K3tog: ILx Knitting 3

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Thanks t.r.! I could see it working much better if I weren't changing from garter stitch to stockinette between the white and blue. At first, I had the totally misguided idea I could change color for just a single stitch, like cross-stitch, and tried to do a mix of intarsia and stranded - which was crazy-making.

The next thing I want to try is some Extreme Double-Knitting. I've got the book pre-ordered after seeing some of the finished stuff in Interweave.

Jaq, Tuesday, 6 September 2011 05:12 (fourteen years ago)

My friends at the yarn shop are really into the Extreme Double-Knitting guy so I am going to have to check it out sooner or later.

tokyo rosemary, Tuesday, 6 September 2011 11:57 (fourteen years ago)

http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6154/6137149665_59c26cf15e.jpg

FINALLY finished my second blanket. NEVER again will I knit a stranded blanket. BORING. BUt I have to say I do like the end result. Still needs fabric backing.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Monday, 12 September 2011 21:28 (fourteen years ago)

I did my first colorwork type thing. Whattt? It's a Latvian braid, y'all.
I remember my knitting guru telling me about a person who did stranded colorwork by picking color A up and putting color B down...every time she changed colors. Didn't even try holding them in the same hand. (This crazoid was the LYS owner in Cruces actually.) I thought this was fucking crazy. But...that is what I did for this Latvian braid. I have become the thing that I judged.
It has made me stoked to do it the propah way, tho. Double-fisting the yarn, yes? Maybe...soon.

I might as well show it to you all, it is a hat by my #1 pattern design crush (crush on both him and his rad androgynous patterns) <3Stephen West<3

http://img834.imageshack.us/img834/655/westward.jpg

Nick Chopper (Abbott), Monday, 12 September 2011 21:58 (fourteen years ago)

I also tried crocheting the other day. Like five minutes of trying. It was like the time I tried to teach myself COntinental knitting...meaning it was brief & half-assed. Is crocheting an edging on a knitted thing significantly different than crocheting to make a crocheted item?

Nick Chopper (Abbott), Monday, 12 September 2011 22:10 (fourteen years ago)

yes, imo, as long as it's a simple edge.

i was single crocheting edgings years before i could fathom how to crochet.

JuliaA, Monday, 12 September 2011 23:00 (fourteen years ago)

Just showing off my first continental colourwork project, finished this just over a week ago - totoro headband! The chart makes it a bit taller than my head, but I bet I can get away with it when the weather turns colder.

http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6162/6174948970_cf7b3cc401.jpg

This was surprisingly fun! Once I figured out how to weave the floats on each hand, there were no problems and it worked up really quickly. The yarn never tangled, and it was so... simple! No idea now how people could do colourwork with both yarns in the same hand (I tried a while back, and the balls tangled ridiculously). Now more confident about working a colourwork yoke in the Cityscape cardie (if I ever don't get distracted and start other projects that is).

And now I've started a shawl in some ridiculously beautiful yarn from Spitalfields city farm wool and sheep festival a few months ago.

http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6151/6184526412_eec4d149b6.jpg

If there's not enough yarn, I have a 'spring greens' colourway that I am thinking of substituting in for a section or two. I am adding in a few extra reps as I've gone down needle size substantially so this will prob be the case.

superpitching, Monday, 26 September 2011 11:10 (fourteen years ago)

Sweet - I love the Totoro! Did you make the chart? I've been lots of double-knitting (just got the Extreme Double-knitting advance pdf so yay even more colors to sort out how to hold) using modified cross-stitch charts and making a few of my own.

I was haunted by the idea of alternating this bright pink/purple/blue/teal yarn with black and finally worked it up in a baby surprise jacket. Really pleased how it turned out: http://www.etsy.com/listing/83452968/optic-striped-black-berry-baby-surprise

Jaq, Saturday, 8 October 2011 23:00 (fourteen years ago)

Little blue penguins need sweaters knitted! http://blog.craftzine.com/archive/2011/10/call_for_knitted_sweaters_for.html

Jaq, Thursday, 20 October 2011 03:00 (fourteen years ago)

http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6179/6175986315_366103d265.jpg

I did a Totoro as well. Really fun. I hold both yarns in my one hand. The trick is to keep it consistent. I loooove doing stranded work. :-)

I want to chime in on the bsj. I wanted to scream I hated it her, way back when you were raving about Z. Then I knit a bsj. Then another. Now I'm going to do another one. lol.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Sunday, 30 October 2011 23:44 (fourteen years ago)

BTW my granny was in awe of my knitting skills: the fact I knit so consistent, blind,... Who isn't able to knit blind? I mean, shit, I need to watch my gazillion series. :-)

Nathalie (stevienixed), Sunday, 30 October 2011 23:46 (fourteen years ago)

i can only knit without looking if it's plain stockinette but often find that i slipped stitches and have to fix them the next row. can one do colorwork without continental knitting? i'm impressed with how fast you all seem to learn but i am stuck with one color only. i could probably do intarsia if i tried.

tunnel joe (harbl), Sunday, 30 October 2011 23:55 (fourteen years ago)

i just finished a cowl from one of the brooklyn tweed shelter collections. (i hate those pictures he has but they are nice things). i just gotta block it. it's good yarn but breaky. there is a break somewhere in the middle of my cables that i can't find. i think the yarn is sticky enough that it won't slip out though.

tunnel joe (harbl), Sunday, 30 October 2011 23:57 (fourteen years ago)

Jacquard just suits me so well. I absolutely love it. Hence why I crank out those stranded hats in no time. Lol. I should try intarsia. Then again I mainly do seamless.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Monday, 31 October 2011 00:20 (fourteen years ago)

I have to look, though I can get away with glancing at the tv every once in awhile if I'm knitting garter. And I can pay attention to Mr. Jaq reading to me as long as I don't have to count - so I always have something with a non-challenging pattern going.

Have finally totally mastered the continental purl, I think from doing a huge amount of double-knitting which is basically k1p1 forever and ever. What superpitching said about the yarn just laying exactly right is otm, but I couldn't see that happening before because I was using my left index finger to lift the yarn over the left needle. The trick is using the right needle action and a dip of the left to put the yarn to the front - it stays draped over the left index finger that way AND lays exactly above the stitch you're going to purl into. Put the right needle in the stitch, twitch the left index to the right and down, catch the yarn with the right needle tip and swoop up your purl stitch.

I started a knitting group at work and have been writing up simple patterns - garter stitch scarf, grandma's favorite square, and last week we did simple mittens. It's a fun couple of hours and I bring all my knitting toys for people to play with. I start the projects off and we pass them around with everyone doing a couple of rows to get the feel for what's going on.

Jaq, Monday, 31 October 2011 00:44 (fourteen years ago)

So I put a scarf aside and now I can't remember what the fuck the stitch pattern is. I have 29 stitches cast on, the row finished before I quit goes P1, then K2 P2 for the rest of the row.

I think this was supposed to be a broken rib pattern? Gah, so frustrating.

quincie, Sunday, 6 November 2011 22:58 (fourteen years ago)

Well k2 p2 certainly sounds like a rib.

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Sunday, 6 November 2011 23:03 (fourteen years ago)

Yeah, but there are 29 stitches, so I don't knowhow that worked. I think maybe it is Row 1: K, Row 2: K2 P2, last stitch P?

I'll take it back to the yarn shop where they told me the pattern (which I failed to write down, duh) and ask them to refresh my memory, I guess!

quincie, Sunday, 6 November 2011 23:28 (fourteen years ago)

Your hypothesis sounds good to me. You'll be putting a seam in down that edge?

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Sunday, 6 November 2011 23:33 (fourteen years ago)

sounds like maybe some type of double rib but i forgot how to do that. i think that might have been like k2, p1 though

tunnel joe (harbl), Sunday, 6 November 2011 23:54 (fourteen years ago)

Oh hang on, it's a scarf, so no seam. I'd do a few rows and see what happens, unless it's mohair or something, that you can't unravel.

Also unknown as Zora (Surfing At Work), Monday, 7 November 2011 00:18 (fourteen years ago)

I tried a couple of rows and f'ed up the pattern, so I'm gonna just chill on it until I can take it to one of those magical people who can look at knitting and figure out exactly what the hell is going on.

quincie, Monday, 7 November 2011 00:28 (fourteen years ago)

But anyway, I really want to finish this damn scarf for Mr. Quincie so I can move on to making this cowl neck warmer thingie with yarn from my colleagues very own alpacas!

quincie, Monday, 7 November 2011 00:30 (fourteen years ago)

Broken rib pattern:

Works over multiples of two plus one.

Row one: Knit.

Row two: Purl one (knit one, purl one) across.

Is that it?

tokyo rosemary, Monday, 7 November 2011 00:37 (fourteen years ago)

Although yours would be
R1: Knit
R2: P1 (K2, P2) across

and that works because 29 is a multiple of 4 +1

tokyo rosemary, Monday, 7 November 2011 00:38 (fourteen years ago)

That's what I tried, but maybe it was R2: (K2, P2) but always end with a P2 stitch as the last stitch on the row? I seem to remember the ladies saying something about always ending on a _ stitch at the end of the row. Would that basically result in the same idea?

My brain is not good at figuring out patterns of the knitting type :(

quincie, Monday, 7 November 2011 01:04 (fourteen years ago)

If you can't wait until you get to the shop, you could send me a picture, and maybe I can tell what is going on.

tokyo rosemary, Monday, 7 November 2011 01:22 (fourteen years ago)

Oh I love and am envious that you can just look at stuff and figure it out! It probably seems very obvious to you, but I have a hard time figuring out pattern intricacies (maths not my strong suit, obv).

I will try to find my camera so I can post!

quincie, Monday, 7 November 2011 01:38 (fourteen years ago)

I'm making a hat out of tosh dk. I have never used madelinetosh yarns before but the colors are so beautiful it's making me sigh like a dandy. Would love to make a whole cardigan out of it someday.

puffy paint (Abbbottt), Saturday, 12 November 2011 15:34 (fourteen years ago)

Guys after making four bsjs I can safely say: Overrated. Never really liked her style. Now even less

Guess I even go against the flow in knitting. Lol

Nathalie (stevienixed), Saturday, 12 November 2011 18:13 (fourteen years ago)

what are bsjs?!

i love the madelinetosh yarns! i am almost done with a cardigan from it but i took a break beccause i came to an annoying part that involves picking up stitches, ew. i'm working on a quince and co pattern. it's the cardigan called anastasia. i think it's too short so i started the sleeves and will use whatever is leftover to make it longer. fast on 10.5 needles and no button band to pick up.

tunnel joe (harbl), Saturday, 12 November 2011 20:49 (fourteen years ago)

i also have a hat i made of madelinetosh vintage last year, it's so soft after being machine washed a few times and feels very durable

tunnel joe (harbl), Saturday, 12 November 2011 20:50 (fourteen years ago)

I want to see that madelinetosh yarn in person - the colors look amazing online! I'm in a hat knitting frenzy right now, trying to get 6 done by 11/17 and now have a rotten ache in my right elbow with 3 more to go. No more custom orders for awhile after this one - I've got one sleeve left to finish on the Snowden Becker Agatha cardigan and want to wear it NOW. (I'm making the sleeves full length and tapered in rather than belled - in midnight heather alpaca, dark dark blue heathered with black and purple and deep green.)

Jaq, Sunday, 13 November 2011 00:39 (fourteen years ago)

My friend M at my LYS loooooooooooooves madelinetosh so now they stock some. I bought some bright bright yellow (Edison Bulb) yesterday. I can't decide whether to pair it with blue or hot pink to make a scarf.

bsjs = Baby Surpise?

tokyo rosemary, Sunday, 13 November 2011 01:25 (fourteen years ago)

Surprise rather

tokyo rosemary, Sunday, 13 November 2011 01:25 (fourteen years ago)

what are bsjs?!

baby surprise jackets. i really think it's completely overrated.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Sunday, 13 November 2011 18:41 (fourteen years ago)

In what way? It's a simple, well-engineered, quick to work up little jacket.

Jaq, Sunday, 13 November 2011 19:15 (fourteen years ago)

i finished the other sleeve and figured out why it came out so short. there's a mistake in the pattern that makes you skip a row. the chart was correct but the written pattern was not. i usually use the chart but the pattern didn't seem complicated enough to justify looking at it. so it's about 1 inch shorter from that and maybe another inch from my row gauge being off. i think i will just make one more leaf.

also whytf are cats so intrigued by knitting tools

tunnel joe (harbl), Monday, 14 November 2011 02:35 (fourteen years ago)

my cat finds my metal cable needle lying around and brings it to me while i'm sleeping

tunnel joe (harbl), Monday, 14 November 2011 02:35 (fourteen years ago)

Neither of mine cares about the yarn one bit, but Drac loves my circular needles and Morrie will chase the paper band from a skein around the house for months. They are strange.

Jaq, Monday, 14 November 2011 02:51 (fourteen years ago)

she carries yarn around and makes a mess of it but she cares most about the cables on circular needles (she has destroyed more than one) and smaller-gauge straight needles because she likes to bat them and carry them around. she once took a sock needle and hid it and brought it back to me a few days later.

tunnel joe (harbl), Monday, 14 November 2011 02:55 (fourteen years ago)

In what way? It's a simple, well-engineered, quick to work up little jacket.

Just looks lumpy (?), way too simple,... Something only a knitter who has heard of it will appreciate. It is quick. If it's baby size, you can do it in two evenings. But there's not much fun in doing it. Unless you are doing sth else at the same time.

I know I know, I shld shut up. :-)

Nathalie (stevienixed), Monday, 14 November 2011 20:32 (fourteen years ago)

It is finally homemade sock weather here in the Sonoran Desert!
~summon the power of Kitchener~

Loud music stressed out sad Shadow (Abbbottt), Tuesday, 15 November 2011 00:28 (fourteen years ago)

I'm knitting a Debbie Bliss classic cardigan for my friend's baby for Christmas. Good grief, rows and rows of stocking stitch is boring. But I think it's going to turn out quite nice, navy with grey trim. And I have some excellent buttons at the ready.

Madchen, Tuesday, 15 November 2011 12:21 (fourteen years ago)

I'm knitting a Debbie Bliss classic cardigan for my friend's baby for Christmas. Good grief, rows and rows of stocking stitch is boring. But I think it's going to turn out quite nice, navy with grey trim. And I have some excellent buttons at the ready.

Be aware: her designs (for kids) are very boxy.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Tuesday, 15 November 2011 14:07 (fourteen years ago)

I'm not sure what that means.

Madchen, Tuesday, 15 November 2011 14:19 (fourteen years ago)

two months pass...

i don't get how people finish so many projects, like one sweater a month or a pair of socks a month. i knit so slowly and i get so distracted! i have 2 sweaters that are in almost-done stages and i keep starting and not finishing accessories. i want to start another sweater now!

tunnel joe (harbl), Monday, 16 January 2012 18:34 (fourteen years ago)

I think I knit pretty fast (continental stylee), but I also knit ALOT - like at least 3 hours a day. Because I'm an addict.

Jaq, Monday, 16 January 2012 20:34 (fourteen years ago)

i am blocking this right now and i think it will come out too long! http://quinceandco.com/store/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2_24&products_id=91
also i started this a long time ago and stopped because i dread picking up that many stitches along the outside http://100-rain.blogspot.com/2010/11/hooray-cardigan.html
then i looked at it today and realized i was doing a good job on it and i should stop being ridiculous. so i'll pick that up again soon.
also i might want to do this in feb/march http://threadpanda.wordpress.com/2012/01/07/knitalong-with-us/

there are just too many other things to do and other ways to waste time!

tunnel joe (harbl), Monday, 16 January 2012 20:53 (fourteen years ago)

I'm doing a straightforward pair of toe-up socks for my sister and am winging a cabled pullover for Mr. Jaq right now. I'm going to try the E.Zimmerman seamless sweater technique for the pullover, but I've only finished about 8" of the body so far (bottom up). I love the textured cardi in that threadpanda KAL link! Also love both your other cardis! Did you use the same yarns as pictured? Gorgeous. I have a terrible time getting both stitch and row gauge - hope the blocking can sort out the length for you.

Jaq, Monday, 16 January 2012 21:25 (fourteen years ago)


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