My second pattern has been published by I Like Knitting December 2016:
Photo @I Like Knitting
I really had fun with this design. Two compatible stitch patterns move randomly up the scarf - I used dice throws to determine the movements for my sample/instructions. The pattern also includes the 'rules' for making your own unique scarf.
The trials and tribulations of a life of leisure...
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Showing posts with label knitting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label knitting. Show all posts
Monday, December 05, 2016
Sunday, June 12, 2016
New Ventures
So over 3 months have gone by since my last post...
I have been pleasantly surprised at how well my throw has done.
I have published 3 more patterns since:
Pinstriped Mitts - a fun pattern to use up sock yarn left overs.
Not so much fun taking the photos in a freezing March...
I eventually published my sweater Nuance in April, despite having finished the actual knitting in December,
Really happy with the cables for the waist shaping and the clean finish of the V-neck. I swatched about half a dozen different methods of splitting the cable to run parallel before I was satisfied with the finished look.
And most recently Chillin using the second skein of my beautiful Crystal yarn.
I have signed up to ICG crafts, a print on demand service, to allow some of my patterns to be sold wholesale on the request of my yarn support Hearthside Fibers. They would really like to have copies of the patterns I designed for them to take to shows.
This meant reformatting, which wasn't a problem for this pattern but was a little more challenging for my Maplewood shawl :)

I currently have a new cardigan that has been tech edited and is now being tested. Hopefully it will be published in late July/early August:
I have also ventured into submitting some designs to magazines.
Before I went down this route I did some research on the process.
Ensure you supply all the info asked for in the format it is wanted in. READ THE SPEC!
If responding to a specific mood board show how your design idea MEETS THE SPEC.
Sketch of the idea does not need you to have any real drawing skills as long as you can portray the idea clearly. (I think I have proved this with the less than complimentary reaction from hubby and my friend Penny - lol).
Photos of the swatch/prototype need to be as large and clear as you can make them.
Email it off and wait... and wait... And then the response arrives.
If it is "Yes" you bounce around excitedly and then fret waiting for the contract and any other details to arrive, and if "No" you can either scrap the idea, hold it back to see if it fits well with another call or decide to self publish at a later date. So far I am 50% bouncing although over a very small sample number.
And then you have to actually write the pattern(s) and make the sample(s).
On my first acceptance this was not as straightforward as self publishing. I needed to use a different yarn to my prototype as the yarn I had used was not readily available in the US. When I swatched with the agreed yarn I got a very different gauge...
And the hardest thing for me is not being able to post details and photos on Ravelry as I normally do with what I am working on...
You finally have everything done. Email off the pattern, charts etc and head off to the post office with your samples being handled as if they were as fragile as a newborn baby. And then find that the smallest box that they will fit in without scrunching them up is actually quite large, So you need something to fill it with... A trip over the road to Penny who luckily had some spare bubble wrap...
And then you nervously track the parcel. Why has it been sat in O'Hare airport for 5 days? It was quite a relief when it finally showed as delivered...
I haven't actually heard anything from the magazine... I have been told this is fairly normal. And as they have said yes to a second design I am assuming all is well.
I have been pleasantly surprised at how well my throw has done.
I have published 3 more patterns since:
Not so much fun taking the photos in a freezing March...
I eventually published my sweater Nuance in April, despite having finished the actual knitting in December,
Really happy with the cables for the waist shaping and the clean finish of the V-neck. I swatched about half a dozen different methods of splitting the cable to run parallel before I was satisfied with the finished look.
And most recently Chillin using the second skein of my beautiful Crystal yarn.
I have signed up to ICG crafts, a print on demand service, to allow some of my patterns to be sold wholesale on the request of my yarn support Hearthside Fibers. They would really like to have copies of the patterns I designed for them to take to shows.
This meant reformatting, which wasn't a problem for this pattern but was a little more challenging for my Maplewood shawl :)
I currently have a new cardigan that has been tech edited and is now being tested. Hopefully it will be published in late July/early August:
I have also ventured into submitting some designs to magazines.
Before I went down this route I did some research on the process.
Ensure you supply all the info asked for in the format it is wanted in. READ THE SPEC!
If responding to a specific mood board show how your design idea MEETS THE SPEC.
Sketch of the idea does not need you to have any real drawing skills as long as you can portray the idea clearly. (I think I have proved this with the less than complimentary reaction from hubby and my friend Penny - lol).
Photos of the swatch/prototype need to be as large and clear as you can make them.
Email it off and wait... and wait... And then the response arrives.
If it is "Yes" you bounce around excitedly and then fret waiting for the contract and any other details to arrive, and if "No" you can either scrap the idea, hold it back to see if it fits well with another call or decide to self publish at a later date. So far I am 50% bouncing although over a very small sample number.
And then you have to actually write the pattern(s) and make the sample(s).
On my first acceptance this was not as straightforward as self publishing. I needed to use a different yarn to my prototype as the yarn I had used was not readily available in the US. When I swatched with the agreed yarn I got a very different gauge...
And the hardest thing for me is not being able to post details and photos on Ravelry as I normally do with what I am working on...
You finally have everything done. Email off the pattern, charts etc and head off to the post office with your samples being handled as if they were as fragile as a newborn baby. And then find that the smallest box that they will fit in without scrunching them up is actually quite large, So you need something to fill it with... A trip over the road to Penny who luckily had some spare bubble wrap...
And then you nervously track the parcel. Why has it been sat in O'Hare airport for 5 days? It was quite a relief when it finally showed as delivered...
I haven't actually heard anything from the magazine... I have been told this is fairly normal. And as they have said yes to a second design I am assuming all is well.
Tuesday, March 01, 2016
Textured Landscape Throw
Several years ago in a burst of enthusiasm and an effort to use up a myriad of odd balls of aran weight yarn I embarked on making a throw, randomly picking stitch patterns that took my fancy from newly acquired stitch dictionaries.
I really love it for all its imperfections and the sheer joy I had knitting it. The wibbly wobbly sections. The odd bits of garter and stocking stitch to get the heights right for the next stitch pattern. The oh dear, I don't have enough to do matching borders so I will just knit with a colour until I get bored or it runs out...
And then people asked if there was a pattern for it. Er, no.
And this was before I had even contemplated designing patterns.
So I decided to make a 'proper' version... Approximately two months work from initial layout plan, choosing stitch patterns, ripping back back if they didn't work, designing transitions/tweaks if needed, designing a few of my own blocks, reworking blocks when I changed my mind on a colour, writing the pattern, getting it tech edited and finally published.
Pattern is now available on Ravelry here.
And don't say you want a pattern for the original version!
I really love it for all its imperfections and the sheer joy I had knitting it. The wibbly wobbly sections. The odd bits of garter and stocking stitch to get the heights right for the next stitch pattern. The oh dear, I don't have enough to do matching borders so I will just knit with a colour until I get bored or it runs out...
And then people asked if there was a pattern for it. Er, no.
And this was before I had even contemplated designing patterns.
So I decided to make a 'proper' version... Approximately two months work from initial layout plan, choosing stitch patterns, ripping back back if they didn't work, designing transitions/tweaks if needed, designing a few of my own blocks, reworking blocks when I changed my mind on a colour, writing the pattern, getting it tech edited and finally published.
Pattern is now available on Ravelry here.
And don't say you want a pattern for the original version!
Sunday, August 16, 2015
That Touch of Pink
I have made myself a lot of sweaters. And I mean a lot. If you look on my Ravelry projects page I have 30 sweaters/cardigans/jackets. A handful were added retrospectively, but the majority were from April 2011 onwards... And I had been knitting sweaters for many years prior to that...
And now my twelfth Ravelry sweater design, That Touch of Pink (yes - I am a Cary Grant fan), may make it out into the wider knitting community.
Eleven of those sweaters were my own designs, mainly to use up oddments of stash.
I actually knew what I wanted the bottom 'third' of the sweater to look like, therefore the sweater would be designed bottom up. Once I had completed that section I knew that I wanted it to be plain to the armholes, seamless and set-in sleeves therefore the body was knit in the round up to the armholes. I also don't have a waist that I want to highlight... Next decision was neckline. Not a V-neck and not a crew neck and not too low either... and just a touch more contrast colour. Top-down sleeves to match the contrast colour stripes on the bottom of the sweater and cuffs to match the neckband.
I was not happy with the first sleeve I made - it was very messy/gappy around the armhole due to the much lower ratio of stitches to rows being picked up. I came up with a much neater solution for the second sleeve which also solved the issues I have with getting wrap and turn to look good. It was well worth the effort of then ripping out the first one and re-knitting it...
Okay, I now have a sweater that I love but that was the easy-ish part...
1. Grading. And this means spreadsheets. And I went to town on this. Starting with the basic desired widths/lengths for body/armholes/neck/shoulders/upper arm/wrist/sleeve for 5 sizes. Every section broken down into subsections for row counts, stitch counts, decreases, pick-up stitches, stripes start, stripes end, short rows with cross-checks.
2. Yarn yardage estimates. Having read a few forum threads on this topic I decided that I wasn't going to use the suggested method of estimating sweater area against the yardage from a 6 x 6" swatch. I had an actual sweater with known yardage of both colours. I had a detailed spreadsheet so I could calculate actual stitch counts pretty accurately for every section of the sweater/size and also for just the contrast colour and use the ratios of stitches for the other sizes against my yardages. My only concern is how much contingency to add...
3. Schematic. Yes, every good sweater pattern should have one... I watched a video on creating one in Microsoft something or other. We use LibreOffice which has a Draw app. Took me a few hours before I finally got the hang of it and a couple of shout outs to Paul when it wasn't doing what I wanted. Changed a couple of settings and all was fine once I was organised enough to actually write down the key measurements on a piece of paper. I am actually quite chuffed with how it looks.
4. Tech editing. However thorough I think I have been there is always the chance I have made a blunder somewhere... Sent the pattern to be scrutinized and am awaiting news...
5. Testing. Once I get it back and any corrections have been done I will open a test. I already have 3 volunteers without putting out a call :)
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Not Even a Fish
Yarn support for my knitwear designs was something I had never contemplated.
Why would anyone want to give me yarn? I am relatively new to designing - not one of the big names, not a big fish in a small pond. In the infamous words of Claude Littner on the Apprentice I am not even a fish...
So when I received a message out of the blue from Lael and Larry from Hearthside Fibers saying they loved my designs and were interested in offering yarn support I was in shock. We exchanged emails over the next couple of days, and the bottom line is that this arrived in the post today...
along with some small tester samples of their other yarns.
I am currently working on my first sweater design that I am hoping to publish. I have made many sweaters for myself in the past but they only had to (sort of) fit me! It's a whole different ball park having to write it up properly and grade it for other sizes.
This is where I have got to so far... Maybe I could leave it like this for the distressed look...
Maybe not.
Once I have finished this I will turn my attention to the above two skeins :)
Why would anyone want to give me yarn? I am relatively new to designing - not one of the big names, not a big fish in a small pond. In the infamous words of Claude Littner on the Apprentice I am not even a fish...
So when I received a message out of the blue from Lael and Larry from Hearthside Fibers saying they loved my designs and were interested in offering yarn support I was in shock. We exchanged emails over the next couple of days, and the bottom line is that this arrived in the post today...
along with some small tester samples of their other yarns.
I am currently working on my first sweater design that I am hoping to publish. I have made many sweaters for myself in the past but they only had to (sort of) fit me! It's a whole different ball park having to write it up properly and grade it for other sizes.
This is where I have got to so far... Maybe I could leave it like this for the distressed look...
Maybe not.
Once I have finished this I will turn my attention to the above two skeins :)
Wednesday, May 06, 2015
Vikkel Braid Unravelled
So I came across these in a Ravelry discussion and decided to investigate further...
Vikkel Braids
Also
known as Lateral Braids and Estonian Braids, they form horizontal stitches across your knitting.
On
investigation of this technique I found many videos, tutorials and
blogs on the how - as in the mechanics below. But none on
understanding, in the words of
the immortal Abbott and Costello,
Who's on first, What's on
Second.
The How
Start
by making 1 stitch and place it on the lh needle. At the start of the
row you can just do a knitted cast on of a stitch. Otherwise I prefer
to do a M1R. I found just
doing an M1 by knitting the loop between the stitches made the first
braid stitch more of a drunken diagonal than horizontal.
Now
repeat the following 4 steps: Mantra
1.
ktbl of the second stitch on the lh needle 2 Back
2.
knit the first stitch on the lh needle 1 Front
3.
Slip both stitches off the lh needle Slip
2 off
4.
Place the first stitch on the rh needle back on the lh needle Put
1 back
until
you want to finish the braid.
Assuming you are braiding across the
whole row and maintaining the stitch count this will be when
there is 1 unworked stitch on the lh needle without doing the last
step 4. You need to
decrease 1 stitch to counteract that first new stitch you made so
just knit the next stitch on the lh needle and pass the previous
stitch over it.
If
you are wanting to increase
1 stitch at either end of your row (e.g. for a top down shawl) then
when the only stitch on
your lh needle is the one just placed there from the last step 4 knit
it through the front and back.
Who's on first,
What's on Second
Understanding
how the braids and live stitches are formed opens up multiple
possibilities when working with more than one colour.
The
first stitch on the lh needle will become a braid stitch when
it is dropped from the needle in the
next step 3. Therefore
always use the colour you want your
braid to start with for your 'make 1' starting stitch.
The yarn used to ktbl the
second stitch on the lh
needle
will become the live stitch
on the rh needle. When
finishing the braid always use the required live stitch colour to
work the last stitch on the lh needle.
The
table below shows the flavours I came up with for
working with two colours (MC – main colour, CC – contrast colour)
with single colour or
1-stitch
alternating colours
of either braids, live stitches or both. The Stitch 1 and 2 columns give the sequence of the yarn to use to knit those stitches as you work across the row.
Make
st
|
Stitch
1
(Step 2) |
Stitch
2
(Step 1) |
Result
|
|
VB2A
|
CC
|
CC
|
MC
|
CC
braid, MC live stitches
|
VB2B
|
MC
|
MC
|
CC
|
MC
braid, CC live stitches
|
VB2C
|
MC
|
CC/MC
|
MC
|
MC/CC
alternating braid, MC live stitches
|
VB2D
|
CC
|
MC/CC
|
MC
|
CC/MC
alternating braid, MC live stitches
|
VB2E
|
MC
|
CC/MC
|
CC
|
MC/CC
alternating braid, CC live stitches
|
VB2F
|
CC
|
MC/CC
|
CC
|
CC/MC
alternating braid, CC live stitches
|
VB2G
|
MC
|
MC
|
MC/CC
|
MC
braid, alternating MC/CC live stitches
|
VB2H
|
MC
|
MC
|
CC/MC
|
MC
braid, alternating CC/MC live stitches
|
VB2I
|
CC
|
CC
|
MC/CC
|
CC
braid, alternating MC/CC live stitches
|
VB2J
|
CC
|
CC
|
CC/MC
|
CC
braid, alternating CC/MC live stitches
|
VB2K
|
MC
|
CC/MC
|
CC/MC
|
Alternating
MC/CC braid and CC/MC live stitches
|
VB2L
|
CC
|
MC/CC
|
MC/CC
|
Alternating
CC/MC braid and MC/CC live stitches
|
VB2M
|
MC
|
CC/MC
|
MC/CC
|
Alternating
MC/CC braid and MC/CC live stitches
|
VB2N
|
CC
|
MC/CC
|
CC/MC
|
Alternating
CC/MC braid and CC/MC live stitches
|
A B C D E F G H I J K
The
pairs of C &
D, E & F, G & H, I & J, K&L
and M&N are essentially
the same, just changing which colour starts the alternating stitches, but you may prefer one over the other if you have an odd
number of stitches and depending on how you are proceeding after the
braid. I haven't swatched
L-N but I think you get the idea...
White
is always the main colour in the photo. I
switched contrast colour as the first one was not showing up very
well.
Other
things to note are that the live stitches above the braid are
slightly elongated. Also you are better off taking it slow and steady
– these are not the easiest things to tink back because of the twisted
stitches and especially so when using two colours.
Labels:
Estonian Braids,
knitting,
Lateral Braids,
Vikkel Braids
Friday, February 06, 2015
Back to Words
Decision was made at the New Year to get back to word studying and see how it goes.
So I started with the 4s. And sort of fell out of study mode pretty quickly as I had the idea for my Studded Diamonds Hat and Cowl.
And then I had an idea for my Love Hearts socks...
These are all in test mode now so I got back to zyzzyva.
Completed going through the 4s - wow, am I rusty.
The last week I have started on the 7s and 8s in playability order, 500 of each a day which actually works out as nearer 650 of each as unlike probability order there is a lot of repetition with the multiple anagram questions. 7s not too bad but 8s are taking a lot longer.
Played my first games since the Commonwealth tourney yesterday against Allan. Honours even at 2-2. Off to Edinburgh tomorrow for my first test - 7 games tourney - in preparation for the Scottish Masters the weekend after. Gonna be tough...
So I started with the 4s. And sort of fell out of study mode pretty quickly as I had the idea for my Studded Diamonds Hat and Cowl.
And then I had an idea for my Love Hearts socks...
These are all in test mode now so I got back to zyzzyva.
Completed going through the 4s - wow, am I rusty.
The last week I have started on the 7s and 8s in playability order, 500 of each a day which actually works out as nearer 650 of each as unlike probability order there is a lot of repetition with the multiple anagram questions. 7s not too bad but 8s are taking a lot longer.
Played my first games since the Commonwealth tourney yesterday against Allan. Honours even at 2-2. Off to Edinburgh tomorrow for my first test - 7 games tourney - in preparation for the Scottish Masters the weekend after. Gonna be tough...
Sunday, January 18, 2015
So I Had an Idea...
I have recently done a few designs to use up scraps which have involved slipped stitches. Which got me thinking... The row gauge for slipped stitches is a lot tighter than straight knitting or stranded knitting. So playing about with it could allow some quite fun results.
So I swatched a bit to see what effects I could achieve. And I am quite excited to find you can get very intricate looking patterns with a few basic rules that must be obeyed.
I have charted up and made my first non-stranded 'fairisle' hat sample and am currently knitting the matching cowl. I will post photos later...
My other design currently being tested is my 'Tudor' hat and Cowl set. It uses an adaptation for knitting in the round of the Tudor Grillwork pattern from my Second Treasury of Knitting patterns by Barbara Walker. Just what every stylish bank robber needs :)
So I swatched a bit to see what effects I could achieve. And I am quite excited to find you can get very intricate looking patterns with a few basic rules that must be obeyed.
I have charted up and made my first non-stranded 'fairisle' hat sample and am currently knitting the matching cowl. I will post photos later...
My other design currently being tested is my 'Tudor' hat and Cowl set. It uses an adaptation for knitting in the round of the Tudor Grillwork pattern from my Second Treasury of Knitting patterns by Barbara Walker. Just what every stylish bank robber needs :)
Wednesday, January 07, 2015
Indie GAL Lives On
The Indie GAL officially ended at the New Year but there are still a lot of us continuing on with WIPs and patterns won/bought. And a lot of chatting...
I am working on my Bewitching Hour gloves, one of the freebie patterns I chose from my prize vouchers:
and I still have three more vouchers to claim.
I also won two skeins of gorgeous yarn (Rapture) from Squoosh Fiberarts - I can't say how happy I am. I have chosen colurways Cognac and Red Maple.
The switch over to LoveKnitting has gone relatively smoothly - I have even had my first EU sale.
The start of the year has been busy with two new patterns published already, and three more being tested.
The scarf I designed for Paul, Seriously Stripey Scarf, was published on the 2nd:
Still waiting for my new release, When the Wind Blows hat, to reach Published status on LK but there are a lot of us adding patterns onto the site so I think they have been inundated...
I am working on my Bewitching Hour gloves, one of the freebie patterns I chose from my prize vouchers:
and I still have three more vouchers to claim.
I also won two skeins of gorgeous yarn (Rapture) from Squoosh Fiberarts - I can't say how happy I am. I have chosen colurways Cognac and Red Maple.
The switch over to LoveKnitting has gone relatively smoothly - I have even had my first EU sale.
The start of the year has been busy with two new patterns published already, and three more being tested.
The scarf I designed for Paul, Seriously Stripey Scarf, was published on the 2nd:
Still waiting for my new release, When the Wind Blows hat, to reach Published status on LK but there are a lot of us adding patterns onto the site so I think they have been inundated...
Thursday, January 01, 2015
2014 A Year of Knitting
Another year over and what have you done?
Well, this is my annual year of knitting photo :)
1 sweater, 1 blanket, 1 table runner, 1 pair of gloves, 5 hats, 6 face cloths, 7 cowls, 8 scarves, 8 shawls and 9 pairs of socks,
I started self publishing my own patterns earlier this year and have learnt a lot. A lot of it I didn't want to learn. A new EU directive came into force not long after I started wrt Consumer Rights which meant a lot of stress trying to ensure I was compliant. And then the stress of the new EU VAT regulations that came into being today...
Ravelry have been wonderful in partnering with LoveKnitting to let us divert our EU sales so that nano-businesses like me can continue trading without having to sort out the nightmare of determining customers location, storing data for 10+ years, VAT registering and having to submit quarterly VAT and MOSS returns for very small amounts of money...
At the end of this year I have 20 published patterns - far more than I had imagined I could achieve in 9 months.
I have started my own Ravelry group, Helen Gipson Designs, which was kind of scary but most of the people who I asked have joined, some more have come along and now I have a happy band of testers.
I invested in charting software, StitchMastery, at the end of September which has been worth every penny in producing more professional looking knitting charts although I was kind of fond of my colour coded spreadsheet charts :)
And now I have to decide on how much time I use knitting/designing and how much time to dedicate back to word studying as that was put on the back burner for most of last year.
Well, this is my annual year of knitting photo :)
1 sweater, 1 blanket, 1 table runner, 1 pair of gloves, 5 hats, 6 face cloths, 7 cowls, 8 scarves, 8 shawls and 9 pairs of socks,
I started self publishing my own patterns earlier this year and have learnt a lot. A lot of it I didn't want to learn. A new EU directive came into force not long after I started wrt Consumer Rights which meant a lot of stress trying to ensure I was compliant. And then the stress of the new EU VAT regulations that came into being today...
Ravelry have been wonderful in partnering with LoveKnitting to let us divert our EU sales so that nano-businesses like me can continue trading without having to sort out the nightmare of determining customers location, storing data for 10+ years, VAT registering and having to submit quarterly VAT and MOSS returns for very small amounts of money...
At the end of this year I have 20 published patterns - far more than I had imagined I could achieve in 9 months.
I have started my own Ravelry group, Helen Gipson Designs, which was kind of scary but most of the people who I asked have joined, some more have come along and now I have a happy band of testers.
I invested in charting software, StitchMastery, at the end of September which has been worth every penny in producing more professional looking knitting charts although I was kind of fond of my colour coded spreadsheet charts :)
And now I have to decide on how much time I use knitting/designing and how much time to dedicate back to word studying as that was put on the back burner for most of last year.
Monday, November 03, 2014
Indie Design Gift-a-long 2014
I am very excited to be participating in this year's Indie Design Gift-a-long on Ravelry.
I have wasted far too many hours sorting out my design collage...
I guess I should be happy that I actually have enough designs now to actually have a choice on which ones to feature.
It all kicks off on the 13th November, at 8 p.m. US-EST - early hours of 14th November here.
Back to knitting now...
I have wasted far too many hours sorting out my design collage...
I guess I should be happy that I actually have enough designs now to actually have a choice on which ones to feature.
It all kicks off on the 13th November, at 8 p.m. US-EST - early hours of 14th November here.
Back to knitting now...
Tuesday, August 05, 2014
Quaternary
After several false starts I got there in the end.
I decided to do a mini version to try out my edging, both at the top and the bottom of the shawl. I didn't like the top edge - it looked untidy but the bottom edge was a success...
So back to the real prototype - I was concerned that the top edge would not lie straight as was with the cables, although it looked really good. I still wasn't sure what to do to fix it. I pulled the whole thing off the needles. I was well over half way so was not overly happy about starting again...
And decided I would measure it before I ripped it back again.
And when I laid it on the table the top edge lay straight. Oh happy day! Now all I had to do was get it back on the needle - not so easy with over 150 stitches including yarn overs.Why hadn't I had faith or even put in a lifeline? I picked up the stitches as best I could and found I only needed to go back a row and a half to get it back on track.
I finished knitting it on Saturday morning and blocked it over the weekend.
I attempted some better photos yesterday but yet another blustery day...
I decided to do a mini version to try out my edging, both at the top and the bottom of the shawl. I didn't like the top edge - it looked untidy but the bottom edge was a success...
So back to the real prototype - I was concerned that the top edge would not lie straight as was with the cables, although it looked really good. I still wasn't sure what to do to fix it. I pulled the whole thing off the needles. I was well over half way so was not overly happy about starting again...
And decided I would measure it before I ripped it back again.
And when I laid it on the table the top edge lay straight. Oh happy day! Now all I had to do was get it back on the needle - not so easy with over 150 stitches including yarn overs.Why hadn't I had faith or even put in a lifeline? I picked up the stitches as best I could and found I only needed to go back a row and a half to get it back on track.
I finished knitting it on Saturday morning and blocked it over the weekend.
I attempted some better photos yesterday but yet another blustery day...
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
Is It A Bird?
It started out as a bottom-up triangle.
However, it became apparent last night when I switched to a longer circular needle that it was morphing...
Why I carried on and knit another one and a half repeats I don't know...
In the cold light of day, having laid it flat and given it it's freedom it is clear that it wants to be a semi-circle...
Unfortunately I had started out with a sharp point for my 'triangle' but then changed my increases to try to achieve a flatter triangle for a wider shallower shawl.
Tonight, Matthew, I want to be a stealth fighter plane...
However, not a total waste of time. I like the way the cables and lace interact and I have charted it. Just need to get rid of the pointy tail... Also gets over the problem of deciding what to do at the top of the triangle to get a nice, clean straight edge that fitted in with the stitch pattern. Many more options to finish off a semi-circle.
So, for a bit of nostalgia rip it up and start again...
However, it became apparent last night when I switched to a longer circular needle that it was morphing...
Why I carried on and knit another one and a half repeats I don't know...
In the cold light of day, having laid it flat and given it it's freedom it is clear that it wants to be a semi-circle...
Unfortunately I had started out with a sharp point for my 'triangle' but then changed my increases to try to achieve a flatter triangle for a wider shallower shawl.
Tonight, Matthew, I want to be a stealth fighter plane...
However, not a total waste of time. I like the way the cables and lace interact and I have charted it. Just need to get rid of the pointy tail... Also gets over the problem of deciding what to do at the top of the triangle to get a nice, clean straight edge that fitted in with the stitch pattern. Many more options to finish off a semi-circle.
So, for a bit of nostalgia rip it up and start again...
Sunday, July 20, 2014
Shawl With No Name
So I now have 4 tests running...
I don't know about other people but I suffer a bit of a downer once the initial excitement of getting a design completed and written up. Especially if I am really excited about it, post it for testing, and expect everyone to rush to want to make it. And then wait... and wait... Again, maybe it is the time of year. I have lots of love but only two testers for my Monet Sunset shawl. And again ran into the problem of 4-ply/fingering/sock yarn covering such a wide range of yards/gramme. Wollmeise is beautiful yarn but is on the heavy end of this category. But my lovely testers are going to order new yarn that is nearer this weight...
Talking of new yarn, this came in the post yesterday :)
Three lighter weight sock yarns, Fyberspates Sheila's sock in scarlet/pink that I just couldn't resist and my first foray of actively buying lace weight (just 50 g for trying out). I am no longer cold sheeping, but being a lot more discerning about the yarn I buy. And sticking to the rule that I cannot buy more yardage than I have used year to date.
Anyway, back to the downer. I mope around for a few days. I stare at my stash. I may wind a skein or two to make it feel as if I have done something. I stare at them some more. I stare into space trying to visualise what they would make. I cast on and start a swatch. I don't like it. I rip it back. Repeat...
I normally resort to knitting socks at this point. But not this time.My original choice of yarn was wrong - variegated and a bit knobbly but good enough to prove the maths, show me what I did and didn't like with the idea, and jot down the bare bones before I ripped it out and started again. So I have reverted back to my Wollmeise. So far so good... No name for it yet...
I don't know about other people but I suffer a bit of a downer once the initial excitement of getting a design completed and written up. Especially if I am really excited about it, post it for testing, and expect everyone to rush to want to make it. And then wait... and wait... Again, maybe it is the time of year. I have lots of love but only two testers for my Monet Sunset shawl. And again ran into the problem of 4-ply/fingering/sock yarn covering such a wide range of yards/gramme. Wollmeise is beautiful yarn but is on the heavy end of this category. But my lovely testers are going to order new yarn that is nearer this weight...
Talking of new yarn, this came in the post yesterday :)
Three lighter weight sock yarns, Fyberspates Sheila's sock in scarlet/pink that I just couldn't resist and my first foray of actively buying lace weight (just 50 g for trying out). I am no longer cold sheeping, but being a lot more discerning about the yarn I buy. And sticking to the rule that I cannot buy more yardage than I have used year to date.
Anyway, back to the downer. I mope around for a few days. I stare at my stash. I may wind a skein or two to make it feel as if I have done something. I stare at them some more. I stare into space trying to visualise what they would make. I cast on and start a swatch. I don't like it. I rip it back. Repeat...
I normally resort to knitting socks at this point. But not this time.My original choice of yarn was wrong - variegated and a bit knobbly but good enough to prove the maths, show me what I did and didn't like with the idea, and jot down the bare bones before I ripped it out and started again. So I have reverted back to my Wollmeise. So far so good... No name for it yet...
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Monet Sunset Shawl
I am still at the point of designing out of stash. This is very noticeable if you look at my pattern page on Ravelry... My socks will have a matching (or half matching) scarf.
Helagon short = It's Stripes Jim
Helagon long = Boing Boing socks + Stripes - TNG
And my new shawl is no exception.
Thriller - the other half of my Helagon short - is an in-your-face variegated colourway, and it was quite hard to decide what else to use with it. Black would be an obvious choice, but I wanted stripes so it wouldn't work as the skein contains black, so sections would 'disappear'. And I don't actually have any black...
As I laid out my remaining skeins and partials of Wollmeise I had a mad idea. The WD Fritzi Frizzante that my Stripe Me Up socks used may just work. A sort of blazing sunset at sea...
So I knew I wanted stripes, but not boring regular stripes. And I knew I wanted stocking stitch. And I knew I wanted wide but not too deep. And I knew I didn't want paired yarn overs down the spine. And I knew I wanted vaguely triangular but not an actual triangle...
I did get myself into a bit of a pickle wrt left and right leaning increases on purl rows but I now have these completely sussed:
Knit :
M1R = back front front; leans to the right as you look at it - logical,
M1L = front back back; leans to the left as you look at it - logical
Purl: and here is the confusion
M1PR = back front front; leans to the left as you are looking at it - illogical
M1PL = front back back; leans to the right as you are looking at - illogical
Whoever came up with naming the purl increases the wrong way round to my thinking deserves to be shot!
If you know which edge you want the stitch to point at 'as you are looking at it' then do the requisite increase stitch no matter if you are on the right side, wrong side, knit or purl...
I will get some better photographs once it has finished blocking, but this was it as I started to pin it out:
Approximately 70" wide and 27" deep at the tip...
I have got a couple of changes to the pattern for the placement of some increases to stop them stacking, but apart from that I am really happy with the design.
Helagon short = It's Stripes Jim
Helagon long = Boing Boing socks + Stripes - TNG
And my new shawl is no exception.
Thriller - the other half of my Helagon short - is an in-your-face variegated colourway, and it was quite hard to decide what else to use with it. Black would be an obvious choice, but I wanted stripes so it wouldn't work as the skein contains black, so sections would 'disappear'. And I don't actually have any black...
As I laid out my remaining skeins and partials of Wollmeise I had a mad idea. The WD Fritzi Frizzante that my Stripe Me Up socks used may just work. A sort of blazing sunset at sea...
So I knew I wanted stripes, but not boring regular stripes. And I knew I wanted stocking stitch. And I knew I wanted wide but not too deep. And I knew I didn't want paired yarn overs down the spine. And I knew I wanted vaguely triangular but not an actual triangle...
I did get myself into a bit of a pickle wrt left and right leaning increases on purl rows but I now have these completely sussed:
Knit :
M1R = back front front; leans to the right as you look at it - logical,
M1L = front back back; leans to the left as you look at it - logical
Purl: and here is the confusion
M1PR = back front front; leans to the left as you are looking at it - illogical
M1PL = front back back; leans to the right as you are looking at - illogical
Whoever came up with naming the purl increases the wrong way round to my thinking deserves to be shot!
If you know which edge you want the stitch to point at 'as you are looking at it' then do the requisite increase stitch no matter if you are on the right side, wrong side, knit or purl...
I will get some better photographs once it has finished blocking, but this was it as I started to pin it out:
Approximately 70" wide and 27" deep at the tip...
I have got a couple of changes to the pattern for the placement of some increases to stop them stacking, but apart from that I am really happy with the design.
Saturday, July 05, 2014
I'm Not Stalking, Honest!
I currently have three tests threads all on 'Watch' in the Free Pattern Testers group - my two scarves and the Stripe Me Up socks.
So I am checking the threads fairly frequently as I sit watching Wimbledon with laptop in front of me...
And it is with alarming regularity that someone has just posted the minute or so before I check...
So I am responding pretty quickly to a lot of posts...
Iolaire is due to finish on the 16th July. All has been quiet for a couple of days. A few errors have been caught and also a few good suggestions on making things easier/clearer that have been incorporated into the pattern. I am really looking forward to seeing the finished scarves :)
Iolaire-Iasgaich test started last Sunday and I am very pleased to say that all the places were taken a couple of days later. It was very useful having the gap between starting the two tests as I could check and correct things that were picked up on the first test that also applied to this one before my testers started. A few minor errors have been trapped so far, but nothing to cause me to pull my hair out... I am awaiting with interest how the testers using the charts get on with the table I have used once all the shaping has been done. I had originally charted it all but due to the nature of the changing cables and lace starting at different points the charts for this section were almost longer than the scarf itself!
Stripe Me Up socks has been a little more interesting...
Now, I am a one at a time toe-up kind of girl. And this design is certainly best suited to knitting them that way. Cuff down one at a time is also very doable - they will start off more difficult as the strands used to make the stripes will be longer than toe-up for the leg, but once the leg is done the foot will feel like a breeze. I was very pleased to get five testers. Unfortunately I am now down to three. One has withdrawn as she has injured her hand, which I hope recovers soon. I don't think it was due to this test... And another has withdrawn as she couldn't cope cuff-down with keeping the strands untangled. I have put tips in the techniques on ways to aid this, but maybe there was a language barrier. My three remaining testers are all doing two-at-a-time... I did put a warning in the test request:
I would be happy for testers who wish to make a pair taat to do so at their own peril :)
And I only asked for one sock for the test needed to be completed...
So I am checking the threads fairly frequently as I sit watching Wimbledon with laptop in front of me...
And it is with alarming regularity that someone has just posted the minute or so before I check...
So I am responding pretty quickly to a lot of posts...
Iolaire is due to finish on the 16th July. All has been quiet for a couple of days. A few errors have been caught and also a few good suggestions on making things easier/clearer that have been incorporated into the pattern. I am really looking forward to seeing the finished scarves :)
Iolaire-Iasgaich test started last Sunday and I am very pleased to say that all the places were taken a couple of days later. It was very useful having the gap between starting the two tests as I could check and correct things that were picked up on the first test that also applied to this one before my testers started. A few minor errors have been trapped so far, but nothing to cause me to pull my hair out... I am awaiting with interest how the testers using the charts get on with the table I have used once all the shaping has been done. I had originally charted it all but due to the nature of the changing cables and lace starting at different points the charts for this section were almost longer than the scarf itself!
Stripe Me Up socks has been a little more interesting...
Now, I am a one at a time toe-up kind of girl. And this design is certainly best suited to knitting them that way. Cuff down one at a time is also very doable - they will start off more difficult as the strands used to make the stripes will be longer than toe-up for the leg, but once the leg is done the foot will feel like a breeze. I was very pleased to get five testers. Unfortunately I am now down to three. One has withdrawn as she has injured her hand, which I hope recovers soon. I don't think it was due to this test... And another has withdrawn as she couldn't cope cuff-down with keeping the strands untangled. I have put tips in the techniques on ways to aid this, but maybe there was a language barrier. My three remaining testers are all doing two-at-a-time... I did put a warning in the test request:
I would be happy for testers who wish to make a pair taat to do so at their own peril :)
And I only asked for one sock for the test needed to be completed...
Thursday, June 19, 2014
Summer Scarves and Socks
I was trying to make an effort to post more frequently again, but time just seems to fly by.
Nearly 2 weeks in Malta for scrabble last month unsuccessfully defending my Malta Open and European Open titles - I came third and second respectively, so not a total disaster. (Unlike my BEST match on Saturday).
Visitors when I got back over the long weekend of the Jim Clark rally. We were very lucky with the weather for a change - glorious sunshine so everyone was outside in the garden rather than crammed in to the sun room for the barbecue. This may have been the last rally after the unfortunate turn of events.
Garden needed some TLC and still does, but it has actually been too hot the last few days!
And knitting...
I took the new scarf design I was working on to Malta but very little progress was made. Too tired when we got back from playing, and the two days off we had were easily filled with other activities.
But I knuckled back down when I got home and completed version 1 (Iolair-iasgaich - osprey):
and immediately started on version 2 (Iolaire - eagle) - thinner and longer with different placements of the cables and lace:
I wrote the second version up first as it was the easier of the two, and the charted instructions are currently being tested. A little disappointed that I have had no takers for the written instructions - lots of 'love' on the post. Maybe it is the time of year - school holidays, hot weather...
I finished writing up the other one yesterday. For something that was so easy to design and knit, it was amazingly difficult to write up the pattern! I am now torn about putting it in for testing at the moment because of the lack of testers for version 1.
And now I am back to socks...
Started working on the prototype of my third variant of stripes to use up left overs. I am still trying to come up with a name... currently Stripes - The Final Frontier. If I come up with a fourth stripes variant they would have to be Never Say Never Again...
Nearly 2 weeks in Malta for scrabble last month unsuccessfully defending my Malta Open and European Open titles - I came third and second respectively, so not a total disaster. (Unlike my BEST match on Saturday).
Visitors when I got back over the long weekend of the Jim Clark rally. We were very lucky with the weather for a change - glorious sunshine so everyone was outside in the garden rather than crammed in to the sun room for the barbecue. This may have been the last rally after the unfortunate turn of events.
Garden needed some TLC and still does, but it has actually been too hot the last few days!
And knitting...
I took the new scarf design I was working on to Malta but very little progress was made. Too tired when we got back from playing, and the two days off we had were easily filled with other activities.
But I knuckled back down when I got home and completed version 1 (Iolair-iasgaich - osprey):
and immediately started on version 2 (Iolaire - eagle) - thinner and longer with different placements of the cables and lace:
I wrote the second version up first as it was the easier of the two, and the charted instructions are currently being tested. A little disappointed that I have had no takers for the written instructions - lots of 'love' on the post. Maybe it is the time of year - school holidays, hot weather...
I finished writing up the other one yesterday. For something that was so easy to design and knit, it was amazingly difficult to write up the pattern! I am now torn about putting it in for testing at the moment because of the lack of testers for version 1.
And now I am back to socks...
Started working on the prototype of my third variant of stripes to use up left overs. I am still trying to come up with a name... currently Stripes - The Final Frontier. If I come up with a fourth stripes variant they would have to be Never Say Never Again...
Wednesday, May 07, 2014
How to Waste A Day
I published Its Stripes, Jim on Saturday evening.
Posted my new design in the designer forums I am in.
And then looked on my designer page. I had a few favourite hearts already.
It must have been a slow time for other people publishing as my pattern thumbprint stayed on the front page of the Pattern tab for quite a while.
On Sunday morning I logged in. More hearts :)
It was on the front page of the 'Hot right now' patterns!
And then I spent the rest of the day checking... and checking my User Activity... And rechecking the pattern pages... I got up to position 24.
I must admit to being a little sad when it was higher up than the cutest knitapotamus you could ever wish for.
It has now slipped back into obscurity, but it was good while it lasted :)
Posted my new design in the designer forums I am in.
And then looked on my designer page. I had a few favourite hearts already.
It must have been a slow time for other people publishing as my pattern thumbprint stayed on the front page of the Pattern tab for quite a while.
On Sunday morning I logged in. More hearts :)
It was on the front page of the 'Hot right now' patterns!
And then I spent the rest of the day checking... and checking my User Activity... And rechecking the pattern pages... I got up to position 24.
I must admit to being a little sad when it was higher up than the cutest knitapotamus you could ever wish for.
It has now slipped back into obscurity, but it was good while it lasted :)
Friday, May 02, 2014
Curb Your Enthusiasm
I can't help myself. I have no patience.
I finished my latest pair of socks, really excited and happy with them, but it was raining so I could not get any good photographs. But I post my finished project with bad photos taken indoors in poor light anyway.
And two people ask if I am going to be wanting the pattern to be tested within a few minutes of sharing my project.
And I really do want to get a test set up sooner rather than later. So I use those photos and finish writing up the pattern and start a test...
It is now sunny but Paul is away until Tuesday...
So I have been outside contorting myself to try to get some better photos that don't include my shadow of holding the camera. And don't show a gap of white leg between my pulled up jeans and the top of the sock. And avoid the bird poo on the patio wall. And don't have a shrub growing out of my feet. I took about thirty and got three that are not too bad...
It is lucky we don't have neighbours nearby :)
I finished my latest pair of socks, really excited and happy with them, but it was raining so I could not get any good photographs. But I post my finished project with bad photos taken indoors in poor light anyway.
And two people ask if I am going to be wanting the pattern to be tested within a few minutes of sharing my project.
And I really do want to get a test set up sooner rather than later. So I use those photos and finish writing up the pattern and start a test...
It is now sunny but Paul is away until Tuesday...
So I have been outside contorting myself to try to get some better photos that don't include my shadow of holding the camera. And don't show a gap of white leg between my pulled up jeans and the top of the sock. And avoid the bird poo on the patio wall. And don't have a shrub growing out of my feet. I took about thirty and got three that are not too bad...
It is lucky we don't have neighbours nearby :)
Wednesday, April 30, 2014
Elliptic Cowl
My test for It's Stripes, Jim is drawing to a close. The test was actually for completing a single right-to-left striped sock, but five out of six testers like the pattern enough to make a pair (and the sixth implied that a pair will be made once she has completed another test but not before my deadline). This makes me happy :) The general opinion so far is that it is a fun knit - enough going on to not be boring and not difficult.
I have a second test running for a quick knit cowl in bulky yarn. I came up with the design after scanning the database for something to use up some araucania copihue yarn I had bought in 2011 and couldn't find what I had in mind. I wanted a cowl that was fitted to my neck and also covered my shoulders.
I wanted some texture so played around with spiralling ribs for the neck. Some research into determining the circumference of ellipses to work out the increases required to get the collar shape I wanted for my stitch and row gauge. Short rows with increases to build the ellipse shape either side after the neck, and then back to spiralling ribs with increases to keep the ellipse shape and get to the required finished size.

I liked it - in fact I kept it on for the whole day as it was quite chilly here - but could see a couple of improvements that I could make. No problem, it used just under two skeins and I still had another four... so I made another one with the changes :)
I have a second test running for a quick knit cowl in bulky yarn. I came up with the design after scanning the database for something to use up some araucania copihue yarn I had bought in 2011 and couldn't find what I had in mind. I wanted a cowl that was fitted to my neck and also covered my shoulders.
I wanted some texture so played around with spiralling ribs for the neck. Some research into determining the circumference of ellipses to work out the increases required to get the collar shape I wanted for my stitch and row gauge. Short rows with increases to build the ellipse shape either side after the neck, and then back to spiralling ribs with increases to keep the ellipse shape and get to the required finished size.
I liked it - in fact I kept it on for the whole day as it was quite chilly here - but could see a couple of improvements that I could make. No problem, it used just under two skeins and I still had another four... so I made another one with the changes :)
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