There’s a new baby in the world, and she needs a new sweater.
This is the little kimono sweater from the Mason Dixon Book.

And I started on some socks. There’s some weird pooling with the green. But otherwise, I love the colors, so vivid! And purple and green. This pattern is my own design, so I may rip it out and start over if I don’t like how it goes. There’s a lace pattern on the top, and just stripes on the bottom.
I still haven’t sewn in my zipper, but with the weather the way it’s been, there’s no need for a sweater.
I made a little trip last week:
It was amazing. I’ll have some more to say about it later, and more photos and even a video if I can figure out how to get it on here.
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Synchronicity
My husband woke me from the weirdest dream this morning, so I just had to share:
I was in the family room of my mother’s house [1]. I was sitting with a friend on the couch and heard some noise outside. We both look out the window (one each) and see a creature that looked like it had the body of a moose, the color and humps of a camel, and the head of a Tyrannosaurus Rex. It also had a pair of arms above the forelegs, that were lying along the sides of the humps, but could be raised as needed. There appeared to be some moss on the back and arms of the creature.
He was gnashing at a nest[2] in a tree on the lawn. The tree was completely non-suburban New Hampshire stock, and the nest was made of those palm fronds that look like a accordion fan. Totally not the right kind of vegetation for the area.
In the tree, which is now big enough to hold a person, is Annette O’Toole, shielding a bird from the Tyrannosaurus Camel. At the foot of the tree is Ed Begley Jr., trying to scare the T-Camel back into the woods.
The nest comes down in the T-Camel’s mouth, but the birds are safe, so he leaves, and Annette O’Toole lets the bird go, and it is a raspberry day-glo blue and flies away. [3]
I yell out the window to get the attention of Ed Begley Jr. “Ed, Ed!” The media are all over the lawn now, interviewing him. He finally breaks away and comes over to my window. Suddenly I am outside the window, [4] standing in the shrubbery. I ask for his help with the nest. Should I try and put it back in the tree or toss it over in the woods at the side of the driveway?
He thought that the birds would never come back after the T-Camel saliva and the touch of humans, so we should move it to the woods. I asked if we should wear a dust mask, so that we won’t choke on the dust. Ed replied that I should not be afraid of the bird dung in the nest, but yes, I should wear a mask. I looked at Ed Begley Jr. and he was wearing a navy blue surgical mask [5] with a cardboard clowny smile taped to the front. For some reason, I wasn’t completely freaked out by the clown smile, and then it was gone.
He gestured to the house across the street, and asked if I knew D, the girl across the street [6]. He was now in a Tuxedo. He said “she was kinda…” “A salesman?” I replied. “Yes, a salesman.” he agreed. [7]
We then notice a ton of graffiti on the windowsill, written in magic markers and pens and those silver pens people use for scrapbooking. Words like “Debbie”, “2000”, little hearts, more like the kind of stuff you’d see on a desktop at school. Ed Begley Jr. told me that he was very upset at what’s happening to the neighborhood. “They keyed my aluminum siding!” [8]”That’s terrible ” I replied.
Just then, my (anonymous) friend sticks her head out the window to tell us that the media are all up the street. “It’s on tv! The vandals are up the street keying someone’s house!” Ed Begley Jr. looks at me and says ” Let’s go! We can catch the vandals!”
As I was starting to run away up the street with Ed Begley Jr. to catch the vandals keying the aluminum siding, my husband woke me up.
I started to tell him all about the dream. He was freaking out by the amount of detail I was giving him, he was pre-caffeinated and was starting to overload. All the way to work I kept remembering more and more detail, and he kept trying to wake up.
Then, around noon, my husband IMs me at work.
[huz] BABE!!
[huz] BABE!! You there?
[me] yes?
[huz] I’m listening to Frosty, Heidi, and Frank. Today’s guest is Ed Begley Jr.!!
[me] Holy crap!
[1] This was before it was renovated, so vintage mother’s house.
[2] I had watched an episode of Survivorman over the weekend where he tore down a nest from a tree in the Kalahari Desert.
[3] I don’t know what happened to Annette O’Toole after this, she was just gone.
[4] Must have gone through, I seem to remember pushing on the screen to see as he approached the house.
[5] My husband later reminded me that he was on St. Elsewhere, so…?
[6] My best friend since 1978.
[7] I have no idea what this means.
[8] Somehow, I doubt Ed Begley Jr has aluminum siding. Remember, it was only a dream.
Apologies
My apologies to those who commented on my blog lately… for some reason I wasn’t getting notified of the comments and there were a bunch of them in a pending state – along with all the spam I get on a daily basis. Oops! I hope I found them all before purging the spam.
If I lost your comment, I’m really sorry!
Off the needles…
… for now.
I finished up the final chapters of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows on Thursday morning, and worked the final stitches of Eris on Saturday.
I finally figured out what the wool reminds me of. You know the old 3-D glasses with one red and one blue lens? And do you remember what the pictures or movies looked like if you looked at them without the glasses on? That’s what this yarn looks like. Mostly blue wool, with red threads of alpaca heathered in. I think it’s the alpaca that gets up my nose and makes my eyes water.
I put her in my front loader with a little Tide, on the “Ultra Handwash” setting, and hoped that it would take some of the itch out of the wool. I think it did!
I set to work repairing my wooly horse. I used dowels from that big orange place, and the wood was quite soft so many of the pegs broke in their holes. I found the same size dowel in a harder wood and made myself some pegs and a few to spare. Good thing too, because while loading up Eris I broke another one of the soft pegs!
Thirty minutes later and with a bit of wrestling, I set her up on my wooly horse to dry. I tied up the front band along the convenient turning ridge that will be hiding the zipper that I plan to insert this week. It took me a couple of tries to line everything up. In retrospect, the heavy cotton yarn I used for basting wasn’t such a good idea – cotton absorbs water and shrinks when wet!
And the waist shaping made the wooly horse not quite work perfectly for blocking, but I love the way the sleeves blocked. All the decreases looked so neat and in rows along the inside edge of the sleeve. Ah well, live and learn.
Here’s a closeup of the collar. There’s something bloopy going on around the collar, but I think i might be because the sweater is people-shaped, and the wooly horse isn’t really.
I said off the needles for now because… the sleeves are too long! I tried it on before completing the first sleeve and it seemed to be right on target, but that was before I sewed the underarm seams. I wonder if maybe the way the stockinette curls at the underarms made the sleeve seem a little shorter that it really was. I do know that it was too much to block out, because I could tell they were too long before I even blocked. But I wanted to see the finished product before making a decision.
I think I’ll rip out the cuffs, and back about 8 rows (I’ll measure to be sure!) and then reknit the cuffs. I thought about just unravelling some stitches just above where I started the cuffs and then grafting them back on after removing the extra length, but there will be 2-4 more stitches to ease into, which is 4-8 rows of cuff. I’ve got the pattern memorized now anyway, so I don’t mind reknitting it. It will give me another chance to graft the cuff ends together better, too. I think instead of casting on, I’ll use a provisional cast-on instead. That might look even smoother in the end.
Then I’ll get busy attaching the zipper. I may need some help from my stich-n-bitch sewing gals on Wednesday, since that is certainly not one of my skillz. Finally, I have to stitch down the hem all around. The knitting curls back on itself beautifully, but I’ll stitch it down and steam it all into shape.
So, stay tuned for a really finished post soon. I can’t wait to wear it to work and show it off. I found another semi-knitter on my current project. She is also a HP fan, a bit of an HP-nerd actually. Way more HP-nerdy than I am. I’m more nerdy about other things though, like Buffy the Vampire Slayer which she also is a fan of. Nothing like establishing safe topics of conversation when you are on a project with someone you may have to argue with about work stuff! Sure comes in handy.
Meanwhile, while I was waiting for Eris to dry, I started on a new interim project: Lavender Fields socks.
It’s green, not lavender, I know. But the yarn came from the Lavender Fields in Valley Center, CA where I visited recently. It’s a sports weight yarn, which I haven’t used for socks before, so this will be a swatch at first. I have no idea how many stitches around it will need to be in sports weight. I’m using 3.00mm needles, which seems a good gauge.
I took out my Barbara Walker 3 last night to see about a lace pattern to use, but didn’t really find anything I wanted to use. I always pull out #3 first, because it’s charted. I hate lace without charts, it’s sooooo hard to follow.
In the car this morning (my huz was driving, I swear) I worked out something that may or may not already exist. Once I finish swatching I’ll share the pattern I come up with. I tried the turkish cast on that Meg Swansen wrote about in Vogue Knitting last year (or was it the year before?) and I like the way the toe looks, so I think I’ll stick with that.
18 Chapters and 1 sleeve down…
… 400 pages and one more sleeve to go.
I finished the first sleeve last night, save the grafting of the cuff which I will work on tonight.
My copy of HP didn’t arrive as early as last year – it didn’t show up until almost 3 pm so I got started a little late, but spent Sunday knitting away and reading at the same time. This is the only way to make the miles of stockinette manageable. Stopping every 6 rows to do the decreases and refocus my eyes off the pages was a perfect balance of adventure and knitting.
Tonight I’ll graft that cuff, prop up my book and start again on sleeve two. At the rate I’m going, I might be done, really done including blocking and the zipper, by the weekend.
Last weekend I found some harder wood dowels to improve the pegs on my wooly board. The cheap ones I bought at the house of orange kept breaking on me because the wood was too soft. So I’ll have to spend an hour or two out in the garage to cut the dowel into pegs and then drill the broken pegs out of the hole so I can wash and block this sweater the right way.
I can’t wait!
I bought two different zippers, I’m not sure whether to go with the lightweight or the sporty zipper – I may just baste them both on and see which one l like better.
I bought some nice coordinating thread, the perfect color really, so I can’t wait to finish this Eris cardigan.
Pictures soon. Can’t stop reading to take photos!
Vacation Knitting
Vacation was such a needful thing. I had a whole week off, but only had to burn 4 days of vacay time. I had time to catch up on my knitting. I had time to catch up on my blogroll, some of which had been sitting in my queue since April.
What a wild collection of things I missed while ignoring my blogroll.
Annie Modesitt’s husband is going through a hellish illness right now. She’s offering a pattern for a donation to help raise funds to make his life a little more comfortable. It’s beautiful. I am alternately awed and appalled by some of her garments. I’ve been wanting to knit the Morris Fern Cardigan for ages, and her corsets are beautiful, but then that bobbled thing from the (I think) winter Vogue scares me. 🙂 She’s an amazing architect, and could really use some help. This pattern can be knitted as a dress or a corset!
Then over at January One there was a row over whether or not a woman can post her own opinion of her own experiences on her own blog. Huh?
My most happy find were these from way back in May: Karen attended a class taught by Janine and showed one of the exercises they worked on for seeing how colors relate to each other for a fair isle. Seeing these swatches was such an ‘Aha!’ moment for me on what to do next. I’ve got several balls of Jamieson’s, Jamieson & Smith, and recently some of the KnitPicks heathered fingering weight yarns that I can’t wait to play with. Separating the color play from the pattern seems so liberating to me.
Earlier in the week, I re-read The Art of Fair Isle Knitting: History, Technique, Color & Patterns, but still wasn’t feeling the love. She does her swatches as solid rows of color stacked on top of each other. But I was having trouble envisioning which colors to stack. After reading Karen’s blog, now I don’t have to, I can use them all! Muahhahahahha!
Well, I didn’t quite finish the sweater, but here’s my progress mid-week. We went to Vegas to see Spamalot. I knitted all the way there and back on the plane.
Here’s a closeup of the clever waist shaping. Cables pull in — plus there are some decreases in there too. I love how it looks.
It was 116F in Vegas, (during the day, that is) and was 98F at midnight. Kinda hot. Not so much fun with the wool, dry heat or no. At some point, it’s just too hot for wool. But I pressed on.
We stayed at the Wynn. Wow, I think the suite was bigger than my house. Seriously. We could only afford to stay one night, but it was a beautiful thing. The bathroom was bigger than my master bedroom and guest room combined. If anyone ever offers to comp you a room there, say yes without even thinking about it, it was that good. They even had room service, pretty much unheard of in Vegas, unless that has started to change. I had an amazing Japanese breakfast, something I’ve always wanted to try. And for dinner before the show, I had a lobster sushi roll that I can still remember the taste of, it was so good. Spamalot was not as good as I had hoped. I laughed plenty, but I had higher hopes for it.
We came home and chilled in the A/C for a few days. Since Independence Day fell on our Stich n’ Bitch night, I didn’t get to knit with my women, so I visited up at the WEHO Stitch n’ Bitch at the Farmer’s Market. It was a pretty small crowd, a few women that I have known for a while from the Santa Monica Stitch n’ Bitch, and some complete strangers, and some in-betweens.
Then on Friday, we went to see something that I’ve never seen except on TV – the Giant Sequioas. All I could say was “Wow”. To see something that has been alive for over 3000 years is pretty awe-inspiring. It makes you wonder how anyone could see this bit of nature and not want to do everything possible to protect it.
Husband included for scale.
More crazy heat, plus the 7000 ft elevation + my asthma left me a little woozy up there. I lost my cable needle somewhere between the car and the room, so I had to cable with the clip of a pencil. I’ve made more progress on Eris, and am only a few rows from starting the hem cables. So maybe a couple more weeks to finally finish it. It was just so hot!
Today, my husband informed me…
You live in a David Byrne universe. You should write a book. Maybe then people could understand you.
Ok.
Eris cardigan progress
As I mentioned yesterday, I picked up Eris, a cardigan that I started, gosh, over a year ago. This is a few rows past where I left off:
I love the pattern, it’s amazingly well written and so detailed I don’t know how anyone could mess it up. I went through the forty pages with a highlighter for everything I need to do, and as I go along, I highlight each step that I’ve completed. It was a breeze to see where I left off in the pattern and pick it up right away.
The yarn though – it’s bothering my allergies a little. It’s a heathered yarn, Elann’s Peruvian Aran. It’s got these red threads running through it that are a little stiff, and they itch me a little. My eyes start to water after an hour or so. I have to take an antihistamine to keep my eyes from running and I want to scratch my skin.
I know it will be okay after I wash and block the sweater, because I did that with my swatches (the ton of swatches I made) and they were a lot smoother and comfortable after the bath. But now, eh.
This is where I left off on Friday. I did a lot more on Sunday during the trip to the Lavender Fields. I think I’ll be able to finish this if I bring it with me on vacation next week.
Heirloom Lace Jacket – almost done sleeve one
I really got into the rhythm of the pattern last week and made some real progress.
I had put it down for a while while I worked on the Jaywalker socks and swatched for another cardigan that I have been mulling over for a while in my brain. In fact, I hadn’t been knitting for a while at home, I was playing with new toys, racing my husband on XBOX, reading a book or three, and just wasn’t feeling it.
But a few weeks ago, I picked it back up again and really cranked along and got to the top of the sleeve, all 18″ of it, and bound off on each side and started the shaping. I followed the directions, and suddenly I was done! But it didn’t make sense. I got out my calculator and did a little math and realized it really didn’t make sense. So I put it down for a bit and wrote to the yahoo group for White Lies Designs, hoping someone had an update version of the pattern that had the correct calculations.
I waited for a few days and didn’t hear anything, so I finally wrote to the designer directly and appealed for help. I bought the pattern back in 2003 or so, and she agreed that there had been a few corrections since then. She sent me the corrections and now I can get back on my way.
But meanwhile, while I was waiting, I was in such a knitty mood after signing up in Ravelry and putting in my done/half-done/dreams of projects, that I spied another member’s Eris cardigan and decided to pick that up. I’ll show some of that tomorrow, as I’ve been cruising along on that sweater, and since it’s with Aran weight it’ll be done in no time!
Meanwhile, take a gander at the lace and edging on the Heirloom Lace Jacket. I love the color, the yarn, the lace, I am having a hard time deciding between the two patterns.
Smell me something good!
My husband and I went on a little field trip today down to Valley Center, CA to the Lavender Fields.
It was a small farm at the end of a dirt road with a number of different varieties of lavender. My favorite is this one – Lavendula x intermedia cv. Provence Lavender.
It has wonderful long stalks that you can use to make wands. I’m going to try and get some of these for my backyard. Right now we only have a single plant, and it’s Spanish Lavender, so I want to try a few other varieties, especially this one.
I learned to make this wand today; pretty good for a first-timer, eh? It was quite easy. If we lived closer to the farm, I would have bought a bundle of flowers but I was afraid they would dry out too soon on the way home, and they need to be pretty flexible to make the wands without breaking the stems. I’ll just have to grow my own.
At the entrance to the building where I made the wand, there was a woman spinning some wool, and so I stepped inside the “Wool Cottage” and picked up a couple of skeins of wool. It smells so good!
We only stayed about an hour, and I get the feeling they were a bit overwhelmed by the number of people that showed up because we were there only an hour after they opened, and the lemonade stand was sold out! They must have done quite well based on the number of people there and the lines in the stores. We also got some lavender infused honey. It looked like they weren’t affected by CCD, as there were tons of bees, the plants were humming with them.
It was worth the trip, I think if I can’t get a few plants going myself, we’ll have to go back next summer and plan ahead so I can get a few bundles of flowers and have plenty to make more wands to stash in my stash!
