Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Japanese knitting books




Last June I stopped at a Japanese book store in NYC. There I found Vivian Hoxbor's Domino KNitting translated into Japanese. I had bought the English version a few years ago. Then had sold it for a few pennies on Ebay when I was going through a purge of knitting books I didn't think I'd ever use. Of course just a week later in a class at Knitters Day Out Janet Szabo pulled this amazing swatch that she said she knitted using a technique she said she found in Domino Knitting.
So now I own both versions: the English and the Japanese. It is interesting to see the differences in the books besides the obvious. The knitted samples in the English version are all very dark and sombre. Most of them tend toward autumn colorways. Not particularly appealing to me. Also the directions are mostly written with only a few diagrams. Some of the wording is very confusing.
The Japanese book has a lighter feel. The pages are not as crowded. The samples have a lighter palette. The diagrams are clearer. Even though I don't read Japanese at all I think I would have an easier time knitting a project from the Japanese book. If I were to recommend one over the other I'd say get the Japanese version.
The picture on the top is from the English version. The picture on the bottom is from the Japanese version. While I don't really care for the pom poms at the bottom of the Japanese shrug, I am far more inspired to knit the shrug (and maybe changing the pattern to a full sweater instead of a shrug) than the English ruana (which looks a little like a heavy wool blanket) .

Monday, September 24, 2007

Shop Samples


Oh NO!

I agreed to create a pattern for a shop sample, but got carried away and didn't think ahead about how easy it would be to explain to people how to do this.


Kathy at Colonial Yarn Shop said that she has not sold a single skein of Noro Cashmere Island and asked if I could come up with a pattern that could help move the yarn. This summer I created a pattern for a summer tank that was half crochet and half knit. The customers loved it. My class for that pattern was full and Kathy sold loads and loads of the yarn used for that tank (Blue Heron Metallic Rayon, and Blue Heron Ribbon). It looked fabulous hanging in the shop even though I wasn't 100% happy with it. I was sloppy in matching the crochet gauge with the knitting gauge. I suffered knitting and crocheting that project. The yarn tangled at one point and it took me a full 8 hours to untangle it. PLus writting the pattern for sizes other than myself took me hours. I should have learned from that experience never to volunteer to knit a sample AND make up a pattern AND use a difficult yarn.
So my idea was that the Cashmere Island was too expensive for most customers to consider using it for a garment. The next thought was that a hat, or scarf might make people just think of using the cheaper alternative to Cashmere Island - which is Kureyon or Silk Garden.

Basically this is a top down raglan (used Sweater Wizard to come up with a pattern). The rules for using the two yarns (Noro Cashmere Island and Jo Sharp Alpaca Kid LUstre) are as follows.

1.Every time you change yarns do a *slip 1 wyf, knit1* for the first row, but make sure that the slip 1 does NOT line up with the last time you did a slip 1.
2.Never change yarns on an increase row.


Sounds easy enough, yes? This pattern has become complicated becuase
  1. With the raglan increases sometimes you can just start with a slip stitch and sometimes you need to start with a knit 1 when you change colors.
  2. THe slip stitch compresses the pattern and changes the row count and therefore changes the rate of increases for the raglan shaping.
  3. I didn't plan when to change colors and just made it up as I went along.


It isn't hard to knit. JUst hard to explain.


I enjoy knitting with this yarn. If I were knitting this for myself I'd be happy with how it is turning out. If I had to tell an advanced knitter how to do something similar - but not exactly the same I'd be o.k. But I'm really scared of having to tell a beginning knitter how to copy the sweater exactly.
I should have decided on a stripe pattern before I started.

Ravelry

I got my Ravelry invite! It is the most awesome website I've ever visited. My friend Cynthia Spencer told me about Ravelry. I'm glad she did. I really enjoy the site.

Listing my works in progress on Ravelry has my head spinning. It is making me realize that I have way too too much on my plate. But also looking at other people's WIP and stashes makes me realize that I'm not the only crazy one out there.

I let my kids pick my screen name for Ravelry. It is Azalea.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Berroco Damask Bag

Here is the Berroco Damask bag (before and after felting) done in Ultra Alpaca in the colors Fig and Fennel.















It only took one cycle in the washing machine to get it felted. That Berroco Alpaca felts really well, and is heavenly to work with. I did most of the smaller areas in duplicate stitch.

lessons learned:
  1. Always duplicate stitch smaller intricate areas of intarsia. I tried to do intarsia at the top of the motif and that was a bear.
  2. To make the knitting easier I enlarged the chart by 200%. Since I don't have access to a copy machine I just opened the pdf file at Berroco.com and then enlarged the image. When I went to print out under print range I selected "current view" to get it to print out enlarged.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Augy's Opal Handpaint inside out socks






These socks look so misshappen off the foot, but fit Augy's foot really well. I think ribbing the insoles is a bad/good idea. A bad idea, becuase it took longer to knit rib than plain stockinette in the round. A good idea because it hugs the foot and provides a better fit.

This is an inside out sock becuase I did a 3/2 rib and garter stitch short row heels and toes and therefor there is no right or wrong side. I was already working on this idea when Socks that Rock came out with their Inside out pattern. STR is more complicated than mine with reversible rib cables. Mine is just ribs and garter. The first picture shows the colors more faithfully than the second. THe yarn is Opal handpaints in GREEN!