theraineysisters knitting and so much more

July 5, 2007

From Susan — Final Fantasy

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 9:51 pm

Before I launch into my latest FO, I’d like to ask this question: “What do you all know that I don’t?”  I mean, do I have two months to live and no one bothered to tell me?  I am trying to figure out why everyone is being so darn NICE to me!!  First, Romi sends me a beautiful pin and then a lovely package arrives in the mail.  Michelle sent me this array of “knitting nirvana” to thank me for a very small favor (and I do mean miniscule!!):

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The yarn is soft and luscious just like vanilla ice cream and the other items are absolute great FUN!!  Thank you, Michelle — you are knit-tastic!  Wow 😉 😉 😉

On to the knitting portion of this blog… 

The Diamond Fantasy Shawl is a fait accomplis.  I finished it Monday, but needed to block and photograph it, which adds time to the blogging process!

Here it is in its unblocked, crinkly, ugly duckling stage:

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Being blocked:

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Don’t you just love the built-in edging?  That’s why I like this pattern.  And now she’s back on Lettie for the final viewing:

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The finished shawl ended up being 68″ by 34″ which isn’t too bad.  I started with ~450 yards of worsted weight silk of unknown origin and now have something to show for it.  I feel pretty good about that.

Front view:

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And, with the gorgeous shawl pin!

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I think it’s wonderful!  I wish the camera captured the sheen of the silk yarn.  I am really glad I read blogs because that’s how I got hooked up with this pattern.  Bloggers rock 😉 !!

PS – Cindy mentioned the lovely photograph of the fireworks — my daughter took that picture.  I thought it looked very professional!

PPS — Sally, please come back!  I need my blogging partner!  I know everyone is tired of reading a single sister — it isn’t called The Rainey Sisters for nuthin’.

 

June 28, 2007

From Susan — On Mermaid and DFS

Filed under: Sally's Mermaid,Updates — lv2knit @ 10:58 pm

I’ve been trying to get this done quickly — it’s a smaller project that I will wear often, so I’m trying to stay focused all the way to the finish line.

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I also want to weigh in on the Mermaid/soft yarn discussion.  I found that my Mermaid softened up a bit when wet blocked, but I agree with Barb Outside Boston: garments can be TOO soft.  I have used some great, soft yarns, but they don’t hold their shape and sometimes pill.  That’s what I like about real shetland wool.  It keeps its shape and wears like iron.  I always wear something underneath so what difference does it make?  I love the feel of real wool.  Now that’s not to say that I don’t like merino or Cascade 220.  They are real wool and soft, so they are great to work with and wear.  But I still love that shetland wool, my friends!!

June 25, 2007

From Susan — Sorry to Step!!

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 11:58 pm

Sorry to step on your post, Surly, but I have a new project to introduce and a great pattern. I can’t wait to see the picture of your Mermaid tomorrow!

First, though, I want to thank all of you for your wonderful comments about the Peacock Shawl. I felt very warmed by your generous and thoughtful praise.

Back to the present!! My next small project is the Diamond Fantasy Shawl/Scarf by Sivia Harding. Many of you are familiar with this pattern, but it is fairly new to me. I was looking for something for some handpainted silk that Sally generously willed to me from her stash (and I did offer it back to her when she was here — honest!!).

Diamondfantasy.jpg

The yarn is 100% handpainted silk in teal and lavendar/purple; approx. yardage is 450 yds.; worsted to heavy DK in weight. I am using a US 10 needle. The pattern calls for fingering weight yarn, but says sport will also work. Sivia thought the heavier silk would work fine — perhaps yielding a medium sized shawl. I love the yarn and the pattern. I like the fact that the edging is built in as you go. This pattern reminds me of the Hemp for Knitting Ponchette I made last year, but a little dressier.

Sivia does not follow pattern writing convention completely — i.e, her charts are kind of different, but you can certainly figure it out. She includes written and charted versions.

I was supposed to be working on Kauni, but knitting is my hobby and I do it for fun — and this seemed more fun at the moment!

May 16, 2007

From Susan — I Couldn’t Hep Myself!!

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 10:08 pm

I’m sorry but I have failed at being faithful ;).  I have been thinking about making the cardigan on the cover of Lace Style since it came out:

LaceStyle.jpg

This looked like the perfect summer cardi to wear in the meat locker they call my workplace!  Do they really need to keep it at 50 degrees??

The cardi takes chunky weight yarn: 90 yds to 50 gm.  I’ve been searching and searching for yarn.  I finally found my dream yarn today: Sublime Aran in “Clipper’ which is denim blue.  It is 75% merino, 20% silk, and 5% cashmere.  Oh my! It could NOT be softer, and I thought the denim would look cute with everything. 

LaceStyle-1.jpg

I am just getting started and could not get a good picture, but you get the idea.  The fabric is not as “white” in places as it looks here, but it does get that washed denim look from light reflection.  I love it so far.  My justification is two-fold: I need a summer sweater, it is mindless knitting, and my Mitered Tote is nearing completion :).  

I came home and said to Hubby, “Hey, I bought more yarn” and he said, “Keep on buying yarn until we run out of money.”  Okay, dear, anything you say!

 

May 12, 2007

From Susan — Knitting Along

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 1:19 am

I’ve been happily mitering along.  This is the perfect take-along project.  It is semi-mindless (except where I have to do my decreases, since sometimes I motor right past them!). 

One of the big squares is done — it’s a lot of knitting, mes amies!  It’s about 20×20 inches!

MiteredTote004.jpg

I also started the bottom sections.  I could NOT wrap my brain around how the bottom was going to work, so I had to do it to see it.  It makes total sense once you get going.  I think it would have been helpful to have a diagram with the pattern for us “visual” learners!

MiteredTote002.jpg

It did not call for a provisional cast on, but I thought it would be nicer and I think it is.

RE: Sally’s brief visit in June.  She will be here on June 14 and we are going to Panera’s in Plymouth for my weekly Knit Night.  Come one, come all!!

I am still 10 rows away from where I was on the Peacock Shawl before I ripped, but I am enjoying it immensely. 

And, please, will someone chip in to buy poor Lucy some underwear?  It is a bit unseemly ;).  They just moved our blog into the porn listings!  And should I be concerned that my husband volunteered to shop for her knickers?

GreysAnatomy.jpg 
On another note — thank goodness GA is back on track!  Last week’s show was an embarrassing disaster.  Shondra, what were you thinking?  The lame California story line was only eclipsed by the stupidity and lack of reality of its characters.  This week was pure gold.

 

April 17, 2007

From Susan — Brief Response

Filed under: Eris Cardigan — lv2knit @ 4:57 pm

In answer to Melanie’s question, the width of the collar = 15″ across:

Slide1-8.jpg

I think that mine may be narrower because I pulled up the collar a bit with the i-cord edging.  I’ve seen other pictures and the collars seem wider.  The actual shoulders will conform to the wearer because of the raglan shaping.

My zippers just arrived and none of them are great — one is so bright it’s like neon green!  Whoa, put the lights out please!  One is really dark but kind of goes.  Not sure what I’ll do yet…

From Susan — Eris is Fantabulous

Filed under: Eris Cardigan — lv2knit @ 7:07 am

Eris is wonderful and I don’t mind saying so. I made a sweater that fits like it was made for me :). Yes, they ALL are, but in fact, only some actually do ;).

All of my trepidation went out the window post blocking.  It is a thing of wonderment — when all the variables came together in the right way.  One small problem: The sleeves are about 1-2″ too long, but that is totally easy to fix with top down sleeves!  I was also pleased that there is very little evidence of ‘rowing,’ which often happens with back-and-forth stockinette stitch.  [Rowing occurs when one’s purl row gauge is slightly larger than one’s knit row gauge].

Now, here is the source of my pre-blocking angst:

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The place where the collar joins the body of the sweater rolled over funny.  I know that’s pretty technical talk!  But it looked weird when I tried it on, and I was nervous it would not block out, but it did.  Woo Hoo!  Here it is after blocking, just flopped onto the table:

Erisfinis005.jpg

I think my short rows are better on the hem shaping — I had a bit more practice with my Japanese short rows by then.

The sweater fits great.  I will actually post a picture of me wearing it once I get the zipper sewn in.  In the meantime, here is Lucky Lettie, draped in the fantabulous Eris:

Erisfinis001.jpg

Erisfinis003.jpg
Yarn: Cascade 220, Color #9460
Needles: US 5’s (cabling) and 6’s (body)
Cost: about $60 (incl. pattern and zipper)!!!!!  It only took 7 skeins of yarn! (at least I think it took 7 — I bought a bag of ten skeins and three are untouched — not heavy mathematics there)

For those of you contemplating this pattern, I say go for it.  The pattern is extremely long, but it’s no more knitting than an average sweater.  Jenna just provides too much a lot of detail.  It is not as forgiving as the Rogue Hoodie if you have gauge issues (because of the collar and hem cabling), but it can work.  The one thing I recommend is to do after-thought I-cord edging (using 5 sts) and for that all I did was omit the edge sts along the neck and hem edges. It took extra time, but I believe it was well worth it.  I did this on the hood of Rogue with very nice results.

April 15, 2007

From Susan — Eris 95% Complis

Filed under: Eris Cardigan — lv2knit @ 9:54 pm

It is true — another “FO” graces our pages.  I finished Eris this evening and now she is drying.  I’m not entirely done — I am waiting for the zippers I ordered.  I’m hoping one of them will work.  XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX -> these are my crossed fingers :).  This zipper should be a lot easier to put in than the one in Oregon because of the way the fronts are constructed. 

Blocking001.jpg

Here is the collar:

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And the sleeve:

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My sleeves are a little different than the pattern. I just did not like the way the original hemline looked on the sleeve.  I tried three times and it looked terrible, so I finished it off like the fronts using a 5 st I-cord bind off.  When I decided to switch to this edging, I had to add another inch to the sleeve which is another reason I changed up my sleeve decreases. 

I will put her on Lettie when she is dry and take another picture or two. I sure hope she fits ME, too!! 

Now all I have to work on is my lil silk top, so it should get done pretty quickly.  What is next, my friends, what is next?

PS — Could someone please explain to me why Sally needs a one-pound cone of Zephyr laceweight?!!?

PSS — I remembered where Marina must have seen Erisort:

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Shelly Kang posted this picture on her blog after the Yarn Harlot’s visit :).  That’s Kim on the left (the friend who gave me Lettie) and Shelly is on the right.

From Susan — A Very Minor Setback

Filed under: Eris Cardigan,Peacock Shawl -- Susan's — lv2knit @ 9:45 am

I can’t blame this one on the knitting gods!  I have had to rip back the sleeves a few inches on Eris — I was literally at the point of binding off the sleeves and thought, “Hmmmm, they really seem too small/narrow at the wrist.”  They were.  So now I’m backing up a few inches and changing my decreases to every 8 rows instead of every 6.  I should still be blocking this baby today.

Sally and I both have unnaturally small wrists — we’re such delicate flowers, aren’t we??  Plus, I am unnaturally tall.  So what I usually do is cast on for the smallest size sleeve and continue doing increases to get me to the size I am making, which tends to be one of the largest sizes.  I can then accommodate my delicate wrists and the unnatural length of my arms in one fell swoop.  That often works.  What I also do is take the bottom hem of the garment and wrap it around my delicate wrists and pull it over my hands to see how many sts I need for the wrist and then calculate my sleeve increases (or decs when top down) from there.  I did both these things, but it was still a little bit off. 

I am working on the silk Vittadini top.  It is not quite as mindless as I had hoped: even though it is stockinette in the round, the ten-ply yarn can be split easily so you need to look at it while knitting.  Darn it!

Romi just started her Peacock Shawl, so I’ll be able to knit vicariously through her for the next few days whilst I await my yarn.  The good news is that she is using the same Zepher yarn Sally used (and that I am waiting for) and LOVES it.  She says the shawl is flying off the needles.  Be still my heart.  So, I will track her progress and hopefully get to start mine before she finishes hers.

To the sleeves, Batman!

April 9, 2007

From Susan — Worried, Who Me?

Filed under: Eris Cardigan — lv2knit @ 10:33 am

I’ve been knitting on Eris because I am still waiting ever so patiently for my peacock yarn (she says nervously, knowing that everyone knows she has NOT been patient at all), and was getting a little worried that I had over-compensated for the uptake needed on the collar.  I added my 5-stitch i-cord edge after the fact, and it looks WAY too tight here in its natural state:

ErisCollaronTable.jpg

Had I gotten carried away, as usual?

So, I placed Eris on Lettie to get a better idea of how it will look on a person and it is fine, even unblocked as it is: 

ErisCollar004-1.jpg

And the back view:

ErisCollar006.jpg

So I’m less worried and therefore more apt to finish this sucker!  Now I can sit by the window waiting for the mail to arrive ;).

PS — Tyna asked about the pattern:  It can be purchased on-line on The Girl From Auntie’s website.

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