Wednesday, September 21, 2022

Moving and Organizing

About a week and half ago, I bought another house. I was after a smaller footprint, less yard, less to clean and no extra rooms that we never use and yet collect dust, doggie hair and empty cups. It was a cute house and came with an outbuilding which would have made a great studio, which I didn't currently have. But the deal changed after the home inspection and we decided to not take on the problems that came with that house. We were disappointed and felt blue for a while until in the middle of the night I woke up with a great new plan. 
It involved changing just about every room in our current house to make my work easier and to give me the studio I wish I had. This required negotiating with Dave to put him in a smaller bedroom and then I could have the master for my sewing, painting, collage and polymer clay stuff. Plus I would get a big walk-in closet to store my yarn!!!
I have been wanting to find a better way to store my yarn and get it out of the bins that were wedged into a small closet. It's always the bin on the bottom that has the yarn I was seeking so lifting and moving the others was big hassle. 
I called on my pal and fellow knitter Patsy to come help me unload these into my new hanging yarn system. 
This idea came from several photos on Pinterest and I knew it would work for me. All of these  storage hangers came from Walmart.


I also have my quilts in this closet, hung on skirt hangers to avoid creases. Because of this organizing binge I can now find things when I need them. Hurray!
Full disclosure: I still have yarn in the garage, in plastic bags, and eventually all will find a home in this closet. Then came the work to make the rest of this master bedroom into a studio.
This is the 'Before' picture and even this is two days into the decluttering. There is a big en suite bathroom that had to be dealt with too, and I took it over just in the nick of time before it was hopeless. 
Here is the new studio with mostly everything that was stored or unreachable over the last two years.

I'm exhausted from all the furniture moving, cleaning and deciding what to toss and what to keep, and yet ecstatic to have a studio again, and such a bright and sunny one at that. The one bookcase is awaiting stuff that is up high in another closet. I'll get to it, maybe tomorrow... or after my nap.


The living room, dining room and hall bathroom got makeovers too, but this is the really good one, in my humble opinion. And of course, now I don't want to move.
By the way, Dave likes his new room and so does his canine companion, Tony.

Friday, September 16, 2022

Miteriffic Poncho Pattern V.2

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A poncho designed in panels of mitered diamonds and triangles. Some experience with mitered diamonds is recommended. For detailed video instructions on making miters see: http://vimeo.com/6832500
For excellent miter written instructions see: http://megan.kiwi.gen.nz/MitresArticle/
For simplicity here the directions for individual miters are reduced to just the specifics.
Noro Kureyon or other worsted weight yarns:
Needles: US 10 for body and US 8 dpns or circular needle for collar
Note: Slip first stitch every row.
Sized Medium, for a wingspan of 60”. (For taller wearers increase the size of the larger diamonds by 10 stitches, or 70+1. Follow the math to increase the smaller diamonds to half or 35+1.)
Center panels back and front are knit the same: Cast on 60+1stitch to make mitered diamond #1. Knit every row, alternating two contrasting yarns.
For triangle #2 pick up 30+1 stitches on the edge of first diamond. Knit every row, alternating yarns, and at the end of the rows on the right side decrease K2tog, K1. After triangle is decreased to last stitch, break yarn. For triangle #3, pick up 30+1 stitches along other edge of diamond #1. Knit every row and alternate yarns. At the beginning of right side rows, K1, k2tog, k to end.
Diamond #4 is the same as #1 and the stitches are picked up from the previous three modules. #5 and #6 are the same as #2 and #3.
Neck Triangle #7: Pick up 30 stitches from between triangles #5 and #6. Make triangle: Right side only: K1,k2tog, knit to center three stitches, make decrease, knit to last three stitches, k2tog, k1.
Make back panel the same as front panel.
Join front and back panels with triangles made the same way as triangle #7.
Center Sleeve panel.
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The center sleeve panel is based on a diamond of 30 +1 stitches and triangles of 16 stitches picked up on the edges of the diamonds. The diamonds # 1,4,and 7 are based on 31 stitches, while the triangles #2,3,5 and 6 are 16 stitches. The tiny triangles #8,9,10 and 11 also pick up16 stitches but have been decreased (k2tog) the beginning and ending of every front row.
The sleeve sides are then sewn to the center sleeve panel.

Sleeve side triangles
Pick up 57 stitches along edge of front or back panels. One or two extra stitches are OK, whatever makes it look like every edge stitch is included. Decrease on right sides by k1, k2tog on bottom edge to match the direction of the front or back panel bottom diamond. Carry up contrasting yarn on opposite side.
Make four sections, two on each side for sleeves. Sew sleeve sides to sleeve center panel.
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Collar. Pick up stitches around the square neck opening, using smaller dpns, or a circular needle #8 and a single yarn, join in a circle. For a cowl collar: Knit with a single yarn, alternating one row knit and one row purl. Bind off at desired height. If desired, the collar can be split and knit flat after then initial six rows are knit. To do this, knit six rounds, find center front stitch, turn and knit to end, slipping first stitch of each row. If buttonholes are desired, make a simple one with yo, k2tog.
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Collar. Pick up stitches around the square neck opening, using smaller dpns, or a circular needle #8 and a single yarn, join in a circle. For a cowl collar: Knit with a single yarn, alternating one row knit and one row purl. Bind off at desired height. If desired, the collar can be split and knit flat after the initial six rows are knit. To do this, knit six rounds, find center front stitch, turn and knit to end, slipping first stitch of each row, alternating one row knit and one row purl. If buttonholes are desired, make a simple one with yo, k2tog.
Optional cuffs. Pick up stitches all around bottom of sleeve and join in a circle. Knit 1 row, Purl 1 row alternately for 12 rows or six ridges, bind off.
Blocking really helps this yarn lie flat and drape best.


Thursday, September 15, 2022

Frosty Shawl

Frosty Shawl
Knit from Cascade Casablanca, 59% Wool, 24% Silk 17% Goat - Mohair  and Gedifra 100% Merino.
The pattern, which I actually followed (!) was the Weaver's Wool Mini Shawl. It's a great little wearable piece, that stays on the shoulders without tugging or adjusting. I think it will be a fave, and will provide a base for lots of variations. 


Available for purchase for $45 plus shipping. Email me.

Saturday, September 10, 2022

Mitered Kerchief

 
 Mitered Kerchief 
 
Does anyone remember the kerchief style scarves from like 50 years ago? Gulp. It just came back to me in a flash. We all wore little cotton triangles either as hats or around our necks. This little knit reminds me of those. 

 

But this time I've made it smaller and started in the middle with a mitered diamond and knit outwards from either side of it. I used a crochet provisional cast on, because it is just so much easier to get proper tension and these are a lot of stitches to cast on (87) and because later I am going to want live stitches to knit from where I began.

Crochet a long chain of stitches and with the knitting needle pick up a stitch in the 'spine' of each chain. Later these can be unzipped and will provide live stitches. 

 

The orange yarn is the crochet part that I will undo and then put the exposed live stitches on my needle to continue to knit. 

Pattern: The mitered diamond in this case was 87 stitches, (42+3+42) using size 3 needles and lots of different colored sock weight yarns. I used a center decrease of k2tog, k1, k2tog, arranging my stitches before decreasing so that they face the correct way to achieve this look. Knit in garter stitch. To knit the sides, unzip the stitches on one side of the diamond, place on needle and join yarn. Decrease at the top edge, k2tog, one stitch in from the edge, every fourth row until 2 stitches remain, bind off. 
The mitered square alone is 8". If a larger, longer scarf is desired, increase the amount of stitches for the mitered square, by an uneven number.

 I'd much rather decrease than increase, which is why I decided to construct this scarf in this manner. One could just as easily start at one end of the scarf, increase until time to make the big mitered square center, and then pick up stitches from the other side of the square and decrease to the end. Whichever way makes you happiest, I always say.
Here it is with just one side knit off the square and the crochet yarn still attached.  
 
Any questions? Email me