Tag Archives: Knitted

Mum. A blog hop. And a thank you.

First things first; I thought I’d open on a note both lovely and interesting, my mother wearing a creation made by her.  Mum knitted her top, the Jo Sharp sideways ribbed top using Jo Sharp Soho Summer DK Cotton in col. Pennant.  The whole top is knitted, or actually I should say ribbed? in one piece.  You cast on one sleeve end, rib the whole thing sideways all the way along to the end of the opposite sleeve.  An interesting and effective design idea!  Thank you so much Mum, for letting me share your gorgeous creation here.

Next; I have been invited by Yoshimi and Sara to join in the blog-writing blog hop.  Thank you very much to Yoshimi and Sara!

1. Why do you write?
I have no idea! since I’m not very good at it.  I got middling marks for writing at school.  In spite of that I still enjoy writing, just quietly and for myself.  I even wrote a novel once.  Don’t worry, the world will never ever be subjected to that particular load of nonsense!  It was a detective/murder mystery.  A pretty bad one.
I started keeping a blog to document all my handmade things, when I realised at one point that I had sewn/knitted/whatever, tonnes of things that had been made, loved, worn with pride until they wore out and then got tossed, things that lived in my memory alone, never photographed.  I felt a bit sad about that.  I must have talked about it with my sister-in-law because she mentioned that she planned to give me a photo album for a birthday present, in which I could keep a visual record of my handmade things with a short description.  She was searching for a suitable one, and in the meantime I commenced taking photos of the handmade things I still had.  I can’t remember what happened next, I think she couldn’t find a good album, then I discovered a few daily outfit fashion blogs which I really enjoyed and decided to start something similar about my sewing and how it related to my personal style.  It was just a quiet and playful thing for me, like a diary, and for ages I barely knew any other sewing blogs existed!  I wrote about many silly trivial things that amused me at the time.  Discovering and joining Wardrobe Refashion was a huge turning point.  I signed up for three months, then six months, then For Life.  That big BIG pledge to never buy ready to wear clothes, ever again.  Hehe, I made that pledge so carefree-ly and lightly and it’s taken me a few years to realise how huge it was!  Obviously I then became a lot more serious and intentional in my sewing.
Lately my writing mojo has dropped off a bit.  My sewing mojo and knitting mojo is going as strong as ever but I am struggling to write posts.  It’s silly, because I can write quite freely and easily if I know no one is going to read it.  Sometimes I ask my husband and he says to just not write anything if I don’t want, and just have the pictures.  I’ve got to admit, it’s tempting.
2. How is your blog different to others of the same genre
I think my blog is quite plain and ordinary, and I am perfectly comfortable with its plainness.  It has nothing that makes it stand out at all.  However maybe it is also unique, in the same sense that everyone’s blog is a unique expression of their own particular self?  Stating the obvious, there. 
I don’t know.  I do my own thing and don’t really follow the pack.  
Ok, I thought of something!  Parentheses are almost non-existent in my blog.  Because excessive and unnecessary use of parentheses is a secret pet hate.
O I know.  Lame.
3. What are you working on right now
Usually I am pretty disciplined about only working on one thing at a time, in an organised manner, finishing and dutifully cleaning up before allowing myself to start on the next thing.  Currently I happen to be working on two things, but one is knitting, one is sewing so that’s kind of OK in my mind.  I pick up the knitting and churn out a couple rows in spare moments, whereas the sewing project is a bit more intensive and requires Proper Undivided Attention, ahem.
OK, so.  The knitting project, that is very different and interesting, in my opinion, a patchwork design that I happened upon while knitting the boys’ Icelandic jumpers, fell in love, and I just had to get some wool and start on it.  Even though summer is just around the corner.  Hehe.  Totally illogical!
In sewing, well I have recently finished a sundress to be photographed and blogged about very very soon, and am now partway through drafting and muslining a rather challenging and very interesting dress.   When/if I finish it, then I Shall Reveal.  *said with maximum drama*  Of course it may well be so disastrous that I decide to not waste real fabric on it… in which case I will move onto any one of the next few things on my mental list, a pretty summer blouse, this year’s bathers, a big pfouffy skirt, or an Issey Miyake ensemble.
4. What is your writing process
Oh dear.   Writing process?  I just sit down and start, usually very awkwardly in some clumsy clunky opening sentence that later gets deleted in self-disgust.  I write a bit more, then a bit more, then loosen up and manage to be slightly less clunky, freely associate, get on a bit of a writing roll.  Writing a tonne of silly nonsense that all gets deleted later.  Actually, upon reflection, I will usually delete and/or re-write maybe 80% of what I have written before hitting “publish”.
I proofread for spelling and grammar like a maniac and often will obsessively go back to correct things like a typo, an errant comma or an extra space; after publishing.  
Primarily, I really try to be factual, informative and fair, and for my blog to be something that I would like to read.

Now I am passing the blog hop baton onto Sue, of fadanista, and to Megan of create with wild abandon, two other sewing bloggers also from Perth.  I’m looking forward to reading their answers to the same questions!

Oh, one more thing!  I just want to say, a big Thank You So Much to whoever nominated me for Burda’s 50 best blogs list, and also to everyone who voted for me.  
Thank you thank you so very much!  I was totally thrilled to be notified that my blog is on the list.  I’m so happy that people like it, and am so very honoured to have received your votes of confidence!  🙂

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an Icelandic hoodie for Tim

*another week of furious knitting later*  and I’ve made an Icelandic hoodie for Tim, my birthday present to him.   He chose the Grein design on p108 of Knitting with Icelandic Wool, the knitting book I bought while in Iceland, but wanted it to be a zip-up hoodie.  
I guess I should have seen that coming;  a hoodie is far more his thing, and since obviously you want them to want to wear it, I complied.  It’s not hard to convert the jumper to a hoodie, but it’s a little bit more work and takes about one extra ball.  The hoodie is still knitted in one piece like Sam’s jumper with two short grafted seams underneath each armhole.  However, instead of knitting in the round I just split the front in two, continued knitting on for the hood, and afterwards neatened up the opening front edges with one row of single crochet. Finally I sewed in an open ended zip (Spotlight) by machine.  Which means yes, unlike Sam’s jumper which was mostly a blissfully heavenly affair of mindless non-stop knitting, in this case I had to turn around and do purl rows as well.  Not quite as quick and mindless as knitting in the round, something I find to be an enjoyably zen-like meditative exercise.  I had to actually think about it, harrumph…
The book doesn’t have any adult sized hoodies that I could use the pattern for – and can I just say, what were they thinking?! – so in consultation with Craig’s Icelandic hoodie that we bought over there I knitted Tim’s the following way:

After finishing the yoke pattern and before knitting the neck hole ribbing, you have 72 st on the needle and wrong side facing…
change to 4.5mm needle, P one row, inc 1 st in centre of row (73 st)
(K1 P1) repeat until last st, K1
(P1 K1) repeat until last st, P1
rep last 2 rows once (4 rows of ribbing)
change to 6mm needle;
(P1 K1) twice, P1, K to last 5 st, (P1 K1) twice, P1
(P1 K1) twice, P1, P to last 5 st, (P1 K1) twice, P1
rep last 2 rows until work measures 35cm from last rib row
divide row in half, fold halves wrong sides together, and graft stitches together.
This gives you a plain stocking stitch hood with a wide moss stitch border.

I used Alafoss Lopi, in the colours, from left:
indigo (9959), light indigo (9958), light denim heather (0008), ecru heather (9972) and black heather (0005).   

Actually, using that ecru heather, a leftover from Sam’s jumper, was a punt.  The white-ish parts of this jumper were supposed to be ash heather, a pale grey,  however I ended up having to use most of the that ball for Sam’s jumper.  And since I ended up with more of the ecru heather leftover than I did of the ash heather, I used that, hoping that there might be enough to do the pattern in this jumper.  The gods were smiling upon me, because there was, just enough!
Funny barely amusing story; the night I was getting close to the end of the ecru heather strip I stayed up til, like 12.30 or 1am or something crazy like that, knitting like a mad thing, because I just could not stand the suspense; would I have enough of the ecru heather, or would I not??  I HAD to know!!
The relief when I did was, er, palpable.
Yeah, my life is filled with gripping moments like that  😉
And now, well!    I only finished the hoodie today and I’m actually dying to leap straight into a new knitting project, like, right now! start a rather special new design that I came across recently.
But my wrists are aching.   🙁
Maybe a little break is in order .

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an Icelandic jumper for Sam

This is my first project from Knitting with Icelandic Wool, a knitting book I bought as a souvenir from Iceland on our recent trip away.  The jumper is my birthday present to Sam  and it’s um, only two months late… yikes! but here’s the thing… while we were travelling in Iceland and I was admiring all the gorgeous Icelandic jumpers on everyone there, I hit upon the bright idea of knitting one for each of my boys for their birthdays.  And so it seemed only fair to let them choose the style and the colours that they wanted.  And I thought at first that I would use Australian merino.  I’m very loyal to Australian wool, you see  🙂 so I took quite a bit of time searching for something of a suitable gauge here but sadly I actually couldn’t find anything.  So decided I would go completely authentically Icelandic and use Alafoss Lopi.  And so of course I had to order the wool from Iceland, and then wait for it to arrive and then knit the thing… so two months late is not too bad all these things considered!  I’ve been knitting like an absolute maniac since the wool arrived! I started it last Wednesday, and finished it exactly a week later, which is not too bad if I say so myself!  and fortunately Sam doesn’t mind that it’s a bit late.  We still have a few months of cold weather ahead so he can wear it for a bit longer this year.  And there’s next year too.  I’m hoping it will be lifelong classic for him 🙂
 Sam chose the Alafoss jumper on p38 of the book, incidentally also featured at top left on the cover of the book, above.  According to the blurb the colour pattern on the yoke is the first ever pattern published by the Alafoss wool factory in the 1960’s.  

The colours I used are, from left:  ash heather (0054), ecru heather (9972), grey heather (0057), dark grey heather (0058) and black heather (0005).  I changed the design just a little bit on the strip second from the top but otherwise stuck exactly to the pattern.  The design is knitted in the fair isle style, and completely in the round with no joining seams, aside from two short grafting rows under the arms.  Grafted seams really do look so much nicer than sewn seams imo, so I think that’s a nice feature.  

I do have one, well I have to say it’s a fairly major gripe wrt the pattern; for Sam’s size S the pattern stipulated 5 balls of the main colour.  Well, it’s extremely fortunate that I had bought another, 6th ball of this colour for Tim’s jumper, since you actually need well into that ball to make this size. And it’s not even a close call, I used about half of that sixth ball.  Now I’m sweating a bit, planning the re-jig of the colours in Tim’s design so I can actually finish his jumper with the remaining wool that I have.  I’ll have to incorporate some of the leftovers from Sam’s jumper otherwise I simply will not have enough!   Not happy, Jan… 
As a last resort, yes, I could order more wool, but the postage from Iceland was so astronomical I’m really hoping I can successfully work something out with what I’ve got.
Anyhow, that’s the fault of the pattern; I am glad I did use the Alafoss Lopi!  Icelandic wool is renowned for being thick and lofty and at the same time very lightweight.  This jumper looks as thick as and it is amazingly warm, but surprisingly it is as light as a cloud! 

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Gold Miette

I have knitted a cardigan.  And weeeeeeee! this is the final thing in my eleven piece swap.   Finished… hurrah!
The Miette is designed by Andi Satterlund, and is available as a free download here.  
Such a great little pattern.  Clearly I love it a bunch since this is my second version in less than six months  *blush*  and I used the exact same wool too; six balls of Debbie Bliss Donegal Luxury Tweed Aran.  This time in colour Gold, 360036.   
Actually, the truth is that when I went in to buy the wool for my first Hunter/Forest green version I dithered and agonised for ages between the two colours.   Like, for so long it was embarrassing.  I loved them both.  Finally I chose the green, obviously; but the golden mustard kept haunting my thoughts.  I couldn’t stop thinking about it.  And I knew that it hated being left behind. It really wanted to come home with me too.  Really, it did.
In my original swap plans I had proposed not a cardi but a jacket; in a really nice mustard, open weave fabric which was a Christmas gift from Tim.  But the closer I came to Cutting The Fabric, the more doubt crept insidiously in.  The fabric is really very nice.  I was bound to ruin it.   And thinking about it; I really prefer wearing knitted cardigans to jackets, most of the time.  I remembered the Gold wool.  The colour is identical, and perfect.  Aha!  Swift justification for an acquisition!!  I raced joyfully, but hastily, to the wool store.  What if it had sold out?  But there it was, patiently waiting for me.  Clearly, it was meant to be.  Thus; I made a cardigan instead of a jacket.
And I still have my lovely mustard fabric, which I think would rather be a skirt.  Some day when I get up the courage to take the scissors to it.  🙂

Details:
Cardigan: the Miette, in Debbie Bliss Donegal Luxury Tweed Aran col. 360036 Gold)
Top: the loose drapey top from Drape Drape, in rayon/linen knit, details here
Skirt; Vogue 1170 in ivory leatherette, details here and my review of this pattern here
Shoes; Bronx, from Zomp shoes

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Hayward, in Noro Ayatori

Hello!  In further knitting news I have also just finished a comfy new jumper recently.   The pattern is the Hayward, by Julie Hoover, and the yarn is Noro Ayatori; a wool/silk mix, in colour 19; a beautiful variegated collection of raspberry pink, grass green, warm pinky/ivory, mint green and hot chilli pink.  The yarn was a birthday gift to me from the lovely Yoshimi; thank you so much Yoshimi!  

When I was trying to decide what pattern would be worthy of this eye-catching yarn, I remembered an elegant Hayward Yoshimi had knitted for herself and I have to admit I seriously wanted to copy  🙂  I enjoyed wearing my new jumper for the first time on our recent day out in Tokyo together.
And actually Yoshimi also wore her own Hayward that day too!

 

I think this is a very chic style; I like the loose and wide boxiness, the wide unstructured boatneck and the curling up lower edge and neckline.  It’s soooo supremely comfortable!
I knitted mine pretty much to the pattern, the only change I made was to the neckline: I kept all the top stitches live without casting off, and once I had sewn the front back and sleeve pieces together; knitted in the round around the neckline using all live stitches, for 4 rows before casting off loosely.  I did this mostly because I’m lazy and loathe picking up stitches, but really it makes more sense to do it this way since, well c’mon it is so much easier and as well makes for a much smoother seamless look at the neckline.  My jumper is size 48″ (34-36″ bust) and I found it necessary to have eight balls of the Ayatori to complete the jumper with stripe matching at the sides and to have the sleeves identical to each other.
I had already started knitting this last year so unfortunately I cannot include it in my SWAP wardrobe; but it’s going to go very well with all my planned olives and ivories  🙂

Details:
Jumper; the Hayward in Noro Ayatori yarn,col 19, the pattern is available here
Beige high-necked Tshirt (under); Metalicus
Jeans; Burda 7863,white cotton denim, details here and my review of this pattern here
Ski gloves; had for years, can’t remember where they’re from
Snow boots; I bought these from Big KMart in the US, 13 yrs ago!  while we were living there  😀  We come across snow so rarely I expect these will last me forever!
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Sheen green hand-warmers

Obviously I’m not in Australia here….  😀  we’ve been visiting Japan, and have thoroughly enjoyed seeing my friend Yoshimi again.  Thank you Yoshimi, it was so lovely to spend time with you and to meet your gorgeous family too.  It was lots of fun!
Sorry for my silly photos here. Snow is still such a huge novelty to me, you see.  I can’t stop marvelling at it.  It seems like such amazing and magical stuff! and maybe it puts me in a kinda loopy mood  😉  I never even saw snow until I was in my late 20’s, and first put on a pair of skis at the age of 36.  Meaning, I’ll never be anything more than a really slow and cautious skiier, but I still love it!  My quads are killing me, but!!
Now for the point of this post: hand-warmers.  Bright ones!  Highlighter hand-warmers!  These are brand new, fresh off the 2mm bamboo dpn’s.   I lost my ultramarine blue arm-warmers last year, I’ve searched and searched and searched, in vain (massive sad-face).  No time for moping but; I needed some more, pronto!  These were cast off in the nick of time to be pressed into immediate service….  🙂  
They are basic tubes knitted in the round with a gap for my thumbs, using Morris and Sons 4ply merino wool.  The colourway, Sheen (col419)  is kind of a whoa! in-your-face colour, like a hi-vis construction worker vest.  In my present surroundings though, I’m considering that to be a plus.  If I get stuck and incapacitated in a snowdrift I can just stick my arm up, and the arm-warmers will be like a beacon for the rescue crew.  In-built safety feature!

Ahem; and now, a silly little haiku…

Neon hand-warmers
on tatami mat.  Empty,
Momentarily.

Hmmm, okaaaay then….  Poetry has never been my forte 😉

Details:
Hand-warmers; knitted by me
Beanie; knitted by me, details here
Thermal top; Kathmandu, neckwarmer; Kaos (both old items I’ve had for years)
Ski pants and boots; hired

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Audrey in Unst, in Blue

I am finishing all of my winter knitting projects just in the nick of time for them all to be packed away.  Woot!  This is pretty typical for me.  I think  I really should plan my wardrobe far more efficiently and be more seasonally aware and prepared!
I was struck by something Roobeedoo wrote recently; that since a knitting project takes so much longer than a sewing project and, as well, lasts for so much longer in your wardrobe, the sensible self-tailored individual plans future sewing projects around a current knitting project; not concurrently.  So sensible!  An edict; the singular wisdom of which I had not appreciated before then…   
Thy knitting projects are the key to planning thy wardrobe, y’all!
I bought this lovely wool during my afternoon out in Paris with Donna of Nid de Tissus, so it brings back happy memories to me of our fun chatty lunch and fabric/wool shopping excursion together.  A wearable souvenir!  It is from Renaissance Dyeing;  4-ply poll dorset wool hand-dyed with natural plant dyes in France, colour Canigou.  Terrified of not getting enough I bought four skeins so obviously Murphy’s Law decreed that I had overestimated how much I would need… doh!  I can never get that bit right!  The cardigan used just over two skeins, so at some point I am going to order some more and make something else using my almost two whole leftover skeins.  I do already have ideas, hehehe  🙂  The full range can be viewed and ordered here.

The pattern is Audrey in Unst, designed by Gudrun Johnston; available here.  I’ve long admired Roobeedoo’s leaf green version that she has worn during me-made May and had decided that at some point I would have to make my own.  The shape is nearly identical to my recently finished Miette! but the chunkiness is the difference between the two.  The Miette is in a thick aran weight yarn, whilst the Audrey in Unst is in a light, fingering weight yarn.  So this is a light little cardigan with much finer stitching tension, and subsequently took a lot longer to knit!  I started this at the beginning of the year  (blush) and only just bought the shell buttons and stitched them on a few days ago.

 The neckline is finished off with an i-cord stitch.  This is the first time I have tried this technique and I think it’s quite a nice, neat and tidy finish and a refreshing change from the usual rib.

 The cardigan is knitted bottom up, and is, like the Miette, designed to be knitted in one piece with no stitching pieces together.  WIN!  Well, you are supposed to stitch the shoulder seams together but I elected to graft the stitches together, like I do with the toes of my socks.  This gives a very nice seam; neat and flat and quite unobtrusive.  I can do a step-by-step if anyone hasn’t heard of and is interested in this technique?

The pattern has a built-in faux side seam, which is an interesting feature.  Essentially it is just a purl stitch every knit row, and vice versa.  The shaping is discreetly alongside the faux side seam.

 The sleeves are knitted by picking up the stitches and knitting short rows with wrapping and turning to form the sleeve cap.  LOVE this feature and I think it makes for a really nice attractive finish; far smoother and sits flatter than a stitched in sleeve would be.

Are there any negatives?  Well you get started; and 36 long long rows of ribbing later, all that blasted purling through the back of the loop had just about killed me.  Seriously HATED this bit. And I’m curious, does purling/knitting through the back of the loop really make a significant difference to the rib?  and if it does then is it really an improvement on the regular sort?  That’s not a rhetorical question btw, I would like to know.

Details:
Cardigan; Audrey-in-Unst in Renaissance Dyeing;  4-ply poll dorset, colour Canigou
Skirt; Vogue 1170 lined, blue corduroy later dyed brown, details here and my review of this pattern here
Tshirt (under); self-drafted, white cotton jersey, details here
Sandals; c/o Misano

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A Hunter Miette

Hello!  I’ve knitted the Miette cardigan.  This is a free downloadable pattern by Andi Satterlund
This design first caught my eye when I saw Carmela Biscuit‘s utterly perfect LBC (little black cardigan) during me-made May.  So perfect!  Everyone needs a cardi like this one, I thought.  I mentally filed the name away to check it out sometime… and when the Handmakers Factory announced a Miette knit-along, I discovered it was not only cute, but a fabulously free! pattern!

This is a gorgeous little design, subtle lacework around all borders but with plenty of stocking stitch so you can knit happily in front of the telly and not miss anything.  I really like how it is knitted top-down and all-in-one so that you can try it on as you go to check for fit.  Plus you can keep knitting to add length, using up excess wool should you so desire.   I did so desire, and added an extra two pattern repeats  ‘cos the original is a tad on the tiny side. As in cropped-tiny, not tight-tiny.  More like a bolero than a cardigan really.
Knitting all-in-one-piece also means that once you’ve finished knitting there is not even one single seam to be sewn up.  This is Smart knitting; a new-ish concept for me knitting-pattern-wise but one that I am absolutely head-over-heels in love with already.  Let’s face it; sewing up the pieces is a bit of a pain and everyone hates that bit, right?  Really, a clever designer can easily dispense with all the seams in any knitting pattern, since your garment ends up as a one piece thing then logically there’s no reason why most designs cannot be knitted as one piece as you’re going along.
This should have been a super quick and easy knit, but I still managed to take forever.  It was just one of those projects where nothing seemed to go right.  Following is the truncated saga of my Miette…
Did tension square.  Tension just slightly off but hyper-enthusiastically got going anyway.  Three entire balls later had to admit it was going to be too small.  Unravelled in entirety.  Started again in larger size.  Ran out of wool.  Wool shop sold out.  Wool shop not ever getting it in again.  Searched a coupla real life shops.  Searched online.  Ordered from the UK.  Waiting on extra ball.  Missed end-date for knit-along.  Waiting.  Waiting.  More waiting.   Ball finally shows up, cardigan finished mere hours later, worn and photographed same day, bam!  
Phew, mission accomplished!!!  (air fist pump)

Note to self: SIX balls of the yarn are needed!!

Details:
Cardigan; Miette in Debbie Bliss Donegal Luxury Tweed Aran, in col.Hunter (360026) … SIX balls!
Skirt; my own design, stretchy layered lace, details here
Tshirt (under); self-drafted, white cotton jersey, details here

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