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Favorite Knit Hats

'Tis this season.

Or, no.  It's really not the season.  September in 'Bama is definitely not hat season.  But the mornings have been chilly, which gives me hope of sweater weather ahead and makes my thoughts turn to knitting that I can wear as soon as it comes off the needles.  So, I thought I would recap some of my favorite knitted hat projects today and help everyone with some start up ideas for hat accessory knitting.

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Deux by Lisa Mutch is such a simple knit that even a novice knitter can manage it.  And, it's quick because it's knit in Bulky yarn.  I did this version for our trip to Iceland last year and loved wearing it.  In the world of quick, satisfying knits, Deux is the king.

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Nevermind, by Melissa Schaschwary, also knit in bulky yarn, is a simple, addictive cable pattern.  I've knit it twice and both times I enjoyed it so much that I didn't put it down until it was done.  Have a couple of football games to watch?  Knit a Nevermind.  The Plucky Knitter's Snug Bulky is the perfect yarn for this hat.

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My Lutz Jump Hat is such a marvel!  Its cables are complex, but not too difficult to conquer for an advanced beginner.  Monika Sirna's well-written patterns are always a pleasure to knit and this one was no exception.  I used Malabrigo Worsted Merino.  It was the perfect yarn for this hat.  It's fluffy and the colors are rich.

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Honegart by Stephen West is such a feel good knit!  I dyed the yarn for it myself and enjoyed watching the honeycomb patterns take shape.  The construction is interesting and the result is a hat you feel proud to say you've knit.  It made me feel accomplished and kept a child going to school up north warm.

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We are crazy Wes Anderson fans in our house.  We love all of his movies, but especially The Life   Aquatic with Steve Zissou.  I had to knit my darling husband (the hat is modeled here by one of the kids), the ubiquitous Zissou hat that was worn by all of the crew members in the movie.  My version is in a light weight worsted yarn that knit up more like a dk weight yarn.  It's got a delicate swirl pattern in the decreases that's fun to knit.  There are several interpretations of this hat on Ravelry, but I thought Lalla Pohjanpolo's version came the closest to what I wanted and it was easy to knit.

You can never have enough hats.  Never ever.  My Ravelry queue, which I try to limit to patterns I seriously plan to knit in the next year, has 15 hats in it.  Four of them are in my short term plans for knitting, including Northport, Greystone, Happy Thoughts, and Howzat.

Are there hats in your future?  I'd love to see your thoughts in the comments with links to hat patterns you've knit or are planning on trying out.

 

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Summer Knitting

Feeling low because you got pranked by the Mars hoax ?  Here's a planet you can see, or at least a picture of my Summer Moon shawl in progress.

Summermoon
This pattern is everything I'm usually not.  It's bright.  It's chevrons.  It's fingering weight and the first row consists of 500+ stitches.  But I was drawn to Knitterella Jill Zielinski's pattern the more I looked at it and took the plunge.  I've been knitting a row here and there when I have a moment and am in love with the color play!

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Blocking Your Swatch: Why You Should

With apologies for the bad, hastily snapped photos, I'm going to offer up a case study in why knitters should force themselves to block their swatches.  Remember yesterday's debacle with the Moto Vest?  It knits up quickly in a bulky yarn, and I approached it with the attitude that the first few inches of the scarf portion were the swatch, since the pattern is more recipe than sized directions.  My initial take was that the sizing was off significantly, and I wasn't wrong.  But it changed radically with blocking.

Prepostblock

[I have to note that the photos do horrible injustice to this yarn, which is a rich deep blue.  I promise to get a good glamour shot of it as soon as possible.]

The rib opens up significantly with blocking, and I should point out that this wasn't aggressive, pin it to the limits blocking, this was a gentle hand wash followed by a soft "do your own thing" kind of block. The back piece is almost double in width.  I want it to be a bit wider, but will probably add one rib on either side, not the 10 stitches per side I was contemplating.  And, the length of the scarf has opened up as well, giving me the correct measurement there.

To recap, had I used the unblocked piece as my swatch, I would have added several inches to the scarf collar and knit a much bigger back, ending up with a piece fit only for Godzilla.  As it is, the verdict is still out on my Moto vest.  I've picked up more of this yarn off of Plucky destash so I can reknit the back wider, a couple of inches shorter, and perhaps with a bit of cable decoration.  And I think it will work.

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Trouble In (Knitting) Paradise

This will be a weekend for much ripping.  Measuring, self-recriminations, re-measuring, perhaps some creative block, and then ripping.  Not just one, but two projects.  

Glacier, my beautiful cabled sweater, has a beautiful back.  But it is too long.  Instead of hitting above my hips it is miniskirt length.  Why did this happen?  Because the yarn is lovely and thick … and heavy. So my gauge swatch under predicted growth in length.  I should have seen this one coming.  I put the project in time out when I came to this realization so I could CALM down and breath before ripping back (this should be fun with alternating skeins to wind and splice) to before the shaping starts and taking out a repeat or two.

Scarf knit up

This is a new project, my Moto Vest.  It's a clever construction, essentially you knit a big thick scarf before picking up stitches in the middle to knit the back. The pattern is more of a recipe than a pattern. At a glance, my shawl collar isn't long enough (it will eventually get connected to the back) and my back isn't wide enough.  I'm knitting with Plucky Bulky, a yarn that is notorious for growth with wet blocking, so I will wet block and remeasure.  But I think here as well, I'm headed for the knitting frog pond.  My current plan is to lengthen the shawl collar, rip out the back and knit it almost twice as wide, and add some cable detailing on the back for a bit of light shaping at the waist.

Shawl

Back

Fortunately for both of these projects, I'm still in love with them and am deeply committed to finishing them.  Some day.

I'm off to sulk.  Hope you are having a better knitting week than I am!

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Sweater Progress and New Yarn

Thanks to the Americans and Madame Secretary (my grown up kids have introduced me to the concept of binge watching), I've made progress on Glacier and am within a couple of inches of doing shaping for the sleeves on the back piece.

Dingus
Dingus was a bit surprised to be caught "napping" a/k/a chewing my tape measure in half on it, but he recovered gracefully and spent some time pretending he was helping me.

I got a  beautiful box full of yarn from The Plucky Knitter a few days ago and am in the process of debating its future.

Plucky

This is mostly Bello Worsted, Plucky's 55% Merino/45% Cashmere blend.  It's very soft and pretty and I've developed quite the fondness for it.  I liked these colors together, and played around with a collage of them, which convinced me I needed a long stripey scarf, sort of a riff on Dr. Who, to put them all together.

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I'm going to devote some time to looking at patterns, but have also given some though to coming up with something very simple on my own.  I'm not sure if that's happening, but I'm really looking forward to knitting with this yarn! 

 

 

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A Basketful of Quilt Squares (Knitted)

Although this behavior is frowned up in my family, I finished up the last quilt square for my Barn Raising Quilt at dinner yesterday.  Over Pho.  I waited to pull it out until the meal was over and we were drinking bubble tea while waiting for the check.  Still, this is considered slightly bad manners in my family.  But I was so excited, after years and years of knitting one of these squares here and there, to finish up the last one.

Finished
Now, I have a lovely basket full of quilt squares, waiting to be edged and sewn together.

Basketful
They look pretty all laid out, but I need to spend some time putting together a nice variation of color and hue, to make sure it all works.  Some time ago, I purchased some black skeins to use for edging/sewing, but as I look at the squares, I think that may be too dark.  I'm going to try either a dove gray or something in a buff range.

Squares laidout

Evil Kitty Dingus REALLY likes knitting.  He likes everything about it — we've never had a cat quite as attentive to the whole process as he is.  He sits in my lap and quietly lulls me into the belief that he is not a threat before striking mid-stitch.  He was delighted to come across some leftovers tucked into this basket, but a lot less happy when he realized I was onto him.  I'm going to have to knit a few yarny toys for him this weekend.

Dingusapproves