Saturday, January 28, 2012

Holding my breath

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January has been a wild month. In four weeks that were over in a flash we've had blinding snow storms with traffic-stopping accumulation, hope-inspiring 40-degree sunny days, flooding downpours complete with epilogues of bone-shattering, slip-inducing freezing rain, and bleak long days of low cloud-covered dark and cold. But today makes me think that even though the winter here lasts another 3 months, Spring may be more than a distant myth. Three months, I tell myself, I can hold on three more months...

I may have to visit friends who live in less temperamental climates.

In homage to Spring, I'm working on a Spring Nursing Shawl for a dear friend with a beautiful brand new little girl. She wanted black, in Noro, but - alas - the Noro yarn called for in this pattern didn't come in any black combinations and I was reluctant to switch to another Noro yarn that did because the lesser yardage would have meant many, many more skeins - 12 skeins instead of 3. So I don't know if, in the end, she'll even like these spring colours and use the shawl...

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A risky endeavor for something that is so much work. I'm using a pattern designed by the owner of a LYS: The Easy As Pie Shawl. It is very drapey, which makes it a good nursing shawl, and also wider at the bottom than the top, so it doesn't feel like you're wearing a blanket when you wear it wrapped as a scarf around your neck. The yarn, a mix of cotton, wool and silk, makes it lightweight yet textural so it just feels good.

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I considered switching to a sock yarn that was dark and black and wintery, and maybe I should. But the fact is I'm 25% done and Spring will be here soon and the black winter coat will go into the closet and she'll search for something that brings a bit of brightness and this particular colour combination of buff and tan and cream and teal will be... quite perfect.

At least I hope so. Sometimes my confidence flags, and my stitches slow, and I wonder if I should be the kind of knitter that knits what people want instead of the kind that knits my own self into what I give. Still, I can't help remembering Elizabeth Zimmerman and I knit on, with confidence and hope, through all crises. After all, if EZ knit Nether Garments for her family and they loved them to unraveled shreds, then maybe I can bring a bit of Spring colour a few months early.

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Friday, January 20, 2012

the final Christmas present

The final gift knitted for Christmas has been sent and received and worn by the recipient! So here are the particulars:

This is Blue Moon Fiber Arts Gaia, in the colourway Tempest. The pattern is the beautiful Anastasia sweater from Quince & Co. The pattern was so fast and easy and knit up without a hitch. This is size XS, and came out with about 2 inches of positive ease. I added a leaf repeat for length but it turned out it wasn't needed. It looks deceptively short-waisted on the model used for the pattern, but it isn't. I also added pockets. I love a cardigan with pockets. The buttons are vintage glass buttons from the 1940's.

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I'm so happy to be on to a group of projects that I've been mulling over for a couple of months - the Belfast Hoodie (from Quince & Co.) - but without the hood, in Quince Lark colourway Storm, and a size 3 (!) Baby Sophisticate for the little guy in the wonderful Sublime Organic wool. My 3rd project currently on the needles is the Firebird Feather Scarf from Piecework magazine in Fleece Artist Saldanah Lace in the colourway Red Fox. I think these projects will keep me busy for a while!

Sunday, January 8, 2012

On the other side of "Whew!"

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The holiday season was fast and furious for both the BF and for me. If seems to have flashed by like the Silver Surfer, but to have been so FULL of events that it left me gasping.

We started with a visit to the BF's family in Cape Cod, where everything was so beautifully old New England - in keeping with their ocean-side cottage with its traditional door wreath! I made a Christmas Pie:

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And, as I reported earlier, my knitted gift for his sister was (whew!) finished on time:

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This is Saroyan, and was very well received. She wore it the entire day as a shawl. She was especially delighted that I had knit for her without her "having to ask for it". It never occurred to me that this would be an issue, but once she mentioned it I could understand that people don't like to feel like they're begging you to make them something. And then there is the embarrassment if you have to turn them down because your knitting list is too long (ahem)... as in 'all projects planned for the next year long'. So I was glad I decided to knit for her this year and so happy she was supremely knit-worthy, as in "loving it!"

The next day, back home, we had our own day and I opened two most wonderful gifts from friends and family:

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These most incredibly beautiful cards were designed and drawn and printed by the artist Julia of Thorazos. I love them beyond belief - the little bird, the cosy nest, the escaping yarn ball... it's so me!

and my great friend Nad sent me this French Sajou scissor set which is To Die For!

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It's the mother-of-pearl set with thread bobbin and thimble in a velvet box! There are little crosses on the handles, like Templar crosses. Last year she gave me one of Sajou's sewing boxes full of various notions so I am really over the moon about all these treasures!

I made knitted gifts for friends, too. I (whew!) finished this one the morning of Christmas eve and got it into the mail that day, so at least the "done-by-Christmas" thought was there! This is a simple cowl for a hiking, biking guy friend:

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It's made from Hand Maiden 4-ply 100% cashmere in a size 7 needle. I plan to write up the pattern and post it for free in Ravelry, since when I went looking for a pattern like this I couldn't find one. This is tall enough to pull up to the nose when cold, but sophisticated enough to fold down and look like a black turtleneck under a formal wool winter coat.

The third knitted gift I made - and this one was finished just 3 days before Christmas but enough time to get it to the recipient by Christmas day! Whew! - was, again, for a guy friend. It is a striped scarf - wide and long - knit in simple K1, P1 on a size 9 needle from Madeline Tosh Vintage (worsted) that I ordered from Happy Knits. The colourways are Graphite, Cloak, and Silver Fox (a gorgeous burnished white bordering on light, light grey):

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This knit was also well received and has been in use almost constantly since it was opened!

Shortly after Christmas, the BF and I traveled to DC again for a week. Our family there have a most gracious home, beautifully decorated for the holidays:

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We had many teas:

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And loved interacting with both Lamp Cat:

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and Crib Cat:

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and, while there - and this should not surprise you - I enjoyed a leisurely, soul-inspiring, second visit to Fiber Space in Old Town, Va while the BF slept in the car (we had gotten lost about 5 times in DC traffic while he tried to find our way there so I think he was emotionally exhausted!). This time, I met the shop dog, a pretty little miniature greyhound who happily stretched in the sun from the wide front windows or tip-toed clickity-clack back forth between people:

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I loved the Fiber Space holiday windows: a fiber-dressed astronaut and alien:

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and Rockets!

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I was able to wander all around the store, looking at every single thing, the way I love to do and gathering everything into my shop basket. The staff is so respectful of shopper's space but so helpful when needed. After an hour or so, I sat on the couch and sorted (I wasn't able to get everything I wanted LOL), and still ended up with an inspiring collection of new yarns and patterns:

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I'm especially excited about 3 skeins of Brooklyn Tweed's Loft that I acquired, along with a perfect, vintage style scarf pattern. I'm dying to knit these up! You can see my choices, set out on the couch beside the basket above: Long Johns, Postcard, and Cast Iron.

So there you have about two weeks out of my life, not counting annoying illnesses and going-back-to-work-nesses. I've started a KAL in my Piecework group in Ravelry and am still finishing up one last big & complicated knitted Christmas gift. But I'm definitely on the other side of "Whew!" and ready for a short and simple winter.

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