I wasn’t planning to go public with this, always trying to keep this blog all about the knitting, spinning, and other yarny activities, and not get too heavy on you all. Sometimes, though, writing can be helpful and I’m really not in the mood to play with yarn tonight. Mr. MmmYarn, truly the love and light of my life, passed away early this morning at Stanford Hospital after fighting leukemia since October 4, the night we got back from our last vacation together. He turned 33 last month and next month would have been our 3rd wedding anniversary. Matt, I love you dearly and I will miss you always.
You are currently browsing the monthly archive for May 2009.
Summer is nearly here and San Francisco had warm weather over the weekend to prove it. The heat Saturday meant I wasn’t up for knitting, plus knitting is one of the slower yarn-related activities as far as using up one’s stash is concerned (weaving goes far faster when dealing with worsted weight yarn), and we recently bought a small folding rigid heddle loom (the Schacht Flip) that begged to be tried out and Mr. MmmYarn insisted I try out first, so try it out I did:
Warping on uses a satisfying quantity of yarn and I’m getting rid of the sort of weird Dijon-mustard-yellow heather yarn and turning it into something very autumnal.
Sunday was Bay to Breakers and the temperatures were well into the 80s. I did not envy this person in the Santa suit in the least:
I hope Santa recovered with a cold beer at the end of his walk. Yesterday and today S.F. went back to its old foggy, chilly self.
The Net Duffel Bag has been done and photos taken for over a week now, but only today do I find the time to write about it.
Pattern: Net Duffel Bag by Vivian Høxbro, as published in Interweave Knits, Spring 2009
Yarn: 2.5 skeins Louet Euroflax fine / sport weight linen, 100% wet spun linen, color: Blue Heron
Needles: size 2
Started 4/9 and finished 5/3/2009
The major modification I made was to inadvertently overlook the needle change when beginning the handle. I’m glad I did. This made the handle far shorter than in the pattern yet I can easily sling it across my body. I can’t imagine how long the handle would be had I worked it on size 6 needles as recommended. Looking at the photo in the magazine on page 29, it looks like a shorter handle than mine, but look closely, and you see there is a knot back behind the model’s shoulder. So if you are making this and don’t want the bag to hang past your knees (and before washing it came to my knees and I’m 5′7″), continuing on with your smaller needles for the “band and handle” section is A-OK.
Now, unless you want to weave in a minimum of 144 ends (72 squares x 2 ends each) just for the body, I have a tip. Knit the base with the first skein of yarn, cutting the tail when the instructions tell you to except for square 16, which you can leave attached. I used a safety pin to hold the last stitch in place. Before continuing into tier 1, take your second skein of yarn and split it into sevenths, so you have 7 little balls of yarn. The remainder of ball #1 (still attached to square 16) is your 8th ball.
The next squares you work set up a pattern of eighths: the bag is constructed in eighths up through its 5 tiers and using 8 little balls will help minimize tails. When you’re done with the base you work squares 17 through 20. Start with a new little ball of yarn for each square that needs it (I used a rubber band on each ball not in use to keep it in check otherwise they got too unruly) and don’t cut the tails here, just hold the last stitch in place with a safety pin. You’ll find each ball in position to work another square when you get to its connecting square. Indeed, the instructions tell you not to cut the yarn after working the last stitch of a square once you get up into square 21, but nowhere do they tell you to make 8 little balls of yarn. I used skein #3 for the handle and have I’d guess a little more than half a skein left over.
Despite this little trick I still felt like I had a bajillion ends to weave in. Part of the reason was I worked half the first tier cutting the yarn after each square until it dawned on me that the bag was worked in eighths and so could have saved myself some weaving had I realized this and split skein #2 earlier on. The other reason was each skein also had several knots in it (say 4 or 5 EACH) so I still had lots to weave in.
I threw the finished bag into the washer and dryer with our regular laundry and it came out soft, pliable, and slightly smaller and tighter. I like it even better now. Also, since my last adventure with linen when I noticed the yarn got softer the more I unraveled and reknitted what I was doing, I worked these skeins about 10 minutes each in my hands, kneading and squeezing, before winding them into balls and starting this project. This made the linen easier to work with.
And one final thought: Euroflax isn’t exactly cheap. This is the most expensive tote bag I own. ![]()
Somehow I thought a new baby sweater would take me at least a few weeks. Sometimes they take me a few months. But not this time. On Tuesday night I swatched. By Friday I had finished the back of the sweater:
Tonight (Sunday), it’s already looking like this:
And it’s not like I spent huge blocks of time just knitting over the weekend. We had our usual weekend errands. We cooked and we made little honey cakes. We went for walks in the park both days. Yesterday I briefly re-created Old Faithful in our very own bathroom: why, oh why, did the instructions for the replacement toilet valve not say to turn off the water source before step 1? Or even in step 1? Thank goodness Mr. MmmYarn ran as fast as he did when I hollered; saved me some major mopping. And my repair worked just fine after the geyser ceased. I helped him warp on for a new scarf today. We called our moms (did you?). We went yarn shopping (in the interest of full disclosure… the trip was for Mr. MmmYarn so he could replenish his weaving stash, but I bought some too, of course). All of these little things add up to a big list of things we did, yet this weekend was easy and actually relaxing and the baby sweater, another little thing, just flowed into being. Perhaps it was the size 6 needles, huge compared to what I’ve been using recently, that made this one such a joy.
If the sweater is dry tomorrow, I can seam it and knit the collar. Yeehaw.
I had a productive weekend: the Happy Hippo is looking pretty darn happy and the Net Duffel Bag is done! The weather, however, is not cooperating so I am unable to get a glamour shot so you’ll have to make do with this:
This is my corner of the coffee table which usually holds various works in progress. I grafted the hippo’s head on last night but left the tail for today (why? no idea) and you can see her tutu still needs elastic. She’s reclining on a bag containing a bundle of brown fiber that I’m attempting to spin into a 2-ply laceweight and sitting on a lovely EZ book that is helping me contemplate the next baby sweater to make. But first a summer dress for the hippo. Then I’ll do the photo shoot and she can go on her way.
No real Yarn People here, but perhaps if there were any, they would be made with this yarn I spun recently that I’ve named “Leela and Fry”. Bright, isn’t it?
Fiber: 100% merino
Supplier: Carolina Homespun
Quantity: 8 ounces (4 ounces of each color)
Finished yarn:
- 1 skein of 4-ply at 11 wpi (= worsted), 401 yards
- 1 skein of 3-ply at 14 wpi (=double knitting), 30 yards
- 1 skein of 2-ply at 15 wpi (=sport), 37 yards
Spun at 15:1 and plied at 7:1
Started 7/30/2008 and finished 2/8/2009
More than 6 months for this? Really? Good gravy, I am slow! Not to mention waiting, ahem, nearly 3 months before getting it off the bobbins. But then again, I do not have a lot of spinning time since I don’t drag the wheel with me on the bus. Nor is there usually enough individual space to break out the drop spindle in one of those seats.
This was a plain merino, easy to draft and easy to spin. The only remarkable thing was that I made a 4-ply worsted, exactly as I intended. No, it’s not as even as if it were machine made (although I know that is physically possible as I have seen a lot of photographic evidence) but it works for me.
Extreme close up!












