and I’ll get to meet more of my neighbors. And I’ll have to find something to knit other than the fuzzy scarf I’ve been working on for the last year and a half.

My first project is going to be the Shimmer shrug from the Winter 2003 issue of Knitty. I ordered yarn from ElannPegasus, a cotton and rayon blend (in black, of course) – and wow, was it ever a good price at $2.48/ball. The order came to less than $25 ($17.36 for 7 balls of yarn, $6.10 for shipping). They’re a Canadian company. I wish I’d known about them when I lived there.

UPDATE: Less than 24 hours later, the yarn is already in the mail. Speedy! I only wish that Elann would send an email on shipping, rather than forcing me to sign into their web site to look at the order status – but I can live with that.

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About

My name is Shannon Hale. This blog is on indefinite hiatus, but it contains archives of the last 10 years of posts about bookbinding, knitting, sewing. and other random things in my life.

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