Archive for the ‘knitting’ Category

Book Review; Handy Top-Down Sweaters

Saturday, April 20th, 2013

A sweater knitting technique that is dear to my heart is the top-down, no-seams method. I’m also very fond of Ann Budd’s The Knitter’s Handy Book of Patterns and The Knitter’s Handy Book of Sweater Patterns books. So I was understandably ecstatic when her latest book The Knitter’s Handy Book of Top-Down Sweaters came out.

Ann Budd's The Handy Book of Top-Down Sweaters

Ann Budd’s The Handy Book of Top-Down Sweaters

These books give you the basic numbers you need to design your own sweater patterns in your own yarn and gauge. You take the charts for the basic sweater, mix and match the body style, sleeve style, neckline style, etc. Patch them all up together and then just knit following the tables she has already done all the math for – in your size and gauge! Since I have never followed a pattern (or recipe) exactly in my life; I’m always changing something, this is the perfect fit for me and knitters like me. She provides patterns for pullovers, cardigans, v-necks, crew necks, collars, raglan sleeves, round yokes, set-in sleeves, Saddle shoulders, and modified drop shoulders. And if you have her other books and a knack for cobbling you can add even more options.

 

Mom's Sweater - ripping

Mom’s Sweater – ripping

As I re-do Mom’s sweater, I will be using this book instead of the previously ill-fitting pattern.

Did I mention I love, love, love these books?

There is a caveat though – these books have a learning curve. If you can only follow patterns where one step immediately follows the next you will have to learn how to use these. My favorite way is to photocopy each page I need to make the garment and literally cut & paste them together to make a pattern. It works for me and then I have a single pattern to file away in my Finished Objects notebooks (along with a yarn sample, ball band and photograph when I’m feeling really organized) and a good reference for when I need to knit a similar sweater.

Which brings me to the digital version or the book’s “App”. Interweave really fell down on the job with the digital version. I purchased it first thinking it would be fab to have it on my iPad and always with me for handy pattern following or tweaking. I got excited when I saw the App because I assumed (we all know what happens then) it would have some really great features, making it easier to follow the patterns. Nope. I feel like they rushed this one out the door without thinking it through. As Seth Godin says “Skeumorphs = failure“, a skeumorph (in Seth’s definition) is a design element from an old thing added to a new one. In this case, the e-book/App is exactly like a printed book with fewer features. The only links are in the table of contents to the beginning of each chapter. Why publishers keep putting out e-books that have even less usefulness than the printed version is totally beyond me. There is an opportunity to shine here people – use it!

A useful e-book should have; the ability to send any page to an air printer and to e-mail it to yourself or your Dropbox account. The ability to highlight any word, phrase or paragraph as well as bookmark same. Every time it says “for such and such info see page 123″ that page number or phrase should be a link, no excuses, with a “return” button so you can go right back to the page you were on when you clicked on the link. And, for a knitting pattern book, it would be nice to have a place marker bar that runs under the line in the pattern or chart you are on as well as the ability to highlight the column for your size. Removable later, of course. I’ve thought about this for ten minutes and I came up with some stellar features. How long did the digital publisher think about it? Good question.

OK, so the last bit was a little rant. I can get worked up about books. I have no sympathy for an industry that cries about its demise when it’s hidebound (pun intended) refusal to keep up with the times is its own worst enemy. Don’t blame the internet or the readers if you won’t deliver what the readers need or want (due to cowardice, laziness or ignorance). I guess that was a big rant, but I have it off my chest for now  :)

In summary, the books are fabulous for the sweater designer who needs a spring-board. The print copies have a learning curve but are well worth the effort and eminently useable. The digital copies (as of this date) are useless.

Do you have any experience with the digital version and does it differ from mine? I’d love to hear the other side.

Deb H

Knitting Oopsies

Thursday, April 11th, 2013

Is oopsies even a word? No matter, all you knitters know what I mean. It’s the little voice in the back of your head that is saying “this won’t fit/work” that you ignore because you are in denial and don’t want to rip it out again. Case in point…

Mom's Cardigan

Mom’s Cardigan

A sweater for my Mom. She picked out a pattern that looks exactly like a sweater I knit for myself in the late 70′s. But the 70′s are back (in the fashion world, anyway) and she liked it. It was a simple bottom-up raglan, wrapped cardigan with a belt, mostly stockinette. I thought “well, the top-down, knit-it-all-in-one-piece girl can learn a new skill, I’ll do it on my knitting machine (used only for sock blanks and one child’s vest up to now). Easy-peasy” (insert maniacal cackling here).

Oy! Just finding my gauge turned into a Sherlock Holmes-esk adventure. How do you KM knitters keep from going mad? After 8 gauge swatches that involved an entire ball of yarn each I finally arrived at the magic combination that did the trick. Yes, Joan, I washed and blocked my swatches before measuring my gauge ;)

Then the adventure of getting it to come out in all the right shapes. I finally drew pattern pieces on muslin and pinned them to the blocking board according to the math of the pattern to get each piece just right. After several attempts and re-dos I had all the knitted pieces that matched the patterns. Whew! But the little voice in the back of my head started to get a little louder. “How can a sweater, that is a wrap cardigan, have the two fronts the same width as the back? Shouldn’t they be a bit wider for overlap?” I really didn’t want to do it over again at this int so I convinced myself that once it was sewn together it would be fine.

Mom's cardigan without the belt

Mom’s cardigan without the belt

Seaming. NOW I remember why I always knit in the round, I hate sewing up seams. Well, I’d had a lesson from Joan at Heritage Spinning & Weaving on doing just that. So I sewed up the side seams, nice straight edges that went together like a dream with the mattress stitch and looked fab! “I can do this” I thought. Then the raglan seams… seam it up, pick it out. Seam it up again, pick it out, rinse and repeat. A lot. I finally got them so that I could live with them but they weren’t perfect. Then the front bands had to be seamed on. Separately? Really? Again, the straight parts looked great, the curved section, not so much. And in the photos I see that I should have made it snugger around the back of the neck. After trying it on me that little voice was starting to shout, it was too snug in the front and in the shoulders, the pattern’s shaping had been too steep. I’d already put so many other projects on hold to wrestle this one into completion that I really didn’t have the heart to start over – again. Besides, it was supposed to be her Christmas present and I’d made her wait so long for it. And it might fit her even if it didn’t fit me. And… and… and…

I shipped it off. The minute it left my hands at the Post Office I regretted it. I knew it was wrong and I should have re-done it.

Mom loved the sweater, but it didn’t fit – too snug in the bust and shoulders. I begged her to send it back (she hated to make me re-do it) but I convinced her that it would bug me for the rest of my life if she didn’t let me have another go.

The yarn is Kathmandu Aran in a lovely tweedy beige and it is wonderful. I loved working with it and, of course (I am a button maker), even a wrap around needs a back-up system so it has a fused glass button, made by moi. :)

Fused glass button detail

Fused glass button detail

The funny thing is, once I talked to her and she agreed to send it back to me, I felt relief. I’m actually looking forward to re-knitting it and having it turn out right. I just needed a break from it and I’m ready to take it on again. The next go-round will be doing the same pattern but not following the same pattern (if you get my meaning). I will be knitting it by hand after getting the yarn ready for another go and using my favorite go-to book for my favorite method of making sweaters; Ann Budd’s The Knitter’s Handy Book of Top-Down Sweaters, I have the e-book version on my iPad so it is always with me – convenient. I am sure that I will knit it the second time, by hand, much faster than the first time by machine. Meanwhile, my KM is still my best friend for knitting sock blanks, my favorite way to dye sock yarn. And I have learned a ton while working my way through all these issues. In the end, I’m a process knitter. That means I knit because I enjoy the process and a finished project at the end is just the bonus. Ripping out and re-doing is not really that big of a deal  just got in the way of other projects. But I’ve got until Fall to get the Sweater Sequel to Mom. That gives me time to sneak in a few projects waiting for the finishing touches while I’m doing it.

Would you be willing to re-knit a sweater from start to finish several times to get it right?

Deb H

Obsessions

Tuesday, February 26th, 2013

Obsessions are a joy and a curse. You become obsessed with something, only to exclude something else. But obsessions are born from joy, the joy of making something so much that you ignore other things (besides housework), things that also give you joy.

Black and Beaded, Dragon Paws Fingerless Mitts

Black and Beaded, Dragon Paws Fingerless Mitts

My latest obsession that keeps me from doing other things? Knitting Dragon Paws.

This is the latest pair, they are off to their new home and I hope they are worn with a sense of fun and flirtation. That is, after all, what inspired their design.

Black & Beaded knit Dragon Paws Fingerless Mitts

Black & Beaded knit Dragon Paws Fingerless Mitts

Lessons learned on this pair – black is a b____ to knit on. Beads take forever to add to your knitting. It’s all worth it!  :-)

Deb H

Dragons on Fish

Thursday, December 6th, 2012

Since the publication of my knitting pattern “Dragon Paws“, ruffled and beaded hand warmers, by Heritage Fiber Pubs last spring, I have sold quite a few copies through their distributors, the yarn shop where I work, and my Etsy Shop. But, now I really feel like I’ve made it to the big time. Dragon Paws is now available on PATTERNFISH for instant digital download.

Dragon Paw Hand Warmer

Toasty warm in soft colors, with a touch of beading and elegance

It has been soooo heart warming to get such a positive response on these designs. I’ve made a fair few in the last year and they have done very well for me at our arts and crafts shows. We have just had the last one for the year and I have to admit, I’m looking forward to a period of knitting, weaving, and fusing just for me!  :o)

Deb H

Wandering And Being Thankful

Tuesday, November 20th, 2012

Yes, I have made you stare at the last post for far too long. For those who are curious, the answer was “yes”.

Let’s say I’ve had a very busy fall! My Mom came to visit for October, a treat since she doesn’t get back here that often. We hopped in my VW and took a week-long road trip to the Boston area to visit with a friend in Newburyport and my niece, who attends BU. We hit the peak of the leaf color, ate lobster and checked out a few yarns shops (big surprise there)! One of my favorite parts of the Northeastern part of the US is the little hidden treasures.

Hidden Alley Art in Newburyport, MA

Hidden Alley Art in Newburyport, MA

The drive to and from was occasioned by a stop at Niagara Falls. I can’t believe that as many times as I’ve lived in Michigan, I have never been. We remedied it by taking a good look from both sides – awesome!

Niagara Falls from the Canadian side

Niagara Falls from the Canadian side, the horseshoe end.

Hubby and I then vended the Winter Wonders Show in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan in November. It was a great show and a great time was had by all. My (finished) Dragon Paws were very well received and made me feel quite clever, indeed  ;o)

I updated the free knitting pattern, “My Man’s Scarf” if you are looking for a great unisex scarf to knit for a loved one.

But now, here in the US, it is Thanksgiving week and preparations are in high gear for a day of cooking and feasting! We Yanks usually reflect on the things we are grateful for during this time and I have to say, my list is very long! But, in a very timely fashion, I came across this paragraph in a favorite book and thought it appropriate to share. From Sir Terry Pratchett’s Disc World novel, “Thief Of Time”.

“The first words read by seekers of enlightenment in the secret, gong-banging, yeti-haunted, valleys near the hub of the world are read when they look into the Life of Wen the Eternally Surprised.

The first question they ask is: ‘Why was he eternally surprised?’

And they are told: ‘Wen considered the nature of time and understood that the universe is, instant by instant, re-created anew. Therefore, he understood, there is, in truth, no Past, only a memory of the Past. Blink our eyes, and the world you see next did not exist when you closed them. Therefore, he said, the only appropriate state of mind is surprise. The only appropriate state of heart is joy. The sky you see now, you have never seen before. The perfect moment is now. Be glad of it.”

If you have never read any of the Disc World books, you should. TP has a way of putting things in perspective. They are also fall-down hilarious.

Happy Thanksgiving!

Deb H