December 23rd, 2007

The ‘before’ pictures

Steven and I went round to the flat that we’re buying the other night to take some measurements and photos so that we can start properly planning the work that needs done. Fortunately, the rooms were bigger than we remembered them being, which is always a good thing. Unfortunately, they’re just as hideous as we remember and there’s just as much work needing done, if not more so. Anyway, if you’d like to take a look at just what we’ve let ourselves in for, Steven’s put the pictures online at his Picasa gallery.

December 21st, 2007

La donna è mobile

Or, in English, “Woman is fickle”. I should point out that this is a comment aimed directly at myself before I offend anyone. I changed my mind about the scarf that I’m knitting for my Mum again yesterday mostly due to the horrible cold that I’m currently suffering from. It’s become clear that because of the slightly wider width I went for, two balls aren’t going to give me a long enough scarf. I had thought I would just pick up another ball at I Knit last night but since I spent most of yesterday huddled under a blanket on the sofa, I didn’t think taking my germs to a Christmas party was a brilliant idea. So, Mum’s scarf is now going to be a neckwarmer instead.

December 19th, 2007

Straying from the path

Usually, when following a knitting pattern, I use the exact yarn recommended as I’m always worried that it somehow won’t ‘work’ without it. However, having decided to knit my Mum a scarf for Christmas at the last minute and not having time to spend tracking down particular yarns, I thought it was time to be brave and try yarn substitution.

So, I picked my pattern and looked up the details of the recommended yarn on www.yarndex.com so that I could at least attempt to find something similar (a slightly fuzzy aran weight). So far so good. There was a small doubt in the back of my mind though. The photos of the scarf accompanying the pattern didn’t look like it had been knitted with aran weight yarn and definitely not with fuzzy yarn.

Undeterred, I bought two balls of the Wensleydale Longwool aran yarn, which I’ve mentioned before, and cast on.

The yarn was beautiful, the pattern pretty, the combination of the two …. bleugh!

Never mind, I had added lots of beautiful scarf patterns to my Ravelry queue earlier in the month when I thought I might eventually get around to knitting something for me again so I went back to the drawing board and started on a new pattern.

The yarn was still beautiful, the new pattern was pretty … and you can see where this is going, can’t you?

Again, despite the pattern claiming that it used aran weight yarn, that’s not what it looked like in the photos so I decided a change of approach was needed and went through my list looking for patterns that looked like they had been knitted with fuzzy aran. At last success with My So-Called Scarf.

Although all the pictures I’ve seen of this scarf have used variegated coloured yarns, the scarf looks beautiful in solid cream as well. It also uses nice big needles so is knitting up very quickly, a definite advantage when there’s less than a week to Christmas and you’re casting on a present for the 5th time!

Fingers crossed that I don’t change my mind again!

December 19th, 2007

How could I forget!

I just realised that I forgot to post to say that I finally finished the Henry scarf for my Dad! I don’t have photos yet thanks to almost never being home during daylight hours at the moment but will put some up as soon as I can.

I was beginning to worry that it wasn’t going to be done for Christmas so I’m hugely relieved. It’s come out beautifully and if it hadn’t taken so unbelievably long, I’d definitely make another one. (Sorry, Steven, there’s no way you’re getting one now.)

I made it in Jaeger Matchmaker 4 ply, which was quite nice yarn to work with although it did have a tendency to split at times. If I was going to make another one, I would be tempted to go for something softer (I wonder if Wensleydale Longwool comes in 4 ply?) and I would definitely use a more interesting colour. Charcoal grey is all well and good and my Dad will definitely wear it but it could do with a little more life in it.

December 14th, 2007

Knitting Lace

Firstly, let me clear up a common misconception: knitting lace is not hard. If you can knit, purl, k2tog and make yarn overs, you can knit lace. A lace pattern might be complicated and difficult to follow but as far as technique is concerned, it’s not hard.

Unless your technique is wrong, as I discovered last night. Apparently, there is a right way and a wrong way to make yarn overs. Now yarn overs are a way of deliberately introducing holes into your knitting. Obviously, holes are very important in lace, so if you’re not making them properly, you’ve got a problem. Having knit several rows of a lace pattern and not getting anything that looked like the pictures accompanying the pattern, I decided to take a closer look at what was supposed to be happening. Clearly, the pattern pictures had holes and, just as clearly, my work didn’t. This suggested a problem with my yarn overs so I thought I’d check that I was making them the way I was supposed to.

Enter Google. The first page I found explained that there is no standard method for yarn overs so if the pattern didn’t explain how to make them, I was probably screwed. Not really what I wanted to hear so I moved right along. The next page said that (and I quote) “the yarn should be wrapped counter-clockwise around the needle looking directly at the point of the right hand needle”. Personally, I’m not terribly keen on the idea of looking directly at the points of my needles even when I’m not knitting with them. Fortunately, I was third time lucky and found a site that explained that I should be bringing the yarn to the front of my work under the needle and then putting it to the back over the needle and not the other way round as I had been doing. This method gets a very loose length of yarn wrapped over the needle (just what you need to introduce a hole) unlike the opposite way which gets you a nice neat stitch and no hole. At last I have holes in my knitting!

The final amusement was the site that explained to me that making a stitch (a yarn over increases the number of stitches by one) in this way was called ‘lace’ when done intentionally and a ‘hole’ otherwise.

December 14th, 2007

A new project

I have a new favourite yarn! (I’m not sure I had a favourite before but I certainly do now.) Since Henry is very very nearly finished (just 3 rows and then the cast-off to do), I bought some yarn at I Knit last night to make a scarf/wrap for my Mum’s Christmas. The pattern that I’m making specified a slightly fuzzy aran weight and I ended up buying some Wensleydale Longwool from Wensleydale Longwool Sheepshop. This is wool as wool was meant to be! It’s 100% pure wool from Wensleydale Longwool sheep and is just beautiful. It has a lovely natural subtle sheen to it and it’s fabulously soft, unlike some other 100% wools that I’ve worked with. It’s soft and warm and fluffy and it’s definitely what I’m going to make my own scarf out of, when I get back around to making things for me.

It’s not perfect: it sheds considerably and it’s a little “grabby” so ripping back when you’ve gone wrong is not easy. Someone else at I Knit mentioned having wasted an entire ball’s worth of yarn having to rip back a jumper and the yarn being unusable afterwards. Note that I would expect both of these problems with any yarn of this sort so these are not criticisms as such.

I can’t comment on the colourways available either. I bought two balls in cream since I wanted something neutral that could be word in summer as well as winter. Since choosing yarn was standing between me and a bottle of organic cider from the I Knit fridge, I didn’t spend too long admiring things that I wasn’t going to buy! You can see (and order) other colours online at I Knit.

Of course, all this means that I have a barely-started project that I need to finish in the next 11 days. I’m also not sure that I like the pattern that I’ve chosen worked in this yarn; I think I might like something simpler given how beautiful the yarn itself is. I do have another pattern in mind so I’ll choose between them tonight and try and post some pictures over the weekend when there’s daylight.

December 10th, 2007

Making progress

As can now be seen from the progress bars (currently at the bottom of the blog sidebar) I’ve made real progress on my Henry scarf. It’s now 95% done, thanks to a couple of long-ish train journeys over the weekend. I might get it finished at I Knit this week but if I don’t it certainly won’t need much more done to it. Bizarrely, I’m now starting to feel anxious about what I’m going to knit when it’s done. For all that I’ve been desperate to get it finished, I’m going to miss it when it’s gone!

Since I failed to buy my Mum a Christmas present while shopping at the weekend, it’s looking more likely that my next knitting project is going to be a present for her, despite the fact that there are now only 10 knitting days till Christmas. I think there should be laws against people having birthdays in December and January. Mum’s difficult enough to find presents for without having to find two within a fortnight.

So don’t be surprised if another progress bar appears with something for my Mum that will knit up quickly and easily and preferably with little or no seaming so that I can finish it in the car as Steven and I are driving home.

December 10th, 2007

The girl’s still got IT

Having been out of IT for the grand total of three months now, I had an opportunity to stretch my technical muscles again recently. Nothing too complicated; I just tweaked the template for this blog so that the number of posts per month was displayed (to make it easier to track my NaBloPoMo progress) and added some Ravelry progress bars. The progress bars weren’t much of a challenge since they just involved copying the code that Ravelry provided to the right place (although working out what the right place was took a little brain power). However, at that magical point in the future “when-I-have-some-spare-time”, I plan to customise them at least a little to match the rest of the template better. It was also reasonably straightforward to add the code to display the number of posts per month but still strangely satisfying. It’s nice to know that my skills in that area haven’t disappeared completely already and that I can still find uses for them.

My current employer asked me last week would I like to go on a course to learn to program in VB. I think they thought I was kidding when I said “Not this year.” I think changing career, sitting 5 exams, buying and renovating a house, and getting married, all within the space of 15 months is enough to be going on with. The idea of being taught a programming language does appeal somewhat, having worked with them for seven years without much by way of formal teaching. Part of me wonders though if it wouldn’t just be better to persuade them to let me buy an O’Reilly book and spend a couple of days teaching myself. Of course, I’m still having to restrain the urge to tell them that writing VB macros to manipulate data held in Excel spreadsheets is a really bad way to handle the amount of data that we’re trying to work with. That might be a good reason for not doing the course. I can just see a VB instructor cursing me under his breath as I put my hand to ask once again “Would it not be better to do that using (insert name of almost any other language here)?”

December 6th, 2007

Knitty – Winter 2007 issue

Something amazing happened today. I looked at the new issue of Knitty and didn’t want to make anything in it! This almost never happens. Usually, Knitty comes out and I immediately want to run out and buy lots of wool and knit and knit and knit but not today.

I have added the kilt hose to my Ravelry queue, just in case the pattern comes in handy at a later date but that’s it.

Or, at least, that’s it for the current issue. Just to prove that there’s usually a lot more that I want to make, I trawled through the back issues and added whole bunch of earlier patterns instead. Guess you can’t win ‘em all.