Monday, February 25, 2008

pattern: heather legwarmers



With 3 balls of single colour sock yarn and a belief that knitting plain coloured socks were seriously boring, I decided to make up a pattern that would be interesting enough to knit, but something i could knit on a LONG tube journey to a friend's house. With my daughter complaining that her legs were cold, the idea of stripy leg warmers as born. Although I knit these to fit her, it would be easy to adapt the width and length to any kid.


Yarn: Cygnet wool rich 4ply.

205 yards per 50g ball
75% wool
25% polyamide
machine washable
lilac, denim mix and pine mix

cost: £2.60 per ball, although less than 20% of each ball is used in thsi pattern as written

time: 10 hours

knitability level: advanced beginner, it's a good first dpn project.

needles: 2.5mm (US 1.5)

gauge: 30 stitches and 36 rows per 10cm

Cast on 60 stitches onto one needle, spread these stitches equally over 3 needles, 20 stitches per needle and join work into a round, taking care not to twist the cast on. Knit in 1x1 rib ( k1, p1, repeat until end of round) for 3 inches. After a few rounds you may wish to place a marker to indicate the end of a round. All colour changes should take place at the end of a round.

Then switch to stocking stitch. keep knitting in the round following the stripe pattern of your preference. Make up your own, use a random stripe generator or follow my stripe pattern that I will put at the end of the pattern. You can carry the yarn up the inside of the tube or cut and sew in ends after every row. For a child's pattern, yarns will need to be twisted with the working yarn on every row so it isn't caught by small toes when it's put on.

After every 4cm of knitting, M1 stitch at the start of every needle. Knit until stocking stitch measures 17 cm, this will give you an even number of stitches for the end rib. (an even number of increace rows is needed if you choose to adapt length)

Complete the end rib of 3cm and cast off loosely.

Sew in ends.

Repeat to give a pair of leg warmers and present to the small child of your choice.

To adapt the size, change the number of stitches for the cast on, (keeping an even number of stitches for the rib) and the length knit, keeping an even number of increase rows so there is an even number of stitches for the end rib.

The leg width is adapted by measuring the diameter of the child's leg just above the ankle and adding 2cm. Multiply the number of cm by 3 to give your cast on number, adding a stitch if necessary to get an even number.

To alter length, measure the length of the leg from just below the ankle bone to the crease at the back of the knee. This is the length of the stocking stitch part of the leg warmer. This leaves a 6cm growth allowance before the legwarmer no longer covers the whole calf.


green: 3cm rib plus one stocking stitch row
lilac: 12 rows
green: 4 rows
blue: 12 rows
lilac: 3 rows
blue: 7 rows
green: 12 rows
lilac: 10 rows
blue: 7 rows
lilac: 1 stocking stitch row plus 3cm rib

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Feb challenge update

Well, I'm doing all right on some of those, not so good on others.

I have not knit anywhere near enough to keep up to my knit a mile, because I took 10 days knitting my pomotamus socks. They do look scrummy though.

I have bought no new crafty stuff, what I've received has been through swaps.

I have finished 4 of my long term WIP's.

I'll sort the charity stuff out later today.

I've given up entirely on the spin every day challenge.

I will look for some stash hand spun and a pattern that it will work with and make that my next cast on.


So, some good, some bad.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Gotland wool





My friend Cledry Yarner sent me a bag of gotland this morning. It's a lovely range of creams and greys. I now need to work out what I'm going to do with it. Something that will show off the colours.



Gorgeous, isn't it.

Friday, February 01, 2008

My february challenge

In February I challenge myself to:

1. knit at least another mile of yarn

2. buy no new yarn or materials for other crafts.

3. finish a quarter of my WIP's, that is about 8, although some need no more than sewing up.

4. finish last and this month's charity knit items and take them to the hospital.

5. knit more socks. adult, child or baby, doesn't matter. I'm over a week behind on my pair a week self challenge

6. spin for at least 5 minutes every day.

7. write out at least one improvised WIP into a pattern

8. knit one item out of handspun

9. organise my personal pdf and saved website library

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

homemade bacon





Well, 3 days in a cure for the pig belly and this is what I got. I'm going to estimate that this was about 15% of the meat by weight and I've got 7-8lbs of bacon.

Having the confidence to leave meat out of the fridge, even in salt took some doing. having the confidence to believe the recipe that said it only took 3 days to cure took even more. But it's definitely bacon, hard, dry cure bacon, more suitable for cooking with thna for frying up with egg and saus on a Sunday morning, but this will add flavour to sauces and soups for months. I already tried a bit in a leek and potato soup and it was LOVELY.

As a first experiment in home curing meat, I've got to pronounce this a great success. We're already looking forward to the hams and I'm looking into the possibility of dry cure ham and home cured salt beef.

Monday, January 28, 2008

she-demon


I decided not to show off pictures of my latest efforts and instead concentrate on my daughter's work today.

I've bought half a pig. A significant proportion is currently in my conservatory looking very unappetising and turning into ham and bacon. The fact i think it looks icky did influence my decision not to share ickyness.

i'd also like to say a thank you to some of the people on Downsizer for some great gifties and swaps as well as their help in many things. You know who you are. Thankyou.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Cuteness



Couldn't resist showing off the cuteness. It's taken a while by she cat has calmed down and girlchild has calmed down and they are starting to make friends. They aren't actually asleep in that pic, just relaxed and happy.

Anyway, I've added a bunch of patterns to ravelry, just to keep track of what i've actually knitted in the last couple of months. Lots of socks and some other nice bits. I need to take a bunch of photos to show them off properly though. I've stuck that on my list of things to do tomorrow.

Need to pick a project to work on now though. I've knit my way through the baby surprise jacket, and need some inspiration to hit me. I'm hoping it will hit me in the direction of one of my multitude of WIP, although that is rarely likely. I'll wait and see.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

basic baby bib

I had a look at the patterns for baby bibs that were available on ravellry and none of them really did anything for me. Simple is one thing, however, all the patterns I could find seemed to be completely unshaped like the one in Mason Dixon Knitting. Although that seems a very popular pattern, it just isn't my cup of tea, so I decided to design a bib myself with a bit of added shaping at the neck.


yarn: dishcloth cotton

100% cotton
machine washable
heavy DK/worstead weight

cost: £1.50

time: 2 hours to knit, 15 minutes to finish

knitability level: beginner

needles: 4.5mm/ US 7

gauge: 21 stitches/34 rows per 10cm in garter stitch

extras: 1.5cm diameter plastic button
sewing thread to attach button

instructions:

Cast on 36 stitches. Knit all rows until work measures 7 inches.
k14 turn (place remaining stitches on holder or waste yarn)
k14
ssk k10 k2tog
k12
ssk k8 k2tog
k10
ssk k6 k2tog
k8
ssk k4 k2tog
k6
knit all rows until work measures 11 inches in total.
cast off.




place remaining stitches back on needle.
cast off 8 stitches
k14
ssk k10 k2tog
k12
ssk k8 k2tog
k10
ssk k6 k2tog
k8
ssk k4 k2tog
k6
knit all rows until work measures 11 inches in total.

*k1 k2tog yo twice ssk
k3 p1 k2
knit 2 rows*
repeat from *to * 4 times

cast off

to finish:

sew in ends
sew on button to shorter ends


Many of the dishcloth patterns with a square garter stitch border could be used as the front panel for this bib, simply by adjusting the centre cast off of 8 to an appropriate size for the dishcloth patters. Or simple embroidery could be added for a personalised look.

the month of finished items

I've decided that january shall be the month of finishing many items. Some shal be new, sme shall be from my WIP's, some shall be small simple items like baby hats, some shall be more complex.

I started this a few days into the new year, when i finally started recovering from being ill over christmas, having then just started recovering from having been ill from october. it all really showed me quite how much stress I'd been under, how much damage to my system that having a large abscess can cause. A healthy adult is not ill for over 6 weeks with flu.

Anyway, I started a new project with sale yarn. I'd been knitting river in mint green KSH. Just not me, not my colour. So I frogged that and restarted in a pale lime (yes, i still like green) and knit until that was finished.

That was my first FO of the year. Since then, I've added to the list.

river in matchmaker 4ply.
6 charity baby hats in Dk acrylic
mp3 player pouch in calmer
2 pairs approx toddler socks in sirdar snuggly 4 ply
wavy headband
cable headband


I'm now about to go start on a pile of bibs in dishcloth cotton.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

I'm back

After a long time away from the internet, various illnesses etc, I'm now back. I shall endeavour to start to blog regularly with loads of nice piccys when i get my decent computer fixed and therefore have a connection that is stable for more than 2 minutes at a time.

Anyway.

here are my knitting resolutions for 2008

1. i shall knit at least one charity item per week
2. i shall finish half of my WIP list. I need to update that. i intend to remove the sidebars and just link through to ravelry
3. I shall knit from stash or swap or charity shop purchases only until ally pally. The aim shall be that I can fit all of the stash on 3 shelves and in 4 boxes. The exception to this is yarn purchased for items 4 and 5, although this should be swapped for if possible
4. I shall knit one pair of socks per week.
5. I shall knit one lace item per month
6. I shall knit one item from or partially from handspun each month

general resolutions:

1. the house shall be clean and tidy before july
2. i shall grow more food this year
3. i shall read at least one book every week
4. I shall cull at least 200 crap books before july (possibly some through some form of swap system) This is to clear off enough space to store craft items on shelves.
5. i shall make a start on selling some of the stuff i have made for the buisness
6. I shall make enough jam over the summer so i don't run out before christmass