23 December 2008

Tap, tap, is this thing on?

So it looks like I'm not really posting much. What news?

I finished my Delilah sweater. It is awesome, and I have two balls left. Not quite enough for a vest, I don't need another hat/mittens/scarf set. Socks? I'm not sure how hard-wearing it is, and it's not extremely sproingy.

I started a bike helmet liner for cold weather. It's constructed unusually. There are double-layer triangular ear flaps which go over the straps, an applied headband, and then there will be loosely knit crown.

I made some more socks, including a leafy lace pair. You can see the pattern on zaposa.

The Noro socks turned into a single rice sock. Then I made fingerless gloves embroidered with "MORE DOTS" on the knuckles. There's about one sick worth of yarn in Noro Kureyon and Louet Gems (combined) that I have no idea what to make with.

I designed a perpendicularly knit sock and made a 2" proof-of-concept. My advisor got me some great sock yarn from Salzburg, so I have plans to make a few full-size socks.

I made a bunch of other stuff, but no other big or exciting projects. I think I'll do another year of stash reduction. It's escaping the stash drawer again.

01 April 2008

FOs

When in doubt, make more FOs. This week, I finished a swatch to learn entrelac and knitting backwards. Now I'm converting it to a muffin-top hat.

I also finished my super secret project for Knitty, which came out pretty well. I read on Knitty's submission guidelines that I can't have mentioned it anywhere, including Ravelry or my blog, so that pretty much kills this submission. Oh well. I'll publish in other fields.

Speaking of other fields, I have a manuscript that's been pinging between me, the co-author, and a reviewer for months. It's frustrating because we all basically agree and are just bickering over smaller points.

20 March 2008

Traveling knitting

In a few weeks, I'm going to a conference for work. I'll be gone about 5 days, and I plan to knit during talks. What to bring?

The incredible changeable sweater will be to far along to just hang out in my lap, and the Noro socks are too small gauge to knit and watch a talk. Perhaps I should cast on some quick worsted socks? The project should be about one ball, though it could be the start to a sweater or somesuch (one ball SO FAR!). It should also be stockinette or simple ribbing -- one row, no more than 4 stitch repeat.

Maybe a baby surprise jacket? I have some great hot pink cotton that was gifted to me at stitch-n-bitch last night. Lea could use a jacket and hat combo for spring.

17 March 2008

Harumph!

We had some people visiting last week, and I missed Stitch-n-bitch. Thus, the Delilah sweater is exactly where I left it -- tantalizingly close to the underbust. Not close enough to start the ribbing, but still too close to continue in mindless stockinette. I need to figure out the decrease pattern for the underbust, and that takes more attention than knitting on the bus will allow. Also, I've gotten to the second ball, and the accumulated bulk of the project means I will soon have to find another project for lab meeting, as I try to be discreet. Perhaps I'll start some (more) socks, or a nice spring-weight fingerless-gloves-cum-buspass-holder.

I did, however, cast off on the Moebius scarflette. Originally planned to be a shawl, then revised to a head-covering cowl, it ended up as a mini-scarf. It's perhaps 6" wide and 30" round, a most annoying size. Were it 20" round, it would be a great head-covering. Were it 40" round, it would be a great shawl. At 30", it is neither and thus not useful. Ah well. Lessons learned:
  • When doing feather-and-fan in the round, note the beginning of a row midway through a decrease section, not at one end of the decrease. Else, the pattern will move over one stitch each row.
  • The moebuis pattern -- which is inherently nifty-keen -- obscures how wide the FO will be. Swatching is imperative.
  • Suri Dream is wonderfully soft, better than mohair. It also does not rip out, no matter how much you want it to.
  • A bobbled bind-off looks surprisingly like crochet. (BO 2 knitwise, kfbf in next st, sl those 3 to the left needle, BO 3 knitwise)

07 March 2008

On patterns, copyright, and being a cheapskate

I don't like to pay for patterns. I'll say that upfront.

I think the practice of spending money on patterns for garments is a little silly. Think about it: you're paying someone else to give you a set of plans for making a garment. The plans are not tailored to your body size (unless you are very lucky). They may not use the yarn you plan to use. They might not even get the gauge you do, or (worse) they may have stitch gauge but not row gauge. You're going to have to modify the plans as written if you want a well-fitting garment, unless you are extremely lucky.

Let's imagine you are not so lucky. You spend a fair amount time modifying someone else's pattern to fit you properly in the yarn you'd like to use. At some point in the process, you realize that you'd rather have a different neckline, or that you'd like to work some lace into the hem, or 2x1 rib is just prettier than 2x2. So in addition to your shaping changes, you're making stylistic ones as well.

What did your pattern money buy you? You got something with a rough shape (that you changed anyways) and a general stitch pattern (which you modified in part), written for a (somewhat similar) yarn. You got to send (some) money to a designer (maybe -- they might not see a dime of it).

Now, if you don't understand how garments are constructed, you might want to learn how patterning and shaping work. If you're not sure how to translate shaping ideas (like darts) into stitches, you might want a quick tutorial. If you like a stitch pattern and can't figure it out for yourself, you should probably consult a resource (like someone else, a book, or the internet).

Some people learn best by example, and looking at other people's patterns can help. Depending on your level of expertise and confidence, it may be sufficient to finger others' FOs or even just look at them. It's not wrong to check out other people's sweaters on the bus, then go home and make a sweater inspired by them. (Though, if you must check out other people's sweaters on the bus, be careful when you're inspecting the front shaping. Just sayin'.)

So, to review: paying money for the plans for something you're going to heavily modify is a little silly, but may hold appeal depending on your expertise and confidence level.

Where does that leave us? Make your own patterns, citing inspiration as appropriate.

This humdrum solution was just fine until I encountered Ravelry. Ravelry makes it super easy to find patterns and projects that use those patterns. Ravelry makes it kinda difficult to find (say) sweaters that are ribbed, form-fitting, and v-necked but do not explicitly use a specific pattern.

I want my objects to have as wide viewing as possible (within the confines of propriety), so logically I should make objects using other people's patterns. However, for reasons stated above, I don't use other's patterns often, if at all.

What to do? Well, here's my solution. I seek a better one. I make objects, then find a semi-popular pattern on Ravelry which looks pretty similar (more-or-less). I note my deviations from the pattern in general terms (switched yarns to DK weight from aran, put shaping at hips, etc), as gleaned from looking at pictures.

Anyone have a better solution?

06 February 2008

Isn't new yarn crazy?

I'm working on a secret proof-of-concept project. If it goes well, I'm making a version in beautiful yarn and submitting to Knitty. If it sucks, I'll put it on my Ravelry.

In less-secret news, I have definite plans for some of the MIL yarn.

I plan a v-neck argyle vest like Eunny's Deep V Argyle, but with better shaping for the short and busty, and no steeking. It will be purply-blue (wool from a cone) and creamy white (alpaca from balls). Looks like I get about 6-7 sts/inch on size 3s. Alas, my only size 3 needles are dpns, and I'm not going to make a sweater on dpns.

I also plan a Picovoli-inspired vest (gosh, I'm on a total vest kick!) out of the handspun Delilah on 5s. I haven't decided about the stitch detailing, so it's waiting. Oh, and I need size 5 circs.

I'm making a moebius scarf out of the Knitpicks Suri Dream. It will be beautiful and lacy. I so declare it. However, I need some (you guessed it) new needles to do it properly. Perhaps just some new swatches to find a better gauge with the needles I have (0, 7, 8, 10.5, 17 in circs...)

So let's review: Three great projects. Free yarn. No needles.

Ok, well, what about some knitting while I wait?

I'm working on the Red Sox Socks in lecture. They're so simple and mindless that I think I'll have them done by the end of the quarter. They're next year's Christmas present for a non-blog-reader, so I feel really virtuous getting them done now.

I'm planning some entrelac socks in red-and-white Peace Fleece for my mom. I need to learn entrelac on magic loop and the checkerboards will be a good companion to her (now defunct) barberpole socks. I can't cast on for these until I finish the Red Sox because the Red Socks share yarn and needles with these.

I think I make a big swatch for the Argyle to get a better idea of gauge in pattern. I'd make mittens or something, but I think I'll run out of yarn if I do anything big enough to matter. Perhaps an ear warmer? It's not like row gauge really matters.

28 January 2008

What to knit... the resolution

The yarn store finally got the rest of the Peace Fleece for the laptop cozy. So I finished that in class on Friday. Today I lugged the entire mitered square tunic and covered my entire lap with it. I expect that will be done (except for the button band and blocking) on Wednesday. Then I have only the Noro socks, which are too tiny to knit in lecture and make my fingers hurt after a few rows anyways.

My MIL heard my stash woes, and fedexed me a HUGE box of yarn from her stash, including some handspun. It got home today and I barely avoided skipping work to run home and see it. We have game night tonight, and I made my husband promise I could have special yarn time before and after the game. It's my hope to bang out a Picovoli-inspired v-neck vest in the next few weeks, and some hats for the baby, and some fingerless mittens in a lighter weight. Then maybe some Red Sox Socks for the fam for next winter holiday.