Showing posts with label blogroll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogroll. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

Wednesday's #WIP : mice!


Today's Wednesday Work In Progress (or WIP): mice for my sister's children. She and I used to love the Jill Barklem Brambly Hedge books when we were little, and I'm pleased that her children love them too. Her eldest has been asking for a toy mouse, so a little trawl of Ravelry ensued. This is a brilliant pattern, free to download, from Janet McMahon's blog, called Fair Isle Mice. You can find the blog here: www.yellowpinkandsparkly.blogspot.co.uk .  I made the Fair Isle a bit simpler, knitting just two rows in alternate main colour and contrast colour stitches. I was a bit worried, half way through, that they looked rather sluggy, but I think the coloured tails and eyes have changed that!

I also learnt how to do i-cord! How have I not known how to do this before? She suggests making the tails by twisting a long length of the main colour, but I wanted coloured tails. It's also quite hard to do the twisty thing hard enough without another pair of hands, and I wanted to get on with them. So I had a quick look in Debbie Stoller's Stitch'n Bitch book, and the i-cord instructions are in there on page 87. If you end up doing this pattern but want a contrasting tail (doesn't everyone?!), then use 3.75mm double-pointed needles and use 4 stitches. I did about 30 rows and, on the penultimate row, tapered the tail a bit by knitting two together twice, then the remaining two stitches together.

I managed to listen to a fair few episodes of the excellent Caithness Craft Collective's knitting podcasts while making these: Louise Hunt has a really engaging way of talking about her crafting as well as her whisky-drinking  - while describing the scenery of her part of Scotland beautifully too. Her knitting book reviews sound really good, too. Find her here: http://caithnesscraftcollective.podbean.com/
 I got the recommendation for these programmes from Sadie's blog: http://ravelledsleeve.wordpress.com/ - there are other suggestions on there, too, but I haven't got round to those yet.

Anyway: one more mouse to go!


Monday, 7 May 2012

Knitting Blog Round-up and a Couple of Thank Yous

As a relatively new blogger, I'm still building up my blogroll of knitting and crochet blogs I enjoy reading. It's rather like choosing a partner - so, what *is* my blog type?  Whose news do I enjoy hearing about?

So far, I'm drawn to these two:

1) Knitting on Trains: as a commuter myself, I love the title of this. Jess blogs here (see the link on the right, here) about knitting and crochet, books and baking, with lovely pictures too.

2) Knitting Up The Ravelled Sleeve of Care: gotta love a Shakespeare blog title, for a start. An anonymous blog, I think - but the writer photographs herself in her lovely knitted scarves and cardis , as well as writing about her life in a personal yet engaging way.

More to come, I'm sure!



Is it normal to let a brooch dictate an entire knitting project?? I got this gorgeous corsage as a present from my Lady Friend a little while ago. We had gone to a Country Market in Orford, not far from here, and, among the fairy cakes and jam we also managed to spirit home, was this beautiful brooch. A closer read of the label revealed that it has been knitted from yarn grown, spun and dyed in Suffolk, on Tracy Ranger's farm. My crusade to shop locally reached a new high <smug smile>. The yarn is soft and fluffy and the brooch is, I think, crying out to be pinned to a vintage, 40s style tank top. I'm thinking of the one in my Martin Storey Rowan Book, Winter Gifts   - and of planning other projects needing this lovely, local wool!


The second lovely gift I've received recently is a hand made tote bag from a friend, @CopperSpiral, in NYC.


She and I were students together, and she has sent me some beautiful hand-crafted gifts over the years. This bag is reversible, and the lining is clean, crisp calico. I think my new knitting projects will fit nicely in here!

I wanted to blog about these presents as a way of showing how grateful I am for them. It's a cliche, but there's *nothing* nicer than a hand-made present. And we makers know that a bit of gratitude doesn't go amiss!

Anyone made something laboriously by hand, only to feel rather underappreciated?? Sad - but I know I have...!