Tag Archives: Socks

high heeled black oxfords (shoes), plus some other stuff

I’ve made some new shoes!

These have had a bit of a journey in the making, with a gap of about five months in the middle of it when I did absolutely nothing to them!  Several things; feeling torn as to the colour I’d chosen, as well as a little overwhelmed with the thought of actually finishing them, when it was actually all pretty quick and simple and painless once I got over that…

So obviously, they’re black.  However! my original plan back in December of last year was to make some two-tone saddle shoes.  I cut out my pieces using the same beige upholstery suede that these shoes are made in, and dyed the pieces respectively caramel brown and “black”, though the latter turned out to be more of a deep charcoal really.

I thought the combo would be pretty cool… but once I’d formed them on the lasts and it came time to sole and add heels, I was starting to go off the saddle idea already.

I already suspected that what I really wanted was for some plain black heeled oxfords in my shoe collection… but it was summer at the time, too hot for winter shoes to be a tempting project anyway, and truthfully?   Christmas had exhausted me a bit and it just all seemed too hard, so I just chucked the half-made shoes into a drawer and basically didn’t touch them again for the next five months…

Fastforward to last week; winter has started to creep in with cold, probing tentacles, and with it the need for warm shoes.  I got the half-made saddles out of the drawer where they’d lain, idle and ignored, and re-assessed.  Carving the heels was the next step, that had been such a stumbling block to me, and really? it’s not that hard of a one.  I bought some wood from Bunnings, got Craig to help me set up the sander on the triton, and sanded myself some heels… hilariously to me, after all that procrastination it took about an hour, tops!  Soled my shoes, glued and nailed on the heels.

oh hey Clara!! and NO, lovely girl…. these are NOT for eating!

I painted the heels with a coat of black satin enamel paint.  I probably should have just painted the whole shoes themselves at this point too, but I still had that tiny shred of uncertainty that I might still want saddles …?  but nope.  Seeing the heels painted a beautiful pure black made the dyed suede look quite muddily unattractive, banishing all doubt.   I went right ahead and did a few more coats taking in the whole shoe, using the same black enamel paint.  Bunged in a foam insert, covered with the same chocolate brown suedette that I’d used to line the uppers, and FINALLY FINITO.

I’ve worn them four days straight already!  A coupla times they’ve got drenched in the pouring rain… in the past this would have filled me with horror but nowadays I have more confidence in the strength and durability, and importantly the waterproof-ness of my shoes! and of course they’ve held up beautifully.   Seriously, I’m totally chuffed! could not be any happier with them!!

Having said that, well of course theoretically I could actually be happier… they’re not perfect and I can certainly see little bits that I could have done better.  But with each and every pair of shoes I really do feel like I’m improving – to see my shoe-making journey, it’s all here under the tag “shoes” – and these ones are very satisfying to me.  They are exactly what I want to wear right now!

This is how I wore them for their maiden voyage… out to lunch on Friday with my friend J, and then later on to book club with a larger group of my friends… I felt pretty cool and chic!  No one asked me if I’d made my shoes! which means any one of three things; they look OK enough to pass for rtw (yay!) or SO bad that people are just too embarrassed to say anything (not-so yay).  The third and most likely option is that no one actually noticed them.  I’m ok with that option, to be honest  😉

Details:

Dress; V1351, floral chiffon, details here
Cardigan; the Miette, a free pattern by Andi Satterlund, all details here
Tights; my own pattern, details here, and my tutorial for making your own custom-fit tights pattern is here
Shoes… MADE BY ME!!!!!

SO, while I’m here and writing stuff… I’ve been making some other things lately too, that I haven’t got around to mentioning so far.

I discovered this pattern for little sockettes that you wear with ballerina flats; the Sytt & Prytt Florens Ballerina Socks, designed by Lena Lundvall.  I found this through a mention from someone doing me-made May on instagram, though for the life of me I cannot remember who it was.. so if that person is reading this then I’m sorry not to give credit!  Anyway, I looked up the Sytt & Prytt Etsy shop and bought the pattern.

 

 

This blue pair is made up exactly to the pattern; my toes are covered… JUST

It’s a super quick and extremely easy thing to make, though I altered the pattern somewhat to make them exactly what I wanted…  specifically, the socks as they are quite “skimpy”.  To be fair, I think this coverage is perfectly adequate if you’re wearing them with ballet flats, which is totally what they are designed for.  However, for me personally, I’m really so not a ballet flat person, and I wanted to wear them with my oxford shoes, that have higher sides and cover the top of my foot too, and so I wanted my sockettes to have more foot coverage too.

I wanted EXTRAAAA!!!

Adding on a good inch nearly all the way around and reducing the elastic length gave me this!  much better suited to the kind of shoes I wear.

my white oxford shoes, blogged here

I made nine pairs overall, including my trials runs, which I’m still going to wear, ‘cos it’s not like anyone can see the less-than wonderful ones in situ.  With the exception of the white ones, which is fresh fabric, the others are all made from old Tshirts.

Thanks for helping me with my pictures, Clara!! xxx

And finally… !

I made a toiletries bag for a friend for her birthday, using the dopp kit pattern from the Grainline Portside Travel set… I’ve made quite  a few of these, see my previous versions here.  The cool crackle print is cotton canvas hand painted in Zambia, I bought it at the Fabric Store in Melbourne during my holiday there with Mum and Cassie, and made a skirt for Cassie for Christmas.  This is the very last of it!

I lined it fully with plastic waterproof stuff from Spotlight, and made little zip pulls for fun, using beads and earring wires leftover from my jewellery making days.  I think it turned out pretty cute, and my friend professed herself very happy with it too  🙂

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cha-cha pink stooff

Hello!

Our recent holiday was a pretty multi-locationed one, covering a lot of ground and involving buses, trains, ferries, sea planes, also including a few long loooong waits in airports thanks to flights getting annoyingly delayed by fog, and two long looong ferry trips of a WHOLE day each.  And because I am the eternal optimist about Getting Stuff Done, even whilst away, I had tossed into my luggage some sock wool and needles, just in case.  And thank goodness I did ‘cos consequently I finished two new projects. As they say in Canada, O yaaa! #AirFistPunch

Item ONE! … or should that be items one and two?

A pair of sockeroonies… photographed against the majetic forests of Hanson Island in beautiful British Columbia, Canada…   I’m poking my feet outside the tent we camped in, on our absolutely wonderful canoeing trip…

Yarn; Morris Empire Merino 4ply in col 449, delightfully called Cha-Cha Pink; and the small bit of Sheen Green colour way is leftover from my hand warmers.  I used my go to sock pattern, from a 1960’s Patons pamphlet that I’ve inherited from my grandmother.

also here in the stunningly beautiful houseboat we stayed in, on the Khutzamateen River.  I think I’d juuuust finished them here and popped them on for a photo opp immediately!

Item TWO! or should that be… items three and four?!

A pair of adorbs little hand warmers…  photographed against the majestic back alleyways of Vancouver in beautiful British Columbia, Canada.  Pose is thanks to a grapefruit mimosa and the influence of a group of hilarious Vancouver ladies with whom I spent an awesomely fun few hours… thanks so much to MelanieSueSveta, Barbara and Louisa for a fabulous morning!

from left: Sue, some random tourist, Louisa, Barbara, Sveta, and Melanie  and yes, those ARE indeed the aforementioned grapefruit mimosas, ahem…

this pic and the one below both courtesy of Melanie… thanks so much Melanie!!

me with my loupe sister, Melanie… we’re both wearing our magnifying glass “loupes” made by Melanie’s talented husband Osamu Kobayashi… I’m proud to say I was Osamu’s very first customer!  I wear my loupe every day and it’s absolutely brilliant for reading menus, labels in Spotlight or in the supermarket when I can’t be bothered hauling my spectacles out of my bag….BRILLIANT, I SAY

and I’m wearing my cha cha pink glovelets, natch! Right here they’re hot off the needles by about maybe an hour, tops !

Anyway… the deets, I’d taken two balls of the cha-cha pink and of course there was plenty of leftovers, and I thought there’s sure to be enough to do something… And fortunately there was plenty!

I just made them up as I went along, pretty simple; and I’ve written a little pattern which I am happy to share.  Please feel free to use, I just ask as always that if you do then please do credit me and link back to me here  🙂

Simple hand warmers:

Note: one size, fits most ladies

Materials:

approx  120m (135 yd) of 4ply (fingering weight) yarn… I used Morris Empire superwash merino 4ply wool  … this pattern uses only about two thirds of a 50g ball

set of 4-5 double pointed needles 2.5mm (US 1) or whatever gives the correct tension as stated below.

Tension (gauge): 31 st and 45 rows to 10cm

Cast on 60 st and distribute stitches evenly onto 3 needles, continue working in the round…
K2 P2, repeat for 10 rows/rounds
Switch to K stitch,continue knitting for a further 22 rows/rounds, turn
sl 1, P59 st… turn.
sl 1, K59 turn
Rep previous 2 rows for a following 20 rows, turn
sl 1, K59 then join work again in the round and continue knitting for a further 12 rows/rounds
Commence K2 P2 rib, continue for 35 rows/rounds.
Cast off loosely

Repeat second hand warmer the same way.

And I’m wearing them today too… wanna see how I “styled” them?  I know what you’re thinking… those things don’t go with her outfit AT ALL.  No, they don’t.  They really really don’t.  But I’m wearing them anyway, hehe. #SayNoToGoodTaste #GoodTasteIsEvil

Details, above:

Blouse; Sudley by Megan Nielsen patterns, in mustard silk crepe, details here
Skirt; Axel by Megan Nielsen paterns, in terracotta pleather, details here
Cardigan; Miette by Andi Satterlund, in Debbie Bliss Donegal luxury tweed in colour Gold, details here
Leggings; self-drafted, in over dyed cotton jersey, details here
Socks (not seen): knitted by me, details here
Boots; Roberto del Carlo, from Zomp shoes

Details, at top:

Tee; self-drafted in striped jersey knit
Skirt; Jade by Paprika patterns, in charcoal cotton jersey
Tights; self-drafted, in black stretch, details here
Shoes; Merrell

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Thoughts on a slow wardrobe…

This morning, I noticed a hole in one of my socks.  Now, your average non-sock-knitter wouldn’t give it a second thought, just toss them out, toddle off and spend a handful of bucks on a bunch of new ones.  But I fetched my darning mushroom…
And as usual when I do anything sock-related, I pondered life, the universe and everything…
 and about “things”.  One really appreciates “things” one has made oneself, don’t you think?  There is that first-hand experience of the time and effort that goes into making some thing.   You come to treasure that thing.  Ergo, you take care of it, and you fix it up if something happens to it.  So, that thing lives on to be useful again.

My handmade socks have really drilled this basic and yet game-changing notion in to me more than any other of my handmade things.  
I think I am less wasteful and more mindful of consumption, thanks to the hours I have spent knitting my own socks.  
Because for sure, knitting one’s own socks is a very humbling endeavour.  Particularly when one walks past those racks of socks in the department stores, $10 for 3 pairs.

I am often asked “why bother?” with a handmade wardrobe.  Why bother spending hours knitting your own socks when it takes so looooong and they are so cheap and easy to buy?  
Well, I don’t know…. but I do take good care of my socks now

(my tutorial on darning is here)

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Some foot fabulousness; hand-knit by Mum

My mother gave me a special gift for my birthday recently, two works of art designed to adorn the foot-al region of my person: a pair of her famous Turkish socks.  Well, famous in our own family, anyway… traditionally she has only made these for the males in the family so I feel pretty honoured and privileged to be the first female recipient of a pair; cough cough, did I hear gender privilege anyone?  Ahem… 
Putting my Mum’s creations here on the ol’ blog is always a humbling experience, as it just highlights to the max the vast superiority of her handiwork and creativity to my own.  I usually turn out socks of the very basic kind, true I choose yummy colours that I love but there is no difficulty level in that, and my socks themselves are pretty utilitarian in style.  When I lay eyes on Mum’s work I feel dead boring in my own output.  sigh
The pattern, as in decoratively, of these socks is created in the fair isle knitting method, that is carrying the unused colour loosely at the back of the work and bringing it forward when it is needed, and the pattern, as in construction-wise, of these socks is the Turkish method of knitting socks.  That is, starting from the toe and knitting up the foot to end at the top “hole” that you stick your foot in.  This method is the opposite from my usual preferred way of sock knitting, the English method, starting at the top and finishing at the toe.   Knitting socks in the Turkish method of course has the huge advantage which is that you can knit contentedly away, making each sock exactly the same length until you have used up your available wool… and not run the risk of running out of wool halfway down the foot section, a terrifying possibility with the English method.
But I digress; I know from experience that knitting one’s own socks is a passion reserved for just the initiated few; so instead of me dwelling on the finer points of sock manufacture, please instead admire Mum’s work above…
On a side note; modelling socks, definitely my favourite.  You may not be surprised that I am kinda low on my modelling mojo.  However socks… well!  No need to worry about a bad hair day, weird facial expressions and who knows (or cares) what hideousness I am actually wearing elsewhere on my person?  My feet are looking beautiful, so yay!

Socks; handknit by my mother using 8 ply yarns

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Fabulous stuff made by Mum and Dad…

My Mum and Dad are enormously creative and talented.  They have made heaps and heaps of beautiful things…a visit to their house reveals one lovely work after another.  I took some pictures of just a few during our last visit…
a sofa table made by Dad, using wood he milled himself from a fallen tree on their property

a pile of colourful socks, knitted by Mum

A banksia seed-pod vase, drilled by Dad

A pair of colourful “leftover” socks, knitted by Mum

Candlesticks, made by Dad from materials scavenged from the tip…

A pair of intricately patterned socks, knitted by Mum

I am so lucky to have such amazing parents.  Thank you Mum and Dad for your never-ending inspiration!

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Scarlet Twist socks

So, having got over my aversion to taking my own photo… ta da!  I’m back, but who knows what hideousness and violations against the fashion world are being committed, just off-camera, hmm?  We’ll never know… actually, I am quite stylishly clad today, but you’ll just have to take my word for it.  Because the purpose of this post is to reveal my new, and possibly last for a while, sockies.  Last, you may ask?  am I sick of knitting socks? well, no, I still have enthusiasm for sock-knitting and I still have some sock wool left.  But I think I have quite enough socks now :), even Craig is helping himself to my sock drawer occasionally, and I am thinking of making other things from my remaining sock wool… just exactly what is to be revealed sometime in the future…
Do you like my new companion? (Sienna is taking a break from modelling too…)  I have included pussycats in my sock pictures before, here, and here, and once a sort-of animal got in on the act here, but this is a first for this green-eyed diva…  she is very fluffy and very placid, and has just been treated to a good vigorous brush, so was in the mood for sitting happily and plumply, if briefly, at my feet; that beautiful glossy grey coat setting off my socks to perfection.

Details:
Socks; knitted in Morris Empire Superwash Merino 4 ply in Scarlet Twist (col 453) with Beluga (col 430) heels and toes, based on the pattern for Ladies Sockettes in Patons Knitting Book C11, a circa 1960’s publication

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Bluestone socks, and a new pet

Normally if one of my children brought home yet another new pet I would gently but firmly manoeuvre said pet back to where it came from.  Our house already passes for a menagerie.  However our new house guest is quite welcome, as he is economical on food, undemanding as far as expensive veterinary visits and vaccinations go, and will not add wear and tear to the garden and furniture.
I don’t know what this little guy’s name is, or whether he even has been given one yet.  He just turned up on our sideboard one day.  Unknown origins or parentage notwithstanding, he is already creeping into my affections with his gentle quizzical little face and sweet nature, not to mention the cheerful colour of his low maintenance coat.
Above, he is asking quietly and politely if we can go walkies now.
Below I am complying with his request.  Isn’t he sweet?
In other new things, I have knitted some new socks… but I concede that that is small bickies compared to a new pet.

Socks; adapted from the pattern for Ladies Sockettes, from Patons Knitting Book C11, a 1960’s publication, using Morris Empire Superwash Merino 4 ply in Bluestone (col 408) and with Beluga (col 430) heels and toes.

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Deep Scarlet socks

A pair of sockies hasn’t been seen here on the blog for a while, although actually I finished these right at the beginning of March, and then got mired down in the me-made March maelstrom and sort of forgot about them… I know, how could one forget abut twenty hours of knitting, hmmm?  Definitely signs of old age creeping in…
These are knitted using some more of the Morris sock yarn Sam bought for me in Melbourne when he was there on his volleyball tour.  I only have about three balls of this type of yarn left.
The weather is cooling off slightly, yay!  enough that my feet were OK with being encased in socks for a photoshoot.  Hehe, our weather girl announced cheerily last night that as we’re expecting a high of only 24C (75F) we should all dress warmly for today, which made us laugh.  Of course this is not really a cold day at all, but compared to the summer we’ve just had it does feel a bit on the freezing side, hilariously.  Given that only two days ago we had 35C (95F).  And joy, last night it rained, the first rain we’ve had in 67 days.  I was pretty excited to put on a cardigan this morning.  Oh, cardigans, how much I love thee, and have missed thee… and I thoroughly enjoyed walking the dog in the rain this morning.  Truly, no kidding.  Just a little bit of rain has brought a freshness to the air, an environmental sigh of relief if you will.  You can almost hear the gardens cheering.  Even Sienna got excited and sprung along with an extra zing in her step.

Details:
Socks; knitted in Morris Empire Superwash Merino 4ply in Deep Scarlet (col 412) with Beluga (col 430) heels and toes, based on the pattern for Ladies Sockettes in Patons Knitting Book C11, a circa 1960’s publication

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