January Round-up

Well, here we are at the end of January and I’ve already stuffed one of my New Year’s resolutions: not to have more than three knitting projects on the go at any one time.

I was doing really well at first: I had an overdue baby blanket, a rectangular shawl that I cast on in December 2010 and I joined the Through The Loops Mystery Sock KAL. That’s three. Then during a post-Christmas knitterly meet-up, Ling of Socktopus threw me a skein of yarn that I’d been admiring but not dared to bring home with me and said that I could knit them a sample.

So I started that.

And then I felt the sudden urge to change my mind about my colour choices for a pair of colourwork mittens, which resulted in me having yarn that no longer had a purpose, so I decided that I needed a new hat.

A hat with what feels like a giant tassel.

Pattern: Wood Hollow Hat, by Kirsten Kapur (Through The Loops)
Yarn: Quince & Co. Lark in Winesap
Needles: 4.0mm

So even though I finished the hat, I still have four things on the go rather than three. And I’m about to cast on something else. It’s all gone a bit wrong, but I figured that maybe it’s okay, and it’s me being genuinely excited about knitting again. I fully aim to finish the overdue baby blanket before the end of February, though, so that should help clear my conscience… if I ever had one to begin with.

I did, however, finish spinning a bump of fibre. This braid here:

became this skein of yarn here:

Fibre: Spindlefrog Oatmeal BFL in Woodland
Specs: 4 oz, 130 yards, 11 wpi (DK weight)
Wheel setting: Spun at 1:13.7, plied at 1:9.5
Technique: worsted-spun, short forward draw

I pretty much threw this fibre into the wheel and waited to see what would happen. I’m currently in an odd love-indifferent relationship with spinning, where sometimes I’m happy doing it, and other times I sit there, staring at the singles on the bobbin, the fibre in my hand and genuinely think: “What is the point? It’s still crap.”

I know I can’t get better at spinning without actually, you know, spinning. But I constantly feel like I’m having to relearn a lot of things, and making the same mistakes despite all my trying. I’m probably overthinking it all, and I did find that the spinning was easier going when I had an audiobook to listen to, so I’m sure it will be better.

I thought just for fun I would do a post at the end of every month also rounding up the books I’ve read and the films I’ve watched. So for January:

Read: Full Dark, No Stars by Stephen King (from the library). I’ve always preferred his novellas and short stories, and this was a nice collection. I liked Fair Extension best, because it was simple, cheeky but horrific in its normality. 1922 I thought was the hardest to get through, but it was one of those stories where I kept checking how many more pages I had to go, not because I couldn’t wait for the story to end, but because I didn’t know how much more of the claustrophobic horror I could take before its conclusion. It’s that sort of good.

Still reading: Stories, edited by Neil Gaiman & Al Sarrantonio (Kindle). It’s my second read-through of Stories, though I never read the last story by Joe Hill, so while I can’t say anything about that one, I can safely say that my favourite stories in this collection are Gaiman’s The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains – there is a moment in this story where I had to exhale in satisfaction, because something that was at the beginning caught with something near the end – and A Life in Fictions by Kat Howard.

Songs of Love & Death, edited by George R. R. Martin & Gardner Dozois (hardback). I’ve only got through six of the sixteen stories so far, but it kicked off with Love Hurts, by Jim Butcher, set in the Dresden Files, so that was a great start. I really need to keep more short story collections around. These have been fun.

Watched: Thor, dir. Kenneth Branagh, 2010 (LoveFilm). We rang in the New Year with this, and it’s just ridiculous fun. It helps that Chris Hemsworth is rather nice to look at, and while that’s all well and good, I really want to see more of Tom Hiddleston. It tickles me that Kenneth Branagh directed this. Who knew he could come up with an Asgard that was so beautiful to look at that all Nick and I could say was, “Damn. We need a bigger screen for this.”

The Rock, dir. Michael Bay, 1996 (BBC1). I have a soft spot for this film. I don’t know what it is. Maybe it harks back to a time when daft action movies still had Don Simpson, and Michael Bay hadn’t got the idea that he might be the best thing since sliced bread. But I can quote this movie in too many places, and I own the soundtrack. I am not ashamed.

Four Lions, dir. Chris Morris, 2010 (LoveFilm Instant). A film is a great comedy about radical Islam when each and every time I laughed, I thought whatever God was in charge of this world would strike me dead. Within the first ten minutes Nick and I were quoting bits to each other and laughing like idiots. It’s bittersweet near the end, but as any good satire, it made me wonder about all the people out there who do think like Barry (Nigel Lindsay), or who are perfectly innocent like Waj (Kayvan Novak).

And there goes January.

FO: Montview

Just under three months later, it’s done.

I kind of finished it twice. I first finished it a week ago, and I was so excited about being able to wear it to the Knit Night North Christmas party I sewed on the snap closures and buttons as fast as I could and wore it. A few days later I undid all the closures and buttons and sewed them on better; the snaps are still so stiff that I worried that the fabric would pull, so I secured them better and I’m much happier with it now.

There is so much to love about this cardigan. Apart from the fact it’s my first ever garment, it’s also incredibly well-designed and well-instructed, even with the limited space that most knitting magazines give for patterns. This only cements, to me, the genius of Ruth’s patterns, and why I think everyone should be knitting her designs.

Where this pattern succeeds and others have failed to get me to make a garment is I think in the cabling. I can get addicted to cables, and I develop the mentality of ‘oh, just one more cross…’ very quickly. It also gives me something to chase after, which makes the going easier and quicker.

I started with the 43″ size, and then decreased to the 39″ to accommodate my more hippy figure, and it’s resulted in a longer garment as I did the decreases accordingly and didn’t try to do them quicker. I like it this way: hip-length things have always looked good on me, especially if it’s well-fitted. Which this garment is. It also gives the cardi a lovely drape, especially when I wear it unbuttoned.

Princess seams shape the body, the decreases and increases done on the wrong side, which is brilliant because you can’t see them, and also the reverse stocking stitch hides it all so well. The reverse stocking stitch background also gives a lovely platform on which the cables really pop out and make themselves known.

All the garter stitch details – the lower band, the cuffs, the button and neckband – are wonderfully squishy. Especially around the gorgeous collar. Garter stitch, folded over, is possibly the squishiest thing ever. The collar is shaped with short rows, and as a bonus, in garter stitch you don’t have to pick up all those wraps! You just keep going and you get a superb result.

I’d previously never seamed anything before, garment or not. Luckily, Ruth helpfully furnishes her blog with seaming tutorials which makes the job incredibly easy. She also dedicated an entire blogpost to this design, with handy tips and tricks. If every designer did this, we would all be fearless.

While this is my first garment, I will say that the construction has totally convinced me of seams. Yes, I know. I think working in the flat, certainly for a cardigan, means that you can divide up the work much more easily, and you know you can stop at the end of a row. I think I might have keeled over from sheer boredom if I’d had to knit for miles and miles round and round and round.

Seaming also gave me a break from the knitting. I got tired of knitting the buttonband at one point and decided to spend the rest of the day seaming up the sleeves, which was kind of therapeutic, in a weird sort of way. The break gave me the impetus to get on with the rest of the band, because it really meant that there wasn’t much more to do!

Setting the sleeves was a daunting prospect, but thanks to Ruth’s precise maths and my (luckily) good and exact gauge, there were no issues at all. Everything fit into place perfectly: no rucking, no tugging, no fixing. I could never have been more pleased.

I found the buttons at Loop, much to my relief. I didn’t really fancy having to go on a massive button-hunt. The warm black ceramic gives warmth to the colour of the cardi, and are light enough to not weigh down the band but still strong. Again, having a garter stitch band makes it easy to mark a straight line on which the buttons go. That and lots of coil-less safety pins.

The fabric is glorious. It was a sunny but very cold day today, but I didn’t feel the least bit chilly while getting these photos taken, especially considering how deep the cut of the cardi is. It’s great on its own and it layers very well under a coat.

I think the only bit that I wish I could have done better were the sleeves. They came out a little long, but then given what I said about the squishiness of folded-over garter stitch, it isn’t a massive issue. Plus the extra length keeps my hands warm.

I’m very proud of this project. Not just because I actually finished something so big in such good time, and not just because I’ve finally accomplished the one thing that has always eluded me, which was knitting an actual wearable object that wasn’t an accessory.

But I am so proud – so very unspeakably proud – to be able to call such a talented and brilliant designer my friend. Thank you, Ruth, for something so beautiful and so intuitive, and for being so inspiring and encouraging.

Pattern: Montview Cardigan, by Ruth Garcia-Alcantud (www.rockandpurl.com)
Yarn: Rowan Felted Tweed Aran in Dusty SH728
Needles: 5.0mm for the body, sleeves and bands, 5.5mm for casting on the lower band and casting off of the body, 6.0mm for casting on the cuffs and casting off the button and neckband. 

Montview: Nearly There…

It’s not been as quick as I had hoped, given my mad pace during the Rugby World Cup, but the Montview Cardigan is on the home stretch.

The body was done and blocked earlier this month. The whole thing took two days to dry but it was completely worth the wait. The fabric has softened beautifully and the yarn has bloomed, filling out all the little spaces where I did pick ups and so on. It took a few tries, but I seamed the shoulders up and after leaving it alone for a while I don’t think I’ve done too bad a job at my first ever shoulder seam.

About a week ago, I finished the sleeves and blocked them, too. They didn’t take long to dry at all, and are now all unpinned and folded, waiting for me to sit down to seam them up.

I’ve already picked up the buttonband – man, that’s a heck of a lot of stitches! – and done about an inch’s worth. A couple of evenings’ work and I should have that squared away, and this project has increased my confidence so much that I know that it will only take me a couple of hours to seam up the sleeves, and maybe a couple more to get the sleeves set in neatly into the armholes.

I’m stupidly excited about this project. It’s my first ever garment, which in itself involves a lot of firsts – seaming, shoulder joins, shaping, sleeve setting – and after trying it on sans buttonband and sleeves, it fits exceptionally well already.

It can only get better.

Making Monday: a Work-in-Progress

The Rugby World Cup 2011 started on Friday. I’ve been very excited about this, given that this is my first World Cup and my first chance to watch the New Zealand All Blacks play. There are loads of games I want to watch, but I’m largely focused on the Six Nations teams because I know them and I know which players are which, but I’m also watching NZ and Australia play to see what the fuss is about.

So far, New Zealand have not disappointed. Extra bonus point: they have quite a few cuties.

As the matches are all in the small hours of the morning, with the most sociable ones kicking off at 9:30 am, I’ve had to record a lot of matches. Which means a lot of catching up.

Which seems to suit my knitting.

Because on Thursday, the day before the start of the World Cup, I decided to cast on my Montview cardigan. This is my second attempt at a garment, the first long ripped out after only a couple of inches of round-and-round-dying-of-boredom stocking stitch. But I’m feeling pretty comfortable about this one, because I’m a little more experienced now, and also, the pattern is by the lovely Ruth.

And you, too, would be confident knitting this pattern, if you had a blogpost’s worth of advice, like she has provided here.

I swatched for it a while back, doing the proper thing and washing and blocking the swatch, because Rowan Felted Tweed does bloom beautifully, and that messes around with gauge a bit. I got the correct gauge on my second try with a 5.0mm needle, so I was all set.

I’m a slow knitter. Not only am I slow, but I’m also easily distracted. I put it down readily and go off and do something else. But this project seems to be different. This is likely because:

a) it’s Felted Tweed.
b) it has cables, and I’m the sort of person who goes, “Oh, just one more cross….”
c) I have a lot of rugby to watch.

Three days later, this is where I am:

Last night I had to make myself stop because I hadn’t realized I’d knitted so much that my left hand was starting to hurt.

The garter band was a bit of a beast, because it kept changing length every time I measured it. First it was too long, then I took out a few rows and it was too short. Eventually, I got to the nearest measurement and declared: Fuck it. It’ll sort itself out. And it has.

I’m starting with the third size to accommodate my hips, but decreasing to the second size to fit the rest of me properly. My extra decreases will make this a little longer than the pattern calls for, but I prefer it like that. Hip-length stuff always looks good on me, so I’m not going to fix what ain’t broke. At this current point I’ve knitted the required three inches of body after the garter band pick-up, and I’ve done four decreases out of the nine I need. And I’ve also reworked the math for how much I have to knit even before the increases accordingly.

I love cables. To me they’re visually easy to do; it’s only a matter of the number of stitches and which way you’re going. I’ve never done cables on a reverse stocking stitch background before, and it’s really making them pop. I can’t wait to see how they’ll look once it’s washed and blocked.

Now here’s the thing: the Rugby World Cup ends on October 23. I’ve knitted as much as this in three days of rugby viewing.

Might I have a finished cardi by then? That seems a little crazy. But I’m pretty sure I’ll at least have finished the body by then and working on the sleeves. I’ll have to block the body and sleeves separately because I won’t have enough room to block them all together. Still, this seems to be working up at – by my standards at least – quite a silly rate.

World-class rugby and excellent knitting. I’m in danger of being in a good mood for weeks.

FO: Hopscotch Socks

Oh yeah. I’m really bringing them on. And this isn’t the last FO you’ll see this week. Oh no.

(Not that I’m actually knitting like a demon. It’s just that it took me forever to get around to taking photos of my finished knitting. Which is silly, really.)

Long, long ago, but not quite in a galaxy far, far away, there was the Socktopus Sock Club, which began in Christmas 2007. Alice was as ever, the genius behind the idea that has carried on till presently – the club since 2010 renamed the Knit Love Club – where now she not only designs all the socks, but also dyes the yarn.

I was a member of the sock club from its inception, and now I get the pattern-only membership as – let’s face it – I’ve got plenty of yarn. But as I mentioned before, me being me, I’m a really slow knitter. That, or I’m easily distracted.

But this is a pattern from the first and original sock club, the fifth installation of the club in 2008.

Pattern: Hopscotch Socks, by Anna Bell
Yarn: Brooklyn Handspun Soft Spun Plus in Toadstool
Needles: 2.5mm

I shied away from toe-up socks for a while because despite the fact that I have quite small feet, my past history (former sprinter) and natural build (stocky Far East Asian) mean that I have quite chunky calves. I’ve long solved this problem for cuff-down socks as I know about three very stretchy cast-ons, but I hadn’t yet learned a cast-off that would be stretchy enough.

Enter Jeny’s Surprisingly Stretchy Bind-Off.

Which is stretchy. Well, it says so on the tin. It’s stretchiness is certainly comparable to the German twisted cast-on for cuff-down socks, which my lovely and clever friend Ruth swears by, which I have since learned and loved.

These socks are a little bit magic. They don’t look like much when they’re off your feet, but put them on and these gorgeous little cables appear, yawning wide like rising stones. The idea of the pattern was that the cables ‘hopped’ to and fro, here to there, and in doing so form these dented pebbles on my feet.

I like them. I like them a lot.

The yarn, though, I have spent some time making peace with.

It’s odd, but so far when I’ve had to go home to Malaysia for a visit, it’s a Brooklyn Handspun yarn that I’m taking along with me, to knit on the plane using bamboo needles.

(I know it’s no longer an issue, but at the time it just made more sense and meant less headache that I took aboard bamboo needles instead of metal. I have now confirmed, repeatedly, that metal ones would’ve been okay.)

Now, I don’t know if it’s the trip to Malaysia, or the bamboo needles, or the yarn, but every single time, it’s absolute disaster. Every single time, the pattern and the yarn get put away for a time until I can face it again. It could really be something as simple as me being incompetent.

But these worked out well in the end. They’re squishy, they’re fun, and they fit really well, which is always the best thing. And even better, I’m now less put off by toe-up socks thanks to this awesome super-springy cast-off. I’m just sorry it took me so long to get these made.

FO: The Story of Luciole

At long last, I give you Luciole.

Back during the run-up to Knit Nation 2010, a bunch of my friends who were all taking Anne Hanson’s classes, decided to each knit one of her patterns in the legendary Wollmeise yarn so that they can show her – and latterly, Claudia of Wollmeise – their handiwork. The result was an array of beautiful lace shawls, all of Anne’s designs, in spectacular colours. I’m sure Anne was chuffed to bits.

So I cast on this shawl at the end of last year, thinking that I would have it ready to wear when I would meet Anne for the first time at the Socktopus Cornwall Retreat at the end of January. I picked a yarn that I have always known was destined to be this shawl, and started knitting quite happily.

Except me being me, I was pretty slow about it. So by the time Anne caught sight of it, I was still 17 rows away from finishing.

She admired it nonetheless, being the warm and kind sort that she is, and said it would look beautiful once it’s done, given how gorgeous the yarn was.

While I was away in Cornwall, knitting this shawl, I felt a little lonely and out of sorts. The big hit my depression took was only a couple of months prior to this, and I was at a point where I wasn’t even sure if I should’ve gone to the Cornwall retreat at all. So, with this shawl in my lap, sitting by the fire in the reception area of our hotel, I rang Ruth.

We chatted for a little bit, her listening to me, me listening to her, eventually both of us making each other giggle a bit. It’s how it works, most of the time, when things aren’t so bad with me. Having cheered me up, she told me to go have fun, so I did.

I abandoned the shawl, for a while. I think that it was because since I didn’t finish it in time to show off to Anne, I wasn’t really in a rush to finish it anymore. I don’t remember when exactly I picked it up again, but when I did, I was pretty shamed to find that I only had 17 rows left to do. About a week’s worth of work.

So I marched on. But for good reason, all the while I was knitting this, I never forgot the last time I had it in my lap. By the fire, in Cornwall, talking to Ruth.

In the end, I made my own deadline: I wanted to finish the shawl before the weekend when Nick and I were going to visit the Savill Garden at Virginia Water, where they’d recently reopened their Rose Garden.

Thanks to Ruth’s online blocking tutorial, I managed to use my blocking wires effectively, and without continually stabbing myself with them, and set this shawl out to look its very best. The body of the shawl is covered with little clusters of yarnovers, giving the effect of fireflies in the distance. The edging – knitted on both sides but entirely readable and so worth the effort – depicts the body and wings of fireflies up close. You can see the points as their tails, with their wings just above.

Hence why I said this yarn was meant for this shawl. Fireflies knit up in autumnal fiery colours.

I thought it appropriate to photograph the shawl here in the Rose Garden, Anne being a big gardener and lover of plants. And with the sun out and the roses in bloom, it looked pretty good in its setting.

It might have been a tad warm for it; the yarn is a glorious blend of 65% cashmere and 35% silk, but I didn’t wear it for long. Just long enough to take these shots. I needed the shawl in as close to pristine condition as possible, after all.

I did show it to Anne, at Knit Nation this year, in the end. The smile on her face was so big; she remembered the shawl from Cornwall and was so happy to see it all finished and looking spectacular.

If anything, her smile was nearly as big as Ruth’s, when I gave it to her as a belated birthday present, and as something she utterly deserved. She hadn’t knit herself a single thing since I last saw her in December, having worked – and she was still working – so hard on her designs and getting herself published that I figured she deserved a brand new knitted object that was just for her.

Pattern: Luciole, by Anne Hanson
Yarn: Nimu Helvellyn
Needles: 3.25mm for knitting, 3.75mm for casting off

Intent and outcome are rarely the same thing. And you know, I’m glad of that.

FO: Nick’s Windschief

Way back during The Bothered Owl Christmas party last December, where many friends were met, much food and drink was consumed and naturally, a bit of yarn was purchased, I bought this yarn from Fyberspates:

I wasn’t going to get anything else that evening, but I spotted this colour, and surrounded as I was by my friends, I held up the skein and shouted, “Does this skein look like my husband?”

I actually got a few ‘yes’s. So I bought it, and resolved that Nick would get a hat.

Ahh, but what hat?

Pattern: Windschief by Stephen West (westknits.com)
Yarn: Fyberspates Scrumptious High Twist DK
Needles: 4.5mm and 5.0mm

This pattern was an absolute joy to knit, and made even better by the yarn changing colour on me every so often. The yarn was in fact so perfect not only for the project but for my state of mind at the time that I was compelled to email Jeni to let her know how much her colours were helping me get over my current blues, and how it made me incredibly happy that her beautiful colours were making a lovely hat for my wonderful husband.

I finished this hat back in December, but I never got an opportunity to photograph it, largely because it spent a lot of time on Nick’s head or in his coat pocket, in anticipation of going out into the cold.

So on a sunny day at Hadlow College, Nick let me boss him a little bit to take these photos. In June.

It was worth it to be able to see these colours in the best light. Colourful enough to be radiant, but deep enough to suit a man.

Or maybe I’m just lucky to have a man who can get away with these colours.

I wish Jeni would name her colours, because I would love enough of this one for a cowl for myself. Maybe another Eternity Scarf…

I wonder if I could ask nicely…?

And Just Like That…

… I’m done.

My two theory sections of my RHS Level 2 Certificate in Horticulture are done. I did one batch of exams on the hottest day of the year thus far and the second and last batch the following day, when we had tropical thunderstorms all afternoon.

I’m kind of sad that it’s all over for now, because there are quite a number of people I will miss. Fortunately, two of the people that I will miss are coming back to do the Practical Horticulture course with me in September so I’ll get to see them again. The three of us are trying to bully a fourth one of us to come along, so it could get merrier. I will also miss Tessa, my Plants lecturer, and her no-nonsense come-all-weathers attitude to everything. I won’t miss my Science lecturer for very long because she’ll be teaching the Practical, so that’s all good.

But I’m also glad it’s all over, because I can have my life back for a bit. The lead-up to the exams put me in such a state that I was little good to anyone or anything apart from the exams. I barely did anything for myself or registered anything else that might have been important. The only other human being I’d seen for over two weeks was Nick. And the only other thing I did apart from revise and panic was to finish this:

More on this when I have more photos.

Immediately, on Wednesday, the day after my exams, I pretty much threw Nick out of the flat, declaring that now that I’m free, I want the flat to myself; please piss off to work, thankyouverymuch. I knitted, I read, and later in the afternoon I went to meet with Nora for a frozen yoghurt at Canary Wharf. A human being that I knew that wasn’t Nick! Fantastic!

And later that evening, Nick found me asleep on the sofa sitting upright, with an XBox controller in my hand, my puzzle game waiting for me onscreen. He said he hadn’t seen me do that in weeks, which must mean I’m finally relaxing again.

The bizarre thing is, the last thing I want to do is relax. I’m geared now. I want to do all the stuff I’ve been wanting to do for weeks but have had to set aside. I have a huge stack of magazines to read, lots of gym to catch up with – I’d been sedentary for so long my legs and feet were actually seizing from being so stiff – and yes, more knitting:

Godiva, by the fantastically talented Ruth.

Although I did sort of had a niggling feeling in the back of my head about something and decided to check Ravelry about it, and there it was.

Le Tour de Fleece starts on Saturday. Saturday. Day after tomorrow.

So tomorrow, I probably ought to be oiling my wheel, and picking out fibres to spin. Lord knows I have plenty to choose from…

A Couple of FOs: Keeping Warm

I have been a rubbish blogger already this year, what with only one post thus far, and more so as I’ve had a few finished objects that I haven’t blogged about!

Let’s start with this one:

Pattern: Shur’tugal by Alice Yu (Ravelry link)
Yarn: Socktopus Sokkusu-O
Needles: 2.5mm

Now, let’s start with the pattern. Shur’tugal is a pattern I have knitted loads of times. The first time I knitted them was for my lovely old housemate, Zaa, from Southampton days. We lived together for four years and therefore she was absolutely entitled to asking for a pair of socks from me. She says she wears them to football matches, and is gently hinting for another pair.

While I was knitting Zaa’s socks, whose feet were bigger than mine, I needed to borrow a pair of feet to check that the fit was okay. Ruth was with me one afternoon so I borrowed her foot. The sock fit very nicely indeed. So nicely in fact that I dug around for a bright skein of happy yarn and made a pair for her, too.

This pair, at last, is for me.

The genius of this pattern is that it is remarkably simple but so satisfying. It looks great in all kinds of yarns – I’ve knitted it with a yarn that pooled, a yarn that was semi-solid, and now this yarn, a most remarkable yarn indeed.

Why? Because Alice, who designed the sock, also dyed the yarn.

The yarn is called Sokkusu-O, which means Original, and feels quite similar to Blue Moon Fibre ArtsSocks That Rock, except I feel I like this more. It is bouncy and strong and feels wonderful on the needles and on my feet. Also, I love the name of the yarn. When Alice first announced what she was going to call it, I had to say it out loud in a sumo-wrestler type voice. And then giggle.

Next, I have a finished object which I think is already my most-worn knitted item:Pattern: Eternity Scarf by Michele Wang (Ravelry link)
Yarn: Madelinetosh Vintage in Nutmeg
Needles: 5.5mm

A scarf that is just a loop long enough for me to wrap double around my neck, with no ends that flap about. Perfect for being active outdoors. When I get warm I just undo the second wrap and leave it hanging around my neck, and if I wanted to, I could even pull one loop up over my head. It is an awesome thing, and I love it so much I can’t wait for an excuse to make another one. It’s been brilliant in the supercold winter we’ve had.

I was skimming my friends page on Ravelry when I was reminded of this pattern – typically, it’d sat in my queue for, well, forever – and I thought, hey, that’d be a neat thing to have while I’m outside a lot and will be so neat and unfussy. I love scarves, but it’d be nice if they didn’t trail down or get caught in stuff, especially things like bushes.

And as you do, I checked to see what yarns people have used to knit this. Madelinetosh Vintage caught my eye for two reasons: a) they make gorgeous semi-solid colours and b) I knew exactly where to get the yarn.

And thus at Loop‘s very first Wollmeise Saturday, while everyone else bought skein after skein of Wollmeise, I came home with two skeins of this glorious golden yarn. It’s not really a colour I would normally pick, but the gold was rich enough that it didn’t render my skin sickly, and it went with just about everything I owned, which tended to be on the fuchsia/purple/deep pink side of things.

Hopefully there will be another FO before the month is out. I can’t wait to finish it, I can tell you that much!

FO: Aurantium in Sonne

Over a year ago now, the very brilliant Alice had the equally brilliant idea of running a lace shawl knitalong via Twitter. We would get clues every so often to continue our progress and questions and sharing could all be done via the wonder that is Twitter.

I know some people have their Twitter feed running in a widget on their blogs, but I don’t really dare put mine up. Given an occasion I can swear several shades of Dulux colour card blue, so I thought it best that I maintain some degreee of decorum.

The knitalong ended last August. I was still knitting, because I am a slow sort. But also maybe because I wanted to enjoy the yarn I was using.

My first ever skein of Wollmeise. I won this skein at a charity bingo game that was hosted by Alice not long before she started the knitalong project and I recall not trying very hard to win anything else afterwards because I was so pleased with it. They’re not immediately my colours, but the shawl pattern was called Aurantium Blossom (Ravelry link), which referred to orange blossom, and I figured, clearly, it was meant to be.

I like lace knitting. I like reading charts, because to me it’s like running a program in my head. I’m married to a software engineer who codes all hours of the day, and he can read lace charts for that reason. It’s a bunch of symbols telling you what to do next. Ones and zeros. Binary. Lovely.

But again, I am the slow sort, and also the easily distracted sort. I abandoned the sunny, happy lace shawl for a while. I have no idea why. Eventually I got fed up of all the half-finished things I have lying about the place and decided to tackle them one by one.

Imagine how dumb I felt when upon pulling this shawl out again, I had all of 20 rows left to do. Twenty. Twenty rows with nearly or over 300 stitches on, but twenty rows nonetheless. Embarrassing, really.

It took me twenty minutes to read the chart, read the knitting, read the chart again, count some stitches and read the chart some more just to find out where the heck I was in the pattern. Once I worked it out, I was off again.

I sometimes write notes on my patterns, telling me alternative ways to execute something, or directional notes or so on. The trouble with leaving a project for so long is that I spent a lot of time looking at these notes and thinking, “What did my past self mean when she told me this?”

Sometimes I do expect to unearth a neglected project and find its pattern, scribbled with the words, “About bloody time, you idiot.”

In the end, those twenty rows took a mere couple of weeks, plus distractions. I cast it off. I waited for a warm day when there wasn’t a lot to do, and I washed and blocked it.

It was like pinning out the sun.

Pattern: Aurantium Blossom by Alice Yu
Yarn: Wollmeise 100% Merio Superwash in Sonne
Needles: 4.5mm

This is, above all, why I love lace knitting. A bundle of loops and stitches, all damp and lifeless after a bath, gets carefully pulled out, stretched and pinned, and suddenly every little detail comes to life. Orange blossoms near the top, orange flowers in the middle and finally edged with leaves.

I thought it was going to take wing and fly away, back into the sun.

I wear this a lot now. I like that when I’m on the tube or the train, reflected in the windows would be duller, flatter colours that get swallowed up by the tinting on the windows. But not this shawl. Oh no. It defies that sort of thing. It feels like nothing could swallow up these colours.

It is only matched by a carpet of varieties South African daisies, and that makes me incredibly happy.