knittingbanshee: (Default)
 So, it's snowing. Or it has been, for most of today. After a very cold day on Wednesday (when I last walked to work), I complained all my mittens / gloves / two-way mittens were thumbless, so my thumbs got very cold on the way to work, but I didn't have time to make my next planned set of mittens (Kate Davies's SnawPaws) before the weather turns warm again. 

Then I remembered I spent Christmas knitting a Muclemuff (and complaining that the weather wasn't cold enough to wear it, of course). So this morning, I took it out with me. 

I can now safely say that 100g of eider wool top and two layers (or three, if you count the floats) of Wool of the Andes keep your hands toasty and warm like nothing I've ever worn. And the wristloop means I can easily let go of it when I start stumbling in the snow.

All in all, I'm very glad I knitted it! :) 
knittingbanshee: (Default)
 So, I've been a busy bee this Christmas, and have worked on a lot of projects.

I did finish the "I'm a little teapot" teapot cosy, which, by the way, doe the job admirably. A bit unnerving to cut the steaks without any reinforcement, but Shetland wool does indeed hold very nicely when doing so. I think I might be ready to try a more complex piece of fair isle, maybe a vest or jumper in Shetland wool. Whenever I can afford the wool, and have room in the house for it.

I started the Mucklemuff on Boxing Day and finished it on Saturday, after the merino wool top I needed for the filling arrived. I seem to have fallen in love with stranded colourwork! And I do really like the Knitpick's Wool of the Andes I used for it. Might use it for the Boreal jumper I'm planning to make at some point.

I also finished the Robin Hood stole, the latest Unique Sheep knitalong. I came out a bit shorter than I was expecting, I think my gauge has gotten a lot tighter than it used to be. I probably should have done it on a larger needle size, but hey ho. It's finished now, and I have a lo of yarn left over. 

So, I'm using the leftovers to make Verdandi, another of the Three Norns shawls. I want to use up all the yarn, so I'm making it bigger than the pattern calls for, which is taking some careful repeating of charts so that things still align when I move from one chart to the next.

i have also started the Winter Wonderland scarf that came as part of the Unique Sheep Christmas package. Cables, cables and more cables! I don't really like making cables, but this yarn is so soft and the colourway is so pretty I think I'll be making an exception for it!

So, yeah, busy me...
knittingbanshee: (Default)
 Well. That was fun. And easier than I expected it to be. Once I got my left hand to play ball so I could knit the pattern colour continental style, that was it! It took a lot less time to knit the blanket than I expected, but that's the beauty of bulky yarns, I guess. 

Cutting the steek was still nervewracking, though. Luckily, it held, and the sandwich does indeed hide the steek edges very nicely. I hope it will continue to hold. And I was reminded of just how much I hate doing i-cord cast off - it takes ages, and about half a ball of yarn... But hey, it looks good now that it's finished. 

I have since done more colourwork in the form of a little teapot cozy (this pattern, if you are interested), which was also my first piece of work with Shetland wool (yes, the teapot gets the good yarn, so what?). And now I'm knitting Kate Davies's Mucklemuff

Gone from "can't do colourwork, wouldn't do it properly" to "what else can I knit that is colourwork?"...

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knittingbanshee

September 2020

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