Showing posts with label Minnowknits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Minnowknits. Show all posts

Sunday, September 11, 2022

Kids’ Knits

DS, DDIL, and the kids travel a lot.  The kids are getting some fantastic experiences already in life, including a lot of farm stays.  Since this post I’ve been knitting on Alex’s Minnowknits Faux Fisherman pullover for Christmas.  I still need to do the neck edging and wet block it.


As little Evelyn’s Minnowknits hat was on hold, I searched for another pattern, again, hoping I could be a blind follower and not have to adjust stitch and row count because of gauge diffs.  When I found this Drops/Garnstudio pattern, I just had to knit it.  It will remind Evelyn of her times at the various farms she’s been to. 

I find knitting cables and texture stitches to be tedious sometimes, well, a LOT of times!  I’m really a color pattern knitter, it’s what my hands like to do best, so this hat was a nice reprieve from cabling, even though, once again, I had to adjust the pattern to fit my yarn and gauge.  The hat pattern didn’t come with mittens, but what is a hat without mittens?  So, I designed mittens to match.  As there’s just 32 sts in these wee mittens, I ran the color pattern around the palm as well as the back of the hand, instead of working a separate pattern for the palm.  One can’t get up a head of steam while changing patterns every 18 sts, especially while working a pictorial, like this one.




The yarns used were two Lamb’s Pride Worsted yarns, one Lanaloft Worsted, and two Cascade Yarns Ecological wool yarns - all heavy worsted wt, knit snugly on US 7’s.

The kids’ birthdays also flank Christmas, one in December, one in January, so more knitting is needed.  I’ll design a cabled cap and mittens in the same grey to match Alex’s pullover, and for Evelyn, another cute hat and mitten set.  Also a Drops/Garnstudio pattern - Warmhearted Hat.

But, no blind following for this design either!  It was designed as a tam, with increases then decreases to shape the tam.  I changed it to a regular hat, and changed the color patterns.  I must have re-charted this hat 6 times, before I got the balance of motif and color to please my eye. The hat is wet blocking and awaiting its pompom.

The Warmhearted Mittens that go with the hat has dice around the entire mitten, which I changed to stripes on half the mitten.  2-st patterns go much faster than pictorials!  With the thumbs at the sides, the mittens can be worn with the stripes on the back or on the palm - wearer’s choice.


They have tons of toys and art supplies, so the kids will be getting knits if and until they outgrow wearing things that Grandma (moi) makes.  If I’m lucky, and mindful of whatever trends they’ll be following as they grow up, I might be able to knit for them for a long time to come.  Fingers crossed!

Onward,
Dawn

Monday, August 15, 2022

Christmas in August

I always need a Plan.  Not a Deadline, mind you, just a plan.  At this point in life, ‘deadline’ is a dirty word. Who needs the stress?

I do, however, need my mind and my environment to be organized, or I feel overwhelmed and flounder in indecision and a lack of motivation.  It’s logical, as being motivated intimates a state of action, or near action, but if one doesn’t know what to take action upon, the action is stymied.  Energy flow is blocked.  It’s bad feng shui, for both the mind and the body!

So, as I’m back to feeling well enough to cook, clean, and climb stairs to do laundry, my natural inclination is to get back to work - knitting patterns, spinning, and weaving, as well as planning some home projects – sewing, organizing, getting in a few much needed things, and getting rid of the old tat and broken electronics and appliances.  

There’s a lot that needs doing!  And although I am feeling well enough, though still on the mend, I’ve learned (finally) not to over do.  Being organized and having a Plan of Action is crucial.  Hence, Christmas in August.  I’ve begun the knitting for the grandkids’ Christmas gifts now, instead of putting it off until November.

I don’t really have time right now to design things from scratch, as heaven knows, there’s a pile of half-finished designs and patterns sitting here waiting for me the past 2 years.  

So, I pulled out the kids’ pattern books that I have hoping to, just once, be able to follow someone else’s pattern, as EZ used to say, as a Blind Follower.  At least, that was the plan.  And we all know how the Universe laughs at plans!

I have 2 Minnowknits books, this one and this one, also Takle and Kolstad’s “Small Sweaters”, 3 Debbie Bliss books, and VK’s Kids issue from 2001. Not a lot of books, but enough to inspire.

I also pulled out my binder of sizing info – data I had collected over many years of designing.  Looking through all this data, however, made my head begin to swim.  It all wasn’t organized enough to be a quick reference.  

So, a Detour.  Spent an entire day (and will need to continue it another day) organizing all this info into charts – body measurement info, but also ease and sizing info, which is affected by yarn weight and stitch patterns.  This short detour is a necessary refreshing of the memory, as I’ve not been knitting for children often, just once a year.

But of course, all the patterns I like will need some (or a lot of!) reconfiguring. It’s always the way – I’ll like a particular stitch pattern or color chart being used, but don’t have the pattern’s given weight and style of yarn, or the pattern isn’t in the size I need.  I’m sure a lot of knitters are faced with this same scenario.  Most of the time, it is all easily enough remedied, so long as one doesn’t mind some math.

I’ve begun with this hat, for my granddaughter, who turns 3 in January. The hat was originally designed in a DK wt. yarn, and I’m using Lamb’s Pride Worsted which leans toward a heavy worsted weight, so I had to reconfigure the stitch counts and the stitch patterns, as well as the ear flap shaping.  The ear flaps took the most time and I’m still not sure about them.


The edges of the earflaps, front and back edges are also left plain in the pattern, which I don’t like, so I’ll be adding an edging.  And a hat needs matching mittens, so I’ll need to design them.

I’m still not sure I want to continue knitting this pattern in the yarn I have, so I ordered 16” and 24” Basix circulars in sizes 4, 5 and 6, in case I decide to rework it (or start something else) in a DK wt. yarn, likely Nature Spun Worsted, which, despite the name, really wants to be knit at a DK wt. gauge. 

I have plenty of circulars, but in larger sizes, and, as is usual, the price of my beloved Addi Turbos have risen quite a bit since I bought my circulars 25 ish years ago!  I don’t mind investing in tools, as I LOVE tools, but am not eager to spend $90 for 5 sets of circulars!

So, while the hat is on hold, I decided to knit this aran sweater for grandson, who turns 5 in December.  

In both of Jil Eaton’s Minnowknits books, there is the same cream-colored aran sweater, in a chunky gauge. I have more than enough Lanaloft Worsted in Manor Grey and Ash, and I decided on the grey. Again, despite the name, the LLW really wants to be knit at a heavy worsted wt, gauge.

Naturally, my gauge is a smidge snugger than the pattern’s, so more reconfiguring was needed.  But that was just the beginning of the needed adjustments. As I knit sweaters in the round, never pieced like in this pattern, this too had to be addressed.  The next thing to change was the direction of the cables on the left front and the left back, so that the cables face each other (mirror image), instead of all crossing in the same direction. I really like things to be balanced, which shows an attention to detail when creating a pattern, that enough thought and planning has gone into the design.

The last change I’m making is how often the 2/2 and 3/3 cables are crossed. The pattern has them both crossed every 8th row, which is rather loose for my taste, so I’m crossing the 2/2 cables on every 4th rnd and the 3/3 cables on every 6th rnd.

I could have just designed this sweater from scratch, for all the changes I’m needing to make, but it will be all the better for it!  

Grandson is said to be fussy about what he will wear, so I knit this aran pullover more in hope, than expectation, that he will like it enough to wear it!

Onward,
Dawn