Retail therapy

I said I wasn’t going to post again until after my exams but I wanted to show off the packages that arrived this morning. I indulged in a little retail therapy while I was ill and everything arrived at once.

Gingham invaded

First up, some brilliant fabric from Voodo Rabbit. Steven showed me a post about their cushions on Boing Boing and, when I saw they had fat quarters of the fabric available in the their Etsy store, I just couldn’t resist. I bought a fat quarter each of “Gingham Invaded” in white on black and black on white.

Gingham invaded

I have no idea yet what I’ll do with this. Steven is talking about getting some for himself to make another dice bag. I’m somewhat tempted to order lots and lots of it from Spoonflower and make my own cushion covers or a quilt!

On a far less geeky note, I also bought a shawl pin from South4th on Etsy. I keep seeing their Ravelry ads and had been trying to resist but being ill lowered my resistance and I succumbed.

Shawl pin

I’ve wanted a new shawl pin for a long time but was looking for something small and reasonably plain, whilst still being pretty. The myrtlewood pin fits the bill perfectly. It’s beautifully light, the oiled finish is gorgeous and it looks great with my shawls. Unfortunately, all the shawl pictures I took were out of focus so you will need to wait for better pictures of that.

Now, back to the books!

My desk

Cause and effect

It seems that the more I knit and sew, the less I blog. Or, is it that the less I blog, the more I knit and sew? Whichever way round it is, there has been very little blogging but a lot of crafting going on.

In the month since I last blogged, I knitted a baby cardigan, finished my Simmer Dim shawl (although it still needs blocked), designed and knitted a hat and matching fingerless gloves, finished a neck-warmer, and sewed a log cabin quilted cushion cover.

I also made quite a bit of progress on the border of another shawl, started another hat, and started sewing a bedspread.

Having written all that down, I’m starting to wonder when I had time to work, sleep and study!

Lots more details to come on all of these but the only one I have pictures of at the moment is the baby cardigan.

a picture for you

This is the Kira cardigan from Harumidori designs and it is absolutely adorable. I wasn’t a great fan of the layout of the pattern document, which was very cluttered and difficult to read, and there were a few typos in the text although I didn’t spot any actual errors in the numbers. I love the finished cardigan though. I knitted in Rowan Pure Wool Aran, which was really soft after washing and blocking but I’m a little worried that some of the red dye ran during washing.

It’s a bit big for the baby that it was given to since he was only 10 days old when we saw him but I had knitted the 6-12 month size.  However, he was wearing the baby hat that I had knitted for his older brother about 2½ years ago, which is apparently still going strong and is still his mum’s favourite baby hat. This was the beanie hat from Natural Knits for Babies and Moms by Louisa Harding. The RYC Cashsoft DK has held up really well with washing, is still really soft and apparently the sizing and fit are just perfect for newborns.

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It’s very satisfying to knit gifts for people who really appreciate them!

Barcelona

Not the city (unfortunately) but the Amy Butler skirt pattern. Back in October, I attended an “A-line skirt workshop” at the Make Lounge in Islington and this is the result (excuse the not-brushed-my-hair-or-put-any-makeup-on picture).

Barcelona skirt

I love this skirt. It has somehow ended up being a little big, despite fitting perfectly when I tried it on at the workshop. It’s still perfectly wearable though so I haven’t bothered trying to take it in at all.

Barcelona skirt

The fabric is a red gabardine from John Lewis and is slightly heavier than the cotton that is suggested for the pattern but is the perfect weight for a winter skirt. The lining is a not terribly interesting grey/lilac polyester which I mainly picked to be a nice contrast.

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I really enjoyed the workshop. The pattern is well-written and easy to follow anyway but, since this was my first time trying to make anything from a pattern, it was great to have someone there to guide me. I learned how to adjust the pattern to fit my measurements and a neat way of shortening a skirt pattern (particularly one that claims it only makes one length). As always with the Make Lounge, the evenings themselves were good fun, a couple of glasses of wine and some good company can make sewing a surprisingly social activity.

There is a guilty secret attached to this skirt though:

Barcelona skirt

It’s not actually finished! There is just a very little hand-sewing left to do to attach the lining to the zip and to add a hook and eye at the top of the zip. Unfortunately, neither of these things are visible when the skirt is worn so I’ve been wearing it lots anyway and have very little motivation to do the finishing. Maybe now that I’ve admitted my laziness to the internet, I’ll finally get around to finishing it properly.

Silver linings

2011 has not started well. So far, Steven and I have both been ill, someone crashed into our car (while it was parked and empty) and I’ve broken a tooth, resulting in the need for a root canal treatment. I don’t like spreading negativity, which is why I haven’t been posting but I’m finally starting to see the silver lining in all the time that I’m spending on the couch — I’m getting lots of knitting done.

Waterlilies shawl

(I’m still working on finding the silver lining in a huge dent in the car and the root canal.)

Brown paper packages tied up with string

Our Christmas tree with everyone’s presents ready to go:

Brown paper packages

One purchase that we made in Brighton that I didn’t mention in my last post was a huge pile of brown paper that someone had saved from parcels from department stores in Brighton and Hove. Steven had already been considering brown-paper based wrapping (apparently I’m no longer the only person in the house who gets the crafting bug at Christmas) so when we saw the collection of 1950s paper, we decided it was fate and it had to come home with us.

I love the various old labels that were still attached. (If you click through to the larger version of the bookseller’s label, you can see it’s date-stamped 28th December 1954.) In fact, I loved the labels so much that I carefully didn’t use any pieces with labels to wrap my presents so that I can use them for something else in future — not that I know what yet!

Old department store labels Old department store labels

Speaking of stamps, Steven created some lovely rubber-stamped gift tags for us to use.

Brown paper packages Brown paper packages

I know I shouldn’t be, but I’m still amazed that something this simple looks so amazing! I foresee lots more rubber-stamping in my future.

For now, however, I’m going to go enjoy the rest of my Christmas day. Merry Christmas!

Vintage shopping

Steven and I spent a lovely day last Saturday in Brighton. We wandered round and round and in and out of lots of little boutiques, galleries, and craft and design shops, which Brighton seems to have by the bucketload. We also hunted through lots of the antique-vintage-junk shops and came home with some interesting purchases.

I know it doesn’t look like much now (particularly in this photo) but I have big plans for this workbox. I’m going to strip it down, re-paint it, polish it up and replace the fabric lining. Once it’s done, I think it will look really good alongside the vintage sewing machine.

Vintage workbox

We haven’t decided where we’re going to hang this next find, yet. I think it would add a nice little touch of colour to our black and white bathroom and it would certainly be appropriate in there! Steven seems to be pushing for it go somewhere a bit more prominent but I’m not sure I’m up for that.

Vintage Ex-Lax advert

We also picked up a box of Christmas decorations. They are not terribly posh or fancy but they are a bit jazzier than our usual decorations and have really brightened up the tree.

Christmas baubles

Speaking of vintage decorations, look what else has found its way on to the tree this year:

Knitting Christmas decoration

Christmas cards 2010

I mentioned last weekend that I had made a prototype for this year’s Christmas cards but didn’t include a photo. The reason for this was that the best photo I had taken of it looked like this:

Prototype for card

For me, prototypes really are prototypes. They are the first attempt to see if it is even remotely possible to physically create something that in any way resembles the vision in my head and maybe, if I’m really lucky, work out some of the initial kinks in the process. Believe it or not, in my world, this is a photo of a highly successful prototype.

However, since I doubted that anyone would find that photo terribly interesting or inspirational and thought that most people would probably pity my poor family and friends for having such ugliness inflicted upon them, I thought I would wait until I had moved past the prototyping stage and made at least one finished article.

Hand-stitched Christmas card

Doesn’t that look better?

(In a fit of craft-related productiveness, I even managed to remember to take photographs of the process and have put up a tutorial on Yellow Ginger showing how it’s done.)

It felt like a lazy Sunday…

… and yet I have a new pair of socks and a prototype for this year’s Christmas cards. It turns out that all I need to motivate me to finish the second of a pair of socks is six inches of snow on the ground. The snow is nearly all gone now (from London anyway) but it is still easily cold enough for the socks to come in very handy. (Apologies for the picture but daylight is in short supply around here.)

Lichen rib socks

The pattern was the Lichen Rib sock from Knitting Vintage Socks and I didn’t make any modifications. I don’t know if it was me or the pattern but there were a couple of bits where I ran into trouble with the instructions for how the stitches should be arranged on the needles. Everything worked out in the end though so I didn’t bother trying to track down any errata or work out what the actual problem was. (Insert rant here about patterns that not only assume you’ll be using DPNs but assume you’ll be using a specific number of needles.) That aside, I did enjoy the pattern and the socks are a great fit and, most importantly, warm!

And now for the obligatory photograph of a blizzard in London:

Snowing in Blackheath

Exceedingly nice notions

Sewing notions rather than knitting notions, for a change.

Steven and I visited the East London Design Show in Shoreditch last night and loved the sewing notions from Merchant and Mills.

Sewing notions

The quality of the packaging and design is at least matched, if not exceeded, by the quality of the notions themselves. The sidebent tailor’s shears, in particular, feel absolutely amazing.

Sewing notions

Unfortunately, the gift box of notions and the shears are going to be a Christmas present for someone who isn’t me so I don’t get to keep them. I did treat myself to some proper tailor’s chalk but might have to pay their website a visit to stock up on some other bits. (You can never have too many pairs of really good scissors, right?)

There are lots of other awesome designers at the show (Steven managed to do most of his Christmas shopping in just one evening) so it’s worth a visit if you’re in the area. (You can get a 2-for-1 entry voucher by signing up for the mailing list on the show website.)

Getting back on the horse

It seems to take a little longer after each exam session for life to get back to normal. I tend to go quiet (electronically speaking) at first because I’m studying so hard that there isn’t time for blogging and everything else that I do online. After the exams, it takes a while for the stress to dissipate and for me to feel like getting back on the horse. All of which is long way of saying that I’m sorry I’ve been gone for so long but I’m back now!

As this is just a quick post to get me going again, here are some sneak peeks of some of the projects that I’ve been working on while I’ve been offline and that I’ll be blogging about over the coming days.

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