Posts Tagged ‘BSJ’

Pitchers and everything

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

Yippee! I can upload pictures again, but first, if you missed the post from last week, be sure to update your bookmarks/RSS feed and any other preset for the blog from http://blog.yarngal.com to http://www.yarngal.com/blog.

The MadelineTosh has arrived and the afghan gals snagged a bunch of it.  I’ll have to reorder right away because I was at the store this morning (ordering fall yarn – gosh, so fabulous!) and saw that the carton was half-empty.  Still some wonderful things in there and I’ve got my eye on a skein of Tosh Sock that absolutely rocks.

Reminder: The shop will be closed on Sunday, May 30.

Let’s catch up with some older photos:

This is the Springtime Bandit shawl that I mentioned several weeks ago, a free pattern on Kelbournewoolens.com.  It’s pretty, fun, quick, and frankly, mine looks better than theirs, probably because of the blocking.  It’s a good pattern.

This is my Let’s dance a fandango! version of the Horizontal Feather and Fan shawl, a pattern that Janet teaches in her beginner lace class.  I used Noro’s Furin and inserted a few rows of Trendsetter’s Cha-Cha, and it’s just plain fun.  Fran Krieger is doing a beautiful version in off-white, very, very pretty.

Here are some photos that might get you into a class this summer.  First is Yuko Lewandoski’s version of the Adult Surprise Jacket.  The colors are bright but overall the effect is tailored and elegant.

This is Janet’s version of the shrug she’s teaching in her Mother-Daughter Design a Shrug class.  It’s too cute in a combo of Jelli-beenz and Fizz:

And here is the toe-up sock in progress, from Karen Walter’s class this summer.  It may be finished this week – it’s sort of like a striptease, every time I see her she shows a little bit more!  (This week she was in to raid the MadTosh before anyone else got their paws on it.)

Carol Whitcraft is knitting like a madwoman for her first great-grandchild.  Look at the beautiful blanket and this perfect little sweater in Jeannee, a soft cotton/acrylic blend.

And Karen Shearer’s granddaughter came in in her Baby Surprise, and even though we’ve shown her before, I had to take her picture again.  You can see why, can’t you?  Do you love the little pants or what?

Anne Nordhoy is an A-one knitter who knits like the wind and does the most intricate colorwork as naturally as you and I breathe.  She and her husband host an auction and fundraiser for the Y every year, and she knits many beautiful treasures to auction off.  Here are a sampling of what she’s offering this year.  They’re just too remarkable to remark on:

A Trio of Christmas Stockings

Thumb Detail (a boy and girl) of a Pair of Mittens

A Multi-Stitch Baby Blanket

A Multi-Stitch Baby Blanket

Christening Gown and Bonnet

Delicate Lace Shawl

A Child's Ski Sweater

Child's Sweater

See what I mean?  It takes your breath away!

Enough for one day… see you soon!

Trish

Share

October 6, 2009

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

A quick post today because I’m listening to The Lost Symbol on my iPod and I’m right at the part where things start to get resolved.  The hero is dead, the heroine is dying – But! things are still unfolding.  So I thought I’d better post now, or I won’t get to it today.

I’m having fun while I’m listening because I finished another sweater (!!) and promised myself I’d only do small projects for a little while.  I finished 4 quick hats in Blizzard, a super-bulky alpaca blend – they’re all cute and so quick to knit up on size 15′s.  The pattern calls for double points the whole way through, but I used my Denise Interchangeable and did Magic Loop and it was so much more fun.  I have to find a cute way to display them at the shop, they’re all from one little folder of patterns.

Swing jacketHere is the sweater I finished, a little swing jacket which is done all in one piece with absolutely no sewing whatsoever.  It will be a free pattern at the shop as soon as I find someone to test-knit it for me so I know the instructions are comprehensible and the numbers work out.  The sleeves are set-in, but are picked up and then the caps are shaped with short rows. This is the first time I’ve ever written something like that.  I love the yarn, called Cayenne from Katia – looks loud in a photograph as many multis do, but it comes in the most beautiful colorways and has lots of texture.  The jacket could be made with the purl side out which would blend the colors more.  You don’t have to decidewhich side is the outside until you’re ready to join the shoulders!

This is a scarf I just finished, using Punta del Este’s Meritwist, a bulky two-ply merino with some definite heft to it.  Cabled rib scarf

The stitch is a faux-cabled rib pattern, fun to work, which I’m also going to try on a plain yarn.  The reverse side looks like a plain rib stitch, so while it’s not reversible, it’s nice on both sides.  Definitely needs blocking to relax all the stitch manipulation, so I gave it a good dousing this afternoon.  This will also be a free pattern, hopefully on the website – it’s about time there’s something new there, I’m sure everyone is sick of looking at Roman Stripe, even though it’s still fun to knit.  I’ll do the next one in worsted, I think, something solid and totally yummy.

Next, I’m going to work on some birthday presents (a Napa for each of my sisters if I can get them done), and maybe fit in a couple of projects from the new Homespun, Handknit, a really good collection of small projects.  We have a bunch of other new books too, including Cat Bordhi’s latest sock manifesto as well as Swedish Knitting, Norwegian Handknits, Reversible Knitting and One More Skein.  I see that the bookstores are not carrying many knitting books any more, and I’ve cut back on the number I order, too, but do try to keep up with what’s new and will always be glad to order any title for you.

Believe it or not, Suzy Crump made me cut her head off when I took this picture, even though she looked absolutely fantastic in this jacket she made in Noro Taiyo.  She chose the yarn because she loved the color of the buttons.  Artists!

Suzy's Taiyo Jacket

Lynda Slovitsky took Lynne Nagle’s first crocheted dishcloth class and here is her first cloth, made from two colors of cotton, one solid and one self-striping and edged in crab stitch, a very cool technique to know for edging your knitted pieces as well.  I love how the colors worked out.

Dishcloth

And here is this week’s Belle of the Blog.  Emily is Karen Shearer’s granddaughter and looks fabulous in the Baby Surprise Jacket Karen made for her, especially with the coordinating T-shirt and hair ribbon.

Emily in BSJ

She’s so adorable and precious!

Classes this week:  Shape Up is on Saturday morning with spaces still open – if SSK’s, YO’s, and K2tog tbl’s are mysteries to you, you need this class!  The gansey class is beginning, but with no openings.  With two sessions and both filled to the max, Donna Guthrie will have her hands full!  And Janet is so proud of her Top-Down sweater class – they had a grueling first week’s knitting to do and everyone made their goal!  She says they’re amazing and now she can leave for Las Vegas and then Rheinbeck with an easy mind.  Good going, folks.

All right, off to see how everything gets fixed at the end of this book – I know the dead hero is going to be saved, Dan Brown is not going to let his best-selling streak end, I’m sure.

See you soon!

Trish

Share