theraineysisters knitting and so much more

March 22, 2006

From Sally — Venetian Hat

Filed under: Gallery,The Venetian Hat — Sally @ 5:39 pm

I’m not quite sure how to describe this hat. While walking our dogs in a neighborhood park yesterday, a friend mentioned an “unusual” hat she had acquired one cold day in Venice. She couldn’t quite describe it — for good reason. Although she said it was knitted, it looks crocheted to me. According to my friend, whose anonymity I’m protecting, it drew stares even in Venice. It’s not an item for the faint of heart to wear. (My daughter agreed to model it; then again she suffered a minor head injury on her bicycle this afternoon.)

Without further ado (the photographs can be enlarged by clicking):

Sorry — I don’t have the pattern.

From Susan — The 100 Year Old Disaster

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 9:53 am

Hello, all.  I attended my local knitters guild meeting last evening.  It is really fun to get together with lots of people who are passionate about knitting.  We have over 400 members in the guild and about 50 people were at the meeting.  The “program” for the night was “Knitting Basket of Horrors.”  Members were supposed to bring in their knitting disasters and share the horror.  It was very funny.

I shared my recent horror story.  I used to fix sweaters for people — beloved, well-worn sweaters that people love too much to throw away when they get holes.  I always saw it as a labor of love.  However, I got kind of sick of poring over these ratty rags and decided to “get out of the biz.”  BUT, I got a call from a man with a One Hundred Year Old sweater.  I was intrigued.  I just had to check out this antique, this heirloom.  It was red with a large, shawl collar.  Simple stockinette in worsted weight yarn.  There were pockets with a double lining (great place to obtain yarn for patching).  The cuffs had holes and there were several other holes throughout.  I thought it would be a piece of cake.  I made the mistake of telling him that when I was done with it, it would look like new (I NEVER make promises I cannot keep…).

I started by removing the lower sections of the pocket linings and straightening the yarn.  I re-knit the linings with yarn that was not the best color match.  Then I removed the cuffs and started unravelling them.  The yarn came apart in shreds!  It was so fragile as not to be believed!  I tried re-knitting the first cuff, combining the cuff yarn with the yarn from the pockets.  It looked like crap.  I was in a panic.  The sweater was in pieces, and I could not fix it.

To make a long story short, I ended up buying new yarn that matched better and re-knitting the cuffs with it. It didn’t look too bad, but it isn’t perfect as I promised.  I also re-knit the pocket linings so they would be the same color as the cuffs.  I had also told him I would try to fix the horrible looking buttonholes.  They were machine stitched monsters.  I managed to redo them using a grafting method I had learned in a workshop with Sally Melville.  I never thought that technique would come in handy.  I charged him what I had quoted, which probably added up to $1.50/hour.  I am still waiting for the check — maybe it’s “in the mail.”  ETA: he loved the results and paid me more than I had asked for!!

I vowed at that moment to never fix a sweater again.  Done. Finito.

RE: Wendy made a very nice comment about the Beaded Mini-Purse and wanted to know if the pattern is available.  It is my own design and I will post it as a free pattern at some point in the future.  At the guild meeting last night, one of my former knitting students said she has made many of the bags and gives them as gifts.  She took one to South Africa as a shower gift and another to Argentina!  People have gone absolutely crazy for them.  Go figure!

March 21, 2006

From Sally — Rogue Update

Filed under: Current Projects — Sally @ 10:28 pm

Well, Saturday may be optimistic as a finish date, although I should finish it by Sunday or Monday. It’s just going more slowly than I had hoped, and I had to do some ripping today because — well — because sometimes reading directions is important.

From now on, I will read directions. Really. I will.

I’m also not so sure I like my yarn choice for this project. The gauge is 4 1/2 stitches to the inch, and I picked Jo Sharp’s Silk Road Aran Tweed. It’s a nice yarn, but slubbier than I expected from looking at it in the skein. It gets very thick and thin and the “tweed” sometimes manifests itself in blobs of color that look as if they might pill. There is also a fair amount of “roughage” left in the yarn: bits of straw and other detritus. On one hand, that’s okay. It gives the knitting a kind of rough hewn effect that suits the pattern. However, it does cause certain aspects of the cabling, especially where you start the infinite cables, to look very muddy. I am not getting clean, crisp cabling. A smoother yarn might have produced a nicer effect. We’ll see.

From Susan — Ballerina Update

Filed under: Current Projects — lv2knit @ 7:38 am

I am nearing the center of the back — the crucial halfway point.  I tried it on last night and may regret taking out some of the fullness.  I had read someone’s blog and she said she took out about 4″ in the back by making the gussets narrower — sounded like a plan to me!  I think she must be a bit more petite than I.  Let’s face it — I’m not the smallest cherub in the choir!  It will fit, and it actually looks pretty good, so I am not going to rip it out.  Magic is possible with blocking — Hanne’s knits are loose enough that they can be blocked larger if need be.

March 20, 2006

From Susan

Filed under: Current Projects — lv2knit @ 1:03 pm

Sally and I share many interests, but knitting is our passion.  We decided to share a blog because, as I said to her, it’s like having a garage sale — I don’t have enough to do one of my own. 

My current WIP is my third Hanne Falkenberg jacket.  I am making the Ballerina #13.  I am probably about 40% done.  Even though it is acres and acres of semi-mind numbing garter stitch, I am enjoying it. 

I have been trying to stay focused on one project at a time and find that I make a lot more progress.  I finished Mermaid #6 in 23 days and my Rogue Hoodie (see Sally’s link) in 12 days.  And I am not a speed demon with the needles.

If you check in now and then, you will find that Sally and I knit about 75% of the same projects.  Fortunately for Sally, she has to knit a lot less than me because she is 5’5″ and I am 5’11”.  It is unfair, but cannot be helped.

Welcome

Filed under: Current Projects — Sally @ 12:54 pm

My sister Susan and I decided to start a joint blog focused on our knitting; we live 1000 miles apart but we talk on the phone almost every day and most of the time we’re talking about knitting. We have absolutely no idea how to create a website, but we do know how to knit.

I’m going to dive right in and talk about my current project, which is the Rogue pullover available from Girl from Auntie.

My sister knit it as part of the Olympic knitting challenge; she enjoyed knitting it so much that I decided to knit one too.

I started it on Thursday, and even though I’ve been sick, I’ve managed to get to the point of dividing for the arms. Here is a photo of the front, which shows its cute little kangaroo pouch.

And here is a photograph of the side. Side shaping is all done through cabling.

I’m hoping to finish it by Saturday — I’ll keep you posted.

« Newer Posts

Powered by WordPress