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The Best Knitting Retreat

I'm on the way home from The Plucky Knitter's "Glamping with Plucky" retreat. It was great fun and I've got lots to share with you.

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On the way home I'll be working on this complicated looking, but simple to knit hat from Feralknitter on Ravelry. It was a great class!

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Postscript: Shortly after taking the picture, above, I realized I had been knitting for three rounds with the wrong background colors (so much for knitting fairisle while chitchatting on the ferry with everyone leaving the retreat).  After lots of wasted time tinking back, I've reknit to where I was before, introducing the correct change in background color.  It's rather hard to see in the photo at the moment, but this is a traditional fairisle piece, knit in only two colors per row, with the background color changing to create a three dimensional effect.

PicMonkey Collage

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I Knit Another Hat

Late last night, I finished up my Paint By Numbers hat.

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I love knitting fairisle hats.  They are so much fun and not nearly as difficult as they look.  I'm particularly happy with the colors in this one, which I plan on wearing later this week in Seattle, where it will hopefully be cool enough to do so.  Knitting a wool hat is a bit of an act of faith when you live somewhere with temperatures still well above 90` as September draws to an end. 

A neighbor, who typically knows about such things, told me while out walking his dog last night that he had heard we were going to have a very cold winter.  He didn't seem to happy about it, but, such music to a knitter's ears!

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The Secret Life Of Trees

I love Carol Sunday's patterns and have had The Secret Life of Trees on my list for a while.  I really wanted to knit it in Elliebelly Chemise, my silk linen blend.  Fortunately, a Ravelry friend also had this pattern in her queue, and was nice enough to knit it up for me.

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It's a lovely pattern and Gail is the kind of marvelous knitter who pays lots of attention to detail, adding in a crochet edging where she carried the yarn while alternating skeins, with meticulous attention to matching gauge so that it looks like a professionally finished piece.  I'm in love, and couldn't resist these fresh out of the package photos — it looks fantastic, despite it's long road trip from Canada to Alabama.  I'm sure it will be even crisper after a gentle steaming, but I had to show it off right away.

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This sweater confirms Chemise's place in my heart.  I adore linen.  I really do.  And I'm always happy to knit with a yarn spun from 100% linen.  But somehow, the addition of silk to the mix turns linen into my favorite.  It looks and feels perfect and it gets softer every time you wash it.  The sheen is amazing.  So, enough.  But I see more of this yarn in my future.

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Slow Progress

Some weeks just aren't knitting weeks.  Unfortunately, this is one of them for me.  The Paint by Numbers had really is not as slow of a knit as it looks like if you're following along on the blog.  It's a straightforward pattern and a couple of days worth of knitting.  But I've been inching along, knitting a row here and there when I have a moment to pick it up.  Saturday soccer mom status is the key to finishing this one for me.  I'm looking forward to wearing it next week.

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New Yarn & A Bad Old Toe

I came home from a rather interesting week away to some really great yarn mail.  My week was spent in the phenom beautiful landscape of New Mexico, which was dotted with beautiful cacti and pretty little desert flowers.

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The yarn I came home to, in total contrast, was full of rich colors from The Plucky Knitter's most recent update.

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I'm planning on knitting some striped, speckled & solid hats for Christmas presents and think this yarn will be perfect!  Two of the sets are worsted and one is fingering.  I can't wait to start looking for patterns.

There's another project I need to take on.  I had some unplanned, minor, but very annoying toe surgery done last week.  I spent the whole week wearing Birkenstocks with my business suits, probably not the greatest look of all time.  I'm hoping to graduate back to grown up shoes this week, and am wondering about knitting a "big toe sock" for a little bit of extra padding until it stops hurting every time my toe comes into contact with anything firmer than a hand knit sock.

Toe

I'm continuing to alternate knitting (I actually knit through the whole toe mess much to the doctor's amusement) between Grannie Annie, one of my favorite knits of all time, the Paint by Numbers Hat, which I'm trying to avoid knitting too quickly as it's a very fun knit, and my Sjølingstadkofta Sweater (no worries about knitting this one too quickly — it's going to be at least a year).  You can tell I'm on a bit of a Plucky binge — all three of these projects are knit in the Plucky knitter's yarn; Cachet, Scholar, and Oxford, respectively.

There's a reason for all of the Plucky knitting.  I'm looking forward to spending the end of the month at the Plucky Knitter's retreat.  This will be my second year and I'm looking forward to classes on fairisle and the mechanics of knitting, but most importantly to seeing some wonderful friends and making new ones.  I can't wait to get away and knit, while hanging out with people who understand the making dinner doesn't trump finishing those last few rows in a chart!  The retreat is going to be spectacular and a much-needed few days away!

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Sjølingstadkofta: A Fairisle Yoke

Sjølingstadkofta in progress.

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I love the little flecks of contrast in the yoke. It reminds me of the LL Bean sweaters we wore in college.

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Hiya Hiya Sharps are perfect needles for managing the yoke increases in this fingering weight yarn. I was surprised by how easy it was to get through this section.

I'm looking forward to finishing this one and moving onto the first chart, which is a roses pattern.

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Progress…

I'm progressing on my Paint Brush Hat, which is now well into the colorwork.

Paintbrush Hat

And, my Sjølingstadkofta sweater is also breezing right along.  I'm a bit further along than in the photo, below. I've finished the collar ribbing and the portion of the collar that is knit flat, and have now joined in the round and added stitches for the steek that is in my future.  I'm knitting on new-to-me needles that my LYS recommended, Hiya Hiya Sharps, and although I didn't like them at first, we are now BFF. They make immaculate increases and wrap & turns (especially when it comes to lifting the wraps to hide them, which I do this way).

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Packing for travel is always a huge challenge for me.  I'll sacrifice just about anything to get my yoga mat and my knitting into my small rollaboard and carry on bag.  But, my current three works in progress all contain multiple, large balls of yarn.  The hat has five, and they are all still huge at the point.  I can manage just two along with me for the sweater, as it's fingering weight and they'll last.  And my Grannie Annie has four balls of yarn, although at this point, they're all about 1/3 of their original size.

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I've been negotiating with myself over who comes along with me this week.  I've got too very long flights.  I'm frankly a bit nervous about running into trouble with Sjølingstadkofta, so I don't want to travel with just one project.  I think Grannie Annie, which takes up less room, likely gets to come along, while I leave the hat at home.  I hate to do that as it's a wonderful pattern and I could finish it on this trip, but it's just too large at this point.  Hopefully I can knit a bit more of it at home and take it along to The Plucky Knitter's retreat, Glamping, at the end of the month.