May 2008

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I am sorry to say this project is for a family member:

Hat_2008May28_ChemoCap_Olive

Pattern: Knit Chemo Cap and Scarf by Berroco, Inc.
Yarn: nearly 1 skein Berroco Chinchilla, 100% rayon, color 5567 (Note: the pattern states 2 skeins, but you need only 1 for the hat. The other skein is for the scarf in the pattern.)
Needles: size 9
Size: 19″ around and 7.5″ tall
Started 5/27/2008 and finished 5/28/2008

The yarn took over a week to get here and I felt guilty about the delay, especially as the recipient had gone hat-shopping recently and it was a bust, and I finally had something I knew I could do that would be useful to her. Seven local yarn shops, and none of them carry it. The yarn arrived Tuesday and I swatched and cast on that night, then knitted the whole thing save the bind-off round on the bus yesterday. I mailed it off to her this morning. I hope it fits. She is doing pretty well, but the circumstances still mean she will need a hat (or a few hats) for a while yet.

While I wait for her to receive hat #1 and comment on its fit, I put in some work on re-knitting Mr. MmmYarn’s socks. Sock #1 is nearing the toe, then I need to unravel sock #2. I won’t bore you with photos as they look nearly exactly the same as they did a few days ago when you last saw them.

No dice

Nope. Not going to happen.

Socks_2008May26_JitterBug_RailwayStitch_blue_WIP

The lower sock in this photo is done but not grafted. The upper sock is short 12 rounds of yarn. Mr. MmmYarn first said to go ahead and unravel just one, having one sock’s leg shorter than the other, but once I showed him how much 12 rounds is he agreed that I wasn’t completely nuts for wanting to unravel them both back to the leg, then back 6 rounds each at that point. Which is what I did. I do have a perfectionist streak in me so I would have unraveled anyway, but it’s nice to know my husband doesn’t think I’m a few skeins short of a sweater.

No moth sightings today or yesterday, but this post scared me. It might be time for a stash toss.

While paging through A Treasury of Knitting Patterns by Barbara Walker, this rib stitch caught my eye as a good possibility for a scarf. I found some green alpaca yarn in the stash and swatched until I got a width I liked. I added a one-stitch selvedge in garter stitch to frame the pattern. This is a shade of green I can’t wear but like to look at, making the knitting go quickly.

The pattern for this scarf is available as a free PDF file in the sidebar under the Free Pattern header.

Scarf_2008May18_Little_Shell_Rib

Pattern: own - available on the Free Patterns page (see link in sidebar)
Yarn: 3 skeins Misti Alpaca Worsted, 100% baby alpaca, color 7238
Needles: size 7
Size: 5″ x 55″
Started 5/9/2008 and finished 5/18/2008

Scarf_2008May18_Little_Shell_Rib_detail 

Mr. MmmYarn filmed me making the P1 K1 P1 into the same stitch since I could not find an existing one online. This is my very first YouTube upload. Bloglines readers, there is a video embedded here (you need to click on the post’s title to view this post outside Bloglines and see the video).

I knew going into making these socks that JitterBug’s yardage was a wee bit short for socks, so I made the legs a little shorter than usual. It looks as though I may not have made them short enough:

Socks_2008May25_JitterBug_RailwayStitch_blue_WIP

The foot on each sock needs about another half an inch before I start the toe. And that little pile of yarn is all that’s left. Tomorrow I will alternate knitting a few rounds on each sock so I can determine how many rounds of the leg to unravel when I unravel all the way back past the heels. At least this will give me bus knitting for the week.

In scary fiber news, I have seen a few moths (!) fluttering in the room the computer is in, the same room that holds all my spinning fiber and a few of my finished felted bags. Now, the moths don’t hold still long enough for me to identify them as wool/clothes moths and a few moths did come out of the basil plant I bought, so I’m hoping they’re some sort of plant moth. But that may be delusional thinking.

Socks for Mr. MmmYarn are this week’s commute project. He likes his socks blue. And not just blue, but BLUE! JitterBug was the bluest yarn I could find at Stitches West this year:

Sock_2008May19_Jitterbug_RailwayStitch_blue

The pattern is the Gentleman’s Sock in Railway Stitch from Knitting Vintage Socks by Nancy Bush. The beauty of the stitch pattern doesn’t quite show up in this yarn but it’s more interesting that the usual K2, P2 sock cuff I do so I’m sticking with it.

Sock #2 is now at the same point this one was yesterday when I took the photo. I am knitting them at the same time, alternating socks every few inches, so I make the same modifications to each.

In other WIP news: I frogged the sleeves and most of the body of my Berroco Memoirs sweater Sunday and now I’m waiting for a day when I’m not so tired to interpret the chicken scratch that serves as my notes and figure out how to fix the armhole problem. The green alpaca scarf is blocking tonight.

Too hot

While it has cooled to a mere 78 degrees outside, inside the apartment it is still 91 degrees after more than 2 hours of running fans with the windows open. My alpaca scarf knitting project and merino sliver spinning project both sit here on my desk, but I cannot work on them today. Much, much too hot to do anything wooly, or anything cotton-y, for that matter. San Francisco doesn’t have many heat waves, but when it does, it’s a doozy. I think I’ll go read the Yarn Harlot’s new book tonight while I fan myself. What a delicate flower I have become.

With the big spinning project done, I can get on with some smaller ones. I have a kind of grab bag of 1 ounce each of various wools and picked out English Wensleydale Longwool top the other night.

The fiber looked like this:

Spinning_2008May11_EnglishWensleydaleLongwoolTopB4

I spun it up into a pretty fine singles. This wool has a long staple length (I had to put my hands really far apart to split the bundle into two sections) and was easy to spin finely once my hands figured out the staple length. It felt course; I wouldn’t recommend it for next-to-the-skin wear. The wool is prettily shiny, though, and reminds me of mohair only it’s less, well, hairy.

Spinning_2008May11_EnglishWensleydaleLongwool

Fiber: English Wensleydale Longwool
Color: natural/undyed
Supplier: friend of a friend
Quantity: 1 ounce
Finished yarn: 1 skein, 2-ply, 89.8 yards, 18-19 wpi (= fingering)
Spun and plied at 15:1

I spun 3/4 of the fiber in one evening and the rest plus plying the next evening. What a welcome break after the 8 ounces of 4-ply! It went so fast. However, I wasn’t so even with this stuff as I have a lot of singles left on one bobbin. Or perhaps I was even, but the bundle of top wasn’t evenly distributed when I split it using my highly scientific method of finding the middle of a bunch of roving and pulling it into two pieces at that point. We bought a small kitchen scale over the weekend so I will weigh the next fiber I split.

I picked up the green fuzzy sweater again, the one I started months ago. The sleeves are great, the waist shaping is in the right place, and the armholes are… too low. Since I picked a top-down construction, this means I need to unravel my sleeves and the body back to past where I began the armholes and calculate again. You see where this is going, don’t you? This sweater will end up abandoned like the others that only need a bit of work, in favor of some tempting alpaca that wants to be a scarf or more colorful sock yarn. Sigh.

The 4-ply yarn is done at last. I started it toward the end of October and plowed through this past week to finish it. You saw the preview of my one big bobbin of 4-ply the other day:

Spinning_2008May7_Merino_TussahSilk_Red

I know it doesn’t look like much, just one bobbin, but that really is a BIG bobbin. Next to the regular bobbin it is enormous. It holds the contents of 4 normal bobbins:

Bobbins

This was a long process. Spinning went on hiatus for a while during the colder months because it was really too cold to spin in the apartment. I couldn’t keep my hands warm enough, plus it’s hard to wrap up in a blanket up to the shoulders when you’re at the wheel.

I ended up with 421 yards. Lest you think that doesn’t sound like much for a 6-month span of spinning, remember it’s 4 plies. That’s 4 x 421 yards = 1684 yards, enough to cover the length of 16.84 football fields. There are also two smaller hanks, detailed below.

I am very pleased with how this yarn turned out:

Spinning_2008May7_Merino_Tussah_Red1

Fiber: 70% merino wool, 30% Tussah silk
Colorway: Red
Supplier: Carolina Homespun
Quantity: 8 ounces
Finished yarn: 1 skein, 4-ply, 421 yards, 10.5 wpi (= worsted weight)
Spun at 15:1 and plied at 3:1

Penny included for scale:

Spinning_2008May7_Merino_Tussah_Red2

Despite the long periods of time between bouts of spinning, the plies were relatively consistent. I held the 4 strands separately between the fingers on my left hand while plying. The one traveling between my thumb and forefinger was a little looser and thicker than the other three. I didn’t mark my bobbins so I don’t know if this was the first one, when I was still figuring out what I wanted to make, or my last one, when I was sick of the project and wanting it to end. However, having inconsistencies spread over 4 plies made for a more consistent yarn than when spread over 2 plies. You’re less likely to have two too-thick (or too-thin) bits line up with each other.

Plying was easy. Call me crazy, but it seemed I needed to treadle much, much less to twist the 4 singles around each other than I do when I ply 2 singles. Treadling speed when I went from 4 bobbins down to 3, then down to 2, was markedly different. I had to treadle much faster once I got down to 2 plies. Perhaps this is a spinning phenomenon I’m unaware of?

The bit of inconsistency between the 4 bobbins showed when I was finishing plying. After one bobbin ran out, I spun the remaining 3 bobbins as 3-ply and when another ran out, 2-ply. I have 33 yards of 3-ply at 15 wpi (= sport weight) and 25 yards of 2-ply at 18 wpi (= also sport weight):

Spinning_2008May7_Merino_Tussah_Red3

Apparently I don’t have a photo of this as fiber. It had great streaks of red and dark blue, lots of silvery grey, and big slubs of white silk that I left in as I spun. You can see the color streaks here and there in the finished yarn although it’s mostly well-blended.

By my reckoning, this project puts me in the ranks of intermediate spinners. I set out to make a 4-ply worsted weight and got it. When I was a beginner, I made lumpy, bumpy yarn with lots of character but no goal; I took what I got. I say an advanced spinner can make what she wants, be it smooth and thin or thick and slubby. I’m not at that point yet where I can make a character-filled yarn with purpose, so I consider myself intermediate.

In organizing things for Ravelry, I found the first stuff I ever spun, back in September 2000. It’s really coarse and the little bit of fiber I have left is nearly impossible to draft. I’m surprised I was able to spin it at all and even more surprised the instructor and shop owner sold it to me as perfect-for-a-beginner supplies. But here it is, my first yarn. It’s a lumpy 2-ply spun on a Louet drop spindle and wound between thumb and elbow (no niddy-noddy yet):

Spinning_2000Sep23_FirstYarn

The insructor had small quantities of various types of fiber to play with, so I picked out two colors of mohair and spun up a bit of that, too:

Spinning_2000Sep23_MohairExperiment

Ah, the memories.

The black sparkly scarf is done:

Scarf_2008May8_BlackFuzzy_w_Silver

Pattern: own (hardly a pattern: it’s plain old garter stitch)
Yarn: 2 skeins Crystal Palace Yarns Fizz Stardust, 86% polyester, 14% Lurex, color 3729
Needles: size 6
Size: 5.5″ x 56″
Started May 2 and finished May 8, 2008

A second scarf beckoned when I finished the black one and is well underway after two bus rides of swatching yesterday and some work on it last night. Mmm… green alpaca:

Scarf_2008May10_GreenAlpaca_LittleShell_WIP

I have been playing some more in Ravelry, admiring everyone’s projects and inputting mine. I decided not to attempt to catalogue my commercially-bought stash in there (gads, just photographing each skein would be a huge undertaking, never mind all the input) but I have been putting in my handspun so I can see it all in one place. It turns out I have more handspun than I thought.

After I started the black fuzzy scarf the other day I got worried I might run out of yarn during the commute and started a new project two days into it so I’d have a second traveling project to fall back on. Do you know that feeling? It turns out I needn’t have worried. The hat is already done:  

Hat_2008May6_Green_w_rainbow_purl_ridge

Pattern: own
Yarn: 3/4 skein Mission Falls 1824 Wool, 100% merino superwash, color LJ-5 (dark green) and a little bit of Wolle Roedel Universal Superwash 2-Color, 100% superwash merino wool, color 2284
Needles: size 4
Size: Toddler
Started May 2, 2008 and finished May 4, 2008

This quick little knit used up an odd skein of green yarn I had in the basket. This is the first time I have used 1824 Wool. It felt great in my hands. It’s soft and squashy and I can see myself using it again to make a toddler sweater or two.

A few nights ago I spun the last of the 4 singles needed for my 4-ply yarn and last night I sucked it up and plied it all. It was not a good night for plying. I came home grouchy after fighting all day with inanimate objects that refuse to do my bidding (I work in I.T.), then circling around the neighborhood for more than 20 minutes to find a parking spot (street sweepers on Thursday morning mean you can’t park on that side of the street Wednesday night). However, watching those 4 singles turn into one cohesive yarn was a beautiful sight, both relaxing and amazing.

Plying took 2.75 hours. I haven’t measured yet but gauging by the crick in my neck and cramp in my left hand, I’d say I have over 250 yards. Luckily I have two tensioned kates that can each hold 3 bobbins. Here is my high-tech two-kate setup for plying 4 strands:

DualKateSetup

Notice the dining chair legs are exactly the right width to hold the Lendrum kate and the Lendrum kate does a great job holding the other one.  My kates limit me to 6 singles but considering I have only 4 gaps between fingers on my left hand (I run each singles through its own gap to prevent tangles) I don’t see myself attempting a 6-ply anytime soon. More details on this project, including glamor shot and final yardage, to follow.

How about a preview?

Spinning_2008May7_Merino_TussahSilk_Red

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