Friday, 24 May 2013

Another Actual FO!

Photo of a cowl

Pattern: Honey Cowl by Madelinetosh
Yarn: Art by Colinette in Mango Lassi
Project page: Mango Lassi

A victory for the SSKUP! I have successfully taken one poor, neglected skein and knitted it up into rather a lovely FO. The yarn is very variegated with shades of pink, green, yellow and grey so I was looking for something with slipped stitches to really show them off. I discounted the honey cowl at first because I prefer cowls that you can wrap around twice and I didn't have enough yardage for the large version, but then I spotted Acernaea's version while looking for projects made out of the same yarn; she had mods for an inbetween size so I used those and voila; a cowl that loops twice around the neck!

Photo of a cowl

This was very easy and was mostly knitted while I re-watched season 7 of the West Wing. I barely needed to look at my needles so I could spend more time watching Candidate Santos instead, a real shame that...

I shall leave you with a close up of pretty pretty stitches:

Close up of a cowl

Monday, 13 May 2013

The Single Skein Knit Up Project

Or the SSKUP for short (pronounced es-kup, obvs.) The SSKUP was born on the day that I first bought my yarn cupboard and gleefully started organising it. Previously I'd had two rather large boxes, a small box and a pile of Loop bags that held the skeins that no longer fitted into the large or small boxes. The cupboard was going to hold everything, the stash would be contained and organised, my needles, project bags, notions, fiber, books etc would all go in there too so I'd have one central store of crafty goodness. I was very excited in the way that librarians so often are at the prospect of organising things.
And then it didn't fit.
I was slightly appalled when I realised. I covered it well; took some of the books out, gave up on the idea of keeping my fiber and buttons in there (why yes, I have rather a lot of buttons, what else did you expect?) squashed some skeins together and wedged the door shut, then resolved to do something about it. Now, I love my stash and I don't feel at all guilty for having it - it's my money and I'll spend it on whenever I like! But I would prefer it if it fitted in the damn cupboard and didn't start to take over the entire flat.
When I first started knitting I - like all the knitters that came before me and all those that will come after me - went a little bit mad and bought a lot of single skeins because they were pretty or because they were there and then never really decided what to do with them. They went into the stash and slipped to the bottom and were slowly forgotten as they became buried by newer, shinier yarn. So I decided that a good way to reduce the stash as well as make myself feel better about it would be to start unearthing those single skeins, picking a pattern and knitting them up, quickly and without thinking too much about it. Here are some of the projects that have already resulted from the SSKUP:
Photo of knitted objects; 2 hats, 1 pair of mittens and 1 childs dress
Photo taking skills; I does not haz them
(Clockwise from top left; Quinalt in Posh Yarn Daisy Sock, Lotus Hat in Malabrigo Twist, Fiona's Top in Cherry Tree Hill Supersock Select, Darla in Malabrigo Silky Merino)
I'm pretty pleased with how they all turned out and have got some nice gifts out of them (except for the mittens, they are mine and essential at #tinylibrary!) So, after finishing my big red shawl and running out of yarn for the Malabrigo hat I was knitting, I decided it was SSKUP time. I went stash diving and here are the next two candidates:
2 skeins of yarn
Yaaaaaaaaaaaarn
Top: Colinette Art in Mango Lassi
Bottom: Knitting Goddess hand dyed aran in semi solid plum
These were stashed in 2010 and I've been a bit stuck with both; the purple is 20% silk and 80% wool but feels quite stiff and the Colinette was bought before I realised that variegated yarns can be really hard to find patterns for! They're both aran weight and around 200 yards, therefore the options are hats, cowls or possibly mittens. I'm gong to start with the purple which will either become a Marigold Slouch or a Sitka Spruce. I'm still considering options for the Colinette; maybe mittens like X Mitts or a cowl like Bertrand Louis or Pedestrian Crossing? I do like the idea of having a rummage through the button stash...
I'll let you know what I decide, but if you're looking for a good method of stash reduction, a small manageable project or a way of using up those old, unloved skeins then I highly recommend adopting the SSKUP approach - it's definitely better than a yarn diet!

Saturday, 11 May 2013

An Actual FO!

Photo of large, red shawl
This was the best photo of about 20...
Pattern: Kind of Blue by Lauren Frehel (Rav link)
Yarn: 2 skeins Malabrigo Arroyo in Jupiter
Needles: 4mm (5.5mm to bind off, to be on the safe side)
Project page
I finished something, w00t! I did work on this while I was away but didn't actually finish it until the day after we got back. And it was the only thing I worked on, so all that extra yarn I carted halfway up the country was ultimately for nothing. But it was worth it for the peace of mind, so I don't care!
This is the first big shawl I've knitted for me and I love it! It went from 44"x24" when cast off to 60"x31" when blocked, so it's big enough to really wrap myself in. I foresee this getting a lot of wear at one of the libraries I work in which is always about 5 degrees colder than outside; this will be perfect for keeping off the chill from the air conditioning. It's also lovely to look at; the garter stitch portion really shows off the slight variagation of the yarn and moves seamlessly into the lace border which is just dramatic enough to draw the eye while not being remotely difficult to knit! I particularly like the eyelet border as well.
The pattern is easy to follow; it's both charted and written and very easy to read. I nearly made one snafu; the instructions say to knit the chart three times then "work rows 1 to 5" which is then followed by 5 rows of instructions for the bind off. I nearly went straight into the bind off before I realised that it meant to knit rows 1 to 5 of the chart again. Thankfully I studied the photos carefully and realised I was missing something because I wasn't on the wrong side. Phew! I hate unknitting looooooong rows. There's also instructions for a good stretchy bind off which I'll definitely use again.
As for the yarn; Arroyo may bring me back to my one true love, Malabrigo, after the short affair I've been having recently with Madeline Tosh. The colour way is beautiful, made up of shades of red, pink and brown and the yarn itself is soft, smooth and knotless and blocks like a dream. I do love a bit of MadTosh but Malabrigo is so much more affordable for a product that really is just as lovely. I'm sorry, Malabrigo, take me back!
So to recover from such a large project, I've moved onto a hat in Malabrigo Worsted, my ideal knitting project. I'll be back when I've finished that, but I leave you with another pretty shawl photo:
Close up of detail of shawl
It's the detail that matters
#love!

Friday, 3 May 2013

But I don't WANT to go home!


View of lake windermere
Lake Windermere
So, this is where I've been staying this week. Beautiful, right? That's the view of Lake Windermere from the top of Loughrigg Fell, which is opposite the flat we're staying in. In fact, I can just about see our flat on the left hand side of the photo. It's been a fabulous week, very relaxing with mostly good weather. Ambleside is a lovely place to stay in, if slightly short on affordable places to eat. I've bagged two Wainwrights (out of 214...), been to lots of nice museums and eaten rather a lot of fudge. Some of my favourite bits were...
  • The Pencil Museum in Keswick, it's a tiny place but interesting and fun and I had to stop myself spending a fortune on pencils in the shop afterwards!
  • Zefferelli's in Ambleside, an independent cinema and vegetarian restaurant, they do a double feature deal where you get a reserved cinema seat and a two course meal for £18.75 so we saw Iron Man 3 and ate lots of delicious vegetables
  • Climbing Wansfell Pike, lovely views from the top but more importantly we beat all the people who started at the same time as us AND overtook a bunch of other people, go us! (Competitive, me? Noooooo...)
  • All the Lakeland Arts Trust places; the Museum of Lakeland Life is really interesting with a good Arthur Ransome bit and lots of stuff about sheep, Blackwell House is a beautiful Arts and Crafts house (if really really crap to get to on foot) and Abbots Hall is a small but good art gallery with a great cafe.
  • ALL THE FUDGE!!!
And, I bought yarn! And we all know souvenir yarn doesn't count as stash, right? After visiting the Museum of Lakeland life and reading all about Lakeland wool industry (just so you know, Kendal's motto is Pannus mihi Panis which translates as Wool is my Bread) buying yarn felt appropriate so it was a good job I found a little LYS round the corner called William's Wools. It was mostly Rowan, Artesano and Noro but they had a small selection of locally hand dyed yarns and alpaca from Town End Alpacas, which is what I went for:
Yarn from Town End Alpacas
 Pretty, pretty alpaca yarn

That's 300 yards of fingering weight pure alpaca in Mushroom, which is undyed. I'm thinking of using it as the contrast colour in one of Kirsten Kapur's new patterns, Carthamus or Rivington Cowl, which obviously means I need to buy MORE yarn for it to contrast with, which I'm obviously very upset about. I think the Shilasdair 4 ply might work well with it, as its an alpaca blend, maybe in Fleece Cloud or Summer Loch or Thistle Bloom... Decisions, decisions.
So tomorrow we head home, and because I stupidly booked the week before the bank holiday weekend off, we're in for a really fun journey as they're digging the line up somewhere between Preston and Lancaster so we're going some mad route via Manchester. I should at least get a lot of knitting done, which is good as I really haven't gotten much done so far...
Anyway, let me leave you with an image you'll like, I bought this postcard in Kendal:
Image of sheep being driven through centre of Kendal
Postcard from Museum of Lakeland Life and Industry

See you back in London!