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Cast On!

It’s day one of the KAL. Adventurous April is here and even though I’m off in Vermont on spring break, my socks are officially a work in progress.

image from http://joycevance.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341ce9cd53ef01b8d1b779a1970c-pi

It’s fun and it’s hard to put down because of the anticipation of seeing how the colors will stack up on each successive row. The yarn is a Paintbrush Colorway on Elliebelly’s Juliet Sock Yarn.

I’ve got to return to college viewing activities with kids, but I’ll be back to show your more sock when I get through with the ribbing and move onto the pattern.

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Knitting on a Plane, Again

I’m on a quick trip with one of the kidlets to look at colleges, so yet again, me, knitting on a plane.

image from http://joycevance.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341ce9cd53ef01bb08cf18d3970d-pi

This is Silver Spoons (in bad plane lighting) and you can see I’ve just started the third chart. I love the way the M5’s and K5 tog stitches work into the spoon shapes. This is an incredibly fun knit!

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What’s On My Needles?

Silver Spoons is on my needles at the moment.  And I've been singularly devoted to it, which is unusual for me.

Spoons in progress

It's so beautiful that I'm hoping to finish it up quickly, even though it's gotten quite large.

Each row is taking me a L-O-N-G time.  Have you noticed the hoard of videos cropping up on knitting blogs and Instagram lately, where knitters are taking video of themselves knitting up close? And, fast!  I look at these videos and they look like light speed to me.  I am not a fast knitter.  But this cashmere feels so lovely as it moves through my fingers, that I will try not to bemoan my slow knitter status and devote myself to enjoying the process.

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Knit Along Yarn

Pop
Suzb626, a/k/a my sweet real life friend Suzanne – the very last skein of KAL Giveaway yarn for Adventurous April 2016 is yours.  You can thank the random number generator gods and lucky #3 on your Instagram comments.  Please message me and let me know the best way to get this yarn in your hands for the April 1 KAL start.

I'm looking forward to casting on for socks on April 1.  I'll be midway through a trip to look at a few colleges with my junior, so I'll be happy to have the prospect of socks and a nice cup of tea at night after trudging around during the day!  I hope everyone is in the final stages of getting ready for the KAL.  See you in our chat thread on the Ravelry group as we finalize our plans.

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Adventurous April KAL – Game (Almost) On

It's time to get serious.

Knitting needles  

Pattern  

Yarn  

Project Page on Ravelry ? Here.

Swatch.  Um, not so much. (It was a bad travel incident that I don't want to think about)

 

Badswatch

 

It's getting close.  April 1 will be here before you know it!  If you haven't joined us yet, take a look on the Elliebelly Ravelry Group.  The rules are simple, starting April 1 and ending when we're through, we're going to knit socks.  We've selected a couple of patterns but you're also free to knit one of your choosing.  And although many of us are knitting with Elliebelly yarn this year, you're free to knit with any yarn you choose.  Make sure you tag your project page with ElliebellyAdventurousApril2016.

Pop!

Still need some Elliebelly yarn?  I've got one last giveaway. (Yes, for old hands, that's Pop!)  Go on over to Instagram and follow Elliebelly_Knits and leave a comment on the most recent post.  I promise to add a lovely picture of my knitting or yarn to your feed a couple of times a week. I'll randomly pick a winner on Tuesday and get the last yarn off in the mail in time for a little bit of quick swatching before our April 1 start.

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Friday Eye Candy

Happy Friday!  I don't know about you, but it has been a long week for me!  I've been away from home and sick at the same time, which is never fun!  I can't remember the last time I felt too sick to knit, but that was me.  Coming home to my family seems to have been a wonder drug and I'm feeling much better.

Waiting for rain© coco581

Since I don't have knitting of my own to show you this week, I thought I would share a project I've been undertaking with a cohort of amazing knitters.  The old Elliebelly website had a page called "What Can I Knit With It" that helped you match patterns with yarns.  When I moved my website hosting, there were a couple of glitches, and all of that data was lost.  It was time to freshen up those recommendations in any event, so I spent several weeks dyeing yarn in some of my favorite bases, and for the last few months, a group of talented knitters have been knitting with it.  Their projects are amazing!  

We are on track to have a photo shoot with them at the end of this month, so I can have a new and improved page that helps you match your yarn with projects.  Until then, you can take a look at all of the projects on Ravelry by clicking here. Judi's Waiting with Rain, the photo above, is knit with Elliebelly's BFL Sock and illustrates one of those elusive principles of yarn selection.  

You can typically make a good substitution of a yarn in your stash for a pattern yarn by focusing on the weight of the yarn, in other words, substituting a dk pattern yarn for a dk yarn in your stash.  But this isn't the exclusive consideration.  You also need to think about drape.  100% wool yarns are "sprongy."  They hold their shape.  They are more likely to cling — in a nice way. Yarns with silk, bamboo, cotton, linen, etc., may be more drapey if the content of the not-wool fiber is high enough.  Think a drapey shawl.  A summer tank top knit out of linen will be loose and drapey but the same pattern, at the same weight, knit in wool, will have a different, more fitted, shape.  Of course, it's not an exact science and sometimes, you just have to knit with a yarn to see what it does.  The 100% Blue Faced Leicester (sheep's wool) content of Elliebelly BFL sock turns out to be really perfect for shawls.  It blocks out to show off the lace patterning perfectly.  And, it's warm enough for a little comfort on a cool day without being too heavy.  The new "What Can I Knit With It" page, when it's ready, will help knitters make these kinds of selections.

As long as we're on this topic, I'll note that one final factor to consider when substituting yarns is that not all yarns categorized as fingering (or sport, or dk, or worsted, or aran, or bulky) will be the same.  Example: a quick perusal of Ravelry shows commercially produced dk weight yarns can run anywhere from 214 to 260 yards for a 100 gram skein.  It's important to be aware of differences like this when substituting a yarn for the one recommended in the pattern.

Ishbel© coco581

Of course, once you understand these concepts, your ability to substitute yarns in endless. You may deliberately choose to knit a wool cardigan in linen for a looser summer look.  A good example is Ishbel, pictured above. If you click on the link to the pattern, you'll see it was written for a 100% wool fingering yarn, although the pattern page also shows a 50 wool/50 Silk blend as an option.  The wool version has a lovely drawn in look that emphasizes the lace. The Ishbel shown above is knit in Elliebelly Panda, a 50% silk, 50% Bamboo blend.  You might not have thought it would be a good fit for this pattern based on the yarns the designer used, but knowing that her beautiful, complex lace would be shown off to perfection by a drapey, non-wool blend, I chose Panda for this project.  Understanding the way the yarn base will work is a key to making a yarn substitution that is quite different from the recommended yarn, but still a success.

Thinking about the results a yarn will give you with the pattern you select is a key to ending up with finished projects you will love and wear over an over again.  And as with the time spent on swatching, it's well worth engaging in this exercise before you invest your precious knitting time in a project.  I hope that when the new "What Can I Knit With It" page is ready, it will be a really helpful resource for everyone.

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Knitting With Spoons

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I'm into the third repeat of my Silver Spoons Shawl, hopelessly in love with the pattern, hopelessly in love with the yarn.  There are some projects where you don't want the knitting to stop. This is one of them.  It's a simple enough pattern to knit while meeting a friend for coffee or talking with family at the end of the day.

Many knitters are making this with a contrast color on the border.  My current plan is to knit mine as a solid, although it's tempting to edge it in black or perhaps a pop of color.  If this one isn't in your queue, it should be there.  And, rumor has it, there is a sport weight version of the pattern coming out next month.