About cpeezers

I live in Washington and have a husband and a 5 year old. They are both named David and they are my Davids. I love to write about my family and about my knitting adventures!

Read!

The other day I posted a little about getting my classroom ready.  I had painted wooden letters spelling the word  – READ.

 

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I finished them off by putting them on some Memo/Photo alligator clasps.  I love how this turned out.  It’s really simple.

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I have it on the window sill in my classroom.  I tried to take a picture of it, but the sun was streaming in from behind and I couldn’t get a decent shot.

Work continues in getting my classroom ready.  I am happy as a clam doing it though so I don’t consider it work at all!

Back to the Blog

It’s time to get back to my blog.  This was my longest stretch in awhile of not blogging.  It has been a busy year of student teaching, substitute teaching and then a thankfully relatively brief hunt for a job.  In the meantime, I have still been knitting and now I hope to spend some time on my blog documenting both knitting, family and some my first year of teaching.

In September I will start teaching 2nd grade, and a good portion of my summer has been and will continue to be spent preparing my classroom.  There is so much to do.  But it’s good work, and I am enjoying every minute of it.

I am also doing some knitting this summer.  I made a Gaptastic Cowl recently with just one skein of worsted Shepherd’s Wool yarn.  It’s not overly long, but I can wrap it around my neck twice.  I am almost looking forward to cold weather so that I can wear it.  (Emphasis is on the almost looking forward to cold weather.)

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I also have a bunch of cotton that I wanted to knit so I’ve been working on a market bag.  The pattern is called Ilene Bag.  It’s been great fun to knit.  I liked knitting the rectangular bottom and then picking up stitches to knit the side.  I kinda had it in my mind though that it was going to be a quick knit, but it seems like it is taking forever.  I have been working on the strap for what seems like weeks, and I still don’t think it’s quite long enough.

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The bag is a combination of about 4 skeins of leftover cotton, but I am liking the look of it.

Part of the fun of getting ready for school is the opportunity to make stuff.  For example last weekend, I made some name sticks.  I have a teacher friend who used these and I just really liked them and decided to make my own for my class.

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Now I just need to add the student names.

Davey and I painted some READ letters yesterday.  I like getting him involved, and he likes being involved.

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I think I am going to put these on alligator photo clips and put them in my reading nook that I am slowly trying to create.

Next on the list, I want to get David back to school with me.  I have some plans for my walls, and he’s agreed to help me make some big ole posters.  I will look forward to sharing those as well!

 

Gnome Mitten: Completed

So almost a year ago, I wrote a blog post about how I was going to complete some projects. One of them was a mitten.

This is the picture I posted then:

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So that was last March.  Today, I got the mitten out again.  Here is how it looked almost a year later:

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Who knits almost an entire mitten and then puts it away, unfinished, for almost a year?

So today I finished the mitten.  I was supposed to do the thumb in a continuation of a gray and red pattern, but I decided that this was entirely too fiddly for me to want to accomplish with the thumb (This may have been the main reason it sat unfinished for so long now that I think about it).  I was really not enjoying it, so I took out the thumb, and I started again.  This time I knitted it all gray.

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Yay!  I am not thrilled with the base of the thumb.  I am not thrilled with the color work on some of the gnomes.  I have some wonky eyes.  I have some wonky gnomes altogether. The mitten does fit pretty well, although it is a little snug across the widest part of my hand.

I am just happy that it is done.  Now the problem is that mittens come in pairs.  I really have no desire to knit the second one right now.  I enjoy color work, but some of the color work on this mitten involves handling three colors at once.  I am not a fan of managing three colors at all.  They get all tangly.

Maybe I will make the second one at some point.  I am a better knitter (I think) then I was a year ago, so it would probably turn out nicer.  Then though, the first one would look even wonkier.    Maybe I will see if it will work as an oven mitt.  There’s an idea.

Herringbone

I have started knitting a cowl in herringbone stitch.  It’s a free pattern from Purl Soho called “Big Herringbone Cowl“.

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I am knitting with Malabrigo which is such fun.  It’s such a soft wool, and the colors are always so rich and beautiful.

Herringbone is such a neat stitch, but it feels like one step forward two steps back with each stitch.  It’s not quite that extreme, but each stitch is knit together and then half of the stitch is placed back on the left needle.  This is what creates that great herringbone stitch, but it is hard to get into a smooth knitting rhythm (at least for me!).

It’s going to be such a nice soft warm cowl though!  I can’t wait to see how it turns out.

Azel Pullover and Davey

I just finished knitting the Azel Pullover.   I have had my eye on knitting this pattern for awhile.  I have seen pictures of it posted on pinterest and facebook, and it looked like such a fun pattern.

I used the same kind of yarn that I just used to make the Christmas stockings:  Plymouth Encore Mega.  It is such a squishy soft bulky yarn.  The pullover is knitted all in one piece with the exception of the neck.  I picked up stitches and knit it after I finished the body of the rest of it.

I made this pattern at the request of a good friend.  It’s for her daughter, and I can’t wait to see it on her.  In the meantime, my sweet Davey kindly agreed to model it for me.  This is not his favorite thing to do in the world, but he was agreeable to it yesterday!

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The pullover still needs six buttons (3 on the bottom on each side), and then it will be finished.

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I love the pullover, but I also love that Davey was willing to model it for me, and that he has his cute little pajamas on.  I won’t be able to get away with this much longer!

Anelmaiset revisited

A couple of weeks ago, I wrote about some really fun socks that I made.   They were from the pattern Anelmaiset.

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My cousin had asked if I could make them for her, and I am glad she did, because I had a lot of fun making them and I learned some new things.

She received them the other day, and she was so nice to model them and take some pictures!  They are so darn cute on her that I had to write about them again!

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She lives in Oklahoma so I am hoping that it will soon be chilly enough for her to enjoy them there.

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Her pictures are inspiring me to want to make some more for myself!

Pottery Barn Inspired Christmas Stockings

I just finished knitting four Christmas stockings.  The pattern is from picket fence knits. I knitted the stockings with Plymouth Encore Mega which is a great squishy bulky yarn.  The pattern was well-written and easy to follow, and it was also interesting enough that I didn’t get bored making four of them.  It’s not often (unheard of really) that I knit four of anything.  I haven’t had a whole lot of time to knit though, and I was always happy to sit down and work on these stockings.

The stockings still need a wooden button attached, and I am worried that my i-cord loop might be a little long and stretchy.  We shall see.  I can always remove those and re-knit them a little shorter.

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I highly recommend this pattern for a beautiful Christmas stocking!

Back to the Newbery Books

I am back to reading the Newbery books.  I’d read 1922 – 1931 with the exception of just a couple over the summer.  Then school started and I didn’t have much time for reading anymore.

I have a new plan though.  I have printed out a pdf of all the award winners from the beginning to the present.  Instead of going through year by year though, this time I am going to pick and choose until I hopefully have them all read.  I also am looking for books that I can check out for my kindle from the library.  I still don’t have a ton of reading time, so I am not wanting to interlibrary loan too many right now.  I will feel too much pressure to get to them.   And I don’t want to feel pressure.  For that reason, if I start a book and it’s just not my kind of book or I really don’t like it, I can stop reading it.  I won’t march through just for the sake of reading it.  This happened to me several times in the books of the 1920s.  There were some beautiful and great books, but there were some really dry ones too that I just didn’t get into.  I said good-bye to those.

It’s very satisfying to check books off a list as I read them.  As I look at the list though, I am thinking using a highlighter might even be more satisfying.

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I just started the 1998 Newbery Medal winner Out of the Dust.  It is written in free verse, and it’s just a beautifully written story about the Dust Bowl.  The story is very historically accurate (at least based on what I have read about the Dust Bowl).  It’s so interesting and so darn sad.  At first, I thought I’d like to read this with Davey, but about 1/3 into the book, I have changed my mind on that.  At least not until he gets a little older.  It’s really bleak, but this was quite a bleak time.

It’s amazing what I have learned and experienced so far reading these Newbery books, and I’ve only really just begun.

Back to the Blog

I haven’t had a chance to write in almost three months.  I started student teaching, and it’s been a busy time.  It’s been a really good busy time though.

Today I am sitting outside enjoying the fall afternoon.  Ellensburg is just incredible in the fall.  It’s my favorite season even though it does mean winter will be here soon, and that’s not my favorite.   So we’ve been getting outside as much as possible.

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I’ve not been knitting or writing about knitting as much as I’d like either.  However, I did finish some really cool socks just in time for the fair in Septembe.  They were a request from my cousin and they were just a lot of fun to make.

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The pattern is called Anelmaiset, and it’s so versatile.  I was able to make this from my yarn stash which admittedly has gotten a little big so I had some choices.  I used worsted weight yarn, and I had a great time trying to figure out what colors to use.  I really like colorwork, and these knit up pretty fast considering that they are knee socks!

I got to experience a new stitch which I think is just called “flowers in a row”.  I had to follow a video on youtube to do the stitch, and I had to watch it really closely.  It was a little tricky for me at first, but fun to learn a new stitch.   I think the video I referred to was: Flowers in a Row.  You can kinda see the stitch in this picture.  It’s the flowery section between the two sections of bright pink.

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I wasn’t sure about the ribbon, but I am glad I made the spaces for a ribbon to be threaded through because I think this could be very helpful on a knee sock.  No one likes a saggy knee sock.

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These would definitely be fun to make again, but for now I need to finish some really cool cabled Christmas stockings for a friend.  The 4th one is almost complete, and then I am looking forward to blogging about them.  So for now,  I will sit outside, and enjoy the day while I knit.

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