Thursday, 23 April 2009
Sockrates Snail
Made this on one of the machines at Ruddington yesterday, and finished off with some handknitting and crochet today. He is contemplating a dandelion on the lawn, as St George's Day is the traditional day for picking and making dandelion wine. The idea came from a handknit pattern in Knitting mag, June 2007, designer Val Pierce.
Forget all your Sammy and Sidney snails - this one HAD to be Sockrates!
Thursday, 9 April 2009
Bag beginning and bamboo, bouncing on the bus
Had a long trek into The Big City by bus, crocheting handles of a peachy-coloured string bag on the way. The bag had been started on the CSM, with every other stitch dropped. Quite pleased with the effect but thought a crochet start base would be better. Tried this by Montse Stanley’s pinhole start on eleven trebles, next round increased to 21 trebles, next round 42 trebles. Looked a bit tiny so did a round of 42 double trebles. It will just stretch to every other needle on the machine. Added advantage is that it could be put on an empty machine, no fiddling with cutting waste yarn off afterwards.
My business finished in the big city, caught the bus back but got off in one of the suburbs, half an hour in the Fabric Place choosing some jersey fabric for a new frock, then crossed the road to Yarn, or as I prefer to call it from their website address, yarn-in-notts (think about it!). I was shown a new sock yarn, Happy by Wendy (Thomas Ramsden Group). This is 75% bamboo and 25% nylon and I could see straightaway that the CSM would love it, and I was right. Bamboo yarn is rather lively, so it snarled up a big on re-winding, but not enough to annoy. The colour way is Aquarius, and the small blue splashed in the pale green seemed to come out a slightly different pattern in each repeat, which is rather charming. AND the price is only £5.95. I ran the remainder through the Knitmaster, 64 sts, 148 rows at T7, so it looks like with care I will be able to get a pair of short fingerless mitts out of it as well - I do gloves starting on 56 sts increasing to 64, in case you are wondering why I chose that number of stitches.
Thursday, 2 April 2009
Jacob's String Bag
Brought some rough stuff home - it was (probably) Jacob’s wool on a huge cone, but although between 4ply and DK and only a single ply, very coarse, and slightly oiled. Made up a sample piece to throw in the washing machine, and it did not come out as fluffy as I expected. A friend thought there might be some linen in it - it certainly has that linen “bounce”. But not something you would want next to your skin. The CSM didn’t like it, so back to hand knitting.
Thus I started yet another string bag with it. Montse Stanley’s Pinhole crochet cast on with 16 stitches, then straight onto a 5.5mm 60cm circular needle, pulling the loop through. Increased in every stitch (32sts). One round knit, one round purl, one round knit. Increased in every stitch again to 64sts, one round plain. Repeated the formula to 128 sts. Because of the coarseness of the yarn, the increase row has the appearance of long knit stitches divided by purls. Photographed it after this, it just about fits neatly on the needle now, so should be easier. Might do some elongated stitches up the bag, still one purl round after three knit rounds, just to vary the monotony. The 128 sts will divide up nicely when it comes to making the handle or handles - haven’t decided which yet. This bag will not be washed before being put into use.
Thus I started yet another string bag with it. Montse Stanley’s Pinhole crochet cast on with 16 stitches, then straight onto a 5.5mm 60cm circular needle, pulling the loop through. Increased in every stitch (32sts). One round knit, one round purl, one round knit. Increased in every stitch again to 64sts, one round plain. Repeated the formula to 128 sts. Because of the coarseness of the yarn, the increase row has the appearance of long knit stitches divided by purls. Photographed it after this, it just about fits neatly on the needle now, so should be easier. Might do some elongated stitches up the bag, still one purl round after three knit rounds, just to vary the monotony. The 128 sts will divide up nicely when it comes to making the handle or handles - haven’t decided which yet. This bag will not be washed before being put into use.
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