theraineysisters knitting and so much more

March 25, 2011

From Sally — Spring Snow

Filed under: Spring Snow Cardigan — surly @ 2:45 pm

Spring in Washington means cherry blossoms. A few days ago, it was in the seventies here in Washington, DC.  My bulbs began to poke timidly out of the ground, and one of my cherry trees blossomed open, even while the buds on its more cautious yard mates stayed firmly closed.

Sadly, caution may have been wiser — our temperatures dipped down into the thirties last night and we could have snow this weekend. Cherry blossoms are fragile, and I’m afraid our intrepid early blooms won’t last.

Washington’s most famous cherry trees — those that line the Tidal Basin — were a gift from Japan, and this spring my thoughts have turned frequently to Japan for many reasons. Just a day or two before the horrible earthquake and tsunami, I started working on another Japanese sweater pattern. I love Japanese patterns because they are so beautiful and unusual. And I love how even the most complex patterns are reduced to a few charts that experienced knitters can follow without speaking a word of Japanese.

The cardigan I’m knitting is by Hitomi Shida, and was published in the Let’s Knit Series (Couture Knit 12: Adult Luxury Knits).

I’m knitting it in Blue Sky Alpaca’s Royal Alpaca in the color Cameo. I’m working it in one piece to the armholes. It’s not a difficult pattern, but there is patterning on the wrong and right sides so I have to pay some attention. I started with a provisional cast on in waste yarn, which is why there is a white “border.” The collar, button bands, and hem are knit at the end in one piece. At least I think they are. I’ll worry about that after I finish the body and sleeves.

The other object in the photo is a pair of Japanese scissors that I bought when I was in Minneapolis visiting Susan. (They came from Bella Lana.) They are a wonderful marriage of beauty and function: very pretty, but also very sharp.

March 23, 2011

From Both of Us — Farewell to a Legend

Filed under: Updates — Both Sisters @ 8:22 pm

In her day, the most beautiful woman on the planet…

March 20, 2011

From Both of Us — Five Whole Years…

Filed under: Updates — Both Sisters @ 2:24 pm

…of blogging!  It’s true — this is our 5th Bloggiversary.  In previous years we have held contests and/or given away fabulous prizes.  To keep it fresh, this year we are doing neither.  (Read: cheap and lazy).  Instead, we thought we would share what we have learned from blogging these past five years.

  1. It is humbling to make your knitting mistakes in such a public arena.  You start something, it’s a flop, and the “whole world” is a party to it.
  2. It is also humbling to celebrate successes in such a public arena!  When something goes well, we are overwhelmed by the gracious comments we receive.
  3. People can be “touchy.”  If you say something wrong, they sure let you know about it!
  4. People are forgiving.  If you say something wrong, they are quick to show their support.
  5. We still have ‘startitis’ like most knitters — the next project is always more fun/interesting than the one you are working on — but having an audience has pushed us to finish more projects.  (This is especially true of Sally, who is notorious for the number of projects she starts and abandons.) We feel the need to produce something to blog about, and we reap the benefits.
  6. We have met some great people as a result of our blog.  We have often been approached at knitting events by our loyal readers, which is wonderful.  We have also met some pretty famous bloggers: WendyKnits, Yarn Harlot, and Brooklyn Tweed are three that come to mind.  It is fun and exciting to be part of the larger knitting world.
  7. We really love sharing our experiences with you and with each other.  It helps us keep track of each other’s knitting progress.  We also use the search feature on our blog quite a bit — it chronicles projects, tips, techniques, and references.  Ravelry is great, but it can’t replace a blog for everything.
  8. Chronicling our knitting has made us more “mindful” knitters.  We think more consciously about what we do in order to share it.
  9. We always learn from and enjoy reading the comments from our readers.
  10. We were surprised to discover that some of you (and you know who you are!) think our banner photo is recent:


It isn’t!!  At. all.  The pants are a dead giveaway — otherwise, we haven’t changed a bit.

All in all, it has been a great experience, and we will keep blogging as long as you keep reading (or until we stop knitting!).  Thanks for your loyalty, friendship, and support.

PS1: the picture was taken in Florence, Italy

PS2 to Betsy from Susan: I also see myself in #3!! 😉

March 19, 2011

From Susan — Exciting News

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 10:58 am

I am back…actually, that is not the exciting news.  The really exciting news is that The Principles of Knitting is being republished!  Yay!  Where do I sign up?   Woo Hoo!  Even though I already own the original, I have pre-ordered the new one.  Apparently, June Hiatt has been working on the edits for YEARS and so the new one is sure to have some new material.  This is a ‘must have’ for serious knitters.

I got back from Florida last night at midnight.  Here are a couple of pics from the trip.  I won’t bore you with more!


Call this picture: My Final Trip to Disney*


Frolicking in the Surf at Cocoa Beach (I was beached)

Our weather was ideal…perfect in every way.  We did everything we set out to do, so it was a successful trip, but I am very glad to be home.

*PS: to Jani who wrote, “I never ever comment, but couldn’t resist adding: Final trip to Disney . . . until the grandkids want to go. :)”  No, final is final.  Laura and Jena can take their own kids!!  I’ll be at the beach!

March 16, 2011

From Susan — Where in the World is lv2knit?

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 8:31 am

If you guessed the Gulf of Mexico, you are correct…but that was just for the sunset last night.  My girls and I are vacationing in Florida for Jena’s spring break.  The weather has been absolutely perfect, which is always a concern — could not have planned it better.  Today we go in search of the elusive Mickey.

March 11, 2011

From Both of Us — Let’s do the Cha Cha

Filed under: Updates — surly @ 1:03 pm

We have been bad bloggers this past week.  Actually, we have been non-bloggers this week!  We spent last weekend together in the Twin Cities and had a great time, but shared no stories, pictures, or exploits.

We visited many local knitting shops and purchased some very nice items.  Sally had never been to Bella Lana in Minneapolis, so we went there after Susan’s daughter styled our hair.  This is a beautiful store. The ceiling is filled with Japanese paper lanterns and the entire store is very elegant, while still being warm and friendly. We both loved a scarf they displayed in the shop made with Trendsetter Cha Cha (47% Wool, 47% Acrylic, 6% Nylon, 100 grams/skein, 65 yards/skein).  It is a fun novelty yarn that creates its own ruffles.  Sally chose Ecru (891).  Susan bought a skein in Dark Denim (433) at Amazing Threads.  We don’t usually “do” novelty yarn. Every once in a while, though, something just grabs our attention. This was a fun and quick little project, and we each knit one while sitting around Susan’s house talking and watching old movies.

When Sally finished her scarf, she had a few second thoughts. She put it on and was instantly transported back in time, to 1967:

She was a little worried, but not five minutes out of the house someone stopped her on the street and complimented her scarf. Alrighty then. It was a go!

PS: Confession Time…Susan went to Needlework Unlimited tonight with some knitting peeps and ended up buying another skein in her signature color (Color 655):

The blue version may end up a very special gift for someone else.

March 5, 2011

From Susan — A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Knitting

Filed under: Updates — lv2knit @ 9:04 am

I picked up Surly at the airport!  She called on Wednesday and asked if she could come visit this weekend, and of course I said yes!  First stop: my Thursday knitting group.  We are hitting yarn shops galore and my daughter did our hair yesterday…more updates to follow.  We need to take some pics so we can share the fun… 😉

March 2, 2011

From Sally — Is Red the New Black Green?

Filed under: Cobblestone Pullover for Sterling — surly @ 1:07 pm

My son arrived on our doorstep (well, really at the airport but you know what I mean) on Friday.  He was — and this was not a surprise — wearing it.  The green sweater I made him for Christmas.  The one he wears virtually non-stop.  Be still my heart.

I gifted him with his new red sweater, and I can only hope he wears it half as much.  I didn’t see much of him — he was here for a conference, not a family visit, and I was out of town one of the nights he was home.  But just before he headed back to the airport, I was allowed to take a few quick shots of him in his new finery.  They’re not the best shots, and he asked me to obscure his face. But voila:



February 28, 2011

And the Oscar goes to…

Filed under: Updates — Both Sisters @ 6:41 pm

February 25, 2011

From Susan –“What’s Happening with EB?”

Filed under: Eala Bhan,Updates — lv2knit @ 9:17 am

Thanks for asking, Suzan!  The White Swan has landed!  My Eala Bhan.  I finished her about a month ago, but needed the post to marinate a while! 

Eala Bhan was another of my “quest” projects.  A project that you see and are drawn to immediately, with an “I-must-make-that” fervor.   Surly and I ordered the yarn (Hebridean 2-Ply from  Virtual Yarns, my color: Lapwing) as soon as we received our books (the newly republished Aran Knitting by Alice Starmore).  I was in such a hurry to start, I insisted that Mairi of Virtual Yarns mail the yarn to Sally’s house so I would not miss a day (I was visiting her at the time). 

That was the easy part!  I decided to knit the fronts and back as one piece to avoid reverse stockinette seaming.  Thus, with fair isle weight yarn and small needles, I had hundreds of sts at the start.  It was like Eala Bhan and the Three Bears!!  The first attempt was too big, the second too small, and the third was just right…lots of casting on (with an elaborate scalloped cast on) and lots of ripping.

As we know, I am not the smallest cherub in the choir, so I was making the largest size.  I also lost my waist in the great “Eat Out” of the mid 90’s, so the extreme waist shaping of Eala Bhan (~12 inches are reduced at the waist!) was a no go for this fatty knitter.   I only took out 4-6 inches at the waist — letting just the reduction in stitches from the large cables into the smaller cables do the shaping.  I also made many other minor modifications, too numerous to describe or remember!

Eala Bhan requires a fair amount of finishing work due to the construction and button bands.  The buttons called for are quite small, which made them difficult to find.  As most knitters know, finding the right buttons is sometimes the hardest part of the project!  I wanted metal buttons, very detailed, in a bronze color, with a shank — a shank button is easier to sew onto a sweater and the thread does not show.   

Again, it was Eala Bhan and The Three Buttons!   The first ones I found were beautifully detailed, in a bronze finish, BUT they had no shank and were PLASTIC (ugh).  The second ones were still plastic, garish gold, but at least they had a shank.  I stumbled across the third ones by accident: bronze, detailed, metal and a shank (see PS 5 below for details)!  Yay!

So, here is my Eala Bhan, at long last:


This captures the color in the sunlight perfectly


Button Detail

After blocking, the fit is perfect.  The sleeves flare over my hand at just the right spot.  The hint of a waist gives me the hint of a waist.  The length is perfect.  The yarn softened to buttery perfection.  I love this sweater.

Grade: A

Pattern: B (very long, complex, and needed tweaking — but a gorgeous concept)
Yarn: A
Fit: A+

Today we leave for the American Birkebeiner Ski Race.  John turned 60 on Tuesday and is hoping for one of his best Birkies.  I am hoping to not miss him at the finish line, which happened the last two years.  Embarrased smile  It’s my only job and I blew it!!  It is supposed to be VERY cold, too.  Freezing  Then on Sunday I get to watch Colin Firth receive his Oscar…wow!  Great weekend!

PS1 to Diana: “And if I had the power I would have Colin present you with your award.”  I would actually pass out if I ever saw him in person!

PS2 to Leigh: I did all the cabling without a cable needle: every RS row you are moving sts and I would have gone stark raving mad if I was juggling a cable needle.

PS3: I am in Hayward (free WiFi — yay!).  John finished his 28th Birkie but it was a very hard ski for him.  The last half was a slog!  Just like some knitting projects I know!  Thanks for all of the extremely kind comments about EB.

PS4: Colin won!  Yay!

PS5: To Amber — where did I find my buttons?  I bought them at Hancock Fabrics.  They are JHB Buttons # 93287, 1/2 inch (scroll down and you will see them).  Three buttons for $3.10.

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