Tag Archives: Knitted

black/white striped jumper

hurrah! I’ve just finished my knitted project for December, aka the last monthly knit for the year! and possibly the last made thing for the year, depends whether I can get my already cut-out thing done in the next day or so.  🙂

I have to admit I was quite excited about this one, but it was definitely the most time consuming of the knitted projects for the year, just because it’s the biggest that I started from scratch…  I had quite a diverse collection of random whites/creams and blacks/charcoal and decided to attempt the classic black and white stripes.  There was quite a lot more of the whites than black so the white stripes are a shade wider than the black ones.  Also the sleeve and bottom hem sections are in the white colour way too.  There is just a very tiny amount of leftovers, nothing to speak of really, which makes me pretty happy.

As previously I made the design up myself, it’s a topdown, knitted-in-one piece, just like my pink jumper from August previously, with a raglan sleeve increase.  The only difference really is that I knitted a rib finish for the edges so they don’t curl up, unlike the pink jumper which was stocking stitch throughout, thus the edges curl up on that one.

 

Speaking of the rib finish, I tried something new I’d seen on instagram, and I’m truly sorry I cannot for the life of me remember who it was who posted it so I can’t give credit for the idea.  Basically, they said that rib is often uneven in appearance and that’s due to the difference in the way the wool goes around the needle in knit and purl stitches.  They suggested the following; for knit stitches, knit through the back of the loop… and for purl stitches, wrap the wool clockwise around the needle – which is the opposite from normal.  Apparently it uses a little less wool, anyway I gave it a go and I think the rib does look a little bit neater than my usual efforts.

I’m really happy with this one!  the classic white/black stripes will be so easy to wear and I’m looking forward to giving it lots of outings in winter.  I was a little worried about the bobbly cream coloured wool – are the bobbles going to be too hideous?!  scary!  but in the end they’re not twee to an unbearable extent and I’m ok to just let them be.

In case you’re curious, is it too hot right now to be wearing it on the beach like this? and the answer is of course YES.  aah, the things I do…!  I actually wore just a light top, carrying the jumper in my beach bag and popped it on briefly for the picture, and it was still enough to make me question my life choices!

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lux trousers and some more random cushions

hello! I’ve made some more things lately…

Firstly, some new trousers.  I used a new pattern, the Fibremood Lux trousers.  Lately I’m more interested in trousers/jeans etc with a flat front and no pleats… and so the pattern piqued my interest immediately.  I also liked the sleek, menswear vibe that the top part gave, even if the patch pockets at the back and the flared legs didn’t quite fit that vibe.  Easily sorted!

I cut mine with straighter legs… partly to fit the pattern better on my fabric too! and decided to put single welt pockets on the back in place of the big patch pockets.  There are nice slanted front hip pockets as well, and I cut mine a good inch bigger all the way around, to better accomodate my own big flippers…

There’s not really much more to say about the pattern, it’s a kinda basic pattern really; classic and a bit plain but we all need patterns like this in our lives too, hmmm?  The belt loops at the centre are stitched in an “M” arrangement, a subtle detail that is different enough to draw the eye without being too much.

my cute little photobomber!

The fabric is a deep chocolate; cottony-sort of stuff; I’ve had it in my stash for so long I cannot even remember how or where I got it from, let alone the content of it.  It has a very crisp “snappy” hand to it and literally crackles while you walk.  It does crush a little, but irons beautifully, and putting in those welt pockets was a dream!  It is just slightly water resistant, and dries very quickly, so I think it might be a technical fabric of some kind.  Meaning I can wear them hiking if need be …  and that need will probably come up next year, at least once!

worn here with my Fibremood Georgie top and above with my yellow clogs, made using a kit from Leather Needle Thread.  Yes, a 100% memade outfit!

I also have my knitting project for the month to show… I made a couple more cushions.  I know, sorta boring? and a bit crazy too, if that makes sense.  But since I’m using otherwise discarded materials and spending nothing, making stuff like this makes me feel virtuous and thrifty and therefore very happy, so it’s all a good thing!  I needed a smaller project this month after a couple of months of knitting full jumpers/cardigans.  I’m hoping to go back a more substantial project for next month!

Both the bobbly yarns were given to me by my daughter-in-law Lainey, and the yellow yarn was leftover from some socks that I knitted a few years ago.  I also made cushion inserts to fit, using yellow satin and toy filling from my stash.  I remember buying the satin years ago as a lining for a coat, and ended up using a different fabric.  The yellow cushion inserts look really nice in my opinion, since you can see through the bobbly knit; and white would have looked too stark.

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green and blue scrappy jumper

 

hello!  I’ve knitted a new jumper, from that big inherited bag of scraps and leftovers that has stymied my dreams of a minimalist, streamlined stash for quite a long time now…  I’m trying to make a project a month and this little number is actually October’s project.

 

It’s a bit late, but of course a jumper is quite an involved project and I’ve knitted two jumpers in as many months now, phew.  I’m trying very hard to keep up the pace though!

Unlike my jumper from last month, I knitted this one bottom up, and have decided for once and for all that this is far less practical way of knitting something on the fly, when your purpose is to keep on knitting until the yarn is gone.  It’s hard to explain without doing it for yourself.. but essentially you have to cast on for the sleeves, and then pick up those stitches again to continue on the sleeves; which is kinda awkward.  Also, you have less idea about eking out your yarn to last until the neck edge.  And also, I’d started knitting in stocking stitch, and then became dissatisfied with the curly up nature of the lower edge, and had to pick up stitches again to knit a final ribbed edge to the bottom edge.  Of course, these are very minor concerns really; since any project in which you’re trying to eke out set-in-stone quantities of yarns and still end up with a garment that is actually wearable is ALWAYS going have some difficulties.

I didn’t take a picture of the “before” yarns, but actually this project changed shape and form several times during the making and new yarns got added in as I went along.  I’m pretty happy though… because there were about 11 balls/part balls of yarn in all to start with, and now they are all GONE from Le Stash.  I’m particularly pleased with the “turquoise” stripes on the sleeves, which are actually four strands of two different colours of an extremely fine mohair yarn that I had no idea what on earth I could use for anything at all.  The four of them held and knitted together as one turned out to be a reasonably good thickness to actually use.

As I was finishing it and thinking about how I was going to wear it, I was suddenly hit with the certainty that I absolutely needed a long sleeve, white hoodie tee to wear with it.  And since I sew, I was happily able to immediately acquire such a thing, with no need to go shopping.

I used our own Carolyn & Cassie Pinjarra pattern, the high necked top version.  I cut a size bigger than my usual for a loose fit, and cut a hoodie piece to fit the neckline length.  I also added a few inches of length to the bottom edge, again for that loose look.  It was a pretty easy hack of our own pattern!  so easy that I wondered for a little bit whether we should draft the hood up and add it to the pattern.

I’m wearing them both here; at top with my Closet Core Patterns Ginger jeans, and then with my long term favourite Closet Core Patterns Sasha trousers… I really need to make some new ones of this great pattern!

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purple cardigan

I’ve knitted a new cardigan!

This is cardigan A  from the book Japanese Knitting, by Michiyo, translated by Gayle Roehm.  The yarn is Jansen by Mod Vera, colour 80421344, it’s a yarn made for Spotlight which is where I bought it of course.  Not the most wonderful yarn in the world but I bought it anticipating the boredom of possible lockdowns during the early days of Covid.  It was a bit mohair-y,  by which I mean that it stuck to itself and had such a degree of fluffiness the needle had trouble getting between the stitches sometimes.

So yes, I said “new” above, but actually this is a project whose beginnings hark back to 4 long years ago…  I bought the yarn in a hurry and then began quite slowly.  I got the back and one front knitted then the cardigan lay undisturbed for a few years.   Yes, I’m so ashamed!  Anyway, progress was painfully sporadic before I picked it up again this month for May’s knitting project.  I haven’t forgotten my pledge to complete a project a month!  although it is going to be a more difficult task than I first thought.  If I hadn’t already knitted a fair chunk of this over the last few years it’s doubtful I would have been able to finish it.  As it was I was knitting like a maniac for the last week or so.

My new purple cardigan is thick and warm and I feel extremely cosy in it.  It has no closure so I’m going to have to pin it closed if I don’t want it hanging open, but that’s ok.  I like it open too.  I realised I forgot to take a photo of the back but it’s other plain, just stocking stitch.  All the interest is in those lovely, richly patterned sleeves.

I’m extremely happy to get this bulky project out of my knitting basket and into the wardrobe!  This was a good ten balls worth of wool, which is a substantial reduction of the stash.  It was a lot of work, but I’m so happy!!

I’m wearing it today with my Closet Core patterns Ginger jeans, and an old white tee that was an adaption of the Closet Core Nettie.

Aaaaand, apropos of nothing really, but I also have to confess that I’ve decided that I really do hate April’s project and am probably going to rework that one.  Hmmm.  How am I going to reduce the stash if I keep making such self-defeating decisions?!

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handprinted socks and hand warmers

I’ve knitted a new pair of socks and matching hand warmers for myself… aren’t they beautiful?

Yoshimi sent a handprinted sock blank to me for my birthday last year, and I got onto it straight away!  I’ve never seen or even heard of a sock blank before, and was quite interested to give it a go… the sock blank looked like this:

and was knitted, I presume by Yoshimi on her knitting machine, in two strands of sock wool held together.  And then painted.  I started at the bottom, unravelling carefully as I went and knitted my socks from the toe up, because I wanted the red/pink section to be the cuffs of the socks…

The pattern I used was my regular Patons pattern, that has been modified, and then I have also reverse engineered to be a toe-up pattern.  I think I will publish the latter one of these days.

You can’t tell just by looking, but the “foot” section of the socks got re-knitted about three times before I was completely satisfied.  The problem with knitting toe-up is that it is very difficult to gauge what the length of the foot is going to be, at the point where you have to start increasing for the heel, and I got it wrong a few times.  I figured I really wanted them to be perfect, so each time I realised it wasn’t going to be quite right, they got unravelled back to the start of the increases, yet again.

I also realised before too long that there was enough yarn in the blank that I thought? hoped? I was going to be able to get a pair of hand warmers out of them too… and there was!  I put the socks onto a length of waste yarn, without casting them off until I knew what was what… and started knitting the hand warmers from the other end, and finished in the red/pink section so they could have a red/pink cuff to match the socks nicely.   I also carefully measured how much I needed to cast off, so I could stop in just the right spot.  I’m proud to say there was a bare few 10cm leftover after I’d cast off!

I’m SO happy with how these turned out!  The hand-dyed yarn is such a pretty range of colours!  Thank you to my dear friend Yoshimi for such a lovely thoughtful gift!

 

 

 

 

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fluffy blue speckles

Oh hey!  I’ve just finished knitting a new jumper.  Perfectly fluffy and perfectly relaxed and slouchy, the most wonderfully comfortable lounge-able thing you can imagine.  This is the We Are Knitters sparkle raglan sweater, a design by Krysten Ritter, in the “sprinkle blue” colour way.  It comes as a kit with everything you need to make it all packaged up neatly  in a lovely brown paper bag.  It’s was the absolute hugest treat to come home and find this on my doorstep! a really delightful present to cheer myself up during a sorta low spell.

And it was truly such a joy to knit!  unply-ed, unspun “fleece type yarn and giant fat needles meant giant fat stitches too, so it knitted up super fast.  Quick gratification, for sure.

And how beautiful are these wooden needles?  They look so cool… so much prettier than my old metal ones.  I wondered if they’d be a tinier bit “stickier” than metals; and yes they were, but not so much as to be annoying or a problem.

The yarn is We Are Knitters “the meriwool”; absolutely gorgeously squishy stuff!!  100% merino, and supposedly treated with a superwash treatment to make it machine-washable.  This is awesome news because I already dropped a bit of chocolate on it… whoops!  I didn’t risk the machine was yet though, I’m too frightened!  I just gave it a spot hand-wash just very gently rubbing wool-wash into the chocolate-y smudge and the spot came out alright.  When I do get brave enough to toss my sweater in the machine I’ll come back and update on whether this worked out just fine or whether it was disastrous… but I’ll be allowing myself a few more wears first, just in case!

So; there was a slightly negative thing with my kit… when I checked out the requisite five balls for my size I noticed that one ball was from a different dyelot than the other four.  This one ball had noticeably less blue sparkles in it that the other four balls.  Not too much of a problem, I thought; I’ll just use that one divided evenly over the sleeves; as in, two rows of the majority dyelot, two rows of the odd-one-out, and repeat; for each sleeve.  This worked out ok, I think but as I was doing the front and back of the sweater I couldn’t help but notice that as well, one ball of the majority dyelot seemed to have considerably more blue in it that even its fellow three balls from the same dyelot.  You can see this at the top of the sweater in the lower picture, below.  It wasn’t obvious when you were looking at the balls together, but once I’d knitted practically the whole ball it did start to stand out a little bit.

above, I’m wearing it back to front compared to the below picture…  the pattern front and back are exactly the same as each other so you can wear it either way, which I really like btw!  I’ll probably wear it like the below picture because I prefer the way the sparkles appear on this side…

Oh, the other thing I’m posting about here is this skirt… this is the Sabrina skirt by Forget-me-not patterns that I made last year in a lovely orange-brown herringbone wool that Mum gave me once.  I recently added pockets to this, as posted here, and now I’m posting it again to point out that I’ve shortened it too.  This involved a fair amount of unpicking an intricately stitched walking vent, just so I could stitch up again closed. Lol, the things we do!  However, I’m much happier with it this length.  I really like my winter skirts to be on the shorter side, and realistically I’m never going to wear this thick woollen skirt in the warm weather!  The other, hidden bonus is that initially I stitched the burgundy-coloured lining hem in orange thread, a. because it’s the thread I used to sew the skirt in and I couldn’t be bothered changing it, and b. I didn’t have any matching burgundy thread at the time anyway.  Now I DO have some burgundy thread, so once I trimmed the lining I stitched the new hem in matching thread.  Yay! for tiny good things!

Look, with regards to the uneven-sparkle issue with my sweater; it’s fine really: I’m not actually bothered because I’m really very happy with it, and I even like that the body is a touch more blue than the sleeves and therefore has a slight visual point of difference.  Sometimes I’m a bit more obsessive about how an apparently random distribution of decorative elements can then appear not so random in the end result; a foible of the design process that a regular person probably wouldn’t even notice but which can at times send my weird brain into a frenzy of debate about whether I should unravel the whole thing and start again.  However, I shall NOT do this, because I knit for joy, not self-flagellation… and I am content to just enjoy my sweater for what it is.  Which is fluffy and warm and pretty and wonderful.

    

Details:

Sweater, the sparkle raglan sweater design by Krysten Ritter, in a kit from We Are Knitters
Rust skirt; the Sabrina pattern by Forget-me-not patterns in an old herringbone wool passed down by Mum? I think? shorted and with pockets added.  initially posted here
Turquoise skirt; adapted Burda 2/2015;109 denim from my NYC holiday, details here
Black tights, my own design, black stretch polyester, details here

yeah, unless it was pointed out, which I JUST DID of course! you can’t even really tell in real life.  I’ve really got to learn to not point these things out…

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baby Arthur

Our new baby grandson is here!!!  We’re so excited and thrilled with him, he’s such a beautiful baby boy, speaking in a totally non-biased way, of course!!   note: so clearly above photo is NOT of new baby grandson…  sorry!  But thanks to R2D2 for modelling the new beanie!!

I just had to make a few new things to welcome our family’s new bubby…

Items one and two are my favourites, obviously!   I knitted a little yoda beanie, based upon this terrific free pattern by Shinah Chang on her FuzzyCloudDesigns blog.  I used the pattern for the ears, but adapted my own for the beanie itself, my yarn was completely different and with a completely different gauge from the recommended.  I think from memory I cast on 60 stitches? and for the crown I did the cast off in a 6 segment fashion. In other words, 1 per 10 stitches in the first cast-off row.

The yarn is from the big bag I picked up off a neighbour’s verge recently.  I cannot believe someone was throwing away so much great yarn!

I made the matching onesie using my current favourite onesie pattern, Burda 9434.  I made it using a scrap of cream coloured cotton jersey, and white plastic snaps, that I bought along with their matching tool from Spotlight.  I don’t know why I haven’t used these before! because they really are far superior to the metal versions…  I’m only sad that the white plastic did not take up the dye, like AT ALL.  Oh yes, I obviously dyed the cream onesie to make it motley brown, like Yoda’s robes.  I used dark brown thread so it would match the final colour.

I think it turned out super cute!

The other onesie is pretty plain, and in retrospect rather boring, it’s saving grace is that it’s for size 3 months, and I’m pretty sure Tim and Kelly have basically hardly anything in this size yet.  So it will come in handy  🙂

omigosh, he’s really so beautiful!! thanks Tim for giving me permission to post this!!  I’ll never ever tire of watching it…  🙂

In complete random and unrelated-to-sewing, life stuff; Dolly Parton- yes, THE Dolly Parton! – set the following challenge meme and I had great fun fulfilling it on behalf of Mischka.  Behold, the cuteness!!

 

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box of socks; the November edition

I finished my November pair of socks; yay! And actually within the month of November too.. double yay!

So I bought this Utterly Divine Yarn #capitalswarranted in San Francisco during mine and Yoshimi’s holiday there… we visited this fantastic little yarn store called Imagiknit in the Castro area and of course I had to buy a souvenir!  Yoshimi did too, and finished hers super quick… see here!

This is actually my very first wearable souvenir of my US trip to be made up and realised, just a little more than a month after coming home but given my current workload I consider that to be not too bad, not too bad at all!

The yarn is Urth merino sock yarn, col 2002, made in Turkey; I did look out for some US made/grown yarn but simply could not walk away from this colourway once I’d spotted it.. isn’t it just the most glorious set of colours?!!  I couldn’t resist winding it up during my stopover in Auckland on the way home, hehehe; yes; it’s weird to wind yarn in public BUT; killing time, and doing something constructive towards my next pair of socks, well seems like a good idea to me!  Two ladies separately came up to me in the lounge and we had little chats about knitting and yarn, which was really nice!  Aaah, knitting…. the great equaliser.

contemplating winding in public

it’s kinda rare to get a view like this while you’re winding yarn

and… done!  I thought it fitted right in with the decor of the Air New Zealand business lounge

I so enjoyed knitting this up; as each little section of colour came up I drooled anew every single time.  That dusky plum-pink! that rich chocolate-y purple! that sharp acidic safety-vest yellow!!  SO GORGEOUS!!  REOUUUWW! – that’s me ripping into the ball of yarn with my teeth and gobbling it all up; it’s just that yummy….  metaphorically speaking, obviously!

It’s a wondrous thing to not tire of the yarn before finishing the socks; usually you do get just a wee bit over the colour before the end but in this case I was just as fully in love with it at the last grafting-off as I was when I first spotted it on the shelf.

le Box of Socks…

Now just one final question comes to mind … is it possible to squeeze that one last, 12th pair of socks into the box, mmm??  This remains to be seen… stay tuned!

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