theraineysisters knitting and so much more

May 18, 2020

From Susan — Well, that happened!

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 11:46 am

It started out innocently enough.  I started out knitting the Sandness Cardigan from a recent Interweave Knits.  I thought the style was cute, nice cabling, etc.  I spent months trying different yarns (spent a ton of $$ test knitting skeins 🙁 ).  I landed on old standby Rowan Felted Tweed.  You knit the sweater on size 3 needles, so it was a bit of a slog.  But, I enjoyed knitting it.

I had some doubts all along because of the unusual construction AND the lack of ANY OTHER RAVELRY PROJECTS!!!  That is such a red flag!  I was getting pretty far along and had questions that the available photos (skimpy at best) could not answer.  I contacted the designer (Mone Dräger) and she responded, answered my questions, and provided a very helpful photograph.  My doubts persisted however.  The sweater was very over sized, long, and drapey.  I just could not picture it with long sleeves.  I could picture it looking like my Capture the Moment, however!!

Here is my Sandness laying on top of my Capture the Moment:

Hmmm.  I opted out of the sleeves.  I simply did 2×2 ribbed cuffs and called it done!

I am very happy with it.  I do think that I could have added long sleeves and it would have worked.  Maybe some day I’ll change my mind and add sleeves…I have enough yarn!!

I also did something a little different when sewing on the buttons.  I used a large bead for the button shank!  I also added small beads on the top of the buttons between the two holes, which I have done many times before.  The Rainey Sisters Tip of the Whenever shows close up pics!!

PS to Cynthia: I worked one row buttonholes over 5 sts to center them.  The method is described in this post.

May 2, 2020

From Susan — Lofty Ambition

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 2:46 pm

I just finished a hat out of Brooklyn Tweed LOFT…yarn from my stash!  It is Andraos, with a bold graphic design.  I used bold contrast colors and a splash of red at the brim.

Invisible stranding helped me across the 19-stitch carries!  I lightly felted this little guy by swishing it in hot water when I blocked it.  I wanted to smooth out the very rustic appearance of the LOFT yarn.  It is a lightweight, warm, unisex hat that I have already worn on cool spring days.

PS to Suzan: I might have to pull it out again!  It’s suppose to be in the 30’s tonight!

April 20, 2020

From Susan — Yarnover Season

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 1:58 pm

The MKGs stellar annual event, Yarnover, was set for the upcoming weekend, but was cancelled of course.  I bought a summery linen shirt that I thought I would wear.  When I got the shirt home, I did a stash dive, pulling out every color I could find that went with the shirt. I chose The Miller’s Daughter so I could combine colors in the garter sections and have solid colors in the lace sections…to mimic the woven fabric.  The colors aren’t perfect, but I think they go.  I know some of the yarns I used, but all were already wound without the labels so some are mystery yarns!

The colors are the closest here, but it’s so hard to capture color:

I did a picot bind off:

I used my No End Stripes techniques, so only one end to weave in: the tail after binding off!  There is a picture of a written chart in the video that may be hard to see.  Click here for a pdf copy: Minimizing Ends in Knitting.

It never hurts to repeat!

April 10, 2020

From Susan — Time to Hippity Hop

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 9:56 am

Easter is Sunday, and you still have enough time to knit this small bunny, or should I say Small Rabbit, which is the name of the pattern.  I have been in the knitting doldrums of late, as I’ve heard many knitters are.  I needed something small, cute, and fun to knit.  Something that I could actually finish!  I made this over the course of two days, but you could finish it in one if you start in the morning!!

I used worsted weight yarn from my stash…so bunny was almost free!  The sweater is my own addition.  I made this for the not-yet-born baby in the family…the baby for whom I knit the little grandpa sweater (Elevenses).  The bunny’s shorts are from the same yarn so I thought a grandpa sweater for the bunny would be fitting.

And the tail is adorable!!

Another QUICK knit is these little hearts!  They whip up in no time.  What are they good for?  Absolutely nothin’…say it again!  But they, too, are small, cute, and fun to knit.

PS to P: I think you hit the nail on the head!!  Knitting feeling like a chore instead of a respite.  Because I’m no longer working, my life has been quieter anyway.  But, I always felt busy: knitting groups, lunch with friends, having the kids over for dinner, flying to Colorado to visit Surly, etc.  The curve that has flattened for me is all the high points of my life!!

March 30, 2020

From Susan — Kep Knitting

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 6:56 pm

No, not a typo!  I just finished Katie’s Kep, the 2020 Shetland Wool Week free hat pattern.  I was looking forward to this excuse to do a little fairisle knitting.  My arthritis didn’t appreciate the top of the crown,  but I soldiered on!  I was lucky to have the main colors in stash.  I wish that my purple was a bit softer.  I should have substituted something else!

I experimented a little bit with a technique I’ve used haphazardly in the past for mitigating the “jog” you get in fairisle patterns, that amounts to more of a break in the continuity of the patterning.  Here you can see what I mean on these Fjord Mitts.  The back of the left mitt shows the break in the pattern caused by working in the round.  I wear these mitts with the bad side down, so no one can see it!  But hats are different…there’s nowhere to hide!

A recent Interweave Knits (Winter 2020) had a great article on how to manipulate the pattern to minimize the break.  I charted Katie’s Kep in Excel and played around with the transition from one round to the next.  It was semi successful:

The top motif was totally cut in half and “broken,” but mine is only kind of broken!  The hat is very large, but my husband and I both have big heads so the fit is perfect!

PS — Wore my kep on a morning walk today.  It was cool and breezy, but my kep kept my ears and head warm!  It fits perfectly, too.

March 22, 2020

From Sally — Lo Sgelo (the Thaw)

Filed under: Updates — surly @ 3:48 pm

With several inches of slushy snow on the ground, I’ve found myself missing the early springs we had in Washington, DC.  The cherry blossoms and forsythia are in bloom there and I know some of my more adventurous tulips and daffodils would have emerged by now.  Here, it won’t be truly safe to plant flowers until after Mother’s Day.

A few weeks ago, as I longed for that first blossoming of warmth, Mirella Freni died.  She was an Italian soprano.  I first heard her on a recording of La Bohème with Luciano Pavarotti.  Her voice was otherworldly.  I used to listen to her haunting version of “mi chiamano Mimi” over and over again.  It is still gorgeous after all these years.

I had just started knitting a self-designed sweater out of a luscious blend of two Shibui yarns when I heard about Freni:  Nest and Silk Cloud in the color Vintage Rose.

These lines from Mimi’s aria spoke to me:

Ma quando vien lo sgelo
Il primo sole è mio
Il primo bacio dell’aprile è mio!
Il primo sole è mio.
Germoglia in un vaso uno rosa
Foglia a foglia la spio!
Cosi gentile il profumo d’un fiore!

(but when the thaw comes
the first sun is mine,
April’s first kiss is mine,
the first sun is mine.
A rose blooms in a vase,
Leaf by leaf I watch it open,
The scent of a flower is so subtle)*

And so I named this sweater Lo Sgelo.  The Thaw.  It probably makes no sense to anyone but me, but it’s a one-off so that’s okay.

The sweater is a tunic style turtleneck.  I knit it in the round from the bottom up, using short rows to curve and lengthen the back.  At the armhole, I split the front and back and added stitches for the first part of the sleeve on each side of both pieces using provisional cast-ons.  In effect, I was making a T-shape.  I used short rows here as well to slope the shoulders/sleeves and raise the back neck.

I first joined the shoulders and underarms using a three needle bind off.  I then picked up stitches for the turtleneck.  Last but not least, I picked up stitches for the remainder of the sleeves and knit them from the top down.

It fits me very well and I love the fabric.

*Translation is mine.

As we all wait for this long winter and potentially long confinement to end, stay safe out there.

 

 

March 18, 2020

From Susan — What can you say?

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 11:52 am

The world has been turned upside down in a matter of days.  The black cloud of uncertainty hovers over us.  How long will it last?  What will the final toll be in terms of lives, jobs, dollars?  It is very distressing.  Knitters hunker down and knit more.  It’s what we do.  Is it the best choice?  I don’t know, but if I am sitting home with nothing to do, I knit.

I recently finished (before the apocalypse) a cool design by Scott Rohr, knit designer and part owner of The Yarnery in St. Paul.  And a friend.  The cowl is called North Loop.  It is unusual and keeps your interest.  I used some of the nicest yarn I have ever knit with: Malabrigo Caprino in a fall array of three colors (fall? !!??).  It is called DK, but is really closer to sport.

Before blocking it looked like something that would emerge from the Black Lagoon!

It is soft and it is cool.  I cast on a new project today and have yarn arriving by mail.  I am sheltering in place, which for me just means not going to my knitting groups. 😐

March 2, 2020

From Susan — Baby Grandpa

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 12:45 pm

Last summer our nephew got married, and we were thrilled to learn that he and his new wife will be having a baby in May…yay!!!  The shower in is in April, so I quickly landed upon a baby sweater for a boy (yes, gender is already revealed!).  Most baby boy sweaters seem to be a variation on the “grandpa sweater.”  I chose Elevenses because it has cute pockets and elbow “patches.”

I used Malabrigo Rios, color Denim.  So cute!!  I am in love with this sweater and the yarn and the color.  Hubby wants one of these!  The pattern is extremely well written.  I made a few changes, but nothing like I usually have to do!! 😉  Anyway, I do recommend this pattern.  I knit a size 18 months so I hope it fits in cold weather vs the heat of August!!  So hard to get that part right!

 

February 22, 2020

From Susan — Birkie 2020 is a Wrap

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 2:26 pm

I was unable to go to this year’s Birkie due to a cold :(, but John went and had a great race!!  He is in the small cluster of skiers — just right of center.

I was able to catch him crossing the finish line – Bib #1011.  Way to go!  And Happy Birthday, too!!

February 16, 2020

From Susan — Getting Rid of the Garter Line!!!

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 12:44 pm

No.  I am NOT obsessed with the garter-in-the-round line in the Rikke Hat!  I swear I’m not!  It’s just that I keep thinking of ways to get rid of it.  My first iteration was the “spoke.”

In the above version, the line is behind the slipped sts (the center spoke above), and is therefore camouflaged.  But, it is still there.  In my NEW iteration, the line is gone entirely!  Yay!!

I figured this out when I made the little Garter Earflap Hat for my daughter’s friend.  I noticed that there was a line where I used a single color, but no line when I purled with a different color.

I wondered what would happen if you used the same color for knitting and purling, but with two different balls of yarn.  I didn’t bother experimenting at the time, but decided to try it when I started a new Rikke Hat…and it works!

The top image shows the hat — the beginning of the round is in the middle.  NO TRANSITION LINE!!!  The bottom picture is identical, but it shows where the BOR is so you can compare the two images.  I am not very good at joining LTCO in the round, so I can tell where the hat starts, but I doubt many other people can!

So, how do you do it??  First, wind your skein into two equal balls:

Then leave one end to the front and one to the back (it will be obvious which ball belongs where).  Knit Round 1 using the yarn at the back.  At end of round, leave yarn at back…do not bring the yarn forward.  Instead, use the yarn hanging to the front and purl Round 2.  Continue in this manner, alternating knit and purl rounds with the yarn that is already in the correct position.

That’s it!  I’m sure others have probably figured this out already.  I know that “Fleagle” does something similar, but knits all rounds: one in the usual way and the other inside out and in the reverse direction.  The positive to her method is that you knit all rounds.  The benefit to my method is that you are knitting the item as written and can follow other instructions per the pattern.

What if I don’t start garter right away?  What if I start with ribbing and then switch to garter in the round?  You do not have to start at the center of two attached balls.  Cast on with one ball and work the ribbing as normal.  Then attach the second ball when you need to start the purl row in garter in the round.  Just always keep it to the front and the original ball to the back.  When finished, use a tapestry needle to pull the tail to the inside.  That’s what I did with my baby hat.

Knitting in the round is actually a spiral, so you will still have a purl “tail” at the start of the round.  There are ways to minimize this, but the whole process looks so much better than the line…at least this obsessed knitter thinks so!!

ETA
NOTE about the cast on: I did a German Twisted Cast On, as called for in the Rikke Pattern.  I joined with the working yarns coming off the righthand needle, in the position for knitting.  I mention using a longtail cast on (LTCO) in my description above, which will have a different look than the German Twisted.  LTCO is not my go-to cast on — I typically use a cable cast on.  I am not very good at joining the LTCO to work in the round, so I just did some practicing.  Not that successful!  I am sure that those of you who use LTCO frequently can figure out my technique and get it to work well for you!!

PS to Pam: I don’t think these techniques are the same, though the helix plays into each.  In my garter method, the start of the round never changes, no sts get slipped.

PS2 to KDS: The way this works is helix knitting.  Apparently, I discovered it, but did not invent it!!  The Fleagle method gets rid of the “seam” by knitting round one normally, and then knitting round two from the inside (WS), in the opposite direction.  I would get confused and not know where to do the decreases!!

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