Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Optimism Reigns...thank goodness!

Still slogging away on this blanket. I created this small strip of blocks to fill a horizontal space in the blanket.

Sewed in ends and then did borders and added background to the edges; after taking last picture, I saw that it was still a bit too wide for the space.
Often it takes getting far away from it (taking a picture) to see what has to be done; I have seamed this in such a way that it is very easy to undo a seam, and remove some rows of stitches.
Anyway, here it is, and I will take another picture in a day or so to show even more progress. When I contemplate this project, I am amazed that I have not grown really tired of it, or stopped altogether. But I do love the colors, am enjoying the continuing process of creation, and am eager to see how it turns out!
My next decision is about the border color; I want to put a border around the whole thing. It is not going to be white, as that will show soil easily. Beyond that, I just don't know...yet. :)
Beth

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Still Making Progress

I have seamed the top, down the sides, and across the bottom, with the exception of the middle bottom. I think that there will be some adjusting to do all along the way, and I don't want to lock myself in to a certain perimeter right now.
Above, there is a vertical space between two rectangles. It is small enough that I decided to fill in with background color. I picked up stitches, knitted garter stitch rows, using what I learned in entrelac to make connections at the top end. Below, you can see the space (one turn to the left from above picture) again, with the newly knitted portion ready to be seamed.

This entire blanket is taking this sort of detailed attention as I do the seaming. Currently, I am working on the other space that is visible in the top picture, just above the Courthouse Steps (emerald/white) block. I made a tiny log cabin rectangle and filled in the small space to the left of the Courthouse Steps a couple of days ago. I am loving the work! I have patience I didn't know I had, and am gratified that my brain is able to figure out these details. It's important to remember that these blocks are all knitted randomly, with no attention given to number of stitches or size. So placement is crucial, and a great deal of filling in is a given.
Maybe I will have a bit more to show you after the feast; I hope you each have a wonderful Thanksgiving!
Beth

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Oops!

After an enthusiastic couple of weeks, I bogged down again. Maybe it's just the size of the project. However, thinking time is also important.

After creating a few more rectangles (pseudo Courthouse Steps and Baby Moderne) to go with the others, I layed them all out again.


The picure below is the latest, and the one I will most likely go with. (I know it is difficult to really see because it's placed atop another quilt.)


I have made many washcloths and bibs in the meantime, and have begun working on my little linen hand towel again. This fall weather we are having is causing me to gain motivation once more, and I feel another burst of energy will soon be directed to completing the last few rectangles needed (see left foreground of picture above).


Does fall weather inspire you? I hope so!

Beth

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Ravelympics


Well, something had to get me off my lazy summer duff and working to complete this blanket! Just in time, Ravelry came through and inspired me to give it a go. I have entered this project into the WIP Wrestling group of Ravelympics; and believe me, it's wrestling I will have to do. The goal is to finish the blanket by the end of the closing ceremony in Beijing.

So, I am currently working to surround each log cabin rectangle with "background" color. The stitches remain live, with white cotton yarn pulled through in place of the needles. When I finish this stack of remaining rectangles, determination of their placement will begin. Only after that step will I know what still needs to be created in the way of rectangles to complete the blanket. And then, of course, the daunting task of seaming!

If you have WIPs that you want to finish, consider knitting along! I'd love to have your company!

Beth

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Growing Pains

In an attempt to learn how much blanket I have, I layed the pieces on the dining table. It will be easy to put them together in a horizontal/vertical fashion, the most common way one would piece a blanket. On the other hand, I am considering doing it on the diagonal; this would involve more thinking.
As you can see, each block is unique; for me, this is the fun; I have been unable to stick to a pattern of repeats, of sameness. However, when I find the work of others interesting or wonderful, it is precisely because they have had the perseverance it takes to repeat colors and patterns; the effects are visually stunning.
Several blocks are still in the making, and most have yet to be edged with the three rows of what will be the "background" color. I am wearing a brace on my wrist - the carpel tunnel threat keeps me from knitting right now - but I will be back at it shortly.

Beth

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Still Working on the Family Blanket

After working on Ryan's name on his blanket, I learned a lot! That for intarsia with garter stitch, work the stitch change first on the right side, work it with the same color when you come to it, on the wrong side. This isn't at all what one can do in stockinette. Anyway, I tried what my brain had figured out, above, and here is the finished rectangle, front and back.
It has become a center rectangle in what will become a larger block. When I have completed the blocks, I will give each a border of 3 rows of garter stitch, leave the stitches live (using white cotton through to hold them) and later do a three-needle bindoff to join them.
The problem then will become one of creating blocks of the right dimensions to complete the blanket, once all these have been joined. As you can see by the two above, each block is different (have I had fun!) and therefore, because I am joining them irregularly, there will be odd spaces here and there at blanket's edge. Still have not completely solved that yet; when I do, you'll know!
Beth

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Basketweave Baby Blanket


In an attempt to recreate a bit of my original blog, this little blanket is, for me, a logical first project for this new space. It was my most ambitious project, in some ways. I began what I termed "the blanket" when my son and his wife announced her pregnancy. This would be my first grandchild. My brother ran to the Yarn Barn in Lawrence KS for the pattern I wanted, and mailed it express! I was certain I would be able to create the "perfect" blanket for this obviously "perfect" baby! Here is the way I described my beginnings, in my blog dated Sept 1, 2007, titled Finally Loving It:


One hundred fifty one stitches were cast on for this little blanket. You may have used this wonderful yarn: Debbie Bliss Baby Cashmerino. I selected this color for my first grandbaby, and bought 10 balls of it online - a nice savings of about $2 per ball when purchased in quantity. I had already selected a pattern. I saw a lovely one from Oat Couture and persuaded my brother to purchase it in a town near his home and mail it to me. I was in such a hurry to get started! I had been waiting for what seemed to me an eternityto become a grandmother, and now it was happening!


I started the Prairie Blanket during a time we had family visiting; I knitted in the living room while trying to participate in relaxed conversation. For me, knitting and counting and trying to keep my eye on the correct line of pattern instructions, along with conversation and a glass of wine just didn't mix. A few days later, I frogged it, and began again, with the same result. So I put it away.



When I picked it up again after several weeks, I realized I needed a new pattern, and the search was on once more. I found a pretty blanket in Debbie Bliss's Simply Baby- you can see it on the cover. I thought, "I can do this, but without the colored intarsia pictures." This little blanket has a pretty moss stitch border and is divided into several panels. Some have colored pictures and some have hearts. So I determined that I would make the blanket with moss stitch hearts in every other square - sort of a checkerboard pattern. I began by reading the pattern carefully and then transferring the heart pattern to a piece of graph paper. "Piece of cake!" I thought. "This is going to be fun!"


Well, it wasn't! After a dozen rows into the heart pattern, I gave up. Just too much counting, too frequent stopping. The fine yarn has a little stretch to it, and the addi turbos are really slick. I was gripping and the yarn was slipping, and counting was painful, and keeping my place on both sides of the blanket, and going from left to right on the pattern ,and then from right to left....well, I just wasn't ready for that. I knew I would need complete quiet to work on this blanket; this project should be enjoyable, fun...and it was not.


Another frogging followed and I wrapped the yarn carefully around the ball. Picking up works in progress occupied my hands for a while. I even completed another little blanket I had started with a chunky yarn and worked in Basketweave pattern (page 16 in Barbara Walkers Treasury of Knitting Patterns).





I'm not certain just what it is about this pattern, but I really love it! It looks somewhat complicated but is really isn't; it evokes carefree country living, casualness and love...well... maybe that's going a bit far.



It looks soft, and it is soft; dozens of little pillows will trap the warmth and keep baby cozy. That's one of the benefits of this pattern over one that is lace, for example, or just flat stockinette or garter stitch. I was pleased to finish this blue one, and tucked it into the drawer with fragrant lavender to wait for the day when it would be wrapped and given away. I closed the drawer with satisfaction and it was then that I knew what I wanted to do with my very special baby blanket.

So you can see all the little tiny yellow "pillows" in the pictures of the blankets. I have passed the point in this yellow one where I gave up on the previous patterns. Finally I am on the right track; finally it feels right, finally it is moving along as I know it should. And finally, I am loving every minute of it!


Then came trouble! I discovered a mistake several rows down! Here is what I wrote on September 30, 2007: By Human Hands:


"I am still working on the yellow Baby Cashmerino blanket; only realized a week ago that the baby is more than half-way to birth, but the blanket is not! I wrestled (and must be still wrestling) with a problem of what to do with a mistake I discovered. I was four or five rows beyond a place in the pattern where I transposed the 5 purl and 3 knit stitches. So the little bump that should have been, was about half, where the purls changed to knits. How I missed it...well who knows?



However, in Book 2: The Purl Stitch by Sally Melville, photos near the back show in wonderfully clear detail what one can do when you discover your mistake. "If a stitch was purled when it should have been knit, discovered many rows later," is the headline over photographs of a mistake being corrected, with directions below. Additionally, the same tutorial is on the opposite page for a stitch knit when it should have been purled. So the information was available for me to make a correction in this little blanket.


Of course, I could also unknit it all, back to the mistake, and begin again from there; this is an unpleasant prospect. I could run a piece of contrasting yarn through the row below the mistake, and then just unravel it; something I have not done before. The reasons for my hesitation about this correction are as follows: the yarn is particularly delicate and I don't want to harm it with overworking it. The yarn is also very elastic! The stitches want to return to the ball from the needles so care is required.

After time and thought, I attempted a correction via the ladder method in the above book. Several rows were involved, several stitches. I am a novice when it comes to this sort of thing, and was apprehensive about making a bigger mess than what I already had. When I had done what I thought was necessary, I found it was still not just right. In the picture above, the mistake is in a shadowy bump in the upper right quadrant. So I put it all away and have taken some time to think, again.

I have, at this point, concluded that the small mistake that remains is not worth the effort or angst to correct. Now...I imagine some of you will really be in an uproar about this. But I am not perfect, and the blanket is only about 1/6th complete; the chances that I will make another mistake are fairly great. After all, I knit in a 3-cat house and enjoy watching B&W movies while I knit. I also take phone calls, run up and down stairs to change loads in washer and dryer, eat chocolates, etc., while I am knitting.

You are familiar with the hang tags on your silk or linen clothing that warn you about slubs and other irregularities; the idea is that this is a natural part of the fabric or thread and you are not to think it is inferior just because it seems to have some strange lumps and bumps....so, I think I can take this just a bit further and say, this blanket is knit by human hands attached loosely to a human brain that is attached loosely to the world, etc. Any little irregularities you may think you see are to be considered a sign that this blanket was knitted by loving human hands and not touched by a machine at any period in its creation."

Below, you can see the edge: I slipped each stitch to give it a pretty edge, even though the stitch that followed was a purl stitch.

So, I was finally off and running. Size 3 needles and a pattern that called for counting and constant changes of the yarn from back to front and front to back kept me knitting on it for only brief periods as alertness was absolutely required. Enter Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday preparations: I wrote on January 3, 2008, Goodbye, 2007!

"Lurking in the back of my mind, all during the holiday preparation time, was the yellow baby blanket that begged to be completed. So finally I made the last push, and on January 1, 2008, I finished it! Hooray! Now I have a question for you. It is about 25" x 28" and seems pretty small to me. If it were blocked, it would be much larger. Blocking would flatten the pattern, and give inches to length and width. What do you think?"



Well, I thought about size and blocking and pattern bubbles for a few days. On January 4th, I made the decision to wash and block. When thinking ahead to the baby whose birth was just about a month away, it seemed only prudent to wash the blanket. And I really wanted to gain a few inches, if it were possible.


It was easy to wash and rinse; I rolled it in a couple of large bath towels and walked on the roll. Then I laid out clean towels on the bathroom floor (heated) and stretched out the blanket. I pinned the edges and corners. I turned on the heat lamp above; the combination of the heated floor, and the lamp above produced a dry, blocked blanket in about four hours. I was delighted.


The blocking smoothed out the pattern as predicted, and added four inches to the length and the same to the width. It was 30" x 32.5" after blocking.

January 16 We presented the blanket, and a little hat made with the same yarn, to the kids last night and they were very pleased. Now I can move on to their family blanket, and also plan to knit something new! Whew!

February 5 Gorgeous baby boy born to my son and his wife! Ryan James, 7 pounds, 6 ounces and 20.5 inches long! Proud Grammy here!



This blanket taught me a good deal of patience; perseverance brought me to the finish line; and, this is the first project I have blocked, so that is an additional achievement.

Beth

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

My Ravelry Connection




Soon I will begin posting pictures, descriptions, tutorials, etc. of my projects currently on Ravelry. These are now on the original blog which I can no longer access because of a really dumb mistake!


I will be able to link projects to this site; the process will take some time, and be really tedious. However, I believe I am up to it...just need some time to get organized, get my thoughts together.
Optimism reigns!


Beth

Monday, June 16, 2008

A Knitting-Only Place??


This is a little face cloth, using a fine white cotton (held up to the light, here) and the Mason*Dixon Knitting Ballband pattern. It's going to be very nice!

Between Ravelry, another blog, a lost blog and this, I think I need to make some decisions! Meanwhile, see my things here. Thanks! Beth