Monday, March 14, 2011

Taking the sock obsession to a whole new level!

I love socks. The sock drawer in my dresser won't close when all of mine are clean. I also love knitting. It's really a match made in heaven.

The term "turning a heel" always struck a bit of fear in my heart. I think that was just because I thought it sounded really hard. Are we sensing a pattern here? Carmen seems to be easily intimidated and should just suck it up more often and get to the part where she learns that it's really not that hard.

Enter my first part of socks!

After months of encouragement and professions of sock-knitting love from my classmates, I bit the bullet and started my first pair of socks. Lauren helped me pick out a great skein of superwash (that is, machine washable!) yarn, printed me out her own Basic Worsted Weight Sock pattern and off I went!

There is about 2.5" of ribbing on top of each sock and then most of the rest is made by knitting around and around and around and around. Where it gets exciting is when it comes time for the dreaded turning of the heel.

It's really not that big of a deal (go figure). Basically, you take half of the stitches and use them to knit a flap with some slipped stitches and knits and purls mixed together. Once you've done that for another 2.5", you pick up stitches along each edge. Now that you're back on all four needles, the gusset and gusset decreases start with K2togs and SSKs and you find that you're turning that heel without even knowing it.

Once you've made it back to your original number of stitches, you knit around and around and around and around some more until it's time to start the banded toe. There are some more K2togs and SSKs and pretty soon your ready for the next and last feat (get it??). This is the kitchener stitch that's used to close up the toe in a nice, seamless sort of way.

These socks are quirky. See how one toe is darker than the other? Yeah... I definitely ran out of yarn before I was done. I'm a tight knitter, which requires more yarn to cover the same distance. And of course there wasn't any more in the shop. So I grabbed a new coordinating color instead. Good news is it's a great yarn for a new project I had in mind! Silver lining, my friends.

A little harder to see in these pictures is the fact that one of the ribbed cuffs is wider than the other. It's really only 1/4-1/3" but still... you can definitely tell. I have been assured that it's fine to just leave that part under the pants when I'm showing them off.

All in all, I'm stoked and already working on the next pair!

Yarn:
Pagewood Farm Kiana Hand Dyed Light Worsted Yarn (100% Merino Superwash)
3.4oz/225 yd skein
1x Army Girl

Needles:
US5 (3.75mm) double pointed needles

Friday, March 11, 2011

More hats! I will eventually either learn or learn my lesson.

Hat attempt #5 (or whatever the heck number I'm on now) spurred from the Irish Hiking Hat - Bulky Version that I came across on Ravelry. I really liked the unique design and that fact that I didn't quite understand how it would all go down before reading the pattern. After being reassured by my mom that it wasn't too feminine for my dad, I was totally sold.

I got some more practice with cabling with the band of this hat, which is made first and then sewn together. I did not want to sew fleece in as a liner, so I used a seed stitch on one side of the band to prevent rolling and stockinette stitch on the other. Then along this side a whole bunch of stitches are picked up (another thing I still need more practice on as well) and used to knit the rest of the hat. It then has a decrease pattern that makes a fun spiral on the top.


This pattern is actually pretty funky and leaves you alone to figure much out for yourself. I was lucky enough to get a measurement from my dad of his head size (28.25") and a classmate with the same size head for an example for the band. How many decrease rows to knit and when to add in the second set though... I was knitting blind on that one.

I made this hat twice. Go figure. The first time it ended up looking really nice! But... it was just to short. It didn't even quite cover my entire ear, and my head isn't as big as my dad's. Well, I guess I'll just hold on to that one for now.


For the second attempt, I added an inch of straight stockinette up from the band before decreasing. This came out to the right height! But when I finally got it on his head, I found that it's just kind of poofy in places that I don't want poofiness. In some ways it looks great, but it's still just not great. I was a bit bummed, but not really surprised.

If I were to make this again, I think I might go with the worsted version instead. Might make it a bit cleaner.

Also, it looks like this hat will need that liner after all. Since Dad is sensitive to wool but not as severely as Mom, I figured I'd give another natural fiber a try and went with super soft Alpaca. Turns out that itches him too. Good thing Mom is a master sewer!

Yarn:
Plymouth Yarn Company Baby Alpaca Grande Tweed (90% baby alpaca, 7% acrylic, 3% rayon)
100g/110yd skeins
1x dark gray (500) (plus just a little bit of another skein for the larger hat)

Needles:
US9 (5.5mm) 16" circular needle
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While I was working on that, I really wanted something else that I could just knock out and that I knew would fit someone, so I made Erich's A&F Knockoff Hat, too. This one got orange and gray acrylic and it was definitely fast. It's still hanging out in my apartment but it might go to the dads eventually, especially if I can't make anything else that works, haha.

Yarn:
Berocco Comfort Chunky (50% nylon, 50% acrylic)
3.5oz/150yd skeins
1x Dusk (5713)
1x Filbert (5745)

Needles:
US15 (10mm) 16" circular needle

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Hang your stockings...

Sometime in the past an aunt of mine tried to knit some socks. As I may have mentioned in previous posts, gauge is hard! These socks turned out quite large and they had been serving as my parent's Christmas stockings ever since.

The thought struck me (after being hinted at by an example hanging in class and a classmate working on the project...) that I could probably make some huge socks too! And that maybe doing so would help get me ready for normal sized socks that I hoped to make someday.

I picked up most of the yarn for these at Jo-Ann with the intention of saving some money. I chose some nice heathery maroon and dark green with woolly white for the cuff. Turned out it wasn't quite thick enough even double-stranded, so I got some mohair from Lauren and threw that in too.

I have to say that knitting with mohair is kind of a pain since it's so sticky and tempramental, as is knitting with three strands at a time. It was worth it though! I ended up with a fabric that was a little fuzzy and soft, but sturdy enough to shove full of presents and food every year.

This project gave me my first taste of turning a heel! For some reason, this phrase always made me so nervous. But, like with cabling and lace, it's really not as hard as it sounds. It's even kind of fun!

Then I got to practice picking up stitches again, or creating new stitches at the edge of the fabric where there were none before. Then came the sewing. These stockings were knit flat and then a sewn up with a seem up the back. This let me practice some more of that mattress stitch which I'm still struggling a bit to master.

I only have the one picture of these currently and it was before they were even totally finished. You'll get the gist though. Just imagine some awesome tassels hanging off the top. A perfect finishing touch, I think.

Yarn:
Lion Brand Wool-Ease Worsted Weight (80% acrylic, 20% wool)
2 skeins Chestnut Heather (179)
2 skeins Forest Green Heather (180)

Lion Brand Wool-Ease Thick & Quick
1 partial skein Fisherman (099)

Katia Ingenua (78% mohair, 13% nylon, 9% wool)
1 skein Plum (19)
1 skein Olive (13)

Needles:
US11 (8mm) 24" circular needle

A Quick Break for an Infinity Scarf

Sometimes you walk into your yarn store and see an amazing, awesome yarn that you have to have. And sometimes you just want to make something simple and quick. Sometimes that aforementioned yarn you've fallen in love with shows itself off best in garter stitch and it's obvious the stars have aligned.

This yarn, Trendsetter Sierra Nevada, has amazing, rich swirls of color. The best part, though, is its texture. The strand flows from tighly wound, thin and shiny to loose, fluffy and matte. There were two color lots that I was trying to choose between and I got the lighter one -- white, cream, gray, yellowish-tan and purple. Unique and so pretty!

After toying with some ideas of what to do with it, I decided just to knit a regular old scarf in garter stitch. (For you non-knitters, that's just knitting every row over and over until you're done.) It wasn't long enough after one skein, so I got another one.

It was nice when it was done! But it wasn't interesting enough. So, I sewed the ends together and made an infinity scarf instead. Instant trendiness!

This is a super warm and cozy scarf, largely because it's so big. It wraps around my neck four times if I want it to. There's no getting cold with that.
Yarn:
Trendsetter Yarns Sierra Nevada (70% wool, 30% acrylic)
2 skeins Snow Bluffs (223)

Needles:
US13 (9mm) 16" circular needle (if I remember right...)