Is it really so wrong that all I want to do on New Year's Eve is just stay home?
I am not, and never have been, a party person. And come to think of it, what's the big deal about New Year's anyway? Yes, yes, reflection on the past year, anticipation of the new. Blah blah blah. I can do that at home, without being in a noisy crowded room.
We have an invitation to a party at a fancy expensive restaurant, from one of Shaun's fellow professors, and an invite to a party at my boss's house, which I really should attend.
I'm having a grumpy day.
On the bright side, though, I made 1 1/2 pairs of fingerless mitts yesterday.
This is the blue pair that, along with the green pair, was a commission from a coworker. This pair is slightly larger, since they're for a man. I upped the stitch count to 40 instead of 36, made the thumb two stitches bigger, and made the cuffs and palms a couple rows longer. I also started another pair in the woman's size from the rest of this skein, and will finish the second mitt tonight. This second blue pair will be going in my shop.
When I was delivering the green and blue mitts today, the friend who received the original blue-purple pair saw the green ones and immediately requested a pair to keep at home, so I'll be making those tomorrow.
I'm going to go to the gym and work out now, and hopefully become less grumpy before all these parties.
Monday, December 31, 2007
Saturday, December 29, 2007
One of Emma's Christmas presents was a little doll cradle I found at a garage sale, that came with just a foam mattress. All dolls, of course, also need a pillow and a blanket, but a headcold and work prevented me from making those before Christmas. So I made the pillow on Christmas day, and the 26th, I made a little quilt.
This was sort of a bittersweet project. Dad was here for Christmas, and he brought me boxes and boxes and boxes, containing Mom's fabric and craft stash. When Emma and I were in Maine last March, I spent several days sorting fabric and sewing supplies and scrapbooking stash, deciding what I wanted to keep. Basically, I cleaned out her craft room for him. It was hard enough for me to do this, but Dad had trouble even being in the room.
When I was in Maine in August 2004, the summer before Mom died, we started planning a quilt for Emma that we would make together the following summer. That quilt was never made, but when I was cleaning her craft room this year, I found the stack of fabric that we had tentatively pulled together as an idea for the quilt. Purples, blues, and greens were the colors, but we never got as far as deciding on a block pattern.
Back to the present. Emma chose all the fabrics for her doll quilt herself (with supervision), from one of the boxes I brought in for her to rummage through. Three of the fabrics that she chose were from that stack of fabric for the quilt-that-never-was. I'd like to think that Mom would approve.
This was sort of a bittersweet project. Dad was here for Christmas, and he brought me boxes and boxes and boxes, containing Mom's fabric and craft stash. When Emma and I were in Maine last March, I spent several days sorting fabric and sewing supplies and scrapbooking stash, deciding what I wanted to keep. Basically, I cleaned out her craft room for him. It was hard enough for me to do this, but Dad had trouble even being in the room.
When I was in Maine in August 2004, the summer before Mom died, we started planning a quilt for Emma that we would make together the following summer. That quilt was never made, but when I was cleaning her craft room this year, I found the stack of fabric that we had tentatively pulled together as an idea for the quilt. Purples, blues, and greens were the colors, but we never got as far as deciding on a block pattern.
Back to the present. Emma chose all the fabrics for her doll quilt herself (with supervision), from one of the boxes I brought in for her to rummage through. Three of the fabrics that she chose were from that stack of fabric for the quilt-that-never-was. I'd like to think that Mom would approve.
Friday, December 28, 2007
Another pair of fingerless mitts, this time a commission! The blue/purple pair I made for my co-worker went over really well, and she went around the office showing them off to people. One of the other women liked them so much that she asked if she could pay me to make pairs for her and her boyfriend; green for her, blue for him. Of course I said yes, so here's the first pair:
The yarn for the second pair is being dyed as I write, and will be knit this weekend. The green yarn is actually the darker green skein I dyed in October, overdyed to darken it up a bit and get some tonal variation. I really like the way it came out. When its knitted, it looks like green marble.
I also finished some mittens for me, using the leftover skein from making the original blue/purple fingerless mitts. I was a little worried that I would run out of yarn, but I actually had a bit left over.
They photographed a too little dark. The picture with the mitt pattern (in my sidebar) and other blog post linked above is a better representation of the color.
The yarn for the second pair is being dyed as I write, and will be knit this weekend. The green yarn is actually the darker green skein I dyed in October, overdyed to darken it up a bit and get some tonal variation. I really like the way it came out. When its knitted, it looks like green marble.
I also finished some mittens for me, using the leftover skein from making the original blue/purple fingerless mitts. I was a little worried that I would run out of yarn, but I actually had a bit left over.
They photographed a too little dark. The picture with the mitt pattern (in my sidebar) and other blog post linked above is a better representation of the color.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Sometimes the best-laid Mom Plots don't work out exactly as planned. Emma got a princess tea set for Christmas, and has been incessantly bugging me to let her have a "real" tea party with it, with mint tea. The one attempt at having a tea party complete with water ended up with puddles all over the coffee table, so I wasn't too keen to let her have mint tea. Water tea parties are fine, outside in the summer. Inside, not so much.
Finally, as a compromise (read: driven to distraction, pulling my hair out, PLEASE STOP WHINING) I told her that when the weather warms up, I will make her mint tea and put it in her teapot so she can serve all her invisible princess friends tea at an outdoor tea party. I figured that would be the end of that.
Five minutes later, as I was checking the dyepot on the stove, I heard the clop-clop-clop of size 10 girl's boots on the floor. I turned around and there she is, dressed in snowpants, boots, coat, hat, and mittens.
"Cinderella and I are ready for our tea party, Mommy. Is the tea hot yet?"
I knew when I was beaten, and gracefully capitulated.
It was about 5:00pm, completely dark out, 27˚F, howling wind, and blowing snow. She sat on the back step, poured her mint tea, talked to her invisible princesses, broke icicles off the gas grill to stir the tea and cool it down (?!), and generally had a wonderful time.
She finally came in after about 45 minutes, rosy-cheeked and happy.
Parenthood is a wonderful, mysterious learning experience. Tea parties in the snow. Who knew.
Finally, as a compromise (read: driven to distraction, pulling my hair out, PLEASE STOP WHINING) I told her that when the weather warms up, I will make her mint tea and put it in her teapot so she can serve all her invisible princess friends tea at an outdoor tea party. I figured that would be the end of that.
Five minutes later, as I was checking the dyepot on the stove, I heard the clop-clop-clop of size 10 girl's boots on the floor. I turned around and there she is, dressed in snowpants, boots, coat, hat, and mittens.
"Cinderella and I are ready for our tea party, Mommy. Is the tea hot yet?"
I knew when I was beaten, and gracefully capitulated.
It was about 5:00pm, completely dark out, 27˚F, howling wind, and blowing snow. She sat on the back step, poured her mint tea, talked to her invisible princesses, broke icicles off the gas grill to stir the tea and cool it down (?!), and generally had a wonderful time.
She finally came in after about 45 minutes, rosy-cheeked and happy.
Parenthood is a wonderful, mysterious learning experience. Tea parties in the snow. Who knew.
Friday, December 21, 2007
Will I have enough time? Will I have enough yarn? The perennial questions of a knitter on a deadline using the remnants of a skein of handdyed yarn.
I started this Branching Out scarf Wednesday night, at about 9:00 pm, after seeing Kris's. I've been aware of this pattern since it was published two and a half years ago, yet it was suddenly imperative that I cast on immediately and make another Christmas present. I used the leftover partial skein from the Calorimetry I made last week, because 1) it was on the table next to my chair, and 2) it looked like there might be enough yarn in the ball to make a scarf. It was initially to be for Emma's preschool teacher, but I gave it to a coworker instead of the Calorimetry since I finished it in time for office giving. I'll either make another scarf for Emma's teacher, or give her the Calorimetry. I wasn't planning on delivering that gift until Monday, so there's plenty of time. (Notice how time becomes relative in December.)
This scarf used 55 grams of the Knitpick Bare merino DK that I dyed sky blue, and US 7 needles. It's on the short side for a scarf, only 20 repeats of the pattern, but is still long enough to keep a neck cozy. Have I mentioned how much I like this yarn? Takes dye beautifully, lovely to knit with, and makes a very squishy soft fabric.
I blocked fairly aggressively, to maximize the length, and it ended up 45" x 6.75". In the event of yarn shortage, I did have a backup plan to put the blue only on the ends, with a white unpatterned section in the middle, but when I reached the halfway point in the ball of yarn it looked like I was going to squeak by with enough length so I kept going.
You can't beat a knitted lace gift from two shortish evenings of knitting.
I started this Branching Out scarf Wednesday night, at about 9:00 pm, after seeing Kris's. I've been aware of this pattern since it was published two and a half years ago, yet it was suddenly imperative that I cast on immediately and make another Christmas present. I used the leftover partial skein from the Calorimetry I made last week, because 1) it was on the table next to my chair, and 2) it looked like there might be enough yarn in the ball to make a scarf. It was initially to be for Emma's preschool teacher, but I gave it to a coworker instead of the Calorimetry since I finished it in time for office giving. I'll either make another scarf for Emma's teacher, or give her the Calorimetry. I wasn't planning on delivering that gift until Monday, so there's plenty of time. (Notice how time becomes relative in December.)
This scarf used 55 grams of the Knitpick Bare merino DK that I dyed sky blue, and US 7 needles. It's on the short side for a scarf, only 20 repeats of the pattern, but is still long enough to keep a neck cozy. Have I mentioned how much I like this yarn? Takes dye beautifully, lovely to knit with, and makes a very squishy soft fabric.
I blocked fairly aggressively, to maximize the length, and it ended up 45" x 6.75". In the event of yarn shortage, I did have a backup plan to put the blue only on the ends, with a white unpatterned section in the middle, but when I reached the halfway point in the ball of yarn it looked like I was going to squeak by with enough length so I kept going.
You can't beat a knitted lace gift from two shortish evenings of knitting.
Sunday, December 16, 2007
An update on The Panda Cory Show:
I have 9 mostly-grown-up babies now, bringing my total to twelve. I haven't collected and hatched any eggs in a while, and I think I'm going to take a break for now. I was getting tired of the daily water changes for the fry, and I've got too much else going on at the moment. Plus, I'm out of tank room.
These guys are so personable and active. I just love watching them trundle around the tank in a group, nosing through the gravel.
I have 9 mostly-grown-up babies now, bringing my total to twelve. I haven't collected and hatched any eggs in a while, and I think I'm going to take a break for now. I was getting tired of the daily water changes for the fry, and I've got too much else going on at the moment. Plus, I'm out of tank room.
These guys are so personable and active. I just love watching them trundle around the tank in a group, nosing through the gravel.
Saturday, December 15, 2007
It's just Emma and me holding down the fort this weekend. Shaun had to go up to Friday Harbor to do some work at the Lab, and Emma and I stayed home to supposedly clean the house a bit in preparation for my dad's arrival next weekend.
So how has my weekend of cleaning been going? Well, I did absolutely nothing last night. I sat in front of the TV and knit on a mitten until 9:30, at which time I couldn't keep my eyes open anymore and had to go to bed.
Today (Saturday) was to have been my big cleaning blitz day, so that I could relax and enjoy Sunday. How did that work out? Hmm, not so much. Emma and I spent the entire morning in our PJs, cuddled in a blanket, watching Noggin cartoons and eating sunflower and pumpkin seeds for breakfast. How decadent. I did make a batch of Julekage (a sweet cardamom-y Scandinavian christmas bread with candied fruit, raisins, and almonds) this afternoon, though. One loaf went in the freezer for Christmas morning, and I fully expect the other to be gone by tomorrow night. Yum.
After the bread came out of the oven, I decided that we needed to get out. We ran out of canned dog food last Thursday, and I forgot to get more before Shaun left yesterday. But Emma and I needed some exercise, and poor Cobalt was very hungry. She chose not to eat at all yesterday since all I had to offer was dry kibble. So Emma and I bundled up, ventured out into the 29˚F snow flurries, and {gasp} walked to the grocery store.
Is this really so unusual? It's only 3/4 mile from our house to the store, and twice on our way there and once on the way back people stopped their cars and asked if we needed help. Now this was nice of them, and if I had been in trouble or something I'm sure I would have been very grateful. But they seemed so astonished that we were just walking to the grocery store.
I brought a backpack to carry the dogfood and assorted other things back, Emma and I were both wearing wool hats and mittens, good coats, and were quite comfortable. I was, anyway, and Emma never complained so I assume she was too. It wasn't as fast as just hopping in the car (which is what I'm sure I would have done had the car been available), but it was a nice walk and Emma and I had a really great conversation. We talked about Christmas lights, why the moon gets bigger and smaller, why you don't talk to strangers, how books are made, why we have day time and night time, why snowflakes have six sides, why bubbles are round and not square, and how girls are different than boys. All topics addressed in response to questions that she asked. Quite a grown up conversation for a four-year-old.
I'm glad the car wasn't available so I didn't miss out on that conversation. GLAD.
So how has my weekend of cleaning been going? Well, I did absolutely nothing last night. I sat in front of the TV and knit on a mitten until 9:30, at which time I couldn't keep my eyes open anymore and had to go to bed.
Today (Saturday) was to have been my big cleaning blitz day, so that I could relax and enjoy Sunday. How did that work out? Hmm, not so much. Emma and I spent the entire morning in our PJs, cuddled in a blanket, watching Noggin cartoons and eating sunflower and pumpkin seeds for breakfast. How decadent. I did make a batch of Julekage (a sweet cardamom-y Scandinavian christmas bread with candied fruit, raisins, and almonds) this afternoon, though. One loaf went in the freezer for Christmas morning, and I fully expect the other to be gone by tomorrow night. Yum.
After the bread came out of the oven, I decided that we needed to get out. We ran out of canned dog food last Thursday, and I forgot to get more before Shaun left yesterday. But Emma and I needed some exercise, and poor Cobalt was very hungry. She chose not to eat at all yesterday since all I had to offer was dry kibble. So Emma and I bundled up, ventured out into the 29˚F snow flurries, and {gasp} walked to the grocery store.
Is this really so unusual? It's only 3/4 mile from our house to the store, and twice on our way there and once on the way back people stopped their cars and asked if we needed help. Now this was nice of them, and if I had been in trouble or something I'm sure I would have been very grateful. But they seemed so astonished that we were just walking to the grocery store.
I brought a backpack to carry the dogfood and assorted other things back, Emma and I were both wearing wool hats and mittens, good coats, and were quite comfortable. I was, anyway, and Emma never complained so I assume she was too. It wasn't as fast as just hopping in the car (which is what I'm sure I would have done had the car been available), but it was a nice walk and Emma and I had a really great conversation. We talked about Christmas lights, why the moon gets bigger and smaller, why you don't talk to strangers, how books are made, why we have day time and night time, why snowflakes have six sides, why bubbles are round and not square, and how girls are different than boys. All topics addressed in response to questions that she asked. Quite a grown up conversation for a four-year-old.
I'm glad the car wasn't available so I didn't miss out on that conversation. GLAD.
Friday, December 14, 2007
I've finished another gift for a co-worker, a Calorimetry.
Once again, Knitpicks Bare 100% merino DK, dyed by me. This is an interesting pattern, shaped entirely with short rows. I think if I make another I'll cast on fewer stitches, because even using DK yarn and US 5 needles (rather than worsted/aran yarn and US 8 needles) it's a tad loose.
Even loose on me, I mean. It's much too big on Emma, but she insisted that it was her turn to be the model.
Once again, Knitpicks Bare 100% merino DK, dyed by me. This is an interesting pattern, shaped entirely with short rows. I think if I make another I'll cast on fewer stitches, because even using DK yarn and US 5 needles (rather than worsted/aran yarn and US 8 needles) it's a tad loose.
Even loose on me, I mean. It's much too big on Emma, but she insisted that it was her turn to be the model.
Monday, December 10, 2007
More combing, this time the rest of the fawn suri alpaca from Caroline. I'm such a bad blogger- I completely forgot to take pictures until the very end of the last comb-full. I don't even have any pictures of the beautiful curly locks. Phooey.
This fiber was very long (8"), very curly, very slippery, and very staticky. Woolcombing X-treme, if you will. I had enough fiber to load the combs four times in all, and by the third batch I had worked out a method that went pretty well. I did initially try just flicking and spinning from the lock, but that wasn't at all successful. The fibers are so long that the locks pulled into a snarly, tangled mess. Perhaps with more practice I could have made it work, but I didn't want to waste the fiber. Combing worked beautifully.
The individual locks were so slippery and narrow that they were hard to lash on, and didn't stay on the combs well, so I flicked bunches of locks first with my dog comb to open up the cut ends and the curls, then put them on the combs and did three passes, misting very sparingly with water as needed to keep the static under control. I did have a bit of a problem with the fibers wanting to wrap too far around the tines if I took too big a "bite" with the mobile comb, leading to difficulty during dizzing (grasping both ends of the same fiber). Eight inch staples are about the upper limit of what I would want to comb.
It reminds me of maple sugar cotton candy.
There was quite a bit of variation in fiber length within each lock, so the combing waste was more than I would have liked (also due to that fiber-wrapping problem I mentioned above). From 106 g of uncombed fiber, I got 68 g of top. I saved all the "short" fibers though, and I think I'll either card them on their own to make a fluffier yarn, since the shorter fibers had more texture than the long silky fibers that the diz drew off, or I may even try to comb it again since most of the waste still has a pretty good fiber length.
What I did get with the diz is lovely. I think it will make a nice laceweight yarn, very much like silk. Shiny, soft, drapey, and no elasticity.
If I spin it fine, 68 g should be enough for a lacy something-or-other.
This fiber was very long (8"), very curly, very slippery, and very staticky. Woolcombing X-treme, if you will. I had enough fiber to load the combs four times in all, and by the third batch I had worked out a method that went pretty well. I did initially try just flicking and spinning from the lock, but that wasn't at all successful. The fibers are so long that the locks pulled into a snarly, tangled mess. Perhaps with more practice I could have made it work, but I didn't want to waste the fiber. Combing worked beautifully.
The individual locks were so slippery and narrow that they were hard to lash on, and didn't stay on the combs well, so I flicked bunches of locks first with my dog comb to open up the cut ends and the curls, then put them on the combs and did three passes, misting very sparingly with water as needed to keep the static under control. I did have a bit of a problem with the fibers wanting to wrap too far around the tines if I took too big a "bite" with the mobile comb, leading to difficulty during dizzing (grasping both ends of the same fiber). Eight inch staples are about the upper limit of what I would want to comb.
It reminds me of maple sugar cotton candy.
There was quite a bit of variation in fiber length within each lock, so the combing waste was more than I would have liked (also due to that fiber-wrapping problem I mentioned above). From 106 g of uncombed fiber, I got 68 g of top. I saved all the "short" fibers though, and I think I'll either card them on their own to make a fluffier yarn, since the shorter fibers had more texture than the long silky fibers that the diz drew off, or I may even try to comb it again since most of the waste still has a pretty good fiber length.
What I did get with the diz is lovely. I think it will make a nice laceweight yarn, very much like silk. Shiny, soft, drapey, and no elasticity.
If I spin it fine, 68 g should be enough for a lacy something-or-other.
Sunday, December 09, 2007
I just need to crow a little. I joined the gym and started exercising on November 7. Since then I have been going to spin class three times a week, and if I miss a class (only did that twice) I use the elliptical or bike on my own the next day, so I'm still getting a 45 minute workout 3x a week.
It has now been a full month. I'm so proud of me! I weighed myself again on Friday, and was somewhat disappointed to see that I haven't lost any weight. I feel stronger, though, and there is a subtle but noticeable difference in my shape. I don't know if anyone else can tell, but I can.
My main goal for exercising, other than general health and fitness improvement, was to get rid of this darn poochy baby-belly that has been hanging on (and increasing) for three years now, since Emma stopped breastfeeding. I don't mind the thighs and rear as much as I want the belly gone. Presumably, if the belly goes, the rest will firm up along the way. And I do believe that the belly is going!
I weigh more now than I ever have before. I truly don't care what I weigh, if I feel healthy and good about myself. The point being that I was starting to not feel healthy and good about myself or the way I looked.
The exercising is working. I'm actually enjoying it, and can stay with it. This is good.
It has now been a full month. I'm so proud of me! I weighed myself again on Friday, and was somewhat disappointed to see that I haven't lost any weight. I feel stronger, though, and there is a subtle but noticeable difference in my shape. I don't know if anyone else can tell, but I can.
My main goal for exercising, other than general health and fitness improvement, was to get rid of this darn poochy baby-belly that has been hanging on (and increasing) for three years now, since Emma stopped breastfeeding. I don't mind the thighs and rear as much as I want the belly gone. Presumably, if the belly goes, the rest will firm up along the way. And I do believe that the belly is going!
I weigh more now than I ever have before. I truly don't care what I weigh, if I feel healthy and good about myself. The point being that I was starting to not feel healthy and good about myself or the way I looked.
The exercising is working. I'm actually enjoying it, and can stay with it. This is good.
Saturday, December 08, 2007
Basic Fingerless Mitts
Note: This pattern is also available as a free Ravelry download, here.
shown in Heritage Hand Dyes DK yarn (www.heritageneedlework.etsy.com)
35 g (1.2 oz)
~90 yards
US 5 (3.75mm) needles (I used two circulars)
gauge: 5.5 stitches and 6.5 rows = 1"
size: women's medium
K=knit
P=purl
kfb=knit in the front and back of a stitch
Cast on 36 stitches loosely. (I cast on over two US5 needles)
Join without twisting and work K4 P2 rib for 16 rounds.
Work first increase round for thumb gusset:
(K 4, P2) 3 times, K1, place starting marker for gusset, kfb, kfb, place ending marker for gusset, K1, P2, (K4, P2) twice.
Work 4 rounds even, in rib pattern and knitting all gusset stitches.
Second and subsequent increase round:
(K 4, P2) 3 times, K1, (marker), kfb, knit to last stitch of gusset, kfb, (marker), K1, P2, (K4, P2) twice.
Repeat (knit even 4 rounds, increase round) 3 more times – 12 gusset stitches.
Work one round even, in rib pattern and knitting all gusset stitches.
Work around in pattern, placing 12 gusset stitches on a holder and casting on 2 stitches in their place.
Work around in pattern for 14 rounds.
Bind off using Elizabeth Zimmerman’s sewn bind off:
Cut the yarn 4x the circumference of your hand/mitt, thread a tapestry needle, and *insert the tapestry needle through the first two stitches as if to purl, draw the yarn through, keep the stitches on the knitting needle, insert the tapestry needle back through the first stitch as if to knit and slip it off the knitting needle, draw the yarn through.* Repeat from * to * until all stitches have been bound off. Don't pull the yarn too tight while binding off.
Thumb:
Place reserved gusset stitches back on the needles.
Knit around, picking up two stitches at the top of the thumb opening (14 stitches total).
Knit two rounds even.
Bind off using EZ's sewn bind off.
Knit a second mitt the same as the first - no reversed shaping needed!
These mitts could be easily personalized by adding cables, lace, or stranded color patterns, lengthening them into gauntlets, or even turning them into full mittens by finishing the fingertips. They're a jumping-off place. Be creative!
--------------
© 2007 Sue Brady
You are welcome to make and sell mitts from this pattern, but please don't copy my written pattern for commercial uses or post it elsewhere (link to this page, OK?).
shown in Heritage Hand Dyes DK yarn (www.heritageneedlework.etsy.com)
35 g (1.2 oz)
~90 yards
US 5 (3.75mm) needles (I used two circulars)
gauge: 5.5 stitches and 6.5 rows = 1"
size: women's medium
K=knit
P=purl
kfb=knit in the front and back of a stitch
Cast on 36 stitches loosely. (I cast on over two US5 needles)
Join without twisting and work K4 P2 rib for 16 rounds.
Work first increase round for thumb gusset:
(K 4, P2) 3 times, K1, place starting marker for gusset, kfb, kfb, place ending marker for gusset, K1, P2, (K4, P2) twice.
Work 4 rounds even, in rib pattern and knitting all gusset stitches.
Second and subsequent increase round:
(K 4, P2) 3 times, K1, (marker), kfb, knit to last stitch of gusset, kfb, (marker), K1, P2, (K4, P2) twice.
Repeat (knit even 4 rounds, increase round) 3 more times – 12 gusset stitches.
Work one round even, in rib pattern and knitting all gusset stitches.
Work around in pattern, placing 12 gusset stitches on a holder and casting on 2 stitches in their place.
Work around in pattern for 14 rounds.
Bind off using Elizabeth Zimmerman’s sewn bind off:
Cut the yarn 4x the circumference of your hand/mitt, thread a tapestry needle, and *insert the tapestry needle through the first two stitches as if to purl, draw the yarn through, keep the stitches on the knitting needle, insert the tapestry needle back through the first stitch as if to knit and slip it off the knitting needle, draw the yarn through.* Repeat from * to * until all stitches have been bound off. Don't pull the yarn too tight while binding off.
Thumb:
Place reserved gusset stitches back on the needles.
Knit around, picking up two stitches at the top of the thumb opening (14 stitches total).
Knit two rounds even.
Bind off using EZ's sewn bind off.
Knit a second mitt the same as the first - no reversed shaping needed!
These mitts could be easily personalized by adding cables, lace, or stranded color patterns, lengthening them into gauntlets, or even turning them into full mittens by finishing the fingertips. They're a jumping-off place. Be creative!
--------------
© 2007 Sue Brady
You are welcome to make and sell mitts from this pattern, but please don't copy my written pattern for commercial uses or post it elsewhere (link to this page, OK?).
I had a productive night last night, and whipped out a complete pair of fingerless mitts. These are to be a Christmas present for a co-worker, who is always complaining of cold hands in the office. Start to finish, about four hours, 1.2 oz of yarn and US5 needles (2 circulars).
The yarn is Knitpicks Bare merino DK, the blue and purple skein I dyed on a dreary afternoon last October. I think this was my favorite skein of the eight I did that day, and it looks even better knitted. The colors were Sapphire and Purple, and I dabbed on ~8 inch lengths of color, then aggressively smooshed the intersections together to blend. Lots of variation, but minimal pooling and striping. I may have to make myself a pair of mittens out of this yarn.
I used Elizabeth Zimmerman's sewn bind off for the top edges, and I'm quite pleased with it. It's very neat and tidy, has as much stretch as the rest of the fabric, and was super easy. The cast on edge is nice and stretchy too, since I used the long-tail cast on over two US5 needles.
I don't know if the knitting world can stand yet one more mitt pattern, but I wrote it up anyway, in my next post. Even if nobody else uses it I still want it for my own reference, because these are the best-fitting mittens (well, half mittens) that I've made to date. They fit my hands perfectly.
The yarn is Knitpicks Bare merino DK, the blue and purple skein I dyed on a dreary afternoon last October. I think this was my favorite skein of the eight I did that day, and it looks even better knitted. The colors were Sapphire and Purple, and I dabbed on ~8 inch lengths of color, then aggressively smooshed the intersections together to blend. Lots of variation, but minimal pooling and striping. I may have to make myself a pair of mittens out of this yarn.
I used Elizabeth Zimmerman's sewn bind off for the top edges, and I'm quite pleased with it. It's very neat and tidy, has as much stretch as the rest of the fabric, and was super easy. The cast on edge is nice and stretchy too, since I used the long-tail cast on over two US5 needles.
I don't know if the knitting world can stand yet one more mitt pattern, but I wrote it up anyway, in my next post. Even if nobody else uses it I still want it for my own reference, because these are the best-fitting mittens (well, half mittens) that I've made to date. They fit my hands perfectly.
Thursday, December 06, 2007
I did a little more combing yesterday, this time to try out blending. I used the wool I dyed last December when I was getting ready to overdye my Urchin Shawl. It's Rambouillet x Cormo, part of a whole raw fleece I bought a couple years ago and scoured myself. I have a pillowcase full of dyed locks, in four colors.
I used about half purple, and half red/pink/blue in equal amounts. When I first put it on the comb, it looked like no good could come from this venture. Clown wig, anyone?
After the first pass, there's some progress, but not much.
After the second pass, though, things are starting to come together.
And after the third pass, all is well with the world.
Mmmmmm.
The staple length of this wool is shorter than the Merino x Columbia in the last post, and there was more combing waste. Some was due to the fact that this isn't as high-quality a fleece as Herkel, some was due to my scouring and dyeing process. I washed this in Friday Harbor, where we had very hard water. It was difficult getting all the grease out and it matted a bit, and I'm sure the kettle-dyeing didn't help. Still, the finished product is lovely springy top that I can't wait to spin.
The colors mixed nicely, but I think next time I'll use proportionally less purple and more of the other colors, though it is noticeably different from the straight up purple locks. It's more dynamic and has depth. It'll be interesing to see what it looks like spun.
I also combed one batch of some suri alpaca locks that Caroline sent me with the Falkland top as the prize from her 500th comment contest. Not the easiest thing to comb because it was so slippery and staticky, but it made beautiful top. Actually, I forgot to take pictures and went straight to my wheel with it. It was very much like spinning silk. I'll have to show that another time.
I used about half purple, and half red/pink/blue in equal amounts. When I first put it on the comb, it looked like no good could come from this venture. Clown wig, anyone?
After the first pass, there's some progress, but not much.
After the second pass, though, things are starting to come together.
And after the third pass, all is well with the world.
Mmmmmm.
The staple length of this wool is shorter than the Merino x Columbia in the last post, and there was more combing waste. Some was due to the fact that this isn't as high-quality a fleece as Herkel, some was due to my scouring and dyeing process. I washed this in Friday Harbor, where we had very hard water. It was difficult getting all the grease out and it matted a bit, and I'm sure the kettle-dyeing didn't help. Still, the finished product is lovely springy top that I can't wait to spin.
The colors mixed nicely, but I think next time I'll use proportionally less purple and more of the other colors, though it is noticeably different from the straight up purple locks. It's more dynamic and has depth. It'll be interesing to see what it looks like spun.
I also combed one batch of some suri alpaca locks that Caroline sent me with the Falkland top as the prize from her 500th comment contest. Not the easiest thing to comb because it was so slippery and staticky, but it made beautiful top. Actually, I forgot to take pictures and went straight to my wheel with it. It was very much like spinning silk. I'll have to show that another time.
Sunday, December 02, 2007
Lookie what I got yesterday!!!!
Indigo Hound double-row Viking combs! Eeeeeee! I actually ordered these October 28. Yes, they took more than a MONTH to get to me. Backorders. Bah. I don't want to talk about it. Now that they're here, I couldn't wait to play. I did a bunch of combing last night and a bit this morning. SO. FABULOUS.
Brace yourselves, I also took a bunch of pictures of the combing process. Please, try not to drool on your keyboard too much.
I'm using Herkel's fleece, the Merino x Columbia that gave such lovely results. To start, I loaded the comb by lashing on enough locks to fill it about a third of the way.
Then I took that comb in my right hand and the empty one in my left (I'm left handed), and transferred the wool to the empty one by combing perpendicularly across the full comb. Here's what it looked like after one pass.
I removed the combing waste, switched the combs so the now-empty one was in my left again, and repeated. Here's the wool after two passes.
Repeat again. Here's the wool after three passes.
Yummmmm. The wool is now completely poofed, aligned, and vegetable-matter-free (not that there was really any VM to start with- coated fleeces are wonderful).
I clamped the comb to the table and slid the wool up the tines of the comb a bit to loosen it and facilitate the drawing-off process:
Drool, drool... Ahem. Time to diz. Now, I don't have an official diz but basically all you need for this process is a little doohicky with a hole in it. Something flat like a spice jar shaker top will work, but they tend to work better if they are concave, since that gathers the fibers together as you push it up. I have been dithering for the past couple weeks about how to make one, since I don't want to spend the money to buy one, but I wanted to start combing now now now! So I was casting about for what to use, and came up with a plastic spoon. Of course! We even have some in the cupboard, which I am compelled to wash and reuse every time since I hate to just throw them away. I cut off the handle, poked a hole with a heated nail, smoothed the hole with a knife tip, and voila, my diz. It has a 1/8" hole.
I used a crochet hook to grab some fiber through the hole, and started alternately pulling the wool out and sliding the diz up.
Pull and pull and pull, until all the good fiber is off the comb and all that's left is the short bits. What you get is gorgeous, fluffy, soft, even top. Mmmmmm.
I wound it up into a little nest, and it's ready to spin.
There is some waste left over, about 20% of the starting weight of fiber. In this case, I started with 10 grams of washed fiber, and ended up with 8g of top, 2g of waste.
That seems like a lot of waste, but when I looked at the leftovers, it really wasn't anything I wanted to spin, not for fine lace yarn anyway. Neppy bits, short fibers, dirt from the tips of the locks. I saved it and may try carding or felting it at some point, but even if I only use the part of this fleece that I draw off as top, I will have gotten my money's worth.
I combed 8 of these little nests last night, and one this morning, for a total of 66g (2.3 oz) of top. If I spin this like I spun the sample skein (10000 ypp, the skein is in the last link above), it should make enough yarn for almost half a shawl. I'm thinking a large square shawl, in the Shetland or Orenburg tradition.
So I have more combing to do, and lots of spinning, but I'm taking a break from combing for a day or so. My hands, they are wimpy, and I have blisters.
So worth it. And it's a great arm workout.
Indigo Hound double-row Viking combs! Eeeeeee! I actually ordered these October 28. Yes, they took more than a MONTH to get to me. Backorders. Bah. I don't want to talk about it. Now that they're here, I couldn't wait to play. I did a bunch of combing last night and a bit this morning. SO. FABULOUS.
Brace yourselves, I also took a bunch of pictures of the combing process. Please, try not to drool on your keyboard too much.
I'm using Herkel's fleece, the Merino x Columbia that gave such lovely results. To start, I loaded the comb by lashing on enough locks to fill it about a third of the way.
Then I took that comb in my right hand and the empty one in my left (I'm left handed), and transferred the wool to the empty one by combing perpendicularly across the full comb. Here's what it looked like after one pass.
I removed the combing waste, switched the combs so the now-empty one was in my left again, and repeated. Here's the wool after two passes.
Repeat again. Here's the wool after three passes.
Yummmmm. The wool is now completely poofed, aligned, and vegetable-matter-free (not that there was really any VM to start with- coated fleeces are wonderful).
I clamped the comb to the table and slid the wool up the tines of the comb a bit to loosen it and facilitate the drawing-off process:
Drool, drool... Ahem. Time to diz. Now, I don't have an official diz but basically all you need for this process is a little doohicky with a hole in it. Something flat like a spice jar shaker top will work, but they tend to work better if they are concave, since that gathers the fibers together as you push it up. I have been dithering for the past couple weeks about how to make one, since I don't want to spend the money to buy one, but I wanted to start combing now now now! So I was casting about for what to use, and came up with a plastic spoon. Of course! We even have some in the cupboard, which I am compelled to wash and reuse every time since I hate to just throw them away. I cut off the handle, poked a hole with a heated nail, smoothed the hole with a knife tip, and voila, my diz. It has a 1/8" hole.
I used a crochet hook to grab some fiber through the hole, and started alternately pulling the wool out and sliding the diz up.
Pull and pull and pull, until all the good fiber is off the comb and all that's left is the short bits. What you get is gorgeous, fluffy, soft, even top. Mmmmmm.
I wound it up into a little nest, and it's ready to spin.
There is some waste left over, about 20% of the starting weight of fiber. In this case, I started with 10 grams of washed fiber, and ended up with 8g of top, 2g of waste.
That seems like a lot of waste, but when I looked at the leftovers, it really wasn't anything I wanted to spin, not for fine lace yarn anyway. Neppy bits, short fibers, dirt from the tips of the locks. I saved it and may try carding or felting it at some point, but even if I only use the part of this fleece that I draw off as top, I will have gotten my money's worth.
I combed 8 of these little nests last night, and one this morning, for a total of 66g (2.3 oz) of top. If I spin this like I spun the sample skein (10000 ypp, the skein is in the last link above), it should make enough yarn for almost half a shawl. I'm thinking a large square shawl, in the Shetland or Orenburg tradition.
So I have more combing to do, and lots of spinning, but I'm taking a break from combing for a day or so. My hands, they are wimpy, and I have blisters.
So worth it. And it's a great arm workout.
Saturday, December 01, 2007
Emma spent over an hour playing outside in the snow this afternoon. When she came in, she was understandably chilly. After her hot chocolate, she decided that since her toes were still cold, everyone else must be cold, too.
She tucked me into my chair with a blanket and brought me my knitting (do I have her well trained or what?), she put a hat on the dog (didn't last long), and she found Naia in the bedroom, where he was having a nice peaceful nap on the dog bed. She brought him a pillow, a blanket, and a stuffed animal, and tucked him in "properly."
Apparently, Naia wasn't too upset about this turn of events. He slept like this for at least two and a half hours.
She tucked me into my chair with a blanket and brought me my knitting (do I have her well trained or what?), she put a hat on the dog (didn't last long), and she found Naia in the bedroom, where he was having a nice peaceful nap on the dog bed. She brought him a pillow, a blanket, and a stuffed animal, and tucked him in "properly."
Apparently, Naia wasn't too upset about this turn of events. He slept like this for at least two and a half hours.
Thursday, November 29, 2007
Well, the forecasts were a bit off- we got about 6" of snow overnight! This was at 7:30 this morning:
It's been snowing steadily all day, and I think it's up to about 8" now. Emma was so excited to see all the snow this morning. She was up at 7:00am sharp, no whining about getting dressed, and was in her snowpants, boots, and coat by 7:15.
She enjoyed almost an hour of snowplay before coming in to eat breakfast and get ready for school.
Whee!
It's been snowing steadily all day, and I think it's up to about 8" now. Emma was so excited to see all the snow this morning. She was up at 7:00am sharp, no whining about getting dressed, and was in her snowpants, boots, and coat by 7:15.
She enjoyed almost an hour of snowplay before coming in to eat breakfast and get ready for school.
Whee!
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Winter has arrived! This was yesterday morning's view from my front door. There's still some snow on the ground today, and they're predicting another 2-4 inches tonight and tomorrow.
I spun and plied the dyed Falkland top on Monday. Continuing in my apparent desire to push my spinning boundaries, I spun this long-draw. Long-draw isn't something I've been comfortable doing before, but this time it worked fairly well.
Left to right, that's 4.7oz/260yds, 1.5oz/80yds, and .5oz/33yds, all two ply. The two on the left are one ply each of the blue and the green, and the little skein on the right is the leftovers from the blue bobbin plied on itself.
Not my most even spinning, but miles better than any long-draw I've done before. And even though it's not the most perfect yarn I've ever spun, it is scrumptiously soft and bouncy, and I love the colors, though my camera refuses to capture them correctly. I think this may go into a hat, or possibly mittens. It's definitely next-to-the-skin soft.
Long draw goes so fast! Just an easy sweep back with my left hand while a light touch of my right finger and thumb monitors the amount of twist going into the yarn, a pause at the farthest point of the sweep to let some twist accumulate, then bring my left hand forward to wind the yarn on. I got about a yard of yarn on each draw. My right hand didn't really have anything to do, just provide an occasional anchor point to pull against when I needed to draw out a slub. I'd like to try spinning on a great wheel some time; the left-hand motion is practically the same, and the right hand turns the wheel. (Cyndy's great wheel video is one of my favorites!)
I'll finish off this post with a shot of the box of goodies I got yesterday for being a randomly-picked blogiversary commenter at Weebug Knits. Packages in the mail are so fun!
The yarn is some bright and happy bamboo boucle, the retractable tape measure is something I've been meaning to get for a while, and the little bug pins (dare I say it- wee bug pins- hee hee!) are so cute! The tea went to work with me today, but sadly, the box of yummy chocolates is now empty...
I spun and plied the dyed Falkland top on Monday. Continuing in my apparent desire to push my spinning boundaries, I spun this long-draw. Long-draw isn't something I've been comfortable doing before, but this time it worked fairly well.
Left to right, that's 4.7oz/260yds, 1.5oz/80yds, and .5oz/33yds, all two ply. The two on the left are one ply each of the blue and the green, and the little skein on the right is the leftovers from the blue bobbin plied on itself.
Not my most even spinning, but miles better than any long-draw I've done before. And even though it's not the most perfect yarn I've ever spun, it is scrumptiously soft and bouncy, and I love the colors, though my camera refuses to capture them correctly. I think this may go into a hat, or possibly mittens. It's definitely next-to-the-skin soft.
Long draw goes so fast! Just an easy sweep back with my left hand while a light touch of my right finger and thumb monitors the amount of twist going into the yarn, a pause at the farthest point of the sweep to let some twist accumulate, then bring my left hand forward to wind the yarn on. I got about a yard of yarn on each draw. My right hand didn't really have anything to do, just provide an occasional anchor point to pull against when I needed to draw out a slub. I'd like to try spinning on a great wheel some time; the left-hand motion is practically the same, and the right hand turns the wheel. (Cyndy's great wheel video is one of my favorites!)
I'll finish off this post with a shot of the box of goodies I got yesterday for being a randomly-picked blogiversary commenter at Weebug Knits. Packages in the mail are so fun!
The yarn is some bright and happy bamboo boucle, the retractable tape measure is something I've been meaning to get for a while, and the little bug pins (dare I say it- wee bug pins- hee hee!) are so cute! The tea went to work with me today, but sadly, the box of yummy chocolates is now empty...
Friday, November 23, 2007
I did a bit of dyeing on Monday, some roving this time. Dyeing roving is not as easy for me as dyeing yarn. I worry the whole time that it is going to felt or pull apart or tangle or fuzz.
The results, though? Delicious.
This is some Falkland roving that I won a while ago, from a contest over at Wool for Brains. Caroline sent me 200 grams of this beautiful, silky, lustrous roving from Wingham Wool Work, all the way from England. It was so lovely in it's natural white state that I almost didn't dye it, but Monday was a cold and gray day, and I wanted to try something new (to me) with dyeing.
My goal was to get two similar but different colors that would blend together when plied, to create an intermediate color. I divided the roving in half (by length), and made the dye for one half blue with a little green, and the other half green with a little blue. This was cold-pour dyeing; I arranged the roving on plastic wrap and dripped on spots of dye, then wrapped the plastic around and smooshed the wool a bit before steaming. This gave a beautiful mottled, tonal variegation. There are spots where the dye is nearly full intensity, and there are spots where there is only the barest flush of color.
I shall have fun spinning this. Thanks Caroline!
In other spinning news, I did another skein of laceweight. This is some Merino roving I found in my fiber closet, that I think came with the lace flyer I bought for my Ashford a couple years ago. Very nice fiber. But wait, what is going on with my wheel?
I have it set up for double drive! I usually spin using single drive (Scotch tension). I actually taught myself to spin on a borrowed double-drive-only wheel in September 2001, and liked it OK, but a couple months later when I bought my Ashford traditional, I had to switch to single drive since that's all it did. Really, at that point, it didn't make a whole lot of difference, since I was still in the beginner lumpy-bumpy over/underspun stage. I was making yarn, and I was happy.
I tried double drive a couple times over the years, and while I could make it work, I didn't feel like I had any control over the process. Scotch tension just felt better. But recently, I've felt like this was a cop-out, to keep using solely one method just because it's what I've always done. I wanted to try again.
So I did, and it worked much better this time. Easy, even. I was able to spin a fine singles (90-100 wpi) with very little effort. The drive band is cheap #5 crochet cotton, tied in a plain square knot. I had to fiddle a bit with the tension and whorl sizes to get it set right, but once I had that sorted out, it went really well. The plying was a bit troublesome because the takeup was so soft, but once I switched up to the next larger flyer whorl, it went fine. I spun the entire little bag of roving into singles on Tuesday evening, and plied it Wednesday evening.
That's 1.5 oz., ~385 yards of ~40 wpi two ply, enough to make a little lacy scarf or weft in something woven. It was really hard to measure the wpi and yardage of this skein, it's so soft and bouncy and stretchy. The skein measures 58" around when relaxed, and 67" around, stretched!
A good reintroduction to double drive, though I still think Scotch tension gives me better, finer control over the draw-in tension.
The results, though? Delicious.
This is some Falkland roving that I won a while ago, from a contest over at Wool for Brains. Caroline sent me 200 grams of this beautiful, silky, lustrous roving from Wingham Wool Work, all the way from England. It was so lovely in it's natural white state that I almost didn't dye it, but Monday was a cold and gray day, and I wanted to try something new (to me) with dyeing.
My goal was to get two similar but different colors that would blend together when plied, to create an intermediate color. I divided the roving in half (by length), and made the dye for one half blue with a little green, and the other half green with a little blue. This was cold-pour dyeing; I arranged the roving on plastic wrap and dripped on spots of dye, then wrapped the plastic around and smooshed the wool a bit before steaming. This gave a beautiful mottled, tonal variegation. There are spots where the dye is nearly full intensity, and there are spots where there is only the barest flush of color.
I shall have fun spinning this. Thanks Caroline!
In other spinning news, I did another skein of laceweight. This is some Merino roving I found in my fiber closet, that I think came with the lace flyer I bought for my Ashford a couple years ago. Very nice fiber. But wait, what is going on with my wheel?
I have it set up for double drive! I usually spin using single drive (Scotch tension). I actually taught myself to spin on a borrowed double-drive-only wheel in September 2001, and liked it OK, but a couple months later when I bought my Ashford traditional, I had to switch to single drive since that's all it did. Really, at that point, it didn't make a whole lot of difference, since I was still in the beginner lumpy-bumpy over/underspun stage. I was making yarn, and I was happy.
I tried double drive a couple times over the years, and while I could make it work, I didn't feel like I had any control over the process. Scotch tension just felt better. But recently, I've felt like this was a cop-out, to keep using solely one method just because it's what I've always done. I wanted to try again.
So I did, and it worked much better this time. Easy, even. I was able to spin a fine singles (90-100 wpi) with very little effort. The drive band is cheap #5 crochet cotton, tied in a plain square knot. I had to fiddle a bit with the tension and whorl sizes to get it set right, but once I had that sorted out, it went really well. The plying was a bit troublesome because the takeup was so soft, but once I switched up to the next larger flyer whorl, it went fine. I spun the entire little bag of roving into singles on Tuesday evening, and plied it Wednesday evening.
That's 1.5 oz., ~385 yards of ~40 wpi two ply, enough to make a little lacy scarf or weft in something woven. It was really hard to measure the wpi and yardage of this skein, it's so soft and bouncy and stretchy. The skein measures 58" around when relaxed, and 67" around, stretched!
A good reintroduction to double drive, though I still think Scotch tension gives me better, finer control over the draw-in tension.
Friday, November 16, 2007
I haven't been doing a lot of fibery things recently, but I have managed to get the second set of charts done for Mystic Waters.
I like the way this is coming out. The end of the second chart was to be the point where I evaluate my choice of needle size and bead placement, and frog the whole thing if I'm not perfectly pleased. I'm happy (and secretly very relieved) that I will not need to do any frogging. Whew.
This isn't going as fast as MS3 did, even aside from the fact that each right-side row is longer than the one before. I'm finding it very easy to get lost in all the yarnovers, and lose track of where I am in the row. I'm not sure why this is, but the fact that I'm working now (makes me tired in the evenings) and also going to the gym (makes me tired on exercise nights) may have something to do with it.
I also like the way the beads are working out. I'm using #8 seed beads, in a "midnight blue metallic iris" colorway. It's the left-most tube in this picture. The mix of colors- blue, green, and purple- really set off the yarn, and I think using them only in the border will be just enough without being overwhelming or too sparkly.
OK, I'm going to go have a light snack now and start drinking water, in preparation in for my date with the elliptical trainer/evil torture device in a couple hours.
I like the way this is coming out. The end of the second chart was to be the point where I evaluate my choice of needle size and bead placement, and frog the whole thing if I'm not perfectly pleased. I'm happy (and secretly very relieved) that I will not need to do any frogging. Whew.
This isn't going as fast as MS3 did, even aside from the fact that each right-side row is longer than the one before. I'm finding it very easy to get lost in all the yarnovers, and lose track of where I am in the row. I'm not sure why this is, but the fact that I'm working now (makes me tired in the evenings) and also going to the gym (makes me tired on exercise nights) may have something to do with it.
I also like the way the beads are working out. I'm using #8 seed beads, in a "midnight blue metallic iris" colorway. It's the left-most tube in this picture. The mix of colors- blue, green, and purple- really set off the yarn, and I think using them only in the border will be just enough without being overwhelming or too sparkly.
OK, I'm going to go have a light snack now and start drinking water, in preparation in for my date with the elliptical trainer/evil torture device in a couple hours.
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Well this is exciting- my glowlight tetras spawned last night! I have 1 female and 2 males, and for the past month or so, the female has been looking extremely round. I never really considered that they would actually spawn, given my water hardness and neutral pH, but they did last night.
The males were flushed much darker than their usual coloring, and both they and the female had a dark spot at their vents. The males chased the female all over the place, and about every 15 minutes or so, they dove into the plants and she released a cloud of tiny (TINY) eggs. Probably 30-50 at a time.
Of course, the black neon tetras and panda cories followed along behind and ate every egg, but it was still really neat to see. I bought a new tank Sunday (upgraded from 7 gal to a 14 gal , woo hoo!), and the fish seem really happy. The cories (lots of grown-up babies now, which precipitated the desire for a new tank) have lots of room to swim now, and obviously the glowlights are happy with the new digs.....
I took some video:
Sorry for the pretty bad quality, that's the best my digital camera can do on video. And don't mind the algae-covered plants, I'm working on it. The other tank was overstocked from all the cory babies, and had a recurring algae problem. And yes, I'll be getting more plants and a background- I just set up this tank a day and a half ago, after all, give me a break!
I have no plans to try and raise glowlight fry. I have enough on my hands with panda cory fry. The 7-gal tank has become the new fry tank.....a step up from the 2.5 gal.
The males were flushed much darker than their usual coloring, and both they and the female had a dark spot at their vents. The males chased the female all over the place, and about every 15 minutes or so, they dove into the plants and she released a cloud of tiny (TINY) eggs. Probably 30-50 at a time.
Of course, the black neon tetras and panda cories followed along behind and ate every egg, but it was still really neat to see. I bought a new tank Sunday (upgraded from 7 gal to a 14 gal , woo hoo!), and the fish seem really happy. The cories (lots of grown-up babies now, which precipitated the desire for a new tank) have lots of room to swim now, and obviously the glowlights are happy with the new digs.....
I took some video:
Sorry for the pretty bad quality, that's the best my digital camera can do on video. And don't mind the algae-covered plants, I'm working on it. The other tank was overstocked from all the cory babies, and had a recurring algae problem. And yes, I'll be getting more plants and a background- I just set up this tank a day and a half ago, after all, give me a break!
I have no plans to try and raise glowlight fry. I have enough on my hands with panda cory fry. The 7-gal tank has become the new fry tank.....a step up from the 2.5 gal.
Monday, November 12, 2007
Good morning! I was awake early today, rescuing my laundry from the clothesline. The windy season has begun in La Grande, and we're expected to have 25-40 mph gusts today. It's at 28 mph right now, and has subsided some since I got up. I don't consider it really windy until the fireplace starts whistling. Anyway, the wind woke me up at 5:30, and I went out to bring in the laundry. It was exhilarating. The temp was 41˚ F, so not too cold, and the air felt wonderfully alive in the blustery cool dark.
Plus, I wasn't sleepy anymore so I just stayed up, and got to see the sun rise about an hour later. This was the view from my front door at 6:40 am.
What a treat.
Plus, I wasn't sleepy anymore so I just stayed up, and got to see the sun rise about an hour later. This was the view from my front door at 6:40 am.
What a treat.
Thursday, November 08, 2007
Quick list:
- I have joined the gym here and will supposedly be starting to exercise regularly again. Actually, Shaun joined the gym, and dragged me along onto his membership, kicking and screaming (whining and couchpotato-ing). I would love to lose some weight and regain some energy, though, so I'll do it. I went to a spin class (exercise-bike-spin-class, not my preferred kind of spin class that involves yarn) last night, and it was painful. My rear went numb from the uncomfortable bike seat, my legs were screaming at me this morning, and my sit-bones still hurt. I cringe at the thought of getting back on that bike tomorrow. It was a good workout, though. We'll see if I can keep up with it.
- Knit a bit more on Mystic Waters, and am about halfway through the second set of charts. Still liking the pattern, though it's taking a bit of concentration to keep track of my place on the chart.
- I have another idea for a hat percolating in my brain, and may write it up as a formal pattern.
- Work continues to be good. I got a lot accomplished in my four hours today.
- That's really about it. I'm tired. I'm out of interesting things to say.
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
I've been spending much longer than thought I was going to on Ravelry. It's just so nice to be able to browse all kinds of patterns in one place, see how they look in different yarns, and most of all- click away to bookmark the ones I like.
I've decided that my next lace project after Mystic Waters MUST be the Forest Path Stole. It's been lurking around in my mind for a while, whispering to me, but the more I look at the projects in my Ravelry queue, the more it calls to me. All those beautiful leaves.
I must knit this. Possibly in handspun. I have all that Merino x Columbia, don'tcha know. And a ball of tussah silk top for blending.
Now to get my hands on that pattern...... My library doesn't carry Interweave Knits, so no free magazine pattern for me.
I've decided that my next lace project after Mystic Waters MUST be the Forest Path Stole. It's been lurking around in my mind for a while, whispering to me, but the more I look at the projects in my Ravelry queue, the more it calls to me. All those beautiful leaves.
I must knit this. Possibly in handspun. I have all that Merino x Columbia, don'tcha know. And a ball of tussah silk top for blending.
Now to get my hands on that pattern...... My library doesn't carry Interweave Knits, so no free magazine pattern for me.
Monday, November 05, 2007
I finally got back to spinning the Ashland Bay colonial top (colorway Northern Lights) that I started in Friday Harbor this past summer, and finished it up this weekend. I spun this much (much, much) thicker than anything else I've spun in recent memory. Years, even. I wanted a nice heavy yarn, possibly suitable for an outdoor sweater for Emma. I'm not sure there's enough here for a sweater, but there's definitely enough for a vest for Emma or a hat for Shaun (if he wants one) plus leftovers.
505 yards
16 oz
3-ply
6 wpi (after washing)
24 wpi singles
It's 3-ply, a nice squooshy round knitting yarn, and can I just say again- MUCH thicker than I usually spin! I'm actually pretty proud of myself, because this is so far out of my comfort range. I have a much harder time spinning thick than thin.
Despite the thickness (only 6 wpi!!), I managed to keep it soft, and it feels great. It's balanced, and poofed up nicely in the wash. It was weird going from spinning the froghair fine Merino x Columbia I just did, to this. My smallest whorl to my biggest.
I have also started another lace knitting project, another mystery-along. I came across a mention on Ravelry of the Mystic Waters shawl, and joined on up. (Actually, I also signed up for the Secret of the Stole mystery-along, and had the first clue knitted, but I wasn't feeling much love for the design or the needle size I was using, so it's been frogged already. I'll wait to see the whole thing done, and if I decide I like it, I'll start again on smaller needles. I especially didn't like the two points on the end. Three might have been OK, but two wasn't working for me. I like odd numbers.) (Aside #2: Why am I signing up for all these "alongs" all of a sudden?)
Anyway, I have started Mystic Waters. I waited for the first two clues to be released to see if I liked the way the pattern was shaping up. I did, so I cast on. I'm using the Princess Blue merino/silk laceweight I spun over the summer, and it's working beautifully. I have finished the first chart.
I modified the pattern by adding beads (8/0 midnight blue metallic iris) to the border diamonds. I think the beads added a lot to the Mystery Stole, just that little bit of weight that made it drape beautifully. As of right now, I'm not planning to add the beads anywhere except the border, because I don't want them to overpower the handspun yarn or the design. This is on US2 Addi Lace needles, though I could probably have gone down to US1's. I'll finish the first clue or two, and if it looks too open, I am committed to starting over. This is special yarn, and I don't want to knit something with it that I'm not perfectly happy about.
This is the larger of the two skeins, 1825 yards. That's more than enough for Mystic Waters (1300 yds recommended), and with the leftovers and the second skein (832 yds) I should still have enough for the warp or weft of a woven shawl.
505 yards
16 oz
3-ply
6 wpi (after washing)
24 wpi singles
It's 3-ply, a nice squooshy round knitting yarn, and can I just say again- MUCH thicker than I usually spin! I'm actually pretty proud of myself, because this is so far out of my comfort range. I have a much harder time spinning thick than thin.
Despite the thickness (only 6 wpi!!), I managed to keep it soft, and it feels great. It's balanced, and poofed up nicely in the wash. It was weird going from spinning the froghair fine Merino x Columbia I just did, to this. My smallest whorl to my biggest.
I have also started another lace knitting project, another mystery-along. I came across a mention on Ravelry of the Mystic Waters shawl, and joined on up. (Actually, I also signed up for the Secret of the Stole mystery-along, and had the first clue knitted, but I wasn't feeling much love for the design or the needle size I was using, so it's been frogged already. I'll wait to see the whole thing done, and if I decide I like it, I'll start again on smaller needles. I especially didn't like the two points on the end. Three might have been OK, but two wasn't working for me. I like odd numbers.) (Aside #2: Why am I signing up for all these "alongs" all of a sudden?)
Anyway, I have started Mystic Waters. I waited for the first two clues to be released to see if I liked the way the pattern was shaping up. I did, so I cast on. I'm using the Princess Blue merino/silk laceweight I spun over the summer, and it's working beautifully. I have finished the first chart.
I modified the pattern by adding beads (8/0 midnight blue metallic iris) to the border diamonds. I think the beads added a lot to the Mystery Stole, just that little bit of weight that made it drape beautifully. As of right now, I'm not planning to add the beads anywhere except the border, because I don't want them to overpower the handspun yarn or the design. This is on US2 Addi Lace needles, though I could probably have gone down to US1's. I'll finish the first clue or two, and if it looks too open, I am committed to starting over. This is special yarn, and I don't want to knit something with it that I'm not perfectly happy about.
This is the larger of the two skeins, 1825 yards. That's more than enough for Mystic Waters (1300 yds recommended), and with the leftovers and the second skein (832 yds) I should still have enough for the warp or weft of a woven shawl.
Friday, November 02, 2007
I made several little Loomette squares a couple days ago, with some of the leftovers from my hat, and yesterday I turned them into these:
Both have a lavender sachet packet inside. Yes, I'm still using the lavender I harvested from my garden in Friday Harbor! It's been living in the freezer, and smells as strong as when I picked it.
The one on top is two plainweave squares, one of which has an embroidered lavender flower (#5 perle cotton, freehanded). The other is made up of two pattern weaves, even though the pattern doesn't show up too well with the variegated yarn. One side has a twill diamond on a plainweave background:
The other side is an allover 3-1 twill, which shows up a bit better.
The lavender has an interesting story- When we sold our house in Friday Harbor, I rooted several cuttings from the big lavender plant, the gorgeous fragrant one that the lavender in these sachets comes from. I gave one of the cuttings to my sister and kept one for myself. My little plantlet met an unfortunate end last March, when Emma and I were in Maine for six weeks and Shaun was in charge of watering the houseplants here in Oregon. I was quite sad to lose my lavender plant, since it came from the very first house I ever owned.
But, my sister still had a cutting! Hers was thriving in Philadelphia. When she got married last month, we put sprigs of lavender in her bouquet, from my/her plant. I brought two of those sprigs home with me, through three airports and two dry and cramped airplanes. I stuck them in flowerpots with plastic bag mini-greenhouses over them, set them on my bathroom windowsill, and let them be (watering when dry).
I took the bags off this past weekend, and the sprigs seem to be rooted, and have started growing.
From my first owned home in Friday Harbor, to my sister's first owned home in Philadelphia, to her wedding bouquet, to my home in Oregon. Lavender with history. This makes me happy.
Both have a lavender sachet packet inside. Yes, I'm still using the lavender I harvested from my garden in Friday Harbor! It's been living in the freezer, and smells as strong as when I picked it.
The one on top is two plainweave squares, one of which has an embroidered lavender flower (#5 perle cotton, freehanded). The other is made up of two pattern weaves, even though the pattern doesn't show up too well with the variegated yarn. One side has a twill diamond on a plainweave background:
The other side is an allover 3-1 twill, which shows up a bit better.
The lavender has an interesting story- When we sold our house in Friday Harbor, I rooted several cuttings from the big lavender plant, the gorgeous fragrant one that the lavender in these sachets comes from. I gave one of the cuttings to my sister and kept one for myself. My little plantlet met an unfortunate end last March, when Emma and I were in Maine for six weeks and Shaun was in charge of watering the houseplants here in Oregon. I was quite sad to lose my lavender plant, since it came from the very first house I ever owned.
But, my sister still had a cutting! Hers was thriving in Philadelphia. When she got married last month, we put sprigs of lavender in her bouquet, from my/her plant. I brought two of those sprigs home with me, through three airports and two dry and cramped airplanes. I stuck them in flowerpots with plastic bag mini-greenhouses over them, set them on my bathroom windowsill, and let them be (watering when dry).
I took the bags off this past weekend, and the sprigs seem to be rooted, and have started growing.
From my first owned home in Friday Harbor, to my sister's first owned home in Philadelphia, to her wedding bouquet, to my home in Oregon. Lavender with history. This makes me happy.
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