I finished the Quaker Ridge Shawlette

The beading of the shawl is finally done.  Whew.  That took a long long time. I finally sat down and knocked the rest of it out.  I am not sure I want to do quite that large of a beaded bind-off again, but I really love the result.  This photograph makes this look more pink than it actually is.  I took this photo outside with no flash.

I took this one inside with no flash, and the light was really pretty good.

 

The color is actually somewhere in between the two.  Helpful huh.

I have to say one more time how nice Madeline Tosh Pashmina is to knit with.   It was a treat!

This is probably the truest to the color.  Anyway, I love the ruffle!

 

Yay for finished projects!

Beaded Bind-off with Superfloss

I’ve been working on the Quaker Ridge Shawlette for awhile.  Actually the main knitting has been done for a few weeks, but I am doing the beaded bind-off, and it is pretty much taking me forever.  It’s kinda slow going, but it’s going to be worth it.  I am loving how it looks.

The pattern included links to a couple of good video tutorials on how to do this bind-off.  The Knit Girllls recorded one: Superfloss bind-off.  There’s another one from Nelkin Designs too:  Beaded Bind-off.  When I am trying to learn something new it can be helpful to me to be able to watch a video and also look at a tutorial that consists of narrative and pictures.  This beaded bind-off can actually be done with a very small crochet hook or with Superfloss. I did find a crochet hook tutorial that was pictures and text, but I couldn’t find one that described the superfloss technique.  I was able to figure it out with the video, but I thought I’d share pictures of how I did it – it’s not hard at all.

I had no clue what Superfloss was.  Apparently it’s some kind of heavy duty dental floss.  You can find it about anywhere I think.  Here is what the box looks like.

 

The floss has this a short stiff part, a fuzzy thicker section, and then a long flossy tail. (Maybe I am the only person who has never seen this stuff before?)

 

So I tied a knot at the end of the long tail.  Nothing fancy, I just wanted to make a knot on the end so that the beads wouldn’t fall off.  The action takes place on the other end of floss.

That fuzzy part is a great place to hold the beads until you need them.  It’s like this stuff was made for bead placement rather than teeth flossing.

 

I bought some glass beads at Hobby Lobby.

 

I put a bunch of beads in a little yellow bowl.

 

I mostly picked up the beads and put them on the floss one by one, or you can dig your floss in there and scoop them onto the stiff end as well.  This works fine too. I need almost 500 beads for this ruffled edge.  Egadz! (although I only put on about 15 beads at a time.  Every once in awhile, I pulled out a fresh piece of floss.)

So you use that stiff end of the floss and poke the end through the first stitch on your needle.

 

Then you pull that stitch off the needle.  Hold onto that end of floss and make a U.

 

Next I had to enlist Davey’s help.  He helped me hold the stitch so I could take the picture.  That’s his slightly grimy thumbnail.  (His hand looks so big here!) See that end piece from above?  You stick it through the bead.  So then you have a loop.

 

You’ll have the floss poking through the bead.

 

The floss is going through the stitch as a loop and the end of the loop goes through the bead so that now the bead is going to slide down nicely over the loop. (David helped me with these pictures.)

 

Slide that bead on down and remove the floss.

 

Now take that resulting loop and put it back on the left needle.  I already had one stitch on the right needle (remember this is a bind-off).  I knit the stitch which has the placed bead.  Then per this pattern, I moved both stitches back to the left needle and knitted together through the back of them (again leaving one stitch on the right needle).  Then you just repeat.  And you get a row of beaded stitches that look like this:

 

I hope this is helpful.  I was a little confused by the process when I started.  Part of this was having no clue what superfloss was and how I would use it.  I’d also never beaded anything before so this was a new challenge!  I’ll post pictures of the finished shawlette hopefully very soon!

Super Scary Mochimochi

Davey and I just finished our Halloween knitting project.  It took us several weeks but was a lot of fun.  I was inspired by my recent purchase of Anna Hrachovec’s new book Super Scary Mochimochi.

I love her books and patterns. I’ve knitted several of her teeny tiny guys too.  So when I saw that she had a new Halloween themed book coming out, I was thrilled.

I looked through the book.  The “Create your own Monster” patterns immediately caught my eye.  She included patterns for different monster bodies and various monster parts including ears, noses, feet, and tails.  You knit the pieces you want and mix and match them to form your own monster.  I decided that this would be very fun for Davey and me.

So I started knitting.  I just made a bunch of random pieces in different colors.  I used Cascade 220.

When I got it them almost all knitted up, I enlisted Davey to tell me how he wanted to put the pieces together.  He was happy to help me.

So we worked together and created four guys.  Their names are still subject to change, but here’s what we have so far.

Meet Cuke (his name is the one who needs the most work).

Cuke has quite the tongue doesn’t he!

Next up is Luigi.  His moustache is a weeeee bit crooked.  It may be that he is a little flustered because his ears do not match.  Davey was for this ear arrangement at first, but then he wished that I’d have made them the same.  Maybe Luigi wishes this too. But – monsters do not have to have matching ears.  It’s a rule.

Next up is Vampire Dude (again – name is still under consideration).

Vampire Dude has batwings for arms.  They are kinda hard to see.  He has quite the fangs, and he has bolts for ears.  He may be a little confused about his identity.

You may have noticed Burt and Curt in the background of the above picture.  Davey insisted that they have matching antennae.

It’s a motley crew.

When I got home from school today, I noticed that Davey had arranged the guys so they could look out the window.  I liked this too.  He’s a thoughtful kid.

I like seeing Davey’s little arm in the picture too..

So welcome Burt, Curt, Cuke, Luigi, and Vampire Dude.  (I don’t know if technically a two-headed monster should be counted as two monsters.)

Minikickers, Fall, Yarn

We’ve had another busy but good week.

Davey has been going to a weekly soccer camp.  It’s been in addition to playing on his soccer team.  He has really enjoyed it.  It’s just been 45 minutes on Tuesdays, and they play lots of fun games with the soccer ball.

 

He received a certificate at the end, and he enjoyed this “ceremony”.

 

 

 

He also has been having fun playing with his “village”.  He requests yarn from me and then hangs long pieces of it all over his village.

 

 

He’s up here with me right now cutting those long pieces of yarn into short pieces of yarn.  He’s working on his scissor skills.

The trees have been so pretty.  I went for a short walk around the neighborhood the other day after I dropped Davey off at pre-k.  Everything is very golden here.

 

I didn’t get a great picture, but I noticed that the mountains are getting snowy again.

 

And then finally, Davey and I have been working on a knitting project.  It’s Halloween related so I am trying to get it done before Halloween, but there’s not been a lot of knitting time lately.  Here’s a sneak peek.  I can’t wait to finish this!

Sunday: Shawlette and a couple of recipes

Davey and I have been hanging out this weekend.  David had to make a trip to Texas, but he’ll be back this evening.  Today Davey and I worked on putting up the Halloween lights.  Hopefully I can take a good picture in the evening.  We are very excited about Halloween!

I have a Halloween knitting project which is in progress.  I’m looking forward to blogging about it soon!

I’m working on the bind off on my Quaker Ridge Shawlette. This is a Susan B. Anderson pattern, and it’s been really nice to knit.  The slow part is the bind-off.  I’m doing a beaded bind-off.  I’ve never done one before so it was a little tricky at first.  I felt like all thumbs with the little beads.  I’m getting better at it though.  I need to get it finished up (almost 500 stitches to bind off. yikes.).

This is not a great picture.  I’ll take some better ones when it is done.

 

I also wanted to share a couple of really good recipes that I made lately.

One is Pioneer Woman’s “Simple Perfect Enchiladas“.  These are really good.  I used hamburger, but shredded beef would be good too.  I always use Hatch enchilada sauce too.  If you can get it, I highly recommend it.  It seems like some red enchilada sauce is kind of bitter.  Not hatch.

Another positive was that the enchiladas warmed up really well.  We aren’t crazy about leftovers typically, but these were great leftovers.

I also subscribe to allrecipes.com emails.   They had a recipe up yesterday for Spicy Beef Stew. Now this sounded a little weird to me because it called for a jar of marinara sauce and a can of Rotel.  So odd that I just had to try it. However, it all blended in and I couldn’t tell at all that I’d put spaghetti sauce in.  I put it on mashed potatoes.  I confess I made Hungry Jack mashed potatoes.  I had not made instant potatoes probably ever, but I’d read somewhere that they were good.  I always thought instant potatoes tasted weird, but these were really good.  Definitely good to put stew over!  Lots of leftovers on this too.

Ok we need one more extension cord for our lights.  And maybe some frozen yogurt.

A little knitting

I just finished knitting a sweet little baby cardigan for a friend of mine.  She’s expecting a little boy, and I am so excited for her.

 

It’s not quite as blue as the color above, but it’s not quite as light as the photograph below.

 

This is a free pattern called Easy Baby Cardigan by Diane Soucy.   I didn’t have a sweet 6 month old baby to model this on so Winkie The Rock Star Bear served as my model.

 

I love this little hood!

 

It has little ties on the front instead of buttons or a zipper.  At first, I wasn’t sure what I thought about the ties in this pattern, but I really like them.  They are really easy to just quickly tie once you slip the cardigan on.  I actually crocheted them as a simple chain.  You could also do an i-cord if you wanted to.

 

This is actually the second time that I made this cardigan.  I started knitting again when Davey was about a year old.  I made a scarf or two, then some houseshoes, and then I decided I wanted to knit Davey a sweater.

It’s a great first sweater pattern.  It’s really easy, although it was much easier for me this second time around.  The first time I made it, I didn’t know about simple things like slipping a marker (SM) or slipping a first stitch.  It seemed like I knitted and knitted and knitted forever before I got the back done.  It turned out nice though, and Davey wore it quite a bit.

 

He was about 11 months old here and had just started walking I think.

I made both of these with Little Lehigh Kraemer yarn.  It’s a 55/45 acrylic cotton blend, and it’s really nice to knit with.

Gosh, Davey sure is a little tot in these pictures!

Organizing the Yarn

Yesterday, I looked down the stairs into the basement where I keep my yarn and other craft supplies.  I don’t have a lot of space, but it had become a MESS.  I suddenly had the urge to organize right then.

Here’s a before picture.  Now while my yarn/craft area was a mess, it was not this messy.  I’d already started dumping stuff on the floor.  When I get the urge to organize, it usually involves dumping everything into the floor into a big pile (this became a rather big pile).  Then I go from there.  I also gathered various yarn projects from all over the house thus accomplishing the goal of also making the rest of the house somewhat more organized as well!

So here it is before when I’ve made a big pile on the floor:

 

I know.  It’s awful.  I am embarrassed.  Even without the pile, it’s pretty bad. I can hardly stand to look at it or to post it here.  David and Davey avoided the entire area once I created the big pile.

So I began organizing.  I had some plastic totes to put yarn and things into, but I needed more.  I bought several kinds, but I wanted to put everything in some kind of container, so I was able to find some plastic dishpans for 97 cents each.  They are thin and cheap, but perfect for what I needed.

David also put some new shelves up for me.  They include a lower longer wider shelf which doubles as a workspace area.  Awesome.

I have a new mascot.  His name is Otto.

 

He looks like a giant potato.  He’s actually a partially completed Rebecca Danger pattern.  He’s going to be a monster at some point.  He still needs me to knit him some arms and legs.  I have to try to remember which Rebecca Danger pattern from which he comes. It’s been awhile.  Rebecca Danger writes great fun patterns. Anyway, he’s there to protect my yarn and to remind me that I need to finish him.

I also have a Davey original on the wall.  It’s a watercolor that he completed not long ago.  I, of course, love it!

 

So after quite a bit of hard work, my little yarn/crafting area was complete!  I’m so proud.  David called it “amazing”.  High praise from the king of organization!

 

Pug Pieced Together!

I finished my pug.  He is a pattern from Knit Your Own Dog.  I think I mentioned that this was not the easiest pattern in the world despite a title that includes the words “Easy-to-Follow”.

In every review that I have read, they’ve mentioned that putting the pug together was not the easiest.  It wasn’t.  But it wasn’t that bad.  It did require a little careful studying of the instructions.  There were not step by step detailed instructions with photos to take you through the process.  But, I was able to figure it out with out that much trouble.  Just took some patience.  I can appreciate the way it is constructed, because they were really going for an as accurately shaped pug as possible.

Here’s his body:

 

Making that curled tail was not easy.  You knit a very long strip that extends from the tip of his tail, underneath his tummy, all the way to his chin.  Then you had to sew that to the left side of the body and the right side of the body.  Cool construction, just a little tricky to get that tail to curl just right.

Then there is the ridge on the back.  I accomplished this with mattress stitch.

 

Now the instructions say to use mattress stitch along the back.  But the way I understand mattress stitch is that you do it with wrong sides together, and than that ridge is on the inside like on a sweater.  But I don’t think they specified that instead you stitch it with right sides together so that the ridge appears on the outside, and it looks to me on the photograph (in the book) like the ridge is on the outside.  I like the way it looks although I am not sure what their intent was.  So if you want a ridge, mattress stitch it with right sides together!

The face was a challenge as well.  I had to stuff it more lightly and then fold up the end to form the nose.  I knitted small eyes and then embroidered some white and brown on them.  His face is pug-like but does not scream “individual personality” – it’s more “I am pug” but not “look at my sweet face and endearing expression”.  If that makes any sense at all!

 

I think I will try the Siberian Husky next.

Christmas ornament, sign language and a locust tree

I am participating in my first “swap” on Ravelry.  There are many groups to join on  ravelry, and often they will have swaps with fellow knitters and crocheters.  Some of these swaps result in a haul that looks like Christmas morning.  They go all out and do awesome exchanges.

For my first swap participation, I wanted to keep it simple.  I have been following the “itty bitty knits” group which is a group of knitters who follow and like the knitting designer Susan B. Anderson.  I made some patchwork socks not too long ago as part of a KAL with her group.  So this is an Ornament Swap.  You make one Christmas ornament and send it out to the person they tell you to send it out to.  Mine went out this morning.

I made a pretty simple little tree, but here’s what I liked a lot about it.  I used leftover Shelter from Jared Flood’s yarn line.  I love the kind of rustic “tree-ey” look of the yarn.  I also really liked the cable pattern on the tree.  It was easy and quick, and I have ambitious notions now of making a garland of little trees.  I could use up some leftover sock yarn that way (although what I would really like to use is more Shelter yarn.  That would involve buying more yarn though which is something I am trying to avoid!).  We shall see.

This was a really fun and quick knit.  You knit it from top to bottom and bottom to top all in one piece, and then sew up one side, stuff lightly, and sew up the other.  The trunk was also just a quick piece to make and attach.

 

So that’s knitting.  I’m working on a jillion things still and want to make a jillion more, but that is nothing new.

So Davey has become fascinated with sign language.  If he doesn’t know the sign (and that is for almost all words), he doesn’t mind making them up.  So we are learning a few signs a day.  You can look them up on youtube.  We’ve learned “Mother”, “Father”, and “Parents”.  He loves to say “I love you” with sign language.  Today we’ve learned “chicken” and “teacher”.  He tells me what word he wants to learn, and then I look it up.  So now he’s making up sentences about being a teacher of chickens.

He likes to tell people that he is 4 and 4 quarters.  I told him a little while back that he was older than 4 and 1/2 now, so somehow he got it in his head that he is 4 and 4 quarters.  He is not interested in my explanation about fractions.

Earlier I found him under our locust tree playing.  I tried to quietly get a few pictures.  I listened to him for a minute, and learned that he was having a cherry blossom festival.

 

I listened to him chatter a little more, and then let him be.  I don’t think he even noticed me.

 

Pug Pieces

Pug Pieces.  I know that just doesn’t sound quite right does it.

I’m knitting a little pug for a cousin/friend who loves pugs.  He sent me the book Knit Your Own Dog.  Also included in the title are the words “Easy-to-Follow Patterns”.  I am not completely in agreement with that part of the title.  This pug pattern is not the easiest in the world.  So far I have these pieces:

 

These are not all the pieces.  There are two ears, two eyes, two front legs which are knitted a little differently than the two back legs, a right side body/head piece, a left side body/head piece and a tummy tail piece (which is a long piece which will extend from under the chin to the tail.)

It’s really a cool pattern.  There is such attention to detail to get the pug anatomy as realistic as possible.  And overall, the pattern is pretty easy to follow.  However, I had a little difficulty with an abbreviation called PULT.  It stands for something like pick up the lower loop.  There are short rows in the body around the head (creates kind of a wrinkle for the pug head).  So this was their recommended technique for when you do the short row turns.  Before you turn, you grab the loop below on the next stitch on the left hand needle.  When you turn, you knit the loop you picked up together with the next stitch.  This prevents the formation of a little hole resulting from the short-row turn.

I just couldn’t quite visualize this, so I spent some time on ravelry and looking for youtube videos. I found one video where a person demonstrated the PULT, but the part I didn’t understand was the part that she kind of zipped through on her needles, so I was still confused.  I did figure it out though.  And it was a fun challenge, but not for a brand-new knitter I’d say.

(It turns out that in their subsequent book, Knit Your Own Cat, they substituted the wrap and turn for the PULT.  That I have done, and that should make this part easier.)

Then there is a part on the head where you have to change colors between the black and the tan.  I’d have appreciated a little guidance here as I’ve never knitted intarsia and I think this was an intarsia like area.  A more experienced knitter might have just understood what to do here.  I need to study up on some intarsia basics.

So it’s a challenge.  And then there will be the challenge of the assembly.  My next worry.  I hope I can pull it off!

So that’s the story of the pug pieces.  (I do appreciate the attention to detail in this book, and I really want to make the Siberian Husky!)