12 posts tagged “blue”
The second is a last-minute Christmas gift for R, which I partly wove in front of him on Christmas Eve, figuring (correctly, it turns out) that he pays no attention to what I'm making unless I talk to him about it. There are stripes in the weft - plain dark grey Jaeger merino and black tweed YSL - but they're much less obvious in the flesh than in the photo.
Next up (pictures three and four) is the finally-finished Clessidra. I don't think I'll use the riverbed sockitecture again, because I don't like how it fits me, but I love the socks and am going to wear them to a crafting date tomorrow :-)
Picture five is R's blue socks with a reknitted heel after he wore a massive hole in one of them. I think I've still got some of the blue, but I'm not sure where, and he didn't mind them being mended in black.
The last pic is my new sock project, double knit socks which I'm knitting wrong side out, so I don't have to move the yarn backwards and forwards (near side is English-style purl, far side is continental-style knit, so one strand in each hand, which is fun). The downside of knitting them this way around is that I can't read my knitting on the wrong side, so whether I'm increasing or not on any given row is a bit random but because I'm knitting them at the same time they'll match anyway so it doesn't matter, and I'm planning a short-row heel so there's no other increases or decreases to keep track of. I wanted to use different yarn to make it easier to keep track of which stitch belongs to which sock, so these will end up non-matching stripes - once I've finished the toe I'll break the yarn and swap them over, and keep swapping them at random intervals throughout (must remember to break yarn to do this, so I don't end up knitting the two together).
At the last minute, I decided to go to the Knitting and Stitching Show with J, and to save myself from an unbridled orgy of stash enhancement, I set some rules. Fibre was my prime target, but only interesting hand-dyed fibre. It is of course possible to buy hand-dyed fibre on the internet, but it's hard to choose - so much depends on things which aren't obvious from a computer screen, so I much prefer to buy it in person. The only yarn I was allowing myself to buy was sock yarn, and even then it had to be either reduced or unavailable online.
Final acquisitions were 3.25mm Addi turbos for knitting Henry, and an Onya bag to replace my current spare bag which is wearing out. A good day!
So, in slightly bizarre order, my latest adventures in fibre:
- (top picture) this is my first attempt at carding, using all the stray bits of fibre from my other projects, which I've been collecting in a pretty wooden bowl on a shelf next to my desk. It needs more work still, but I'm intrigued by the possibilities in carding
- (second picture) this is the end result of the purple and mauve I've been spindle-spinning, although it's not this bright in real life (actually, take this comment as applying to all of these pictures. Apparently there was actually light in my library this morning when I took the pics). It's three ply, two of bright purple and one of mauve, 200m, and really soft. I plied it on the wheel, because spindle-plying is the dullest thing ever. Not completely sure what I'm doing with this, but then that's true of so much of my spinning!
- (third picture) bright purple singles left over from the above. Maybe around 130m; not sure. I might leave this as singles, or I might two-ply it with itself, or I might just wait and see what other inspiration strikes
- (fourth picture) Remember what I said above about these pictures being too bright? That's especially true here. This yarn isn't actually glowing. Honest. This is Valentine merino from Violet Green that Dyddgu traded me for the ex-Jaywalker sassy stripes. I still think I got the better part of the deal :-) This is my first real wheel-spun, and technically it's a bit of a mess - the singles are over-spun, and then I underplied it, so it's pretty hopeless. But the colours are gorgeous, and it feels beautifully soft and velvetty knitted up, so I don't care :-) Talking of knitting up, the knitting visible in the pic is my second attempt with this yarn. I started off thinking I'd make something in reversible entrelac, because the way the colours work seemed well suited to entrelac's small blocks, but I don't much like its onesidedness. Alternating squares of stocking and reverse stocking stitches seemed like a great idea, and I intend to try it again sometime with smooth yarn to see if it's inherently flawed, or if it was just let down by my uneven yarn. Anyway, I frogged it, and am now making an attempt on the Dashing fingerless gloves from Knitty. Which I like so far, although I've been neglecting them for other pursuits (such as the Shadow and Ghost socks, and the next picture...)
- (fifth picture) Peacock yarn-in-progress! This is my current project. I'm a bit over halfway through spinning the dark green (Petrol from Texere), and then I'll do the dark blue (Rich Royal, ditto) and the light blue (Cornflower, ditto ditto), and ply the lot together. And then I'll look at it and think about how pretty it is, and fail to decide what to knit with it but I Don't Care :-)
- (sixth picture) The rest of the Texere order that supplied the above. A big (400g) bag each of purple and dark red, and a bunch of small (50g) bags of other colours. When I made the order, I was thinking about doing some blending with the hand cards that came with the wheel, but having discovered that it's actually quite a lot of work, and that I like blending-by-plying, that might not actually happen. Still, should keep me in fibre for a while.
- (seventh picture) This is the sample for the Peacock. It's spindle- rather than wheel-spun, just because it's easier to do tiny quantities that way, and I was sampling for colour rather than for spin.
The second picture is the scrap scarf I mentioned below. It's been ongoing for ages, and probably will be for ages more, but it's shaping up nicely, and it means I only have to throw away leftover pieces that are too short to have two knots tied in them, which is good because I hate throwing away tiny bits of pretty (in the same vein, I'm keeping all my tiny wispy bits of spinning leftovers in a bowl next to my desk, with the thought of trying to spin them all together when I'm proficient enough to try it).
I have also knit a row or so of the goth space invaders (black and purple bmp), but I'm just not enjoying it. I need to persevere so I get the hang of the stranding, which will make it more fun, but at the moment it's just annoying and fiddly, and I'm channeling all of my perseverance and determination into trying to finish off my various academic assignments by the end of the semester, so the socks will have to wait.
(I wrote some of this yesterday, but Firefox crashed before I could post it, and I was too frustrated to write it all again.)
There's a slight problem with a couple of the stocking-stitch-stripes, where my fingers got confused with "kfb" and "ktbl", and increased some stitches when they were supposed to be only twisting them, so a couple of the stripes are rather bulbous, which you can see in the picture to the right - counting down from the top-right, the second and third stocking-stitch-stripes are swollen near the top. Probably no one but me (and now you!) will ever notice, though.
The plots and schemes I mentioned earlier are to do with the sock yarn that arrived with the clapotis yarn - blue and green Cascade Sassy Stripes, and Lorna's Laces Shepherd Sock in "Valentine" (still much pinker and tamer in real life, but in my head it's still the colour of blood oozing from a heart. Which probably makes me really gross, but never mind). I swatched the Cascade last night; I don't have the needle size the Jaywalker pattern calls for, just the one below and the one above, but even with the smaller one, my gauge is way off, and the number of cast-on stitches would produce an enormous tube, so I think I'll have to rejig the pattern. Fortunately, it comes in nice simple repeats, and the length of each zig-zag is also adjustable, so it should be really straightforward once I've re-swatched properly. Which I will probably put off, because I hate swatching in the round - either you have to cast on millions of stitches to make a tube wide enough to measure properly, or you leave loose yarn around the back, but then the three-or-four stitches on the edges are too loose to be any good at all, and it's really fiddly to manage. Sadly, my purl tension is different from my knit tension, so I do have to do circular swatches.
The Lorna's Laces is more troublesome. I knew when I bought the Cascade that it would be for Jaywalkers; all I knew about the Lorna's Laces is that it would be socks for me. I hadn't really got any idea what kind of socks. Now I have a plan to test out - more swatching! - to see if it works with the variegated yarn. The colours are fairly similar, so I think it might well work. The plan is (surprise, surprise!) cables. Frax suggested using my triskell cable on socks, and since the jumper of doom is destined for frogging, I still want something knitted with the thing, having designed it. So I'm going to swatch that, and see how it works. And because a whole sock will be two cable repeats around (give or take a few ribs), I might as well guess a number of stitches and actually cast on for a toe-up sock and see if it works. (Has to be toe-up because the pattern is charted bottom-up, and I'm too lazy to rechart it.) I'm going to use the toe-up heel-flap method from Baudelaire, because I like it, and because it gives me a good number of stitches to be able to start the back cable panel on the heel flap itself, which I think would be rather cool.