Tuesday, August 28, 2007

iPod can now keep warm...

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Here you see my pretty little iPod cozy. I bought myself an iPod shuffle a few months back, and found the tangling of the earphones to be both distressing and dangerous for the safety of said item. Voila, the cozy.

It's just a crocheted impulse I did one night. I used some yarn (the brown) left over from a swap from Portugal, and the white wee bird on the front is some leftover Elsebeth ClassicAl from some fingerless mitts I made a couple years back. The bird is from a pattern - the little bird pin from Happy Hooker.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Duster: Tilted to Perfection

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Specs:

Pattern: Tilted Duster, Interweave Knits, Fall 2007
Yarn: seven balls of Lang Yarn - Soft Shetland
Buttons: four very perfect ones snagged from Mac Fab in Toronto

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Things I did wrong this time:
Insistent as I am, I used this yarn despite it's being a wee bit on the wrong side of gauge. Fortunately, there doesn't seem to be too many drawbacks (so far the only one I've come across is this garment's tendency to snag itself. Which is rather heartbreaking, but may be due to it's long, flowy nature, rather than my stubborn yarn choice).
I should also have been a bit more careful in the button placement, because this pattern wants to pull apart in the front, instead of lying nicely as it does in the pattern photos. I played with the idea of stitching it into place, but decided to wait on that one. I used exactly all the balls of yarn I bought, with about 12 inches of yarn left over.

Things I feared, but all came to naught:
I was unsure whether this pattern would make me look preggers. As this pic demonstrates, the Duster does no such thing.
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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Toronto

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CN in the clouds as I make my way to Lettuce Knit.

A much-anticipated day off on Tuesday found me wandering the streets of my fair province's capital, searching for relaxation in both water and retail therapy.
The waters, I should explain, are found in this fantastically bliss-inducing spa:

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My Spa. Yes, I claim ownership.

Where I spent three very good hours sauna-izing, green-tea bath soaking, and generally dreaming about the upcoming projects currently being formulated in my noggin.

Then off to Lettuce Knit, where I was highly tempted by some beautiful Blue Sky Alpaca, but courageously turned it down. I never knew I had the strength.

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I also strolled down Queen West, and took in a good many button shops. Ultimately, it was Mac Fab that won me over. I didn't realize buttons were so fascinating. I have buttons for several purposes now:

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Buttons for Duster.

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Buttons for aesthetic reasons.

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Buttons because, well, they're purple tweed.

At the end of a happy day spent, I curled up in my cozy apt. and finished the Tilted Duster (FO post to come soon.)
I hope to have a delicious hunk of knitting to show off quite directly. Urge me on - send the good knitting vibes this way.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Headline News: Derisive Comment Leads to the Canary Lady whipping off FOs

Spurred on by negativity, I, the perpetual caster-onner (oh, OED people, if you need to round out the over 500,000 words in our wonderful language, please see me),
I, the impetuous improviser of perfectly good patterns, (please see previous post, or any of my disaster-knits, for clarification),
I, the chronic dreamer and project-abandoner,
have completed a project in under a week.

Sounds like not-so-much to you, but a triumph for me.
Due to my recent "stash-with-a-purpose"-itis, I've been scanning my mags, flipping through books and racking me brain to come up with suitable projects for all those odd-balls o'yarn I purchased before I had the good sense to buy yarn for a project.

The cute wee Shorty you see pictured below is the first in what I anticipate to be a long line of FOs from the SWAP (stash with a purpose) fever.

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Specs:

Pattern: my own take on Grumperina's Picovoli
Yarn: one, very golden, and very lovely hank of HandMaiden's Silk Maiden
Ribbon: two pieces of some creamy-coloured silk ribbon I purchased from the ever-supportive eBay

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This project came about because I wanted to make something wearable (something decidedly not a hat). This yarn called out to be worn against the skin. It's possibly my favourite yarn ever. The colour is perfect, as well.

The only problem is that I'm not used to wearing these type o' Shorties (I just made that up. If there's a real term for this type of garment, let me know). I'm undecided as to whether it makes me look cool, or like some sort of misplaced 13th century golden maiden.

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Once again, photographing oneself in a mirror creates only half-good representations. I know you all forgive me.

Thursday, August 02, 2007

C'est Comme Ci, Comme Ca: Bergere de France

The unfortunate and rather disappointing Bergere de France - Take II:

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Specs:

Pattern: Bergere de France - Take II
Yarn: almost precisely six skeins of Knit Picks Elegance in Ash
Things I'd change:
This pattern was modded from the get-go. The original pattern is much baggier, and knit with a worsted weight. On the KAL on craftster, someone suggested just going down a yarn weight or two, which is what I did. The part I'd alter is the number of rows in the yoke (about an inch or so more would be useful) and go up a needle size. Above is the post-blocking outcome, and below you see the pre:

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Aside from the bottom which is unfortunately curling up (yet another thing I'd change: the ribbing to a 1x1 instead of the rib called for in the pattern), I think I prefer the pre-blocking stage to the post. It's not as stretched and diaphanous.
The cables turned out nicely, and the yarn is lovely to work with.
A big boo-boo I committed was with the set-up for the yoke on the front of the sweater. I left several of the edge stitches too loose, and so when the time came for finishing, I thought I could just tighten them up and all would be right. Oh no, not so, as you can see rather shamefully here:


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My sadness continues as I see there are no decent photos of this here unfortunate knit to show.

Mods:

I knit the body in the round til an inch or two before the instructions changed for each. This helped maintain my sanity, because I truly do not like at all or in any way having to CO for the front and then CO for the back, knitting the very same way for inches and inches.

And I leave you with a cable close-up:
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