First are the socks, and by socks, I mean sock that I have been "working" on for Fiona for a while now.

They are based on this pattern. The yarn is the Fig and Plum colorway from Yarntini. I absolutely love the yarn, love, love, love it! Anyway, I turned the heel, it went so well. I knit the foot. I thought at one point, I wonder if this is long enough and it was precisely the right length. There were no ladders. No holes in the heel. I was so happy. I thought, I'll just figure out how many stitches there are. I checked gauge. I had apparently gone from knitting 8 stitches to the inch to 10 stitches to the inch by the time I got to the foot. I did some math, I had knit 5715 stitches. Then I thought, Fiona should try this on before I graft the toe. The foot is snug. Not tight, but snug and I think it would be uncomfortable. The foot will have to be reknit. I'm hoping that if I go from US size 0 (2mm) needles to US size 2 (2.75mm) that it will be ok. So knowing all of this, the sock has just been sitting. I don't have the heart right now to rip back all of those stitches and start the foot over. Picking up such small stitches is a nightmare to me.
Here is a little magic, the color changed just as I was doing the short rows for the heel.

Here is a photo of the scarf I am working on for my sick co-worker. It is going slowly and I feel terrible about it.

The yarn is Louisa Harding Kashmir Aran. The pattern sort of evolved through swatching. It is reversible. I will write it up one of these days.
I've been interested in spinning lately. You may remember that a coworker invited me over to her house to try out her spinning wheel. Since then I have wanted to try out my spindle again. We didn't really do well together the first time. So I pulled it out a couple of weeks ago and spun, and it/I worked. I think spinning with the wheel helped me understand. Anyway, I decided that I wanted to wind off what I had spun so I could practice plying sometime. Since I don't have a nøstepinde I looked around the house and used this instead.

The sad thing is the relatively well spun fiber is at the center of that little wad of yarn-to-be, so you will have to use your imagination.
For Christmas, I made a patchwork doll blanket for Fiona to go with a doll bed she received.

This is only the second time I've touched a sewing machine. Not bad, if I do say so myself. It is based on the tutorial at Happythings. It is backed with off-white chenille.
While reading Feministe I came across a post about this Face Transformer. It was really interesting seeing myself as an Afro-Carribean or West Asian. They also had a couple of artistic options.
Here I am as Botticelli might have painted me:

And here is a Modigliani me:

And the last picture is of little bird foot prints on my doorstep from when we had snow eons ago.

I love watching birds and have several feeders including one just to the side of my front door. This morning at breakfast we saw a Varied Thrush digging and pecking in the duff beneath the large firs we have in our backyard.
Wow, you have been crafty! So many nice things you've made.
ReplyDeleteIf the socks are really not that tight and only a little snug, I'd recommend not ripping them. Knitted socks tend to stretch quite a bit after you wear them a few times. :)
Those socks are gorgeous! Love the colors. I'm a converted "toe-up" sock knitter, though, if only because my Kitchener stitch is atrocious and has ruined at least 2 pairs of otherwise nicely knitted socks.
ReplyDeleteLove the scarf, too!
nice! Love the socks. They look comfy.
ReplyDelete