Sunday, July 29, 2007

Pottering around...

It's been a strangely busy week or two. I thought I'd be a lot less busy at the end of July this year - the Cambridge Folk Festival has gone by without me this year, due to Kevin and Kate's imminent new addition to the family; and there was this book I wanted to read last weekend - three dribble-cloths and a baby bib's worth, as it turned out.

No spoilers - I know Nic for one hasn't finished it yet - but I enjoyed it immensely.



This weekend I'm knitting up samples for the course I'm teaching next week - it was extremely good fun last year. (There are still places, so if you're at a loose end Wednesday-Friday next week, do follow the link and sign up!)

Have also been finishing the latest Unbloggable Project and contemplating what to do for the next one...



And as a random but pretty image, I was given a phalaenopsis as a present from friends, in honour of something else I can't blog about yet... Looking it up, it turns out to be a Moth Orchid! Nice. I love moths, apart from the tiny minority of UK moths which enjoy yarn as much as I do... one of these appeared on the window on a very rare pleasant evening a couple of weeks ago, and I saw one of these fluttering around near work last Wednesday evening...

And now I need to go and proofread Mrs R.'s written directions for Chart F of MS3...

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

MS3, stage 3


There's quite a lot of knitting going on here, but most of it of the 'move along, nothing to see' variety. Apart from Mystery Stole 3. Here's Clue 3 roughly blocked. The "shadow of the Cross" effect is slightly creepy, but the light was really bizarre and that's the window-frame in the way... At long last there was enough light to take pictures of the beads, which are subtle but lovely.

The resident inspector seems to approve, anyway.

I made a present for a friend a couple of weeks ago, which has now been handed over, so here's Sue's Pot, drying upside down over the glass jar I use for holding balls of yarn so they don't fly around the floor while I'm knitting. It was made of felted Paterna tapestry wool, a present from Jan a couple of years ago - the colours are gorgeous and it so nearly didn't leave the house...

And this is Sunday night's production - a friend came round with a couple of kilos of jostaberries, and I had a bag of birds' eye chilis left from my Chinese supermarket trip the weekend before, so jelly was made...

Saturday, July 14, 2007

A reveal...


This year's first Unbloggable Project has found its home - the baby it's intended for isn't due for a month or so, but Kevin and Kate's baby's shawl has been delivered, opened and oohed and ahed over.... The Cork and Bottle isn't perhaps the most traditional venue for a mini baby-shower (and certainly not a great place for taking photos while people are having a quiet pre-dinner drink)... But here are some in-progress photos - in Big Bag of Washing mode:


The details: the Summer into Fall shawl from Goddess Knits (scroll down this page); knitted centre-out in KnitPicks Bare laceweight (about 150 grammes) using a 4mm/US 6 Addi Turbo (I didn't have my lace needle then).
The finished size was about 52" square after blocking. The second time I've run lifelines in a project, and I'll be doing that again, because I needed to pull back 4 rows at the beginning of the 5th chart, and having to tink them would have been soul-destroying. Apologies for the quality of these pictures - it always helps if there's just a little sun around, and these were being taken about a month ago, when sun was in extremely short supply....
The Christmas-present blocking wires from my parents really came into their own here - no idea how long it would have taken with the old crochet-cotton and pins method, but it was very pleasant to do with the wires...


So, all the very best to Kate for her maternity leave which started yesterday, and to both of them for her house-move which happens today!

Sunday, July 08, 2007

A second kiln

So I was walking to the station on the way back from buying the steamer, with it perched precariously on my bike basket, when I bumped into an ex-colleague; after the usual pleasantries he asked what was in the box and I said 'oh, I'm doing some dyeing and I need a second steamer'. And suddenly remembered that awful Barclays ad with the woman who took out a loan for her second kiln, and cringed inside...

But it is a very beautiful steamer; made in Thailand, which you can guess from the jaunty angle of its handles... and a double-layered one, to boot... you can get an idea of the size when you realise that's one of the larger Le Creuset kettles, but thankfully it's extremely light. And pretty, did I mention pretty?

So Anne, Carole, Claire, Debs, Jayne, Rosie and Sue came over in the afternoon, and we dyed; in several phases as there was really only enough space for three to work, but we're all grown-ups


(in theory at least)... If you want to see what Anne has in that bowl, go here...

Here are some skeins drying out (and yes, that is blue sky out there! after a downpour as people were arriving, it all dried out quite nicely)



And here's Jayne posing with her mad laceweight - watch this space for what that might eventually turn into:



I did my usual and mopped up a bit of everything that was left with a skein (of laceweight BFL in this case): here it is hanging on the line in an attempt cunningly to disguise that Garden Design casa Knittingonthegreen is brought to you this year by Tomasi di Lampedusa.


Here it is in Exhibit A mode on the patio table
and lurking in its natural habitat in the honeysuckle/bindweed combo by the washing-line...

After all that, Sue, Rosie, Debs and I went off to Helen's Open Studio, just down the road (my Serene Face pot came from there - here's a pic of it a couple of weeks ago:



We were chatting - and she was talking about her... second kiln... (she is not, I hasten to add, anything like the Dreadful Barclays Woman...)

After that, Sue and I went to the pub for gin and tonic while waiting for our Thai takeaway (thanks, Sue!)

I finished MS3 Clue 2 - but the sheets are washing at the moment - I'll pin it out and admire it later on when they're ready to put back on the bed! I'm probably mad, and wrong, but I'm thinking 'dragon' for the theme at the moment...

The sock has fared less well.

I don't know whether it's knitting lots of lace, or just the 'mediumweightness' of this yarn, but I seem to be knitting socks for the Three Bears at the moment. The first one was at least 12 stitches too big, this one was at least 6 - so I'm now working on 2.5mm needles on 48 stitches, and fully expecting to have something that even Baby Bear couldn't get his foot into... It is, thankfully, not only gorgeous yarn but also very forgiving of repeatedly being ripped out... This time I did at least entertain two yoof at Cambridge station with the frogging...

Saturday, July 07, 2007

Socks, steamers and lace addiction


I went down to London on Thursday and needed train knitting for the way back. My visit included an X-ray of my briefcase; the security guy was amused by the sight of a hardly-started toe-up sock in the monitor...

This is the Tequila Phoenix variation of 'Vog on from this time's Knitty. Happily it is actually that variation - I printed out the toe-up version without noticing that I hadn't included the lace pattern, and had to work it out by squinting at the photo (the thought of an 80 minute train journey without knitting being... unappealing), so I'm pleased I got it right! The yarn is Socks that Rock mediumweight in Chapman Springs; previously seen lounging about at the British Library but ripped as I'd managed to make something yeti-sized by accident... This time round it's pooling, but interestingly; I'm hoping that will continue or replicate itself on the other sock, or I may be ripping again!

I'm also finding the second part of Mystery Stole 3 completely addictive - sat down last night to knit 'just a couple of rows' and ended up wrestling myself to bed at the end of row 18 some time later... Whatever it's going to be, it's going to be pretty. And it looks as if there were 6,707 knitters in the group at closing time; huge last-minute surge in membership when the Yarn Harlot and Bonne Marie joined the fun and blogged about it! Sometime in the next day or so I'll get the written instructions for Clue 2 to proofread, but for the moment I'm just really enjoying the knitting... More than the other stole I'm doing, by the same designer, and I'm still trying to work out why...

This morning I'm going out to buy a new steamer (from the Chinese supermarket) and a new supply of latex gloves - members of the Cambridge KTog are coming over to do some dyeing this afternoon!

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Wet, wet, wet

It's been yet another weird day of bright sunshine and torrential rain: at about 7pm, one bright streak of light appeared on the green... (The brown stuff on the road is lime-blossom, floating in the puddles)



Finally finished something - the ripple-stitch sweater for my colleague Richard's new(ish) baby. One ball of cotton/wool sock yarn (from Jan) with a satisfyingly small amount left over - I wasn't panicked too much about this one now I've got a scale which goes down to 1 gramme increments... (3 grammes left).


The rest of the day was spent at the Fibrefusion (no website yet) summer "do" (the Fitzwilliam Museum and Loch Fyne), and buying clothes for a Thing on Thursday. And trying to stay dry, of course...

And as a final random thought, I'd just like to point to this week's a softer world - it's generally pretty excellent, but this one stuck...