Archive for December, 2011

No matter how many projects I have on the needles, somehow it seems they all finish at once. I usually like to split things up in to smaller pieces, but just for today, here’s a monster post to get us (mostly) caught up.

Just before the holidays, I put the final touches on the lacy Falkland sweater:

I love the way the lace flows in the design, but when I tried it on, it looked a little too stretched for my taste.

The sweater does fit, but it’s a little tighter and a tiny bit shorter than I wanted. I’d figured out the sizing based on what I thought I could get from the yarn I had, and I came pretty close to using it up. I don’t think I could have squeezed another vertical lace panel in there if I’d tried, but that’s what it would need to fit me the way I wanted it to.

But I love the sweater, so I hemmed and hawed and tried to convince myself that I’d wear it anyway. We’ve been down this road before. I knit something, love it, am sure I’ll wear it, but there’s this one little thing about it that bugs me. Then I think of someone else that might wear it. And it becomes theirs. Even if I don’t give it to them, I’ll never wear it without thinking that it would be perfect for them. Once I’ve seriously considered giving something away, I never wear it again.

And so, the sweater went to my younger sister. She’s about three inches smaller than I am, which gives her just about the perfect fit. I was worried that she wouldn’t actually wear it (she’s at that tricky 14-year-old stage), but then it kept popping up all through our visit. I think she likes it.

I had planned on knitting another version of this sweater anyway, in a commercial yarn to test the pattern when I eventually finish writing it. I was thinking of using something from Blue Moon Fiber Arts or Briar Rose, but then I saw the perfect color in a yarn from Madeline Tosh while we were poking around in a local yarn shop at home.

The yarn is slightly lighter weight than I had planned, but the color is just what I was thinking, and there is enough of it. This is second (or possibly third) project in line on my knitting list for the new year.

Just as we were about to leave the yarn shop, I spied something that was instantly added to the cart.

I have been stalking the Alice Starmore books for years, online, in used book shops, and on library wait lists. I couldn’t bring myself to pay $400 for them, but a couple have just been re-released by Dover. I knew they were coming, but I hadn’t seen them in the wild yet. I don’t make many instant decisions when it comes to buying crafty things, but this one was absolutely clear. I’ve barely had time to open it, but I am really looking forward to exploring these pages very soon.

On the same day we took pictures of the lacy sweater, I managed to get a couple of Branden’s MacGyver sweater as well.

I am amazed at how warm woolen-spun shetland has turned out to be. I had always heard that a low-twist, woolen-spun yarn is warmer, and having knit this sweater I definitely have to agree that it’s true. I think the non-commercial roving had something to do with it, too. You just can’t get that much loft out of a commercially processed top.

My hand-combed Gulf Coast spun up lighter than anything else that I have done. I ended up with one skein for my friend, and another, smaller skein for Shelley (who doesn’t knit but raised the sheep). I can’t wait to spin the rest of this fleece, but there’s a lot of hand processing left to do before I get there. Another project to begin the new year.

And then, this morning, I finished weaving in ends and put the neckband on the Bright Lights sweater.

It still needs a steek and a zipper installed, but those need to wait until after it’s been blocked. I love the way the colors stayed in register the whole way through the knitting. I’m also pretty happy with the back accent stripe, though the upper sleeves are a tiny bit tight (which will block out), and so they pull the stripes and shoulder seam a little too far toward the upper arm in this photo.

Here again, I’m glad I didn’t add any extra ease on the sleeves, because this is all I had left at the end of the project.

I had hoped to cast on for my next project while we were home for Christmas, but the busyness of the holiday ensured that that didn’t happen.

This is Dream in Color Smooshy (with cashmere) in the color Velvet Port. It is destined to become a long-sleeve version of a vest that I knit just before we left Seattle, two and a half years ago now.

The new version will be my test piece for the first pattern that I’m writing up, and hoping to publish in the new year.

So that’s that. A bunch of finishing, and some new things coming. I’m excited about re-knitting the two lace sweaters, and I’m hoping that will fuel my push to get the patterns written up. The first one was mostly done, but then I decided to tweak the way I’m writing it and now am back almost to the beginning again. I think the new way will be better and clearer, and possibly even easier to write than the old way, so the changes are good, even if they do slightly delay my casting on. As always, there is much to learn.

And now, I’m going to go soak the Bright Lights sweater so that I can start learning all about steeks and zipper installation. Wish me luck!

Just a quick note between packing for our trip (tomorrow) and celebrating our anniversary (today) to say happy solstice to you all. I’m not a religious/spiritual type, but I love knowing that this is the darkest it’s going to get this winter, that it’s time to open our arms and welcome back the light. Spring is a long way off, but the corner is already partly turned. For all that it symbolizes, I hope you have a wonderful Solstice.

Yesterday, I suddenly realized that it has been a week since I touched my knitting. I sewed some buttons onto the lace sweater on Monday, but other than that I had done no work on knitted garments all week.

That’s partly because my fellowship is ending in a couple of weeks, and so suddenly everyone wants the impossible from me before I go. (No matter how much you plan, it seems this always happens. I’m trying to remind myself that the important things will get done, and the rest…well, the rest will get left for someone else.)

It’s also partly because I’ve been spinning this:

That’s the first of the greens for the fall colors sweater, which is getting ever closer to being ready to cast on. I’m loving the spinning, and the colors are great, but I needed it off my wheel so that I could do a little bit of last-minute Christmas spinning.

Those little clouds of fiber are some of my hand-processed Gulf Coast fleece, which is beautifully soft and fluffy. The bounce in that fiber is just amazing. These little bits of combed top are destined to become a skein of yarn for a very good friend and beginning knitter who was with me when I bought the fleeces. I’m also hoping to get enough for a small skein to send to Shelley, so that she can see the yarn that came from her sheep.

Here’s a sample, spun up in a light worsted weight:

I can’t wait to spin some for myself! Of course, there’s a lot of carding and combing before then, but I think that seeing this bounce might just be enough to get me going on that project again.

And then, Branden gave me an early anniversary gift on Friday. I’ve been working on making my yarn finer and finer in hopes of one day weaving with the yarn I spin, but I’ve been having a really hard time breaking past the fingering weight range on my wheel. I can get a heavy laceweight if I really work at it, but it’s a struggle to keep an even yarn. I’m sure that some part of that is just my skill as a spinner, but some of it is also because of the ratios on my wheel.

Branden solved the second problem by getting me a lace flyer. I’m not allowing myself to touch it until the Christmas spinning is done, but I did spin a few yards of singles, just to see how much of a difference it made.

Even on the “low twist” setting, I’m getting singles that are much, much finer and very consistent. I might just get to laceweight in the new year!

I don’t know about where you live, but it has suddenly turned to winter here. The last of the leaves have fallen from the trees, and the air is taking on that cheek-stinging quality of a winter chill. We’ve even gotten a snow flurry or two, certain proof that winter is on its way.

Before we say goodbye to fall entirely, though, I wanted to revisit some of the fall colors in my dyepots. I know I can never get enough of these colors, and judging from the comments section I’m guessing that most of you feel the same.

One of the fun things about dyeing more frequently is how much it changes the way I see color in the world. I’ll be driving along on my morning commute, and there’s a new colorway around every turn. When I look at art, I notice more about how light and shadow combine, and I’m constantly looking for the colors within a color (is that a blue-brown, or a pink-brown? Or maybe grey with a hint of green and a tinge of orange?).  What’s even more fun is that it seems to be rubbing off on you, too.

My friend Carolyn is off on a great antarctic adventure at the moment, but she sent me this photo from a trip to Alaska, asking if I could make it into a colorway.

Do you see all those colors in the brown? There’s green, and yellow, and especially red in there. There’s the grey-blue of the clouds, and then the grey of the mountains, and the deep gold of the autumn leaves at the foot of the photo.

When I first saw the image, I knew that I wanted to dye it as a gradient, with all of those colors stretching from one end of the fiber to the other so you could spin your way from the leaves all the way to the mountains and sky. I laid the fiber out for a two-ply yarn, and then began painting each section. The sky was a combination of pale green-blues and grey, almost too faint to see on the white of the fiber. Then came the blue-gray of the mountains, fading into brown overlaid with reds, orange and green. At the very end came a touch of gold, mixed with browns to keep it from being too yellow to wear. Each section overlaps slightly with the next, and I used the same dyes across the fiber to make sure that they’d end up in harmony. I also made sure to leave areas unsaturated with dye to capture the variation in light and dark in the texture of those hills.

I also dyed a dappled version, with all the colors mixed together.

Here, the reds bled into the greys in places, which brought out a little bit of unexpected pink, and the whole colorway leans a bit more toward the gold (note to self: yellow is a dominant color. A little goes a long way). Both colorways have a bit more blue in them than the original photo, because I mixed in a navy dye to make the greys. On my sample cards, that mixture gives a very rich slate blue; here it leans a bit more toward a denim color.

(Since Carolyn is in Antarctica and can’t really check email all the time, she got to pick her favorite before I published this post, so the long gradient fiber won’t be in the Etsy post.)

Next, I started on a a series of inspirations from the Twinset blog. (You two really do take good colorway photos. I could keep going for months, just stealing pictures from your blog.)

Back in October, Jan posted a picture of the early snowfall that hit D.C.

The one on the far left of the second row really caught my eye. All those bright reds and yellow-greens, laid against the black of the branches and the white of the newly fallen snow. When Jan first took this picture, I said that I didn’t think I’d be able to get wool white enough for the snow. But then I dyed the Whitecaps colorway with the new Falkland fiber, and thought again.

It didn’t come out absolutely white, because red dye always leaks on the first washing. I washed the heavily dyed sections first, and then rinsed the whole fiber together, so the bleeding was limited, and I did end up with some sections of pure snowy white.

Then, there were two photos from Ellen’s fiber retreat, also in October (must have been a good month). The first is one that I’m calling Fall Reflections:

Unlike the other fall colors I’ve dyed, this one is tempered by a lot of grey and even a touch of green (look at the water, just under the tree line). And then, of course, there are the fiery colors of the trees themselves.

Again, my grey leans a little blue, and I didn’t catch quite as much of the orange as I was hoping for, but it is in there. This fiber holds almost the whole rainbow, really.

Finally, I turned to the last image in the same post, a beautiful photo of steam rising off of the water.

The contrast in this one really fascinates me. There are the black, black shadows of the trees, and the pink-white of the mist over the pale blue surface of the water. I also see a little bit of brown in the mist, just at the edges where it mixes with the black.

Here, I almost need a touch more blue in that grey, but this has to be one of my all-time favorite colorways, if only because it goes so well with all the colors I love. Last time I posted about dyeing, we took a few paired photos as an experiment, and it instantly became my absolutely favorite part of taking fiber photos for the blog. It is so much fun to dig through a box of fiber and see what goes together! (As Branden patiently takes a hundred more photos…)

Rather than go through them one by one, I thought we’d try a composite image this time (click to enlarge):

1) Alaska Mountain (gradient version) and Misty Water

2) Misty Water and Sea Green (links go to the original post for the colorway – all of these colorways are also available on Etsy as of this posting, except for the Alaska Mountain gradient)

3) Misty Water and Fallow Fields

4) Fallow Fields and Alaska Mountain

5) Fallow Fields and Early Snowfall

6) Fallow Fields, Early Snowfall, and Fire Maple

7) Alaska Mountain and Storm Green

8 ) Alaska Mountain and Red Oaks

9) Fall Reflections and Fire Maple

10) Fall Reflections and Sea Green

11) Alaska Mountain (gradient) and Alaska Mountain

We’re always more careful to get good color on the individual fiber photos, so it’s good to go back to the original post if you want to see the exact colors of one of the fibers. Still, I like seeing the two colorways side by side like this, and it’s fun to figure out what different combinations will go well together. Each pairing highlights different aspects of the fiber; sometimes a particular color is the dominant one, and sometimes it almost disappears. By changing the partner colorway, you get an entirely different effect. Look at the Alaska mountain with Fallow Fields (#4) and with Red Oaks (#8), or even with Storm Green (#7). You’d get a completely different yarn from each one of those.

I’m sure these fall colors will be back again one of these days. For now, I’m really enjoying this last little burst of color before we give in to the winter grays.

I usually knit one piece, pullover sweaters. The kind that don’t need all kinds of little doo-dads to finish up. You cast off, weave in the ends, block (if I feel like being good), and bam! Instant sweater.

It just so happens that both of the projects currently on the needles are a little more complicated than this. Both are cardigan style, one is pieced. One needs a zipper, and the other needs buttons.

The lace sweater has been finished for a while now, except for that critical part where I go out and buy buttons. Here’s a terrible picture to give you an idea of where it stands:

Sorry for the backlighting; unfortunately it’s all or nothing with light lately, and I decided that I’d take what I could get.

This weekend, we finally made it out to look for buttons, in a marathon errands-running session on Saturday. I have a couple of options that I think will work, and now just need to sit down and sew them on, and attach the grosgrain ribbon button band reinforcement.

In our travels, I also picked up some of these:

I had never seen them before, but two people in my knitting/spinning circle have been using them lately, and they swear by them. They’re little plastic bobbins, and you can wrap a few yards of yarn inside to keep things tidy while doing intarsia. Unfortunately, this weekend was too late for them to be helpful on this project:

But now I have a set for next time I am inclined to work with lots of tangly ends. (All things considered, though, I found it very easy to work with the intarsia ends wound as small skeins. As long as I kept an eye on them, they were beautifully behaved.)

Here’s the back:

We also picked up a zipper for this one, and I’m looking forward to my first ever full-front steek and zipper install in the near future. I’ll probably finish the sleeves first, though.

I’m also realizing that I need to start planning my holiday travel knitting. The sweater came with me to Florida a couple of weekends ago while we visited Branden’s grandmother, and I can probably take along a sleeve or two when we go back to Massachusetts late next week. But I’m thinking I’ll need a couple of other projects on the needles, too. Our yarn shop mission on Saturday was also partly a yarn scouting tour for another project I have in mind, but I didn’t find quite what I was looking for. I know where to order it online, though, so I might get it in time to take with us.

Other than that, I think a stash toss is in order, to see what might be hanging around in there that just needs to be cast on next.

It’s been a bit quiet over here on the blog lately. I’ve been working away on projects (more on those soon, but I still need to take pictures), and I’ve been plotting and planning about new things to come for DesigKnit.

I find that fall and early winter are some of my most creative times. The rest of life gets a little less distracting as the weather gets colder and the dark draws in. The fading fall colors highlight the passage of time, and another year ticks by on my mental calendar (I think it’s probably all those years of school that make my new year begin sometime around September). And so, naturally, I begin to think of things to come.

It was around this time last year that I decided to try a little experiment that has turned into our dyeing adventures here on the blog. It’s been an interesting year; lots learned about shopping carts and shipping, and about finding the right balance for me between Etsy content and general blogging. It’s been really fun to have you all along with me, sending photo ideas and squealing with excitement when I get a color just right.

I’ve learned a lot about making the dyeing (and posting) process work for me, without becoming something that I dread “having” to get done, and I’ve realized that I really do want to do more of it. I also know (and have known from the beginning) that it’s not possible for a handful of dedicated blog readers to find a use for all the fiber I now want to dye, no matter how enthusiastic and supportive they may be. (And thanks for that support! This wouldn’t be nearly as much fun on my own.)

So, finding new eyes for my fiber is first on my list of things to do in this next year. I’ve been thinking of various ways to approach this, but the best option seems to be vending at a couple of local fiber shows. I’ve been tossing this idea around since sometime last summer, but now I’m moving toward making more concrete plans.

This past year I have paced my dyeing to match the shop; not getting too far ahead of the amount that things are selling. Now, it’s time to start building up more of an inventory, so I can start dyeing more and stashing it away in boxes for the summer. There will probably be a dyeing post every couple of weeks or so; not much more than there has been, but I may experiment with a wider range of colorways for each day rather than limiting myself to my standard four.

I’m excited about the freedom that this opens up, to dye what I feel like and trust that it will find a use and a home somewhere. There’s been a similar freedom in dyeing for the Etsy shop; I’m much more open to experimenting on 4 oz of fiber than on a sweaters’ worth of wool, and I can dye colors and combinations that I wouldn’t necessarily expect to want to wear, because they will be perfect for someone else (and often, unexpectedly, for me). Sometimes more variation seems like a really wonderful thing.

I’m also thinking about revisiting some patterns that I have nearly written and that really only need polishing up. This is a tricky one for me, because I spend all day being very precise, careful and exact at work. Coming home and thinking hard about being precise, careful and exact in knitting isn’t always high on my list. But my fellowship is finishing up in a few weeks, and I may have a few months before anything else comes along, so this seems like a good opportunity to pull some old projects together and finish them off. I count at least 6 designs in my notebook, ready and just waiting to be turned from a tangle of charts and scribbled instructions into something more useful.

Then there are the new designs that are still coming. So many ideas, just waiting their turn. I don’t think I’ll have any trouble keeping busy in the new year.

What about you? Are you thinking of new year projects yet, or is it all holiday knitting this time of year?