I had to laugh this morning when I looked out the bedroom window into the back yard and saw this.
This little guy is sitting on a bird bath that used to sit in my garden. It got knocked down during one of the storms but he's patiently waiting for spring.
Knitting and more...spinning, beading, crochet, tatting, bobbin lace, tambour, watercolor....
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Monday, January 20, 2014
Fini
I love it when projects go like this one did.
Way back last year, early last year, I bought some fiber. It was a special deal from Ashland Bay that had a variety of unusual wool fibers, including "Portuguese" wool and Masham (a breed of sheep). I had some dark chocolate Shetland (another breed of sheep) in my stash already so that gave me a natural white (Portuguese), medium grayish brown (Masham), and dark brown (Shetland). Several years ago I'd used the Ashland Bay Apple Green to spin some yarn for mittens and a scarf and I loved the color. I thought that would be a great pop of color to go with the natural colors so I got some of that as well. Late last year on my trip to Maine, I got to go to Halcyon Yarns (one of my absolute favorite places in the universe) and while I was there I found a Merino (yet another sheep breed) mix of 3 shades of natural colors that you spin together and get a medium brown with good depth to it.
I started spinning a nice fluffy 2-ply yarn that after washing ended up much thicker than I expected. But I had a picture in my mind of what a Fair Isle sweater would look like using these yarns. Just a picture. But I realized that the yarn was really too chunky for a sweater and I spent much of my drive to my Mom's mulling over what to do. Lo and behold, I came across a knitting book in an antique mall that showed a cabled poncho using thick yarn and it hit me. That would be a perfect use for my lovely yarn.
I chose my needles and number of stitches to cast on (based on the cabled poncho pattern) and started out. Actually first of all, knit a swatch using all the colors and decided that was how I wanted to start off. And then I carried on. I decided that, because of the chunky yarn, I should use smaller motif designs. With my handy pattern dictionary at my side, I looked through, found a few that I liked, decided the order of them and I knit. Once I got to the next section and it seemed like it was time for another one, I chose and knit another one and so on.
Once I got to the shoulders, I wasn't really sure how to do the decreases so I just winged it and it came out perfectly. So how does one finish it off? With a wide fold-over pivot edged collar. The collar done like that made room for the button bands and finished it off just right (as did the heavy shell vintage buttons that I already had on hand - just right).