Tuesday, August 19, 2008


Update - no knitting :(



Well, at least he called me this time.

Dad is back in the hospital.  He called me yesterday afternoon and asked me to come drive him in to the VA in Boston - which I did.  His blood pressure was so low I couldn’t believe he was still kicking.  But he’s tough and sounded better when I called this morning.

I really only have a couple of things to tell you.  For the time being, I’m not going to be posting regularly as the situation with dad seems to be gradually worsening and it’s likely I will be going back and forth to Boston on a regular basis for the immediate future.

Second, I have converted all the patterns on Ravelry (Ravelry name: Robbyn) to .pdf format and all are now available as free downloads from Ravelry.  The service provider for my blog has made some changes that make accessing the blog somewhat problematic for some folks at some times and I felt this was the best way to insure that those patterns remained available to those people who wanted them.  Any future patterns will be handled likewise so that even if the blog is funky, the patterns are obtainable.

I hope the world is treating you all well!

Posted by Robbyn on 08/19 at 09:04 AM
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Friday, August 15, 2008


How energy efficient would a cable car be?



I’ve been running dad around this week so not a lot of knitting has been done.  What knitting there has been has revolved around swatches like this…



Lattice cable swatch



And this…



Knots cable swatch



These are Elsebeth Lavold type cables though I don’t use the increase method she does.  These cable have been running riot in my imagination for a while now and I’m determined to find out what they want with me - since they are apparently not going to leave me alone :)

I’ve also been working on afghan pieces…



6 x 9 rectangles



...for an organization that collects pieces, makes afghans and sends them to wounded veterans.  If you’re interested, you can find out more about this at The Handmade Afghan Project.  These don’t take a lot of time and are a wonderful fill-in project for odd moments.



Knitting Chatter, Saturdays 8:00 PM to 11:00 PM EST



See the “Knitting Chatter” button on the side bar for more information.

Chat is definitely on for Saturday evening.  Come one, come all - it’s a blast :)

Hope you all have a splendid weekend!

Posted by Robbyn on 08/15 at 09:37 AM
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Tuesday, August 12, 2008


Here, Kitty, Kitty…



The scarf is finished and so I present the pattern for your pleasure and, hopefully warmth!  The lace is very simple and the work goes quickly and easily.  The little kitty face lace comes from the agile mind of Jennifer Fleury (of JenLa fame) who very kindly gave me permission to use it.  The catspaw lace is old.

As I am currently owned by two members of the feline persuasion and as I know knittendom has a great many cat lovers, the combining of the two lace patterns seemed just the thing.  As always, if you find any mistakes or if you have any difficulties with the pattern, please let me know - I will be more than happy to help.

Note: When uploaded, the number of stitches to cast on was off - considerably off :) Comes from having too many projects on my mind!  Anyway, it has been corrected.

Enjoy!

Here Kitty, Kitty...



First scarf picture



Materials

DK yarn - about 400 yards.  Yarn used for model was Peer Gynt.
Size 7 US (4.5 mm) needles, circular.
Size 9 US (5.25 mm), circular.

Finished (blocked) length - about 68”
Finished (blocked) width - about 8”

All stitches are slipped purlwise unless otherwise noted.

With the larger needle, cast on 22 stitches.  Transfer to the smaller needle to commence work.

Beginning triangles

First triangle

P2, turn.
K2, turn.
P3, turn.
K3, turn.
P4, turn.
K4, turn…

Continue this way, adding a stitch on each purl row until you have done a P11 row.  Do not turn.  Repeat procedure for second triangle.

First tier

Right side triangle

1.  K2, turn.
2.  P2, turn.
3.  Kfb (in the front and back of the first stitch - an increase), SSK, turn.
4.  Sl 1, P2, turn.
5.  Kfb, K1, SSK, turn.
6.  Sl1, P3, turn.
7, Kfb, K2, SSK, turn.
8.  Sl1, P4, turn…

Continue this way until you have completed a Kfb, K8, SSK.  Do not turn.

Cat Face Lace block

Pick up 11 stitches along the selvedge edge of next triangle (or unit)

1.  P11, (turn after each row except the last)
2.  K10, SSK (last stitch of block with first available stitch of next unit.)
3.  Sl1, P10.
4.  K10, SSK.
5.  Sl1, P10.
6.  K10, SSK.
7.  Sl1, P10.
8.  K3, yarn forward, sl5, yarn back (keep the float a little loose), K3.
9.  P10, P2tog
10.  K3, yarn forward, sl5, yarn back, K3.
11.  P10, P2tog
12.  K3, yarn forward, sl5, yarn back, K3.
13.  P4, M1, K3tog, M1, P3, P2tog.
14.  K5, K1 inserting the needle beneath the floats created on rows 8, 10 and 12, knitting the stitch and drawing it back out from under the floats before letting the old stitch drop off the needle, K4, SSK.
15.  Sl1, P10.
16.  K3, K2tog, yo, K1, yo, SSK, K2, SSK.
17.  Sl1, P10.
18.  K10, SSK.
19.  Sl1, P10.
20.  K10, SSK.
21.  Sl1, P10.



Second scarf picture



Left side triangle

Pick up 11 stitches along the selvedge edge of next triangle (or unit)

1.  P2tog, P9, turn.
2.  K10, turn.
3.  P2 tog, P8, turn.
4.  K9, turn.
5.  P2tog, P7, turn.
6.  K8, turn…

Continue this way until you have 2 stitches left, P2tog.  Transfer last stitch back on to left-hand needle.

Turn work.

Second Tier, Catspaw Lace Blocks

Having one stitch on left-hand needle, pick up 10 stitches along selvedge edge of next unit.

1.  K11, turn (turn after each row except the last).
2.  P10, P2tog.
3.  Sl1, K10.
4.  P10, P2tog.
5.  Sl1, K2, SSK, yo, K6.
6.  P10, P2tog.
7.  Sl1, SSK, yo, K3, yo, K2tog, K3.
8.  P10, P2tog.
9.  Sl1, K1, SSK, yo, K1, yo, K2tog, K4.
10. P10, P2tog.
11. Sl1, K10.
12. P10, P2tog.
13. Sl1, K5, SSK, yo, K3.
14. P10, P2tog.
15. Sl1, K2, SSK, yo, K3, yo, K2tog, K1.
16. P10, P2tog.
17. Sl1, K3, SSK, yo, K1, K2tog, K2.
18. P10, P2tog.
19. Sl1, K10.
20. Sl1, K10.
21. Sl1, K10.
22. P10, P2tog.

Pick up 11 stitches along selvedge edge of next unit.

Repeat procedure for second block.

Turn work.

Alternate Tiers 1 and 2 for length of scarf, ending with Tier 1 and having worked Teir 1 fourteen times.

Ending Triangles

Pick up 11 stitches along selvedge edge of next unit.

1.  K11, turn (turn every row but the last).
2.  P2tog, P8, P2tog.
3.  Sl1, K9.
4.  P2tog, P7, P2tog.
5.  Sl1, K8.
6.  P2tog, P6, P2tog.
7.  Sl1, K7.
8.  P2tog, P5, P2tog.
9.  Sl1, K6.
10. P2tog, P4, P2tog.
11. Sl1, K5.
12. P2tog, P3, P2tog.
13. Sl1, K4.
14. P2tog, P2, P2tog.
15. Sl1, K3.
16. P2tog, P1, P2tog.
17. Sl1, K2.
18. P2tog twice.
19. Sl1, K1.
20. P1, P2tog.
21. K2.
22. P3tog.

Repeat procedure for second ending triangle.  End off and cut yarn, leaving a tail long enough to weave in securely.  Weave in ends and block as desired.



Third scarf picture



Oh yeah - the charts!


Face lace chart

Cat Face Lace Chart

Key to face lace chart

Key


Paw lace chart

Paw Lace Chart

Key to paw lace chart

Key




Notes:  The dimensions can be varied by using different weights of yarn and different needle sizes.  Sport weight on size 5 US (3.75 mm) needles would yeild something a bit more delicate while bulky yarn on size 11s US (8 mm) would give a heftier result.

I used Peer Gynt DK wool for this scarf because it’s what I had on hand.  However, this is a sturdy, rough-ish wool really intended for outer garments and is somewhat scratchy.  Something softer would be a better idea if this is going to go next to your skin - Knitpicks Merino Style is a nice soft yarn :)

Posted by Robbyn on 08/12 at 07:44 AM
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Friday, August 08, 2008


Little Boy Blue…



I finally was able to finish the baby blanket this week as the temps have been quite nice - low 70s and even in the 60s overnight.  There wasn’t much to finish up really, the end row of triangles (which constitutes the bind-off in entrelac) and the edging.  I had thought I wanted a border on this, but I’m not going to have time.  The birthday of the child this was made for is this weekend.



Blanket and toy



Instead, I tidied things up with a half-double crochet all around the blanket.  It neatens the edges a bit but isn’t at all fussy.  And, with only a single row worked, it doesn’t separate itself out as something added on afterwards - I rather like that.  It looks integral :)



Blanket edge



The pattern is very simple - basically worked in the same way as the swatch in All Aboard the entrelac Express.  The blocks are 11 stitches wide and the tiers alternate between stockinette (Row 1: Knit, Row 2: Purl) and mistake rib (Row 1: *K1, P1*; end K1, Row 2: Purl).



Blanket edge



I cast 99 stitches onto size 8 US (5.00 mm) needles and just worked until the length was just a bit more than the width and the yarn used was Caron Simply Soft (worsted weight) - about 4 skeins.  The final measurements are approximately 40” x 49” - perhaps a little grand for a toddler, but he’ll grow into it :)

If anyone is interested in specific instructions for the blanket, let me know and I’ll get something written up.



Knitting Chatter, Saturdays 8:00 PM to 11:00 PM EST



See the “Knitting Chatter” button on the side bar for more information.

Drop in if you have time, bring your knitting and join the fun!

Have a wonderful weekend :)

Posted by Robbyn on 08/08 at 08:53 AM
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Tuesday, August 05, 2008


No end in sight…



The only problem I have with taking on a big and varied project, is that each discovery made, each nugget of information acquired and each new thing learned all open up tons of possibilities in addition to the ones you’re already considering.  Where do you draw the line - thus far and no farther!

I’m working on it :)

Remember the tree chart in this post?

Another possibility occurred to me…



Small trees chart



I will have to play with them both to see if one or the other works better in situ.  Right now I’m thinking a combination of both might be appealing!

The scarf - she grows :)



Entrelac scarf



I’m finishing up the third ball of yarn and I think another 100 yards after that should just about do the trick.

I realized the other day that Pop, the remaining gerbil of our original three is three years old.  At least that’s my estimate of her age based on her size and apparent age when we brought her home.  That’s ancient for a gerbil and, while she has slowed down a bit, she’s still doing quite well, climbing into my hand every night with eagerness and alacrity for her pumpkin seed :)



Elderly gerbil



Cocoa also gets a bit excited about her evening treat - in fact a couple of nights ago she was so excited she dropped the seed which promptly vanished in the bedding and cardboard confetti on the bottom of her tank.  Then she panicked.  So I got her another seed, of course.  I’m well trained, I am :)

Finally, the next incarnation popped into my noggin a couple of days ago.



Cabled block



This is certainly not the yarn for this project, but it was available last night when I wanted to see how things might look.  I’m not sure this is the cable either, frankly :) But definitely cabled blocks would provide a ton of possibilities and design ideas.  And, of course, there are a dozen things circling around in my head, clamoring for attention…

Jade got us up earlier this morning than we would have preferred by insisting she was starving and then, when that didn’t work…



Black cat observing gerbil tank



...tuning into kitty TV, channel 2 and trying to engage in the audience participation part of the program.

Hope you’re all having a good week!

Posted by Robbyn on 08/05 at 09:38 AM
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Friday, August 01, 2008


Here, Kitty, Kitty…



I worked on the second sock all Tuesday and Tuesday evening so that the pair would be done and ready to bring to my father on Wednesday morning.  I even asked Myria not to let me get out of the house without taking a picture of them.



2 x 2 rib sport weight socks



They came out reasonably well and I believe dad will like them.  I asked him to let me know if there were any problems - you know, the standard stuff: a little too snug, perhaps a hair too long, heel too deep or not deep enough.  I can adjust for any small issues in the next pair.  He’ll never tell me though, he’d think it was being ungrateful.

Oh and, of course, I walked out Wednesday morning and left them on the coffee table :) So he got them yesterday instead :)

I have also been working on a scarf!



Entrelac cat lace scarf



The salmon color in the photograph isn’t quite accurate - there isn’t as much orange in the real thing.  Though there might be eventually - I’m not entirely thrilled with this pink and have been wondering if adding some yellow or orange (or both) with a smidge of green (to keep the color from screaming!) would give me a coppery color.  The yarn is otherwise quite nice - Peer Gynt DK - a little scratchier than I’d prefer but that may change after washing.



Entrelac lace close up



The lace patterns are via Jennifer Fleury’s Cat’s Face Lace Socks.  She tells me that the paw lace pattern is quite old.  However, the face lace is entirely her creation and she has graciously given me permission to use it for a free pattern (already in the works).  Very clever knitter, that girl, not to mention nice!



Knitting Chatter, Saturdays 8:00 PM to 11:00 PM EST



See the “Knitting Chatter” button on the side bar for more information.

Chatters is on for Saturday evening.  Bring your knitting (crocheting, what-have-you, etc.) and join the fun.

And have a wonderful weekend!

Posted by Robbyn on 08/01 at 08:15 AM
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Tuesday, July 29, 2008


A glimmer of enlightenment…



In observing my crafting tendencies, Myria tells me that she thinks I am trying to follow the thread of the universe to see how it works and how it shapes everything and that my pursuit of that, whether through beading, crocheting or knitting, is deeply mathematical.

Initially this came as quite a surprise.  I didn’t think of myself as a math kind of person and, in fact, had done abysmally in highschool geometry and algebra.  But, over the weekend, I fell over something that helped me to understand what she was getting at.  And it was the consideration of these types of patterns, dishcloths which incorporate a clever use of knit and purl to create a picture, that sort of illuminated things for me.

First of all, I doubt that I could have come up with anything as nice as some of the patterns I’ve seen - from things as simple as an apple to as complex as an Army Eagle.  But I realized as I was looking over the patterns that they are really very simple.  It’s simply a matter of knowing whether a stitch is a knit or a purl (which, of course, the patterns tells you).  There’s no math to it - just counting.

On the other hand if you take a look at some lace stitch patterns, you’re dealing with math all over the place - increases countered by decreases, symmetry, balance, shifting stitches, half-drops and so forth - it all has to be worked out properly - pattern on pattern from row to row - in order for the final fabric to look pleasing to the eye.  And hopefully, not just pleasing, but drop-dead gorgeous :)

It’s the pattern of the working that does it for me - the actual rhythm of the needles doing this and that in a regular, sequenced fashion.  I am in no way minimizing the validity of the dishcloth patterns, the picture knit/purls - I certainly couldn’t have designed them and many of them are quite lovely.  But I would have a difficult time working them (or picture lace, for that matter) because there’s no pattern to the working; I wouldn’t be able to focus on it and would never be able to keep my place without a dozen markers and a clout over the head :)

But give me something complex, cables or lace where there’s a real rhythm to the working and it’s like dancing - and I’m happy as a clam :)

Just how happy is a clam, anyway?

I have decided to go forth on a rather large project that I’m not going to discuss much for now - except for pieces now and again.  I promise that if I actually manage to pull it off, you’ll be the first to know :) It’s a lot of work, but it’s also fun - in a breath-taking, wet-your-pants kind of way.  These are what I’m setting up now:



Charted lace



This is picture lace and I’m nervous about using it because of what I was talking about above.  Still, it is exactly what I want so I’ll just have to cultivate the focus and concentration I need to do it properly.

This, however:



Charted lace



...should be sheer joy to work :)



Goldie and chart



Goldie begs to differ :)

Posted by Robbyn on 07/29 at 08:49 AM
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