theraineysisters knitting and so much more

November 12, 2007

From Susan — 10-1/2 to 1

Filed under: Lyra by Niebling — lv2knit @ 12:58 am

Those are the needle sizes I’ve been switching between all weekend!  Wow!  It feels very strange but actually is a nice change up.  I knit for awhile on Lopi Cardigan and then switch to Lyra.

Here is the Lopi back drying.  I decided to block the pieces as I go.  I never do it this way, but I just felt like it this time.  I kind of wanted to see if the knitted fabric would soften up.

LopiBack.jpg picture by lv2knit

Here is a close up of the shoulder showing the Japanese Short Rows done on shoulder shaping: 

LopiShoulder.jpg picture by lv2knit

I rarely shape my shoulders.  I do not like shoulder seams (too bulky) and did not like the look of my previous short row technique.  I REALLY like Japanese Short Rows: easy and very invisible.  Now I can get shaped shoulders AND do a 3-needle bind off!  Woo Hoo 🙂

Here is the “Blob” in progress.  I have not forsaken Lyra!  I am now on Round 130-ish and still in love.  There are acres of stitches in each round so I plod away at a snail’s pace.

Blob.jpg picture by lv2knit

Here is a bit of pattern close up.  I really do need some longer needles…

LyraCloseUp.jpg picture by lv2knit

The more I knit on this, the more I appreciate the design and its ingenuity.  The flowers are sculpted in thread and air — positive and negative space.  It is really amazing.

I should finish the Lopi sweater in another week or so and then may work my second Kauni sleeve.  I have the need to get some things off my plate, and working on ‘almost done’ stuff is certainly a way to do that!

Rudolph Update:

Apparently, a few of you called Amazing Threads for the Rudy Pattern (they had to start a waiting list!).  CiD sent me a lovely thank you with a copy of this pattern — for Elfred, Rudolph’s Sidekick:

Elfred.jpg picture by lv2knit 
AND
 Bag-1.jpg picture by lv2knit
…this knitter’s accessory bag: you put it around your neck so you can keep all of your knitting necessities close at hand.  Thanks, CiD!!

Well, Monday starts another week — hoping yours is great.

To Jess L. and others:
Remembering you this Veteran’s Day.
 

PS in response to question about Japanese Short Rows: I learned how to do them from Nonaknits – check out this link. 

November 9, 2007

From Susan — What was I thinking??

Filed under: Current Projects,Susan's Kauni Cardigan — lv2knit @ 8:07 pm

Gas is $3 a gallon and going up, the housing market has bottomed out, they are talking recession — so, what do I do?  Buy yarn, of course!  And not just ANY yarn — yarn I already have!

I am talking about Kauni Rainbow.  I was nearing the finish line with my first Kauni Cardigan and then was gobsmacked by the Damask version.  I bought two more huge skeins of Kauni yarn (and I hope it is enough: cross fingers and toes!). 

It arrived today from Wollsucht and was already wound onto cones — very nice presentation.  It inspired me to dabble in a little creative stash maintenance, holiday style:

NewKauni004.jpg picture by lv2knit

Ah-h-h-h-h, see the festive cones hidden in plain sight!!  How do I think I’m going to finish a second Kauni when I haven’t even finished the first??  A true knitting mystery.

Speaking of knitting mysteries: why did I start a new project?  I have plenty of knitting already under way!  I picked up the Lopi yarn I ordered from Needlework Unlimited for this little gem (bought during the Shop Hop):

LopiPattern.jpg picture by lv2knit

and thought, “This is a quick knit.  Maybe I can whip this out and not even miss a beat!” 

NewKauni.jpg picture by lv2knit

The color is actually a very pale grey (Lopi 054) — not so beige as the picture.  It is kind of a quick knit, but really.  What about Lyra, Plisse, Kauni, Homage — the list goes on and on.  I feel conflicted!!

I know a lot of knitters suffer from start-itis, but that doesn’t make it right! ;)  This is a nicely written pattern and I hope to finish it quickly so I won’t be diverted too long from finishing Lyra, Plisse, Kauni & Kauni, Homage….etc.!  I’m outta control!

 

November 6, 2007

From Susan — Say Hello to My Little Friend

Filed under: Completed Projects — lv2knit @ 7:33 pm

I have said this before, but I love knitting.  I love it because it takes you from the sublime:

SooLyra.jpg picture by lv2knit

to the ridiculous…ly cute:

RudolphtheRNReindeer072.jpg picture by lv2knit

I fell in love with Little Rudy last Saturday at Amazing Threads.  They had a shop sample of CiD Hanscom’s latest creation and I dove right in and made my new companion that very day — and felted him on Sunday.  It “felt” good (no pun intended!) to have a finished object for a change, too.  CiD has designed a treasure trove of these characters.

Here is the original, hanging out with some felted peeps:

RudolphtheRNReindeer018.jpg picture by lv2knit

We all know and love the famous reindeer:

RudyTV.jpg picture by lv2knit

My husband thought me obsessed, especially when I tried no less than 79 times to get a good photo — it never happened.  But here is the money shot, because the little turned up tail has got to be the cutest thing I’ve ever seen!

RudolphtheRNReindeer026.jpg picture by lv2knit

You can tell that my felting did not “take” on the beigey yarn, which surprised me because it was Eco-Wool (leftover from Hemlock #1).  The yarn I used for the body was Peruvia (like Hemlock #3) in color Pumpkin.  They had had a run on the Ella Rae wool that CiD used for her Rudy, but the color I chose very closely matched.   I had to do a nose transplant because mine was too dark (same color as collar) and too small.  I knitted a small ball in a Christmas red, felted it separately and sewed it on.

Anyway, I love my lil Rudolph and would carry him around with me all the time, but people would talk — in fact, they’re already starting to stare 😉

 

November 2, 2007

From Susan and Sally: Answers to Ballerina Questions

Filed under: Knitting Tips,Sally's Ballerina — Both Sisters @ 10:55 pm

Several of you had some questions about Ballerina, so we will attempt to enlighten and clarify:

From Susan to Judi P in Cleveland : I love my Ballerina and wear it frequently — sans button!  I suffer from “lack of waist” syndrome so I wear it over a jumper.  It never slips off my shoulders, never needs adjustment.  When I went on the Shop Hop three weeks ago, Rosanne was one of my travelling peeps and she wore her Ballerina — it’s exactly like the one Sally is knitting.  She never tugged or pulled, and it looked fantastic with black slacks and black turtleneck — she also wore a stunning necklace.  Sally started hers at this time because I described how great Rosanne looked wearing hers.  So, there are a couple of real life testimonials!

Check out this source for great pricing on Ballerina:
Cucumberpatch

Warning!!  Hanne just introduced a new design that looks like a cross between Sunrise Circle and Mermaid called Gloria — quite cute (Cucumberpatch for Gloria).

From Sally: Several people have asked me about the basting along the bottom of my Ballerina:

It’s not basting. I’m marking the ridges where I’ve made increases with a contrasting piece of yarn. Ballerina is short in the front, and it gets longer as you work your way around to the back. You start knitting with the left front. I’ve marked each ridge where I’ve made an increase so that when I start decreasing as I work towards the right front, I can decrease on the same ridges. In other words, it’s an easy way for me to try to make each half of Ballerina identical. I use the same method for marking increases on sleeves or increases/decreases for waist shaping.

Susan uses the same method. She described it here. Basically, when you get to an increase row, you “lay” a different colored yarn over the running thread between two stitches. Then you knit, which traps this yarn in place. It’s quick and easy and, if you forget to lay the yarn across the running thread until you are halfway through the row, you can pull it through with a crochet hook on the next (WS) row. When the garment is finished, you just pull it out. 

Another question was whether one wraps for the short rows. That’s a little more complicated. Falkenberg’s directions tell you to do a yarnover, rather than a wrap, for short rows. You knit to the turning point. (Remember, you are knitting garter stitch.) You turn. Instead of putting the yarn to the back, if you just knit the next stitch you create a yarnover. When you activate the stitches, you knit that yarnover with the following stitch and all is well.

BUT: I have found that other methods are sometimes prettier and you just need to experiment. For example, when I did the sleeve increases, I did nothing at all. No wrap, no yarnover. Why? Well, when you first knit the new stitches (to increase the number of sleeve stitches),* you are knitting on the wrong side. When you activate them, you are knitting on the right side. When I did these short rows using Falkenberg’s yarnover method, it just didn’t look right because the YO shows on the RS. It looked better doing nothing. (I have found this to be true in general with seed stitch as well as garter.) On the other hand, when you are activating stitches on the right side of the fabric, Falkenberg’s method looks great.

With the black yarn I’m using, you could use Falkenberg’s method and it would work; I just liked my method better, at least for the sleeves.   From Susan: I used Hanne’s method on my sleeves and did not like it for the reasons that Sally describes.  But it does look okay when you activate the sts from the RS.

From Susan: Another good method for garter stitch short rows is to wrap the stitch as usual for short rows but don’t pick up the wrap when you come back and activate the sts.  The wrap mimics the look of a garter stitch ridge perfectly.

*I had placed all of the sleeve stitches on a needle first through a provisional cast on and then added them in; I was not following Falkenberg’s directions.)

PS to Marina: I do not expect to knit Gloria: I already made both Sunrise and Mermaid, so I do not feel compelled (at least for the time being) to make Gloria!  But who knows??? 😉

October 31, 2007

From Susan — Hanne [Falkenberg] & The Sisters

Filed under: Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie — lv2knit @ 10:57 pm

Happy Hallowe’en from the other Rainey Sister!  The doorbell just rang — our 4th set of trick or treaters.  Seriously!  It is 9 pm and hardly anyone came to our house!  Anyway, it was eldest daughter and her friends who greatly profitted from the fact that we had had so few children stop by.  I unloaded a lot of candy on them.  DH did the candy shopping this year and did “okay” — but he bought those peanut butter thingies in the orange wax paper wrappers — OMG!  I gave away a lot of those!  Ish…

Unlike Surly, I have not knitted half a Ballerina in the past week, but I have been plugging away on Lyra.  I’m on about the 117th round.  The rounds are incredibly long at this point.  I’ve made a couple of small mistakes, but corrected them and moved on.  If I ever see my camera again I’ll post a blob picture.

Lyra is what I work on at home and Plisse goes to work with me each day.  That is not good news for Plisse!  I have been too busy at work to take breaks so her progress is greatly stilted. 

plisse004.jpg picture by lv2knit

The pattern stitch is somewhat annoying.  The right side is plain knitting, but the wrong side moves from rib to garter.  If you are not paying attention (and it is hard to see from the WS), it’s easy to make a mistake.  The yarn is a gorgeous color with bits of bright teal green and yellow mixed in.  The picture color is very true. 

I broke down and ate one (well, two; OKAY, three) of those peanut butter thingies.  I think they changed the formula in the last 40 years — they’re not too bad 🙂 !

Thanks to all for the kind words about Roslin and also for pointing out a couple of mistakes.  I added a Roslin Errata page (in the upper righthand corner, above the pattern link) which will have a running list of all the corrections that are made along the way.  The pattern link will have the current, most up-to-date and “error-free” version 😉 — hey, we never claimed to be perfect!

PS — how cute is that jack o’lantern of Batman???

PSS — in response to Anne:  I hope that the yarn you are considering has both weights: dk and fingering, or else the transition will not work.  Thanks!

From Sally — My Little Assistant Is Haunting Me (and so is a Ballerina)

Filed under: Knitting Tips,Sally's Ballerina — surly @ 10:50 am

Now that the first rush of excitement of our Roslin Hoodie pattern is past, and quick before we find any more mistakes, let’s get back to our regularly scheduled knitting and blogging.

I love Halloween — for some reason it’s always been one of my favorite holidays. Mayhaps it’s the candy. I usually carve a few intricate pumpkins, but I confess that this year’s are a little dull:

Fortunately, someone in the wilds of Colorado has been taking up the slack. Remember my little assistant? Here’s a refresher photo for those who don’t:

He’s been immortalized in a Halloween pumpkin by my daughter’s boyfriend. I think he may have found his true calling; it captures Batman perfectly.

As for knitting, I’ve embarked on another Hanne Falkenberg: Ballerina. I’ve had this kit for some time, and suddenly got interested in it when I finished Mermaid. I needed a portable project — my Kauni skeins are too large to carry around. Well, all I meant to do was get it “started,” but I got carried away. I’m just over halfway finished with it already, although I suspect my progress will now slow considerably.

Here are a few shots. First, Lucy is modeling it and wishing I would provide her with some kind of undergarments:

Here are some other shots that show the color and the pattern a little better. I was surprised, based on the photos I’d seen of this jacket, at just how many stripes there were on the sides. That part was a little sl-o-o-o-w.

For some reason, I’m finding this to be a more enjoyable knit than Mermaid — I’m not sure why. One reason may be that you are forced to knit the sleeves as you knit the body, so I know I won’t be faced with the drudgery of sleeves when the project is almost, but not quite, finished. It’s also a very clever design. As you finish the front, you knit one row of a garter ridge (which is always two rows) from the bottom to the neck edge, quickly (ha!) knit a sleeve, and then go back down the garter ridge and finish it. There is thus no side seam — you just keep going. You are supposed to go back later and seam the sleeves.

My clever sister Susan, who made Ballerina earlier, figured out an easy modification that allows you to join the sides of the sleeve in a three-needle bind off as you are knitting so that you don’t even have to go back later and do that bit of finishing. Instead of doing the sleeve increases as Falkenberg directs (by stitch increases), you do a provisional cast on of all the sleeve stitches and increase using short rows (as you do for the raglan shaping, etc.). Then, as you finish the last row of the sleeve, one side of the sleeve is already on a needle. You remove the provisional cast on from the other side and put those sleeve stitches on a second needle, and do a three needle bind off as you knit the last sleeve ridge. It’s brilliant and easy and eliminates finishing. I’m so glad she knit this first.

From Susan and Sally — Quick Correction to Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie Pattern

Filed under: Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie — Both Sisters @ 10:03 am

Oops.

There are two small errors in the pattern with respect to the colors used in the Fair Isle insert. First, we neglected to list Pacific in the materials needed. You should purchase one skein of Simply Shetland 2-ply in Pacific (763) in addition to the other colors listed. Second, although we correctly told you to purchase a skein of Sunset (186), the chart calls it Sunrise, which is a much darker color. We love both of those colors and ALWAYS mix them up for some reason. We apologize for the confusion and will update the chart and the pdf as soon as possible.

Re the question about the “yellow” in the photo. It’s not yellow; it is Granny Smith (1140) as listed in the chart and the materials.

Thank you again for your interest and support.

October 29, 2007

From Susan and Sally — Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie Pattern

Filed under: Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie — Both Sisters @ 8:26 pm

We were both humbled AND inspired by your reaction to the Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie we designed.  Susan worked on the hoodie pattern most of the weekend, and it is ready to be unveiled.  The pattern for the Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie is a free gift to you, our readers. 

There are some disclaimers and suggestions in the pattern.  Please read carefully.  If you find any errors, let us know and we will correct the pdf file.

We hope you enjoy the Roslin Hoodie!

FairisleHoodieSideView3.jpg picture by lv2knit

Oops.

There are two small errors in the pattern with respect to the colors used in the Fair Isle insert. First, we neglected to list Pacific in the materials needed. You should purchase one skein of Simply Shetland 2-ply in Pacific (763) in addition to the other colors listed. Second, although we correctly told you to purchase a skein of Sunset (186), the chart calls it Sunrise, which is a much darker color. We love both of those colors and ALWAYS mix them up for some reason. We apologize for the confusion and will update the chart and the pdf as soon as possible.

Re the question about the “yellow” in the photo. It’s not yellow; it is Granny Smith (1140) as listed in the chart and the materials.

Thank you again for your interest and support.

For additional photos, including closeups, click here.

October 27, 2007

From Susan — Humbled by Response

Filed under: Lyra by Niebling,Plisse,Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie — lv2knit @ 10:02 am

Well, what can I say?  Your response to our little hoodie is overwhelming!  Since the math work falls to me (Sally did the knitting, and I did the number crunching), I will try to write up some additional sizes.  It is that huge mental effort that stopped us in our tracks before.  We shall see! 😉

As I reread our post, I realized it sounded more than a little braggy.  Let me explain. Sally and I wrote the post as co-authors: she wrote the parts about my contribution, and I wrote about hers.  The post sounds braggy but we are really just bursting with pride for the other Rainey Sister!  🙂

I have been working on Lyra day by day.  I am (drum roll) on Round #100!!!!!!!!!!!! Woo Hoo! 🙂 Out of 180 :(  I am no where near halfway done — because of the circle thing.  Oh well.  I am almost done with the third set of leaves and have started the “tulips” (if that is what they are).

Lyra10-26-07.jpg picture by lv2knit

My take along knitting is Plisse.  It is at a very strange looking stage.  If asked, “What are you making?” no one would ever believe a sweater:

10-26-07Progress.jpg picture by lv2knit

The teal section is what I have on the needles right now.  Once all of the white is filled in with knitting (quite a while from now, if my current rate of speed is any indication), then I will pick up the peplum and work down.

I won a prize at the Shop Hop two weeks ago from Coldwater Collaborative, so I feel the need to go to a yarn store!!

October 23, 2007

From Susan and Sally — Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie

Filed under: Roslin Fair Isle Hoodie — Both Sisters @ 3:13 pm

While we each plod along, trying to make progress on some other projects we thought we’d share a sweater we designed together a few months back.  We wanted to create a design that incorporated some fair isle knitting into it.  The challenge was that we wanted the fair isle portion to be in jumperweight yarn, but we didn’t want to have to knit the entire sweater out of such small gauge yarn.

Did we have to? No, we didn’t.  Jamieson has several weights of yarn in the same colors.  Susan came up with an ingenious way to transition invisibly between Jamieson’s Dk weight yarn (3 ply) and Spindrift (2 ply). Sally did the playing around with colors and design for the fair isle band and did virtually all of the actual knitting (that’s only fair — it was knit to her size).  Susan did the math.  Who got the better deal?

Sally adapted the fair isle design from a typical Shetland-style pattern. Here’s a photo of one of the original swatches.

The sweater features a hood, raglan sleeves, and a “kangaroo” pocket. Here are several views of the finished sweater:

Fairislehoodie.jpg

 FairisleHoodieSideView3.jpg

FairisleHoodieBack.jpg

Susan came up with the idea for a cute little pocket on the sleeve. Here is a close up view — isn’t the button cute?

hoodiepocket.jpg

Finally, this picture shows how nice the transition looks from 3-ply to 2-ply.   

fairisletransition.jpg picture by lv2knit 

The knitted weight of each section is identical: the fair isle band and the body of the sweater have the exact weight and feel. 

The sweater fits Sally perfectly and is great for fall.  Susan keeps threatening to knit one up and by doing so enlarge the pattern — a lot.  Right now it exists as a “one size fits few.”  We debated sending it off to try to be published, but that would require a lot of brain activity from a very dormant brain. 

Mom would be so proud: we have finally learned to play well together!

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