Sunday, February 3, 2019

First of Many

As you might have gathered, I had our first baby late in 2018. Many people have given me crap for not knitting anything for the baby yet. Other people have made things for Cute Baby (her daddy decided that should be her online name): Grandma knit a dedication blanket and a Christmas stocking, other Grandma made a quilt, Aunt W made a quilt, Friend K crocheted a headband and hat, etc. Baby is very well-loved and warm. But I am a knitter, and so Mommy-mades are a requirement, apparently.
Trick was, Tall Hubby and I didn't find out the gender of Cute Baby prior to her birth. It irritated our friends and family to no end! It also contributed to why I didn't make or start anything. I'm okay with all of this though, as I personally think gendering babies from day 1 is stupid and I dislike pastel pink and blue anyway. So my little girl is in gray, navy, white, tan, yellow...deal with it.
But while on a trip to Michael's with SIL M, I found these:
Such great colors!
They were apparently meant to be turned into little pompom hats, and I thought it would be a perfect starter project for Cute Baby, bought a skein, cast on...
And then had a baby. Also as previously stated, this meant knitting time went downhill quickly. I also decided to knit Christmas and Baby knitting went to the bottom of the priority list. So it was finally finished a few days ago.
Nothing fancy.
And it fits,
Mostly.
But I was not happy with it. Why, you might ask? This is the remaining yarn:
Can you guess the problem? 
No, it's not that there is so much yarn left. In the finished hat, there's no hint of those gorgeous teals! The trials of making small things. The accompanying orange pompom would blend right in rather than being a statement. Sigh...
I refuse to frog it. It's well made, it fits, it's warm. It's just also not what I wanted for Cute Baby. So I guess I'll have to cast on another one. Thank God they're fast.
...too bad I already also started on a toque for my Brother-in-Law J:
Leftovers from the Cunning Hat
My ultimate goal for 2019 is to get through as many of my UFO, Upcoming Projects, and Needs Repair lists as possible so I can embark on a grand knitting project I've been planning for years. I think it's a common malady of knitters and creators in general that the Upcoming Projects list never ends, only gets added to. Regardless, I shall strive to finish one orange hat before starting a third. 


Sunday, January 27, 2019

A Cunning Hat

Back in November, I was faced with what I thought would be an enormous amount of semi-free time.
This little one had something to say about time usage though.
I decided I would knit Christmas presents during my maternity leave, also to go along with my broke sisters' decision to DIY Christmas to save some money. My plan was mitts for Sister C-2 to match a hat I made for her years ago, a requested striped scarf for my mother, and a cunning hat for Sister C-1.
This was a request as well, I believe. We are a nerdy family and I think I can say C-1 is the most open about it. This based on Jayne Cobbs' handknit hat from the cult classic, too-short TV show Firefly. I used the pattern from Glitzy Faery for the most part. C-1 came with to pick out yarn and we decided on what we thought were more screen-accurate colors, rather than the more commonly accepted trio of colors (i.e. mustard/pumpkin/russet rather than yellow/orange/red). A small difference, just personal preference.
I have no in-progress photos because, as any new mom can tell you, a small baby takes up quite a lot of time.
Sister C-1 modelling

Looks rather good, doesn't it? 
Just for comparison...
Pretty cunning, doncha think?
This was the only gift done in time for opening presents on Christmas Eve. It was also the calmest, least ...interesting...not, thankfully. Still fun and a decidedly nice product that my sister loved.

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Recap #2 - More Baby Things

Two of Tall Hubby's cousins out in Colorado had beautiful baby girls earlier this year. It's an ever-expanding family, this one.
One was a decidedly pink-for-little-girls kind of family (which is completely fine) and the other family I made the executive decision not to ask. Looking through our local Michaels, I came across these really cool Caron Cotton Cakes in fun colors, one including a hot pink variety. 
Ain't they cute?
I liked that they were self-striping as well, which cuts down on the design work on my end. Both girls were due in the spring and as my new policy is to knit for 1-year sizes to maximize use, I was looking at summer sweaters. Cotton seemed like a nice weight and breathable material for warmer weather.
I also went with my go-to summer pattern, In Threes, so the self-striping would add some further interest to a fairly simple pattern. 

I like it.

The self-striping also ended at very advantageous points. 
This one is for Baby K and is waiting for ends to be sewn in and buttons to be sewn on. I do hate hand sewing, apparently. I've been procrastinating on this one for quite some time now.

Take #2, still striping into very convenient points. 
Getting towards the end.
This one is for Baby S and is actually finished as well. I sat up late and finished the edging, sewed in all 4 ends of both sweaters, and stitched on the buttons. I had them in the mail the next day without realizing I forgot to take ending shots of them. Whoops!
But they are done and on their way to their intended recipients. Yay!

Saturday, October 20, 2018

Recap #1: Blue Ballgown

Good Lord, it's been a long time. So, what will follow is a series of catch up posts, starting with the Blue Ballgown.  
It turned out very well.
Clearly, my Sister C-2 and I made it to the Midwinter Civil War Ball, way back in February. I did finish the eyelets, it was a long slog, but it got done.

There was much dancing.

And everyone looked very nice. 
Aside from one incident where my drawers came untied in the middle of a dance and I had to dash to the bathroom to fix things, we had a very nice time.



Monday, February 19, 2018

These Things are So Effing Small...and Only Getting Smaller

As I mentioned last time, I have a big hand-crafting project to finish on a deadline. The 22nd Annual Mid-Winter Civil War Grand Ball is coming up and my sister C-2 would very much like to go. I have gone in the past in not appropriate attire and it was very awkward. I decided I no longer wanted to look inappropriate so my DDM and I set about working on a period-appropriate ballgown.
This one, with the lace on the collar and sleeves. 

In Felicity-ballgown-blue polyester silk and trimmed with black lace with beads. 

I got together with Mom to continue working on the gown. I put on the corset, stunned to find it still fit after a solid year, and put on the skirt and bodice, which had seemed a mess of issues last year. The skirt was still messily too long and needs to be hemmed, which will be a bit complicated as Mom is turning out to be a big perfectionist about this. We decided to try for a little bit of trim along the bottom edge as well. Then we turned our attention to the bodice. It still didn't seem to be fitting right. I stood still as Mom examined it. Suddenly her face cleared a bit, she reached out to the edges of it, gave it a firm yank down around my waist, and everything magically fell into place, right where the sleeves and collar and waist were supposed to lie. Jeez.
So we aren't as far behind as expected. Good. Great.
My next step became clear. I needed to start working on the closures for the bodice. To be accurate, the historical closings are corset-like lacings through hand-stitched eyelets. We would have just cut corners and done modern grommet placements, but our local store did not have black grommets. So I get to do this by hand, like they did in the 1850's. Great. Fifteen eyelets on each side, 3/4 inch apart, 3/16 inch around. Thirty total.
Thank God I have two more weeks, these are going to take gorram forever.
My first two.
Clearly I learned a few things between the first, down by the bottom edge, and the second. These two took me a solid hour and a half all by themselves. Making sure they're big enough for the specs is difficult; they're supposed to be 3/16" around, or 4.75-ish mm. That feels huge, but it's really not. My tools for making the holes were actually too small to start with.
My workstation (the keyboard of my laptop) is kind of a mess right now, anyway.

My scaling tools. 
The smallest needle is what I've been using to part the threads of the silk, rather than punching through it. Then I go in with the metal and plastic yarn needles to make the hole larger, and finally go through with the wooden knitting needle to get the final gauge. It feels a lot like stretching ear lobe piercings, not going to lie.
Either way, these two are actually still smaller than they're supposed to be. I don't know how I keep shrinking them! Ah well. I'll just use the yarn needle to help pull the lacing ribbon through when I go to put the sucker on. 
But remember how I said these eyelets are small?
That's the whole edge of the bodice on my lap.
Can you see where I was working? Two down...twenty-eight to go. Whoo boy. 
(I should be grateful though, in the end. Chelsea over at "A Sartorial Statement" came in at sixty-six eyelets for her 18th century maternity stays. Yikes!)

Monday, February 12, 2018

A Finished Thing!

I finished another thing!
Remember I was knitting for Friend M's Baby O a while back?
That was this one, oh so long ago now.
It's the Wee Stripes Pullover, and I liked the color way and pattern enough to start a second, exactly the same version just a size up for Friend A's Baby M who was born in December. Last time we saw it, it looked like this:
Very sad.
Well...
It is in fact completed!
This one turned out just a little wonky; the tension at the bottom being a little tighter than the rest of it, and the seaming up being a little sloppy because I was in a hurry.
Button band and all.
I found these nice gray wooden buttons for both Baby O's and Baby M's sweaters, so they're super matchy-matchy. 
Look who came to visit!
I put the sweater on Tammo's level to take pictures of, making it part of his domain and so needing a thorough inspection. We also saw the new movie Peter Rabbit this weekend and so I thought a bunny photo would be appropriate. 
This was good timing, as I had another big hand-crafting project to finish on a timeline, so getting this sweater out from under me was a large weight off.





Thursday, January 11, 2018

Oh wait, that's knitting!

Back to some knitting!
I'm starting to feel like the Yarn Harlot, Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, when it comes to my sock knitting. At the start of this evening, I had 2 different socks on the needles using the same pattern. I like having a sock in my bag because when I'm not having to fuss about with provisional stitches for the heel, decreasing for the toe, or shaping for the heel, they're really straightforward knitting. The nice thing about self-striping yarn, or yarn dyed so as you knit it naturally forms horizontal stripes without you as the knitter having to change out yarns every stripe, is that it can look really fancy or interesting while just being plain stockinette stitch.
So I have this pair:
Pretty sure you've seen this one before.
This is actually sock number 2. I finished the main body of knitting on sock number 1, minus the heel shaping, and still needed something for my bag because I can't do heel shaping in the dark of a movie theater and we were going to see Darkest Hour, so I cast on sock number 2 right away, like a responsible knitter.
I'm actually already past the heel on this one, so this pair is moving along pretty quickly:
I didn't have any contrasting yarn, so that out-of-place variegated row is going to be the heel. 
I will freely admit to using the same sock pattern over and over again. The above crazy green/pink/blue/white pair is my third set of this pattern. My printed-out copy of the pattern is dog-eared and rumpled and stained from being in my daily purse for so long, but I know it well enough to barely have to look at it anymore. I know it's 60 stitches to cast on for my size and if I have another of the socks nearby for comparison I can tell whereabouts the heel row should go and when to start decreasing for the toe.
The real reason I started on the second crazy green socks is because I had picked up the heel shaping on my second pair of these socks. Remember when they looked like this?
It was like this for a long time, really. 
Well, now that sock looks like this:
Wow, a completed sock!
For some reason I decided the responsible thing to do with this pair was to fully complete the first sock before casting on the second. I really don't know why my approaches were so different between pairs, but there you go. As soon as I finished the main body of the sock I picked up the heel stitches and got going again. 
I found it amusing that it had a complimentary color scheme to my 2017-Christmas-present Smartwool socks. 

Nice little triangle heel.
This is the afterthought heel again, which is great for keeping the pattern of the self-striping yarn (mostly, you can see the grey-tan-grey stripe toward the left got a little lost on the other half). It also works well if you happen to find yourself running out of yarn at the end of the toes because you can just put in coordinating yarn for the heels and toes as needed. 
They fit pretty well, just a tiny bit short along the length of my foot and my usual problem of large calf muscles that taper quickly to my ankle, so without a lot of 1x1 ribbing to hold them up (which I don't like the look of and is boring to knit) or decreasing/increasing along the leg for the same purpose (which I never remember to plan for or write down so I can duplicate it), I just have to deal with some bagginess at the ankles/leg bits.
I also managed to tidy up the gappy bit at the corner of the heel shaping. Yay!
Overall, I still like this pattern (clearly) and it's well on its way to being a staple of my knitting cycle, especially as I keep leaving sock yarn on my Christmas list, so my in-laws keep getting it for me :) Not a bad way to go.
They clearly know my colors.