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Test Hat

I am excited to be testing a new hat pattern for Faiza, whose patterns, HandSoOn Knits, are really extraordinary.  If you've missed them, she's the designer of Rumors of Snow, the amazingly textured and colored BIG shawl and some hats with lovely architecture to them.  So I was incredibly flattered when she asked me to test her upcoming hat pattern.

Half

It's written at a DK weight, so I'm knitting it with the Plucky Knitter's Sweater (in the Antiqued colorway).  It is a very pleasant knit, and without giving away the surprise, it has a very clever construction that makes it one of those patterns where you want to knit just one more row before putting it down and find out you've knit several more inches quite without realizing it.  I'm about halfway done here and hope to snatch a little bit of time away from regularly scheduled activities this weekend to finish it.  Or at least come close.

Birmingham is surprisingly springlike today, but I have an end of the month trip planned with the baby girl to look at New England colleges.  I am going to take this hat along and give it quite the work out.  I think it's going to be warm and pretty and I strongly encourage you to stalk Faiza for its release!

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Sleeve Island

It feels like it has been forever, but it has only been half of a sleeve.  It's a pretty hefty sleeve, but still, every time I hold it up to my arm, I notice that it hasn't gotten any longer.  It's a knitting black hole.

First sleeve

I always tell myself, "oh, I've only got the sleeves left, I'm almost done," when in fact nothing could be further from the truth.  I've already knit an entire skein into this sleeve.  The sleeves will be at least a third of the knitting on this sweater, not just an itty bitty little task before finishing.  It's sort of like child birth, I never seem to remember.  And with all of the fidgety thought process involved in the direction to "increase one stitch on each end and take into pattern," it's much slower than knitting the body pieces.

Despite all that, I'll confess to you in confidence that I'm really enjoying the sleeve knitting process.  The mental exercise has reinforced my belief in the accuracy of studies like the 2012 Mayo Clinic one that conclude knitting keeps your brain working.  Watching the cable form and expand out across the increased stitches is wonderful.  And, one day, I will have sleeves.  

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Knitting sleeves always makes me think "sleeve island," as one of my longtime knitter friend calls it.  This ALWAYS makes me think of Gilligan's Island and I end up with a terrible earworm. Want an earworm of your own?  Then watch this.

 

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Oh Look! A Sleeve (in progress)

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I'm exceptionally pleased with the start of this sleeve!

First off, it is no longer huge.  I have a nice, slim fit.  I am not usually magic with numbers, but I seem to have succeeded here.  As written the sleeves were enormous gaping maws a little bit big.  I would have known that if I had read the comments from other knitters, but, um, no.  I did not do that.  But we are started up again, this time one at a time instead of two and the fit is nice and tidy.  Please keep your fingers crossed that my math holds up at the armholes.

Second, the sleeve is a set of pretty complex cables.  I'm not sure if I can fully explain, but you can see it best in this picture of the body.

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The body consists of five "bands" of a nine stitch cable and it's border.  The cable is a sort of convoluted one that crosses over and back and makes a cool interlocking chain.  On the sleeve, there are only three cable bands.  But, you increase every few rows, and are told to work the increased stitches into the cables when possible.  I'm not experienced enough for that to make a lot of sense, but after doing a lot of research, I realized that I had to make up the "outsides" of each side of the sleeve and add the proper stitches in.  It's really not as easy as it sounds until you get the right pictures in your mind — what you have to do is oppositional to what you see on the charts.  But it seems to have finally clicked, and so far so good.

It's slow going, but I would really like to get this sleeve finished by the end of the month.  Along with this hat, which I had to cast on for yesterday.

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The pattern is a very clever new hat that Faiza asked me to test.  If you've not seen her patterns before, she is the designer of the delectable Rumors of Snow.  You won't want to miss the hat when it's released!  I'm knitting it in Plucky sweater, in the Antiqued colorway.

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Progress On My Habitat

There is progress being made.  Not progress on a sweater (although there is that), but progress on my tree house knitting room.  The rest of the family only thinks it's a sun porch that everyone can enjoy.  It's actually going to be my knitting nook, complete with a comfy chair and really good lighting.
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I live with one (adorable) husband, four children, two dogs, and five cats.  I like the fun and frenzy of family, but the clutter, not so much.  And as every knitter knows, some (or perhaps most) of the clutter is mine: leftover balls of yarn, a project bag that needs sorting out, swatches, and other remnants of a knitter's life.  But, I have a plan.

When my (adorable) husband announced last year that our back deck was beyond its useful life and I had to do something about it, I dutifully went to work.  Well, not me personally, but we live in one of those neighborhoods where people are very helpful, and before you know it, I was connected with just the right people.  Our backyard has been in the sort of carnage you see in the top left photo for the last few months, but under the watchful eye of Harry the Maine Coon Cat, the plan is coming together.  I'll be able to cook outside, which should give me lots of extra knitting time due to the ease of grilling and the proximity of knitting in the fabulous empty room with no clutter at the moment, just a few steps away from the grill.  I guess it's because it's still being built, but it looks so calm and peaceful and I love the view of the trees.  Hopefully in the next few months, I'll get to show you pictures of  knitting in my clutter free zone treehouse room. I can't really imagine a quiet, private space after 25 1/2 years of raising children, but every time I look at this space, it feels like my own private retreat!

And it couldn't come at a better time!  I'm on sleeve island with the Glacier sweater that I've been knitting for Millennia since last fall.  Just at the start of sleeve island, the second time around on this project, so I could use some peace and quiet to get through all those cables with increases and decreases.  I may just pull a folding chair out there and knit away!

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Adama Cowl

Adama.  I absolutely adore this cowl pattern.  It's been on my "knit it now" list for quite a while.

image from images4-b.ravelrycache.com© Hilary Smith Callis

I cast on last week, after running into my Local Yarn Store (It's called In The Making. It's a good enough shop that if you're coming anywhere even close to Birmingham, Alabama, you should detour for a visit) to pick up a few things.  The pattern is well-written and has a clever design.  But, you're going to have to listen to me whine about it in this post.  Please keep in mind that the whines are all self-inflicted wounds.  The pattern is lovely and I expect to end up with a charming finished object, if I can just get my act together.

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Adama is written for The Plucky Knitters' Scholar, a worsted weight cashmere and merino blend that relaxes after blocking into a smooth, light-weight fabric.  And I had some gorgeous Scholar set aside for this pattern.  But, when I visited my LYS, one of my favorite knitters there was wearing a gorgeous version of Adama, knit in Woolfolk's Får.  Får is a very different yarn from Scholar.  Scholar is a woolen spun yarn, which makes it light and fluffy — it's a web of cashmere with a little merino for balance.  Får is a chainette construction, it looks a bit like a 3D crochet chain, and no matter how hard you pull on it, you would be unable to break it, which is something you can do quite easily with a woolen spun yarn. Får is dense and furry.  It's wonderfully soft and has a pretty halo you don't normally see on a 100% merino yarn.  All of that to say, it's rather a denser knit than the lacey Adama calls for, at least in its in-progress, pre-blocking version.  It took awhile before I could discern the emerging pattern.

Two colors

This yarn is absolutely horrible to have to rip out.  But that shouldn't be a problem, right?  I am, after all, an experienced knitter and this is a simple pattern.  I'm blaming this one on the cough syrup I've been taking at night, but I have ripped rows out of this project, again, and again.  Probably more than everything I knit last year, combined.  This is an easy pattern, and something I would have expected to complete in three or four evenings of knitting. But, the version I saw alternated sections in two different colors and I was so taken with it, I decided to imitate that approach, which is not part of the pattern. On my first try, the row that that looked like the right place to break in the pattern was too late.  Rip.  Second time around, I forgot to switch colors when I got to the proper row.  Rip.  And amazingly, I've forgotten to switch every time I've gotten to a color change, even though I stuck a big purple annotation marker in all of the right places on the pattern.  Definitely the cough syrup.

It's not easy to rip out several rows of knitting in Får.  That is particularly true of the lace rows I've been ripping out.  Even worse, I've been knitting mostly late at night, when the light is poor for a project so dark — the darker of the two greens is very close to black.  So I've been struggling to see the PSSO's and SSKs and get them back on the needle properly, in poor light.  To compound my problem, my other size 7 needles are in use, so I'm using a not pointy, not for knitting lace, pair of Addis, that although a fabulous needle for normal knitting and doable for this project, are horrible for trying to pick apart and unknit stitches.  Like I said, all self-inflicted wounds.

The moral of the project should be, if you're going to use a yarn that isn't quite what the project intended, get yourself the right needles and some decent lighting.  But I'm going to slug this one out because I really want to finish this project.  I'm on the fifth color change out and guess what?  Missed it again.  I'm midway through the rip back — I gave up late last night and I'm going to pull it out in the light of day to make it easier.

Why am I doing this?  The cowl I saw in the shop was so beautiful.  It was warm and fuzzy.  The colors were elegant.  The shape was perfect for a cowl — close fitting for warmth but a striking accessory.  I'm usually a process knitter who enjoys the journey, but here, I'm pure project knitter.  I want the finished object!  So cross your fingers for me.  Hopefully, I won't rip out too much hair while I rip out my stitches and I'll remember the rest of the color changes.  And if you're on the edge about knitting Adama, do.  I'm sorry I waited this long and suspect this won't be the only time I knit it.

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Picking Up Stitches and Swatching

I am picking up stitches. 236 of the little suckers, to be exact, because I've fudged my Arlo to make it a bit bigger to fit Ollie's measurements.

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I am not a huge fan of picking up stitches at the best of times, and because the spin on this yarn is rather loose, it's testing all of my pick-up-and-knit skills and patience.

As a bribe for good behavior, I gave myself permission to swatch for the Wolly Wormhead Hat KAL.  I'm excited to be knitting with the first yarn I've dyed for myself in ages, despite the fact, which I've noted earlier, that I seem to find it impossible to get an accurate photo of yarn in the turquoise blue range on my iPhone.  I'll have to pull out the big camera this weekend. Not to brag or anything, but I got gauge on the first go round.  This rarely happens for me and I am delighted!

Luewatching

Even though I wasn't happy with the result a few rows in, I decided to continue swatching with two skeins of the Plucky Knitter's worsted weight cashmere yarn, Cachet, for a Forester pullover. The colors are Bohemian Blue and Fisherman's Wharf, and they look nicer together, now that I'm further in.

Watching

I'm still not 100% on this combination and am going to try a blue/black combination to see if I like it better. I definitely want a big, bulky cashmere turtleneck to keep me warm this winter!

That's all the time I get away from picking up stitches.  Wish me well!