Yeah. I don’t recommend throwing a quarter at me. I use long, pointy sticks made of metal. You have been warned. 🙂
Stashbusting – The Jewel Scarf
I have named my little scarf: I shall call it, mini-scarf. No, kidding. The Jewel Scarf. Why? There aren’t any jewels in it, and no beads, but the colors are shiny and remind me of jewels. Ergo, the jewel scarf.
Sadly, since it’s metallic, it’s tough to photograph because the lighting gets wonky; here’s another shot with the flash so you can see it a little better.
This pattern is kicking my butt, though. It’s deceptively simple: Row 1, K1, *YO, S1 WYIB, K1, PSSO*, K1. Easy peasy, right?
Okay, if you don’t read knit-speak: Row 1, Knit the first stitch, then the pattern repeat is: yarn over, slip one with yarn in back, knit 1, pass the slipped stitch over the knitted stitch, repeat until only one stitch remains; then knit 1.
The purl row is identical, just with purls instead of knits.
That’s where the problem is – I keep forgetting to slip that first stitch, or I forget the yarn over, or I end up with 3 extra stitches by the time I realize I have a mistake. I’ve pulled this silly scarf out about five times so far and am about ready to throw my shoe at it. Today I seem to have gotten it, though, as you can see.
Stashbusting, I’ve got your number. 🙂
What are you knitting? (Or crocheting?) (Or making?)
Journey into 3-D: Notebook – The Jewel Scarf
I learned a valuable lesson when working in 3-D: never take the knitting needle out of live stitches by accident, especially when working a lace pattern.
I bought some lovely yarn on one of my trips and, since we just moved, I can’t find the ball band to tell you about it. But suffice it to say that it worked up into a lovely narrow scarf for use with a work outfit or something. Just as I was trying to figure out how to cast off, I pulled out what I thought was the non-working needle and voila.
It was the working needle.
For those of you who don’t know what I mean, in knitting, you have live stitches on a needle. If you have experience, you can generally put them back on a needle. It takes practice. I can do it, if I’m careful, with stockinette stitch – so-called “plain” knitting. I can do it with rib stitches and garter stitches too. But lace? Not so much.
Sadly, I fiddled and faddled and put the project away sometime last year or early this year.
In moving, I found it again and decided to bite the bullet and start over. Yesterday, I sat down with my trusty ball winder and took the scarf apart. I’m going to make it over again with a pattern from Barbara Walker’s A Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns, called “Rick Rib.” It’s a combination of rib stitch and lace. It’s very simple to work, just two lines, and can be made on any even number of stitches. I’ve cast on twenty and started. Here’s how it looks so far (there’s not much yet, but from tiny acorns…)
Here is the project with the yarn next to it. The jumbled bits are because I did about six rows and realized I’d made several errors and had the wrong stitch count. Some knitting days are like that. I started over this morning and it’s going more smoothly.
I love the way the knitted cast on looks like a series of sideways knit stitches. I’ll post more pictures once I have the pattern established so you can get a look at it.
Sunday Weaver’s Journal: The Belii Shawl
My beloved street-rescue cat Belii died last year after a prolonged battle with kidney failure. I decided to weave something in his memory, inspired by him and his place in my life. It feels a little silly to admit that out loud, that my artistic inspiration is my cat, (Am I becoming a Cat Lady?), but we shared a household for 16 years. If you have pets, you’ll understand. If you don’t have pets and aren’t a “pet person,” it won’t make sense – and I feel just a little sorry for you.
From the time he was a kitten, Belii was the most affectionate cat I’ve ever known. His favorite spot was on your chest – whether he knew you well or not. I used to hand guests a wash cloth to put on their shirt so that he wouldn’t kneed their skin. That’s the other thing he did all his life – kneed with his claws. I think it was a holdover from living on the street. I’ve read that it’s a way for cats to get the milk to come when they’re nursing, and that makes sense. But he took it one step further – he would actually curl his paw around your finger and hold on. If he couldn’t sit on you, he’d sit next to you, as in the picture above.
His name, Belii, is the Russian word for “white.” When he first adopted me, he was white – all white. I took him in, got him healthy (he had a slew of stuff that the vet needed to take care of; he was the most expensive “free” cat I’ve ever gotten), and fed him.
He turned orange.
As you can see in the photograph above, his ears are the darkest part. I looked it up; he’s got some Siamese in him and there’s a rare colorway called “peach point” that I’ve decided is Belii. It sounds cool, doesn’t it? I have a Peach-Point Siamese. La-tee-da. Folks don’t need to know he was homeless in Las Vegas when I found him, eh?
The design challenge is how to represent his colors in fabric. I suspect this won’t be the first project where I attempt it, since I have some yarn in my stash that I bought with the idea of knitting something. But for now, my focus is weaving and creating, in cloth, a piece of art inspired by my orange white cat.
Oh, why didn’t I change his name? The Russian word for “orange” is оранжевый, or oranzhevyy in transliteration. Not nearly as pretty-sounding to my American ear as Belii.
I love the pattern I made for the kimono and I talk about using that warp to thread the new warp, in a Sunday Weaver’s Journal earlier this year. I’ve been working on the project and have pictures but not had time, because of our move, to post anything. Today, I’m here to remedy that. So, without further ado, here’s some photos:
My pattern is called “Twill Complication,” from A Handweaver’s Pattern Book by Marguerite P. Davison, page 46 (Marguerite P. Davison, Publisher, Swarthmore, PA, 1994). I took the treadling pattern and put it in an excel spreadsheet so I could mark off where I am on the pattern. The wrap is nine feet long in total, so that’s a lot of pattern repeats!
We realized that there were a couple boo-boos in the threading once I started weaving. In between the time I finished the kimono and started the wrap, one of the assistant instructors thought I was done with the loom and started taking the old warp off. When she realized I was intending on tying the new warp to it, she re-threaded everything. We’re not sure if the boo-boo happened then or when I originally threaded it, so her suggestion was to do one entire pattern repeat in a highly-contrasting thread so we could evaluate what to do.
The options: keep going anyway, even with the mistake, (if it wasn’t too visible); cut the warp thread(s) that could be safely eliminated without changing the design; or take the treading out and start over – which I did not, frankly, want to do.
Here’s an example of the entire repeat. There were three problem spots, which aren’t greatly visible here, but are visible enough that they would cause a problem in the finished design.
After conferring with Natalie Boyett, we decided to just cut three of the warp threads and let the rest go – primarily because I didn’t want to rethread everything.
I am working on a Glimakra loom from Sweden. It’s taken a while to get used to, because the shed (the part where you run the shuttle back and forth) is a lot narrower than on American looms. It does, however, make for much neater edges, which is something I struggle with.
After using the loom for the last almost nine months now, I’m really liking it. We’ve had some challenges, most notably when the twin holding the heddles in place snapped, but Natalie was able to fix it and it works smoothly now. The most important part, how the weaving looks, is something I’m really happy with.
Here is a the first repeat of the actual pattern. I decided to use alternating peach and ivory repeats of the pattern, because I loved how the contrasting yarn looked in the header.
Here is a detail of the pattern. I love the way it looks beaded. You can see a comparison with the kimono fabric in the Weaver’s Journal post here.
This is a view of the loom in its entirety except for the castle. It’s a nice width for me and I love how the fabric is turning out.
Oh, contrary to popular belief, the Russian word for “scarf” isn’t “babushka,” it’s шарф, or “sharf” in transliteration. A “babushka” is a grandmother.
Stay tuned for more Weaver’s Journals coming soon.
Saturday Showcase – Upcoming Releases!
I’m so excited. I’ve been emailing around the interwebs and am tickled pink, purple, and yellow to report that I have TWO surprises for you coming in October!
October 19th, author Tina Holland will be coming to KK to talk about her craft of scrapbooking. Tina is a trip – she lives on a self-proclaimed “hobby farm” in Minnesota, writes sexy romances with the tagline, “Have You Been Naughty Today?” and hopes one day to open a bed and breakfast with her husband, a pilot and something of a mad scientist himself. My kind of people!
When I asked Tina what crafts she likes, she said none. None? NONE? Well, scrapbooking. It’s really her aunt’s passion, she told me, but from the sounds of it I think Tina qualifies as a crafter. Have you seen some of these scrapbooks? But I want to know more about why she focuses on writing and what niche it fills for her in terms of creative expression, and how that ties in with scrapbooking. I can’t wait.
On October 26th, author and textile artist Maddy Barone will be coming to play! I so want to marry Maddy and hide her away as my kept woman to write books and make stuff. Multi-talented, she can design period clothing, knit, write awesome books, and I wouldn’t be surprised to find out she can do magic too. We haven’t yet managed to meet in person, though we’ve talked on the phone, but one day I will make her part of the Noonypod.
Noonypod. I just made that up. I love it! 🙂
Now, don’t be like that. You won’t be assimilated, silly!
At least not until October… o.O…
Happy Autumn!
Inspired by Calligrapher Margaret Shepherd’s daily calligraphy blog, and her entry #223 Celtic Color and Line, I drew this up for our family’s dinner celebration today. In honor of J.R.R. Tolkien’s characters, we’re even having elevenses and afternoon tea!
Happy Autumnal Equinox for those of you above the equator and Happy Spring for those of you below it. May your cup runneth over and your nylons wear without runs, may your internet be hiccup free and your stove hoods avoid birds (long story, that).
Saturday Showcase – Me!
Now that we are moved and almost all settled in, (I unpacked the last box of books today!), I have knitting knews – and it’s HUGE!
That’s right, sports fans, I started knitting again! My carpal tunnel is still aching, but it’s subsided enough to let me do some gentle tasks. I also started playing the piano again and am doing some finger-strengthening exercises from the Hanon book that are really helpful. I’ve noticed my hands don’t ache as much and I’m getting strength back in my fingers, though I still get really numb.
Wow. Get me talking about my hands and I sound like a little old lady. “My bunions are…” Yeah. Shaddup and git ta tha good stuff!
I bought some very ridiculously expensive suri alpaca and Merino wool blend, one hank of cream and one of … hmm. Mocha? Sand? Not sure. It’s pretty, whatever it is, and beautiful to work with. I wanted to do a pattern that set off the colors well so I settled on making a short stole with one of Barbara Walker’s patterns. Take a look at how it’s coming along:
I figure it will be long enough to wrap around the neck like a collar and then be secured with a shawl pin or something similar. I wish I had enough for tassels, because I think that would look cool, but there isn’t enough of the stuff unless I want to take it apart and make it more narrow. I don’t really want to do that, so a pretty shawl pin (or maybe even a button) it is.
Stay tuned. I have weaving journal pictures to share but I’ve been so busy with the move that I just haven’t had time. What WILL you do without me?
Knit!
Duh.
Kalos Graphe
©2013 A. Catherine Noon. All Rights Reserved.
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There is something magical about using a calligraphy pen. We see the nib, and the paper, and the quality of the writing is changed, elevated.
I haven’t been practicing lately, for whatever reason. Today, while reading Week 6 of FINDING WATER by Julia Cameron, I thumbed through the chapters I’d already read and came across the quote above. I decided to play with the size of the words and my gosh if it didn’t turn out pretty spiffy!
Sunday Weaver’s Journal
Round Like a Triangle
I decided to try a triangular box, with more or less successful results. A couple challenges presented themselves:
- 3″ triangles
- the grid on the triangles themselves
- getting the rectangles to match up with the triangles
- edge stitch
Taking them in order, the first issue is that the largest triangles I could find are 3″ on a side. I checked the internet but that’s the largest one available that I could see.
I tried cutting the rectangular grids into a triangle, but the hypotenuse isn’t supported enough and it’s not straight. It’s like cutting a diagonal line across a piece of graph paper.
Because the base is 3″, the box is only 3″ in size. I decided to start with the lid and make it small. It worked well, as you can see, but then I got the idea to make the base very tall as an experiment:
The last two problems are part of each other. The first was getting the rectangles I used for the sides to match up with the triangles. It worked, sort of, but will take practice. The second is what to use for the edges. I used the edge stitching for the top of the box, pictured above. For the bottom, I used simple overcast stitching. The overcast stitching, which not as pretty, is much better to use for the project.
In all, it’s a successful experiment but I’m not as happy with the box as I want to be. I’ll have to try it again and see what works better.