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Slow, But Enjoyable, Knitting Progress

I cast on my Vodka Lemonade cardigan on the last day of 2014.  As of today, I am here:

Vodkal

It has taken me all this time to knit a mere five inches of collar.  In my defense, it is in seed stitch on a sport weight yarn (The Plucky Knitter's Crew).  And, I've simultaneously knit a hat, finished off a capelet, made significant progress on my Olivia wrap, and knit close to two skeins’ worth of a Sugarloaf Cowl. But I am admittedly slow at seed stitch, although I enjoy it. I do hope the rest of the sweater comes along more rapidly!

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A Box of Yarn

Box

Here is a quick picture for a Friday morning.  My kind UPS lady dropped off this box, full of The Plucky Knitter's Scholar, a rustic textured yarn that is a cashmere/merino blend.  Oh the possibilities! Whatever will it become?

I'm thinking about this sweater, or possibly this one for the red yarn, which is called Strawberry Wine.  And this one has caught my eye for the blue yarn, which is Thank You Note.  What to knit next is always one of my favorite questions!  Happy Friday everyone.

 

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What’s Your Favorite Color To Knit With?

It started innocuously enough, with a couple of pretty skeins that I purchased during a trip to a favorite local yarn store in Tuscaloosa.  I'd never really thought about chartreuse.  It looked like Shrek.  And, my Mom never really liked me in green.  But those first skeins jumped into my cart over the summer, and suddenly that color was everywhere!

Chartreuse mosaic

Have you ever developed a color obsession from out of no where?  It's not even a trendy, Pantone scale color for 2015.  It just suddenly caught my eye.  And my needles.

There seems to be no end in sight.  I have some coming for a sweater — slightly different, and in different fibers, than the one I already have in progress.  And a few skeins for a cowl that will likely be a gift for a friend.

I wonder if it's just me, or if everyone picks up color obsessions over time; only it's magnified for knitters and other crafters who work with color.  I would love to hear about your color obsession!

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A Weekend’s Worth Of Knitting

I seem to be having a glut of "welcome to the new year, everything is going crazy" overtime at work and insanity with kids, but despite that, I did find a bit of time to knit over the weekend.  And especially, a big thanks to Downton Abbey, when everything in my house comes to a halt and I can knit and indulge.

Olivia

I devoted my knitting time this past weekend to Olivia.  Olivia is the first project I ever cast on in yarn from The Plucky Knitter.  It's Primo Aran in the Holloway color, a delicious teal.  This is the first time I've ever done a Fisherman's Rib, and the number of mistakes in this project (I've found the rib almost impossible to rib back and make corrections in) attest to my learning process.  Although it's slow, I've reached the point where I really enjoy it.  I'm about four inches into what needs to be seven inches of rib.  

For the next couple of weeks, I'll probably have painstakingly slow photos of "oh look, I've knit another half inch of Fisherman's Rib" to show you, so in an effort to make up for that in advance, I'll share this odd but intriguing cell phone video my daughter shot in her ballet class, because she knew I would like the music.  It's grainy and off kilter but really moving.  If you're interested, she comes in midway through in a black unitard with a white top and sleeves.  Yes, it has absolutely nothing to do with knitting, but imagine all the warm ups you could knit for those dancers, if you really put your mind to it!

 

 

 

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Works in Progress

The week I go back to work after the holidays is always a bad week for knitting (as much as it is good to be back with good friends and getting the job done).  I manage to get in a bit of knitting when I wake up and a bit at night, so this week wasn't a total knitting loss.  But progress was slow.

Vodka

Thea Coleman's  Vodka Lemonade pattern is my most challenging project at the moment.  It's a sweater pattern knit in The Plucky Knitter's delicious Crew yarn, a merino/cotton blend.  That is the collar that you see above.  It's knit in seed stitch. I'm in the decided minority of knitters who enjoy knitting it.  It's slow going and time consuming, but it's very pretty.  At this rate, it will take me quite some time to finish the collar before I get on with the body of the sweater, but I don't mind at all.

Ogrepaddlemitt

Paddle Mitts are a Tin Can Knits pattern.  Like the other patterns I've knit from this designer, the pattern is straightforward and the finished item is utilitarian.  And I have managed to create a small disaster with what should have been a simple project.  I decided to use my favorite skein of yarn, this beautiful skein of Plucky Scholar, which is a worsted weight blend of cashmere and merino in a rustic spin.

Ogre

That would have been just dandy, had I seriously contemplated the fact that Scholar was a bit heavier than the yarn the pattern was written for and sized down, but no, I did not.  That was okay in the body of the hand, where the ribbing made it work.  But there was drama with the thumb and I overcompensated with rapid decreases after picking up the stitches for it.  I've pulled that all out and am starting over for a thumb that works with the rest of the mitts. This will go into the man-sized pile for gift giving, darn it.  I hope I have enough yarn to do a second pair for myself.

Inprogressclose

When The Plucky Knitter introduced her first collection of patterns, All Bundled Up, last weekend, I enjoyed looking them over and admired several enough to add to my Ravelry queue of patterns to knit this year.  I even contemplated buying yarn for one of the sweaters in the near future.  But then it hit.  The Sugarloaf Infinity Scarf pattern was so tempting.  It was written for my favorite yarn, Snug, and it just so happened I had the perfect colorways for it in my stash.  So on my needles it went, and it's unusual little rib was an enjoyable knit while we watched a move on TV last night (The Life Acquatic with Steve Zissou, which you should watch if you haven't seen it and like slightly snarky, self-indulgent humor).

Yarnchoices

I have plans this weekend to work on my Olivia wrap, and I wanted to get in more work on Vodka Lemonade's collar, but I'm afraid Sugarloaf has captivated me, and may end up as the attention-getter in whatever time I have this weekend.  Fortunately, it's cold outside and there is a lot of appeal to sitting inside where it is warm and this is hot tea and I can knit.

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Another Knit Nevermind Hat. Subtitle: Why I Love The Plucky Knitter’s Snug Yarn

I'm sure I sound like I have lost my marbles to anyone who is not passionate about knitting.  But, I have a new favorite yarn, and I really don't care who knows about it.  Snug.  I love you Snug.  I love you for your cashmere content and for your beautiful, smooth, round, bulkiness.  And I love how you take color.  All of them.  I loved you right out of the box, even before the first time I put you on my needles.

Snuginabox 

I love you even more, now that I've knit a second hat out of Snug, my second using the Nevermind cabled pattern.  It is what you were meant for.

Transfer

Forgive me for the glamour shot.  I'm rather partial to the model as well.  But she still doesn't get to keep the hat!

The colorway is Fisherman's Wharf, a neutral with just a hint of a purpleish undertone in the right light.  So subtle that you're not even sure it's there.  So beautiful that I'm kicking myself for not getting a sweater quantity.

Light

Nevermind2

Nevermindhat

Here is the obligatory cat photo.  I was chided, after the lovely photo of our baby cat Juliet earlier this week, for not including our cats in more photos.  So here is Harry, who is skilled at photobombing, but agreed to pose just this once.

Harryandthehat

In case I haven't been clear, if you don't have any of The Plucky Knitter Snug in your stash you need to RUN not walk and get some.  You can buy it at her periodic updates or through destash on Ravelry if you're lucky.  It's amazing yarn.  You need to knit with some now!

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Knitting Disaster Averted

My disasterous Cables and Lace Capelet is fixed.

Smiling

Just like that!  I ripped off the oversized collar and reknit it on smaller needles and made it shorter. Suddenly, I have a beautiful capelet that makes me think of something Claire should be wearing on the Outlander TV show.

Segment

The combination of cables and lace is simply beautiful.  Norah Gaughan is a genius pattern writer.  The capelet was wonderfully fun to knit and fast too, even with my problem-solving exercise at the end.

The side and back views are as beautiful as the front.

Backside

 

Back

This pattern is fantastic.  I can't wait to knit one of Norah's sweaters, most likely Ropewalk, although every pattern she writes is gorgeous.

At the end of the day, Problem solved.  I hope this experience will encourage others to be fearless about ripping and recreating.  I tend to be rather nervous about doing this type of thing but it was powerful to rip back an entire ball of yarn and lunge straight on in to make it better.  One of my favorite things about knitting is that it encourages us to be our best selves and reminds us we don't have to settle for something we aren't happy with.  For 2015, I resolve to be more fearless in my knitting!