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Dye Yarn. Dye.

Sometimes a girl just has to dye yarn.  Nothing else will do.

Pot

I dyed some Blue Faced Leicester for a very sweet girl.

Ecoduo

I dyed two skeins of Elliebelly's Eco Alpaca — I guess that makes this an Eco Duo — to use together in a hat for my oldest.  The skeins were dyed together and then the skein on the bottom was overdyed.  I'm hoping this means I get complimentary skeins that work well together.  It's an experiment I've been wanting to try for a while.  You can see the richness of the colors a bit better in the close up photo below.

Duo2

There is a bit more yarn steeping and you would think I would be tired of dyeing, but of course, that never happens.

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What Do You Do When You Are Out Of Yarn?

I never cease to be amazed by the ways in which people convince themselves that something that is clearly not right is actually okay or even good.

You might think that this is a very successful knitting project in the works for a very sweet young man.

Sweetollie

But you would be wrong.

I spent the better part of the week not knitting on this sweater, while telling myself I had plenty of yarn to finish the sleeves and the ribbing at the bottom.  Briefly, I entertained the possibility of finishing out the sweater with a solid gray yarn — a moment of deep practicality.  Then I pushed the notion aside and reminded myself I still had three partial balls of yarn and everything would be, well, okay.  Or even good.

Last weekend I hedged my bets by starting in on the sleeves early.  I knitted the body of the sweater just far enough to do the last button hole, leaving a couple of inches of ribbing at the bottom to be done.  I started one sleeve, and then I told myself that just to be sure, I would start the second one.  At this point I had three circular needles and three balls of yarn attached to the sweater, and knitting the third sleeve was an interesting dance of needles and tangling balls of yarn.

And then this happened:

Shortsleeves

Two partial sleeves.  Two rapidly diminishing balls of yarn in ziploc bags.

I can "catch up" the shorter sleeve on the left to the length of its mate is on the right with the remaining yarn.  But that is about it, as you can plainly see.

Ball1

Ball2

Really, I knew.  I knew this day was coming.  After I exhaust these two little stubs of yarn, I'm going to have to bring out the gray — I have some lovely Alpaca — and pray that I can get gauge.  And that it doesn't looks stupid, a sort of a "hey, I ran out of yarn but I'm trying my best" sweater.  I'm hoping I can embrace the mistake and that it will look like an intentional design element or at least that it won't look like a total disaster and become the kind of sweater all children fear their mother may knit them some day.  In the future, I will try to keep myself from ignoring the impending train wreck, or maybe just recognizing that when the math on yardage is a little bit tight at the outset of a project, it likely won't improve with time.

Despite all of this, I am oddly delighted with this sweater.  I like the bulky Elliebelly Talia Merino yarn and I love how the colors play together.  The Ragman pattern is simple, but a joy to knit and not in any way boring.  So I'm going to suck it up, start knitting with the gray yarn, hope for the best, and trust that  another solution will present itself if the gray yarn doesn't work out.

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Casting On: Ollie’s Crayon Ragman Sweater

The Elliebelly Knit Along starts today, and I'm on top of it.

This yarn

Crayonforollie

is going to become this sweater, Donna Higgins Ragman.

Framed_Ragman_600_medium2

I'm off to a good start. 

A very bad swatch indicated I would get gauge on size 9 needles (I've knit with this yarn before so I knew that and was too lazy to do more than just quickly confirm it.)

Badswatch

57 stitches, casted on using the long tail method.

Caston

And, on to the set up row for the raglan increases, followed by the insertion of pretty yarn jewelry (stitch markers).

Setuprows

Stitchmarkers

The only hitch in the process involved our large black cat, squirt, who became enamoured with the "new toy" Mom got him, and suddenly wandered off with the ball of yarn, trailing my needles behind him.

Yarnthief

He was very disappointed when I took it back.  Poor kitty!

 

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Getting Ready For The Elliebelly Knit Along: A Post In Which I Expand My Choices Instead Of Making A Decision

I have a number of favorite patterns and potential choices for the Elliebelly Knit Along, which starts Saturday so I'm getting to the point where I really, really, really need to make a decision here.  I hope you'll consider signing up and knitting along with me!  You can knit any pattern of your choice in any Elliebelly yarn, with lots of fun along the way.  Sign up here.

Instead of deciding from among the patterns I looked at a few days ago, I have a couple more possibilities to add to my list.

Cowl_2_medium

I adore Karin's Simple Ribbed Cowl pattern.  I can't help but think it would be wonderfully warming on a cold winter's day, and I do have just enough bulky Cashmere to knit this one, although I would have to do some quick dyeing as it is still in its natural state. (This is actually not much of a disincentive, because I love dyeing and I love dyeing Cashmere).

Shrug

Then there is Pinkobbit's shrug.  She used the Shrug This pattern, which uses just 153 yards of an aran weight wool.  I could probably get gauge double stranding some of my Eco Alpaca.

Elliebellyalpacaeco_medium2

I also think the black and white colorway Pinkobbit used is fantastic, and it occurs to me something like that, or yarn dyed in my Urban Myth colorway would be nice for this pattern.

We are coming up on decision time here, and I don't seem to be any closer.  I'm still eyeing the Sea Three (Seacell and Silk) as the yarn I would most like to dye with.  But I haven't hit the perfect pattern for it yet, and the patterns I have found are so tempting, that I suspect a number of them are going to hit my needles between now and the end of the year.

Hopefully a few of you are doing a better job than I am of deciding what to knit.  Remember to go ahead and sign up officially once you make your decision. 

 

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Ellie’s Tiny Tea Leaves Knit Cardigan

Here is the start of Tiny Tea Leaves.

Startedyoke

It just couldn't be any cuter.  I'm knitting this sweater, which is meant to be Ellie's fall cardigan, in Madeline Tosh's Vintage hand-dyed superwash Merino yarn.  The pattern starts at the yoke, and is knit all in one with raglan sleeves.

Progress on this one is going to be slow, but it's so much fun to knit I'm going to have to make time for it.  There are lots of beautiful examples of this sweater on Ravelry if you want to see it knit up without waiting for me.

P.S. – Make sure you check back in over the holiday weekend as I'll be posting a giveaway for some hand-dyed Elliebelly organic Merino yarn.

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Enough (Knitted) Ruffles for Ellie

Ellie kindly agreed to model the finished "Enough Ruffles for Joyce" scarf so you all could see her new short hair.  And of course, I couldn't resist playing with Photoshop just a wee bit.

 

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The scarf is, of course, still all blue.

 

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I'm incredibly happy with the way it turned out.  The cashmere is fantastic, the color just right, the pattern, as promised, enough without being too much.

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I am as happy with the scarf with the tails worn long and hanging down as I am with it wrapped double around.

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And, the scarf even appears to have magical powers.  It knocked Ellie straight out asleep when she put it on after arduously playing the role of model for me.

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