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Knit It Now: Stephen West’s Honegart Hat

This is my favorite hat of all time, possibly my favorite knitting project of all time.

Hat1

I made it back in 2011, but it was a rush job as cold weather set in for a child who was going to school up North, and I didn't get decent pictures at the time.  Thankfully, the child returned, and with him the hat.  I pulled it out with some other winter things this morning and remembered what a brillant pattern and fun knit it was, and wanted to share it with you all.

Hat3

This hat is knit in two different sections, which gives you endless possibilities — solids, variegated yarns, you name it.  I dyed Elliebelly Alpaca & Merino just for this project.  The honeycomb portion of the hat is so much fun to knit that I pulled over at a farmstand on the way back from the beach, and knit much of it while eating fresh peach ice cream and watching the tourists.  I couldn't wait to finish it.

Hat2

This hat is at the top of my "must knit it again" list and I recommend you try it if you are looking for something a little bit frisky but well within the capabilities of a advanced beginning knitter with a couple of projects under your belt.  (I mean that in the realistic sense — not in the way some well-meaning experienced knitters who have forgotten what it's like to be knew to sticks and twine will tell you the lace shawl is "really easy" or the heavily cabled pattern is fine for a new knitter).  Like all of Stephen West's design, it is slightly edgy but imminently practical.  And, it's really warm.  Return of the Polar Vortex, anyone?

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Outlander Knitting

Outlander knitting is suddenly everywhere.  And for good reason — as the weather turns colder, who wouldn't want a huge, chunky knit cowl to keep you warm?  There seems to be lots of demand on Etsy for all sorts of Outlander-wear and patterns are cropping up all over Etsy.

Grandma

This cowl, my version of The Gathering pattern by Kalurah, is already in use by my Mom, as our weather turned cool over the weekend.  It was knit on size 35 needles, with Elliebelly Bulky Merino held triple stranded.

I also wanted to try knitting one on larger, size 50 needles.  I used one skein of Cascade Magnum to knit this one up.

IMG_1629

Although it is lovely, a sweet, teenage child seems to have claimed it, so I'm going to try a third for myself, double stranding the Magnum and going a bit shorter in length so it settles over the shoulders like a shrug.  Knitting with the size 50 needles is good brain candy, especially since I've got some lace on hopelessly small needles going on at the moment.

The Gathering pattern, as the other host of Outlander patterns cropping up on Ravelry, is simple and forgiving.  And like the issue is Scottish independence, what's old seems to be new again — these styles seem very of the moment and I have the feeling we'll see them worn everywhere before it's over.

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What Was I Thinking
Subtitle: This Skeins Don’t Match

In the whiskey-foxtrot-tango category of bad things I've done as a knitter, comes this unforgiveable mistake when knitting with hand-dyed yarn: not alternating skeins as you knit.  I know better.  After all, I dye yarn myself and understand that even with great care, handpainted skeins aren't going to be a perfect match.  And Malabrigo Yarn, which I love as much as life itself for its beautiful colors, is notorious for throwing skeins that don't match, even in the same dyelot.  Which is to say, anyone with an ounce of sense who is knitting with Malabrigo knows to swap skeins every few rows.

Started

But, in my excitement at starting this project, I … forgot.  This is Evelyn Clark's Shetland Triangle Lace Shawl, and I have been wanting to knit it for a long time.  It's a simple lace pattern, knit in DK weight yarn and I chose the indescribably delicious Arco Iris colorway in Malabrigo's Silky Merino yarn.  I had four skeins.

Four skeins

You can see right off in the picture that although it isn't horrible, the second skein down from the top has a lot more bright yellow in it than the rest of its cadre.  So, you guessed it, that's the one I started knitting with.

Repeat 4 cropped

Midway through the fourth repeat, I realized I hadn't changed out skeins.  No problem, I told myself, those skeins really were well-matched, and I would be just fine.  I would start alternating now.  So I pulled out the next skein (as a well prepared knitter I had wound multiple skeins into balls so I could switch off carefully throughout the shawl) and beheld this incredible horror:

Balss

They don't even look like the same colorway.  The one on the right, the skein I started out with, is not even in the same universe as the one of the left, which I am currently knitting from.  Quel disaster!

After second skein

Here I am, about four rows into the new skein (this photo has the truest colors of any of them — I do love Arco Iris).  One could almost convince oneself that it was all going to be okay.  That despite carelessness, just this one time, the knitting gods were smiling, and it would all work out.

However, I have learned that such hopes typically get smashed a couple of inches in.  I haven't made a mistake like this in years, actually, in seven years, since this sweater, which I knit in 2007, showed a clear line between skeins.  You can't see it well in this cleverly staged photo, but particularly in the back, there was a line of demarcation that was as clear as the Berlin Wall.

Greensweater

Already, my thoughts are turning to clever strategies like a gentle, unifying overdye to tone the different skeins into submission.  I could, and probably should, frog this back to the first repeat and go forward in a more knitterly fashion.  But I'm going to hold my breath and see what happens.

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What I’ve Been Dyeing

This post is just eye candy, pure and simple.

Trug

I've been doing some dyeing, and thought you all might like to see it.  For the most part, I've been doing two- skein sets so I can do a hat and mittens for my children who seem to shamelessly lose their hats and mittens every year who adore and cherish everything I knit for them.

BFL

I've been wanting color, like this Blue Faced Leicester, perhaps because our later summer garden is a riot of color and it's infectious.

Rainbowcashm

Although most of it is for the kids, this more muted bit is for me.  It's dk weight cashmere that I've dyed up — some of it is reskeined and some not but it's all the same, and I intend to make something wonderful with it, perhaps a long scarf to wrap around my neck this winter, or a shawl.  This is the time of year when weekend soccer games give me lots of extra knitting time, so I'm glad to have all of this ready to be knit up!

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Outlander. Late & Grudgingly. (But Happy About The Knitting!)

My Mom has been a huge fan of the Outlander books for at least a decade.  I have to confess that I've feigned polite interest, but the plot has never grabbed me enough to convince me to read it.

One word suddenly changed that: Handknit.

Claire

Or rather, it didn't convince me to read the books, but instead, to watch the show, because I was told the knitting was beautiful.  And it really is!  Claire's ubiquitous and stunning cowl is something I had to knit for my Mom, also named Claire, right away.  After searching through the available patterns (clearly, it's just a big ring of garter stitch, but I wanted ideas — should it be a mobius, should there be shaping, etc. etc.) I settled upon The Gathering as a good place to start and cast on.

Cast on

The lovely purple edge is this provisional cast on, which I prefer to the one the pattern suggests.  The yarn is Elliebelly Bulky Merino, held triple stranded to give it the necessary bulk.  Although the pattern calls for size 50 needles, I didn't have any on hand, so I'm trying it with my size 35 needles, the largest I own.  I'm not sure it will give the loose drapey knit of Claire's cowl on the show, but it seemed worth a try.

My plan is to knit until I am just about out of yarn and then use a three needle bind off, rather than Kitchnering, because I'm lazy like that.

This pattern is the easiest possible knit, and seeing how nice it looks now, part way done, I'm pretty sure the biggest challenge will be giving it over to my Mom when it's done.

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Finished Soxies and a Hat

Finished1

Who knew Soxies would turn out to be such an intriguing little pattern?  They were a quick knit, which is always gratifying.  But, with their cables, they never got boring and I found myself knitting late into the night just for the fun of watching them take shape.

They knit up so quickly, that I also managed a quick Barley Hat, knit from Malabrigo Worsted that I dyed myself.  I know a little boy who is going to be grateful for this hat when the weather turns chilly, although he looks less than pleased about it now.

Barley
 

Barley has also been a hit with the newest member of our family, a Boxer name Fig, who was a birthday present from my husband earlier this year.  For those of you keeping count, that would be two dogs and four cats in our family.  I'm trying to teach sweet Miss Fig that yarn is not a toy!

Fig

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Soxies on a Plane

I’m onto the second Soxie. I managed to start on the same color repeat as the first one, so I’m hoping there will be similarity to the way they look-or at least a pleasing harmony.

As you can see, I’m knitting the second Soxie on a plane, just like the first. I’m getting some funny looks from my male neighbors who aren’t quite sure what to make if the woman with the pointy sticks.


Soxies on a Plane