Friday, March 31, 2006

Stashalong

I'm signing up for the next three months, but planning to allow myself 1 day each month to buy wool, but only if it's necessary for completing a project. (Sally Melville explains this better in 'Styles', which is mainly a stashbusting book). I am absolutely not going to resort to the trickery suggested by my friend Jan - she suggested that if I bought her yarn, and she bought mine then this would (ahem!) be OK. Pish Tush! I am going to be Good (probably) - so this weekend will see me sorting and cataloguing my stash, and I will be posting the list so that you can all see what a Bad Person I've been up to now (some of the yarn in this stash is over 20 years old ...)

Sunday, March 26, 2006

Olympia

Went to Olympia on Friday afternoon - turned out that it was really a cross-stitch show, rather than anything else, but I've never been to any of the big shows before, so useful pactice for Ally Pally, if I ever get there -


I met - in real life, not blogland! - Yvonne (pictured above in her Olympic Yoga Wrap), Ruth, Kerrie, Mary & Claire and a number of other knitters. I demonstrated Loopas to lots of nice ladies at the Knit & Relax stand, while Yvonne was off having a coffee, did a bit of knitting and chatting (more chatting than knitting, actually), and spent (not too much!) money on a few bits and pieces at:

- Silkwood (a skein of some pretty hand-dyed 4-ply wool, and a bag of combed wool tops for dyeing and felting)





- Hipknits (a Kool-Aid dyeing kit), where I met Kerrie & Ruth





- Black Sheep (a number of balls of Sirday Illusion, which I got to try out on the Knit & Relax stand)





- and a lady selling Colinette (which I'm not usually very keen on, but one colourway in Giotto in a gorgeous red orange yellow sang out at me)




then I entered the green Steek Boa in the Simply Knitting scarf competition. And then back home, hiding my purchases between my armchair and the bookshelf, as I went (and judging by some of the conversations I had on Friday, I am not alone in this behaviour ...)

In answer to a question from The Crafty Otter, my loopy boa took me about 4 hours to make, but I think that this was because I used a large number of yarns from stash, so it was quite heavy to work with as the length increased - used as intended by Sirdar with some of their very bulky yarns, eg. Sirdar Wow!, the time would be cut considerably due to the lightness of the yarn in use. Also, talking to Mary & Yvonne on Friday, the reckoning is that a short boa (ie 1 ball of Sirdar Wow! and 1 of Sirdar Vegas, or similar, for a length of about 3 foot) could be completed in about an hour, and to judge from Yvonne's description of her lengthy 'stay' at Glasgow Airport (snowbound)the other week, she completed (and sold!) vast numbers of the things in a period of 9 hours ...!

Yesterday I had a last fling on eBay before Stashalong begins, and bought lots of gorgeous Filatura di Crosa mohair yarns (no - no idea what for, but they were an absolute bargain, and gorgeous colours to boot, and I'm sure they'll tell me what they want to be eventually - some of the yarn in my stash has spent 20 years making up it's mind though), and today I'm being good-ish and making lots of stitch-markers for possible sale on eBay, when I get my act together ...

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Happy Birthday Sarah!


Happy Birthday, this is your present, as soon as I can get it to you ... but it may just go to Olympia tomorrow afternoon first, if I can get the time off work (what a Bad Sister you have!)


This is a detail of the front, so you can see all the lovely yarns that went into making it, but for the rest of the knitters out there, I used:
2.5 balls Patons ZigZag
1 ball Sirdar Denim DK
1.5 balls Gedifra Soffice
2 balls Gedifra Fiocco Oro
1 and a bit balls (or so) of two different cotton yarns (both are approx DK in weight, bought in Lidl last summer) - from stash
0.5 ball Twilleys goldfingering
Overall length of the combined yarns was 120 - 130 metres


Here's a detail of the back, showing the holding chain-stitches (in the Sirdar Denim)- this is just a technical detail and nothing for you to concern yourself with ...


... and finally, the latest Steek Boa in all it's glory, as modelled by your 'sweet' little niece Emily (aka Lizard Lady)

Sunday, March 19, 2006

Head for the hills ...

... John is giving James his first driving lesson today. Suggest it may be a good idea to avoid the middle of Kent if you possibly can

Monday, March 13, 2006

Yarnaholics Anonymous

Green boa is done (photos will be posted after my sisters' birthday on 23rd), and I'm back to working on a cardie in the boucle yarn donated acquired at February's Maidstone Knitters meeting - testing out how to make a fitted body shape by decreasing / increasing at the appropriate points.

Meanwhile I've come to the conclusion that I and my stash need help! I went to Maidstone Knitters on Saturday, determined to be good, and came home with 16 new (to me at least) balls of yarn (5 interestingly knoppy ones - Robin Charade, I think - donated by Jan, which I think I might experiment on with some dye, 1 ball of Patons ZigZag - an absolute necessity to complete the boa, and 10 balls of eyelash yarn which were a bargain at 99p each in Wilkinsons - and it's not even as if I need any eyelash yarn at the moment).

So I am joining the Stashalong blog for at least a couple of months - wanted to join back in January, but was just a little late, and now have got to the point where John is making all sorts of threats about what will happen to the stash if I don't get it under control ...

Had a go at lacemaking on Saturday as well, Sharon bravely let me loose on her work in progress, and hopefully there may be a picture of this when Hazel gets round to uploading the photos ... which she has now done, thanks Hazel!

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Playing catch up ... (Warning, contains MATHS!)

France

Here we are in Honfleur (photo taken by Emily). Sadly no wool shops this time, but I did get to see the Bayeux Tapestry at last. I have mixed feelings about this work, as I have the feeling that the winners get to write (or re-write!) the history books afterwards, nevertheless it really is an amazing piece of work, and the colours are MUCH brighter than I would ever have guessed at from the photos I have seen - it's really hard to believe that it's nearly a thousand years old. If you get the chance, then this is a definite Must See.

11+ exam results
Emily and I sat on the bottom stair by our front door on Thursday morning waiting for the post to arrive, and of course it was much later than usual, but she passed (with maximum marks in two out of her three papers! - excuse me a moment of maternal pride here) and has been given a place at Tonbridge Grammar School starting this September. This is the last time I will ever have to go through the stress of forcing one of my children to do practice papers, so I am utterly thrilled about that. Now we just have the joy & expense of new school uniform and equipment to worry about ... :(

I had taken a half day off from work for all this, so after I dropped her off at school, I made my way into work via Oxford Circus, as I had a little time to spare. Rowanettes, you are sadly unforthcoming on all things Liberty! - why has no-one mentioned that Liberty are now stocking some Gedifra yarns. Decided on a couple that will go part way to being a steek boa for my sister who has a birthday coming soon


Knitting and Maths - WARNING to Hazelnutcluster, don't read this bit!
I was recently asked a question about whether I feel my love for knitting is linked to my attraction to mathematical subjects, and I've been meaning to answer it for some time (apologies to Big Bird for tardiness). I suspect in fact that it may be the other way round, I liked knitting first and then realised how much maths it involves, certainly this is true if you want to design anything for yourself, and not rely on other people's patterns for everything. Also, I'm not the world's best mathematician, and I'm far better at applying maths, than I am at the theory (or pure) side of it - what this tends to mean in practice, is that I study with a view to getting the assignment or exam done, rather than necessarily understanding what I am doing ... seems to have worked so far in that I got the degree, but I think that I may have to try a little harder with this year's course, which contains entirely too much calculus (eeewwwwww!) and far too many greek letters for my liking. (Personally, I much prefer geometry)

Sirdar Loopa
Readers of Simply Knitting will already know what this is, so I won't spend too much time explaining - it's a gadget (rather like a hairpin for hairpin crochet) for making loopy scarves with NO KNITTING AT ALL involved, but it looks a bit funkier, in part due to being bright (Barbie) pink. I thought one of these would make a nice birthday present for someone I know with a forthcoming birthday, along with some assorted yarns, so I ordered a couple from here, and they arrived the next day. These are the full-sized ones (about 8.5 inches wide), not the mini version that came free with Simply Knitting. I had hoped that Holly and Emily might enjoy them, but I think the large one is a bit too big for them to use comfortably as yet, so I have had a go at stashbusting with it (partly to test how well a looped fringe only held together by crocheted chainstitch and sewn backstitch holds up in everyday use) and here are the results.

First, the whole thing is about 75 inches in length, and I used approximately 130 - 140 metres of each of the yarns, which are YarnArt 'Punky', Sirdar Country Style DK, Sirdar Country Style Brushed DK Tweed (long discontinued), Richard Poppleton Aran, and Wendy 'Velvet Touch'.


Here's a detail, colours are reasonably true to life


And here it is, modelled by Holly, so you get some idea of size / length