theraineysisters knitting and so much more

April 15, 2008

From Susan — Back to Normal (?!)

Filed under: Susan's Mitered Cardigan — lv2knit @ 12:08 am

Whatever that means !  My knitting immersion therapy is over and it’s back to the daily grind (yes, Marie, I did go to work today, dragging my sorry behind behind me!).  I could have a “booster shot” by attending tomorrow evening’s MKG meeting, recapping the success of Yarnover and listening to Joan Schrouder’s knitting wisdom.  We’ll see if family obligations allow me off my leash for another night.

I must admit to amour propre after reading the Yarn Harlot’s description of our meeting the other evening.  Wow!  Thanks for the kind words!!  And I keep thinking back to all of the knitters we met — wonderful memories of a fun evening!

Now on to some knitting content.  I have some complaining to do.  I am a little peeved by the yarn I am using for my current project — the Mitered Cardigan.  I am knitting with Rowan Tapestry in the Lakeland colorway.  The yarn is not my favorite and I am praying that it doesn’t turn into one giant pill immediately upon cast off, BUT that is not what is bugging me today. 

I finished the left front a while back:

The shaping worked as planned, I knit the bottom square of the right front, and had made some headway into the top section.  Motoring along at a ‘slow-but-sure’ clip.  Then I looked at it.  The top section was about ten shades darker than the bottom section.  I had grabbed a ball of yarn from the same bag, with the same dye lot and it looked completely different!  Ugh!   It was way too obvious being right on the front!  I ripped and restarted with a new ball, but should I have to?  Isn’t that why they created dye lots?  I know handpainted yarnie la la’s can vary a lot, but this is standard Rowan issue.  (It doesn’t say anywhere that it’s handpainted). 

I am now concerned about the rest of the project and how I can scrounge enough yarn for the sleeves.  I know my Kauni sleeves were very different in color, but that was a design element ;)!  I don’t think having one pale sleeve and one dark sleeve will look quite right.  It’s a little frustrating…

April 13, 2008

From Susan and Sally — ….A Few of Our Favorite Things….

Filed under: Back Story,Susan's Mitered Cardigan — Both Sisters @ 11:03 am

Thursday

From Susan:
The Yarn Harlot came to town! But that pales in comparison with the fact that Surly also came to town! Sally arrived today at 1pm. I picked her up at Minneapolis’ best kept secret: The Hubert Humphrey Air Terminal. Maneuvering through that airport is like time travelling back to the Fifties: an age when air travel was fun and uncomplicated.

First stop: two yarn stores — Borealis and The Yarnery. Borealis must have about the best selection of sock yarn in town…but I don’t really knit socks. At least not too many of them. They do have a wonderful selection of yarns and a lovely, friendly staff.

From Sally:
Borealis does have a fabulous sock yarn selection. I can’t even knit right now and I bought some lovely sock yarn from The Great Adirondack Yarn Company. What was I thinking?

From both of us:
The Yarnery hosted Stephanie’s book appearance. They, too, have a wonderful selection of yarn and a lovely, friendly staff. St. Paul is ground zero for some great yarn stores — the two already mentioned and Three Kittens are the trifecta of LYS goodness. Each has great yarns and great staff. We are really lucky here!

Now, on to the “Big Event.” The BE was being held at the University of St. Thomas. Despite the ridiculously horrible weather (from Sally — why did I leave 70 degree Washington to fly into a snow storm?) and need to hustle ourselves through the outside slop, it turned out to be a fantastic venue: roomy and yet intimate. The Yarnery staff had learned many lessons last year and the BE was greatly improved. It was very well organized.

Here are some knitting peeps as they ready themselves for the BE to commence:

They kicked off with a “Sound of Music” theme (hence the title of this post) — the Von Yarnery Family Singers (aka, Angie, Eric, and Jessica) regaled us with songs from the hit musical with a Harloty accent:


Could Eric be any taller, cuter, or blonder (????)

Shelly Kang has YouTube videos linked on her site — a MUST VISIT to hear these clever crooners!

Then out popped Stephanie and the crowd went wild! We laughed, we cried, we knitted — it was great fun.

Many of us stayed for the obligatory book signing/fawning session that followed. Here The Rainey Sisters meet the Yarn Harlot:

She said “hi” to Susan and then mentioned Sally — Susan said “she’s right there” OMG — all three of us in one room.

Friday
Friday was pretty uneventful as we tried to avoid the bad weather that continued to pound the upper Midwest. We rested up for Big Event #2: Yarnover.

Saturday — Yarnover
From Susan:
Yarnover was held at Hopkins HS for the first time — great venue. This year was the first that I was part of the planning committee. Sally was my trusty sidekick and very helpful (thanks for putting up with me!). We got there at 6:30 a.m. and got home at 8:30 p.m. Need I say more? I was a whipped pup, let me tell you!

About 300 people were registered and of course many drop ins checked out the vendor fair.

The list of instructors was a veritable who’s who of the knitting world, and I would hate to leave out any names, but let’s just say I was a bit knitstruck!

The highlight of the day for me was seeing (and touching!) Susanna Hansson’s incredible collection of authentic Bohus knitting. She brought a museum’s worth of priceless, vintage Bohus designs — here are a few examples:

Yes, that is a Blue Shimmer! Sally was wearing her Blue Shimmer yesterday so she fit right in and caught the eye of most of the people in Susanna’s class!

Oh, how I wish I spoke Swedish:

After BE#2, we got to dine with the aforementioned knitting Biggies and had a wonderful time. Here are some of the people at our table:


Sally with Ann McCauley


Chris Bylsma and Joan Schrouder (in a stunning but not-quite-finished Kauni sweater — knitting needles still hanging from the armholes!)


Susanna Hansson and Sally Melville

For all of the knitting-related “activity,” I got NO actual knitting done! Sally and I did pick up a little yarn along the way. Here is another mitered project for the near future:


Ode to Joy Cropped Jacket by Candace Eisner Strick

Sally ordered the Cape Cod colourway and I have the one pictured — Autumn. It is a bit unusual for me (some will challenge that statement!), which is why I chose it. In person, the color looks like water color, and very vintage. Part of it was that Sally and I were staffing the information booth the whole day and sat directly across from this sweater — its siren song proved irresistable!

Today it’s back to the Yarnery to teach a class and then Sally flies home. It has been a whirlwind of knit-tastic proportions. I wonder if this is a legit excuse for a sick call tomorrow? Maybe not! 🙁

From Sally:
Yes, I bought a sweater kit.  No, I can’t knit.  Is there a problem with that?  I met many wonderful knitters and lots of people who read our blog as I sat at the information desk pretending I knew enough to help people.  I can’t list everyone’s names, but I want to especially thank Shelley Hermanson and Anna Blomster for their warm welcome to me.  They were two of the nicest knitters I’ve met and I was in awe at how hard they worked to make Yarnover such a special event.

PS — just received this photo of The Rainey Sisters from Shelly K.: 

April 8, 2008

From Sally — Stash Enhancement or What Was I Thinking?

Filed under: Back Story — surly @ 2:15 pm

I love yarn. I really really do. I therefore buy a lot of it. Sometimes, I keep buying yarn over and over again for the same project because nothing I buy seems quite right. Often, I will buy yarn just because I like it with absolutely no idea what I’ll use it for. Lately, I’ve been trying to knit more items from my ever burgeoning stash because I generally still love most of the yarn that overflows the bins in my yarn room. Even so, I am still tempted into buying new yarn. I just engaged in some minor stash enhancement — right before I learned that I am not supposed to knit for a few weeks. That is very frustrating, let me tell you.

First, I’d like to thank everyone for their kind comments on my latest finished project and for their sympathy over my wrist woes. It was encouraging to hear that others have struggled through this and been able to return to knitting. I’m optimistic about my prognosis because although de Quervain’s can occur as the result of over use, mine was triggered by hauling heavy luggage up some broken escalators in New York. I just got my custom splints yesterday and I think they’re helping. They’re quite sculptural looking actually:

In the meantime, I have so many projects I want to work on: my Damask Kauni, my Pearl Buck Swing Jacket, Cross Lanes, a few shawls, and, of course, the projects involving my new yarn.

The first yarn I bought was some Nature’s Palette Fingering Weight for the Koigu Keepsake Shawl. I had seen that shawl knit up in just one color instead of the ten or twelve they recommend, and I much preferred how that looked. (Shhhh — don’t tell my sister about this purchase. She doesn’t know.) It’s in the colorway Spruce.

I love how this yarn shades from green to blue and back again.

I must be in a blue frame of mind because when I bought this lovely blue yarn in New York. It’s Koigu’s Kersti Merino Crepe, which is a really wonderful yarn to knit with. I’m thinking about doing a Mitered Cardigan like Susan’s out of it.

Sadly, thinking about it is all I’ll be able to do in the near term. On Thursday, however, I have something to look forward to: a trip to Minneapolis. Yes, the Rainey Sisters are about to be together again — so watch out!!

P.S. Susan and I love sharing how we fix mistakes (because we certainly make our share of them). Romi, one of our favorite readers (and owner of the Rosemary Go Round blog) has a fabulous tutorial on how to fix a big lace mistake in her April 7th blog. It includes wonderfully helpful photos. You can be duly impressed by clicking here and scrolling until your jaw drops.

February 2, 2008

From Sally — More Sleeve Avoidance

Filed under: Knitting Tips,Sally's Kauni — surly @ 6:38 pm

It’s too bad I never wear vests because I really am not of a mood to knit the sleeves on my Pearl Buck cardigan. So, in addition to a bit of stealth knitting, I’ve gone back to my damask Kauni, which I started in a burst of enthusiasm and then set aside. It’s just what I have been in the mood to knit the last couple of days, however. Here is how it is looking.

I’m getting to the point where I need to figure out exactly how long I want it so I can decide where to start the armholes (which means dreaded future sleeves). I also need to decide what kind of neckline I want. To that end, I made some graph paper to my gauge and charted the pattern again onto that paper. Then I used that as a kind of stencil — making multiple copies of the pattern repeat. Now I’ll cut and paste my sheets of graph paper together so that I have a paper duplicate of my sweater upon which I can plot out the neck. Doing it this way makes it easier for me to make sure that I’ll start the neck shaping at an attractive place in the pattern.

December 27, 2007

From Susan — NOT Square

Filed under: Susan's Kauni Cardigan — lv2knit @ 1:16 pm

In anticipation of Sally’s ‘Christmas stealth knitting reveal’ (later today or tomorrow) I thought I would share the buttons I found for Kauni.  No, they are not square!  I like the look of square buttons, but do not like using them.

KauniButtons.jpg picture by lv2knit

I loved these buttons (purchased at Skeins in Minnetonka, MN).  I did not want to get too gaudy by having too much going on with the buttons.  I need to reblock Kauni and gain 2″ in length, but otherwise, put a fork in it! 😉

I hope you had a wonderful holiday.  Truer words would never spoken as when I described our trip to Grandpa’s as a feeding frenzy!  I ate from the moment we arrived til the moment we left: non-stop!!  Those who know me know that this is entirely possible.  I love food and I’m not afraid to show it!

I received some good books for Christmas, so that will cut into knitting time — but well worth it.  I am progressing on Roslin and will share pictures in a day or two.

December 17, 2007

From Susan — I Forgot Something

Filed under: Susan's Kauni Cardigan,Uncategorized — lv2knit @ 8:02 pm

I’m glad so many of you liked the square neck on my Kauni.  I meant to include this link in my post yesterday.  It describes the whole square neck process with my Kauni.  I did not want to go on and on in a regular post, but figured that those who are interested could click.  It is also located as a link in “Susan’s Gallery” for future reference.

December 16, 2007

From Susan — Free at Last, or “It’s Good Enough for Me”

Filed under: Susan's Kauni Cardigan — lv2knit @ 1:22 am

I am so amazed: I finished my Kauni Cardigan.  I’m not amazed by the finished Kauni — what amazed me was that I allowed myself to BE FINISHED with it! 

As I described to my knitting peeps on Thursday evening (at a wonderful Christmas soiree hosted by Mary!!), I had major Kauni concerns:

1) The sleeves were not going in as planned.  The seaming looked like crapola.  So I decided to pick up around the armholes and graft in the sleeves.  This step was completed this morning.  They did turn out looking better than the seams did.  I should have picked up and knitted down after all :(. 

Note: I chose to knit the sleeves from the cuff up so I could control the color of the cuffs.  It didn’t even work out that way!  I ended up with strange-colored cuffs anyway!  Here’s a pic to prove it:

Dec408003.jpg picture by lv2knit

2) I did not like the front bands AT ALL!!  I had spent 12-15 hours knitting the front and neck bands in one piece on 60″ needles (seriously!).  I did not like the band for several reasons: band too wide, neck opening too small, top buttonhole not centered, blah, blah, blah; yada, yada, yada.  My plan was to redo the band completely, even though many, many hours of knitting would be involved.  I wanted the sweater to turn out, of course. I spent most of Saturday evening pouring over my new, improved approach to the band to “fix” all the stuff I did not like about it, but could not come up with a plan. 

Drum roll, please.  I decided to do nothing.  I bound it off and it is blocking at this moment.  I tossed in the towel.  I gave up.  I caved.  I decided that enough was enough.  AND IT FEELS FANTASTIC!!!!  I did not want to spend umpteen hours re-knitting the bands when I wasn’t even sure they would look better.  I decided that it was GOOD ENOUGH!  I did not strive for perfection or to be the best that I could be — I didn’t care!!  Woo Hoo!  Susan made a breakthrough :).  And, don’t get me wrong, I don’t mean that I ever get to perfection, but at least I do try to do my best — except for today!!  [Susan is now doing her ‘happy dance’ around the room]

Here is the Good-Enough Kauni:

kauniComplete001.jpg picture by lv2knit

kauniComplete005.jpg picture by lv2knit

So I am 95% done with this bad boy!  I need to do some inside finishing and find buttons (always a Ruh Roh! ;)), BUT the main part of the Kauni is behind me.  I’ll post more pictures when it is off the ground!

It feels so good to be bad! 😉

December 4, 2007

From Susan — Sleeveless in Seattle

Filed under: Susan's Kauni Cardigan — lv2knit @ 10:04 pm

Has THAT blog title gotten mileage?  I bet it’s been used often!  We all love knitting sleeves so much, don’t we?

I finally got back to Kauni, finishing Sleeve #1 and starting Sleeve #2:

Dec408003-1.jpg picture by lv2knit

You can see that my sleeves are totally fraternal in their twin-ocity.  I “planned” it that way 😉 – at least that’s my story.  I’ll tell people that the randomness of the colors is part of the Kauni charm and mystique (and hope they buy it!).

Anyway, I have set a deadline of January 1, 2008 to be wearing my Kauni Cardigan — not too tough a deadline to meet if I stay focused…but, we know that it is easy to get tempted!  And, it is a very busy time of year.

Especially today: I spent 7 hours in my car.  SEVEN HOURS.  I did not drive to Chicago either.  I drove to and from work (1.5 hours EACH WAY) and then drove my darling daughter to the dentist: 2 hours EACH WAY (usually a 30-40 minute drive).  SEVEN HOURS!!!!  People wonder why I hate cars.  The reason it took so long is that it snowed today.  I love snow but this is just plain torture. 🙁

And to prove I’m not a total Grinch, here is the best part of the trip –  I love it when someone has the lights on when I get home.

Dec408001.jpg picture by lv2knit

PS — I enjoyed reading all of your comments and stories re: knitting at social gatherings.  Natalie made me do a spit take when she compared the hobby of knitting to scrapbooking, whittling and collecting dryer lint in public — picturing people dragging these hobbies along made my day.  Thanks, all!

November 24, 2007

From Susan — FO Squared

Filed under: Completed Projects,Modular Purse — lv2knit @ 1:50 pm

Well, I did finish two items the last couple of days — BUT, they were 1) already started, b) not that difficult, and 3rd — not that fantastic.  The thing is, even if you just get a base hit instead of a grand slam homer, it still counts as a hit, right?

The two things I finished are the Lopi Cardigan and the Modular Tote Purse.  Both were lots more work than I anticipated — isn’t that usually the case?  By the end, I wanted to cut them both up and throw them away. 

Let’s start with the purse.  This project became the “Thing That Would Not Die.”  I have worked on it off and on for what seems like months. 

Give this thing a haircut: look at the ends!

November07003-1.jpg picture by lv2knit

Here are some pre-felting pics:

November2407003-1.jpg picture by lv2knit

November2407007.jpg picture by lv2knit

I made a major mistake on the front flap, but did not discover it until way too late.  I would have needed to re-knit 3/4’s of the flap and that was not an option, especially since I had already joined it and finished the i-cord around the entire thing!  In shaping the flap (rounding the lower corners) I rounded the wrong squares!  So when I joined it to the bag with the rounded corners down, the flap was 90 degrees off.  It would have lined up perfectly if I had shaped the correct corners!  But, like I said, too late!

Here is the felted bag drying, front view:

November2407012.jpg picture by lv2knit

Back view:

November2407013.jpg picture by lv2knit

The second FO is the Lopi Cardigan.  This is a bulky knit, wooly-wool sweater.  I still need to find buttons, and truth be told, it’s still damp! 

November2407008.jpg picture by lv2knit

As Surly would say, “It is A sweater, not THE sweater.”  It is wearable, it is kind of cute, it is very scratchy, and it looks kind of blah when it is on.  Here is Lettie trying to model it:

November2407005.jpg picture by lv2knit

And a close up:

November2407009.jpg picture by lv2knit

So that is why I knew I could get two projects done.  The potential third FO has no hope of getting done this weekend as I had hoped.  It took me too long for the above items.  I am going to finish my Kauni Cardigan next.  I really want that off my plate.  I also have an additional Hemlock to make for a shop sample for the Yarnery.  I’ll be teaching the Hemlock this winter.

So the good news is that I finally got some projects done — I have not worked on Lyra for several days now, so I want to get back to that one as well. 

Hope all of you enjoyed your Thanksgiving holiday.  We spent the day with family and ate, ate, ate!

PS — Here is the Reynolds Lopi Pattern #82273 for those who missed in past posts:

LopiPattern.jpg picture by lv2knit

PS Squared 😉 — When the felted purse dries, I’ll take a picture of it with the regular Modular Tote so you can compare the two sizes.

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. 

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