Monday, April 4, 2011

Gytha

gytha
The first time I saw the pattern "Gytha" in the Winter '08 issue of Twist Collective, I wanted to knit it right away.  The problem was:  I just didn't have anyone to knit it for.  Neither of my two older daughters likes to wear bright or multiple colors and my little one was too small.  Fast forward two years, my baby is now wearing her the same size as her eighteen-year-old sister, despite the fact that she's only nine. 

Usually, I don't like to knit (or quilt) my projects in the exact same color as the original pattern.  This time, however, I picked my colors to match the pattern as close as I could get.  I love turquoise! The pattern called for Green Mountain Spinnery Mohair.  It's a lovely yarn, but I couldn't justify spending that much on a nine-year-old's sweater.  Knit Picks came to the rescue!  Their Wool of the Andes yarn come in a rainbow assortment of colors.  Buying yarn online is always a little nerve-wracking for me.  I read good reviews, I read bad reviews.  In the end, plunged ahead and ordered the yarn.  For about two bucks a 50 gram skein, how can I go wrong?  The yarn arrived 6 days after I placed the order.  No knots, no blue fingers. Wool of the Andes is a hit with me  I will buy it again.  Maybe Knit Picks fixed the problems that some reviewers were complaining about.



M's gytha

It only took me three weeks to knit the sweater.  It would have only been two weeks if it weren't for some changes.  I didn't want the sleeves too wide, so I decreased every few rows.  I thought I made the sleeves short enough, but when M tried it on for the first time, it looked ridiculous.  My goal was to make a sweater big enough so my cutie-pie can still wear in the fall (she's growing like a weed), but not so big that she's swimming in it.  There was only one thing to do.  I snipped the stripes off of each sleeve, unravelled the ribbing at the elbows and grafted the stripes back on.  Voila!  Shorter sleeves!

The picture we took doesn't show the toggle buttons at front opening, because I hadn't sewn them on yet.  M wore the sweater to school as soon as the toggles were secure and was happy as a clam.  I pictured her teacher and classmates ooing and aahing.  I didn't picture her falling into a mud puddle, which of course is exactly what she did.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Birthday Hoodie, update

The birthday hoodie is off the needles and blocked.  I still have to buy a zipper, but since we've become the house of flu, I haven't been able to make it to the store to buy that zipper.

E is pleased with the results, but I'm not sure it's long enough.  The measurements are spot-on, according to the pattern, and I still have two hanks left over.  I'll have to let the recipient live with it for a while before I decide whether or not to frog it back and add some length to the sweater.  I'm really sick of knitting it and don't want to look at it for a while.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Birthday Hoodie

E lost her favorite hooded sweater (store-bought) a while ago.  I tore the house looking for it. I was even desperate enough to look in my sons' room, but the black hoodie was nowhere to be found.  For her birthday this year, I decided to knit the Zip-Front Hoodie, from the book, Knit So Fine: Designs with Skinny Yarn.  The pattern is very simple and straight-forward.  It has delicate cables going up along the zippered front edge and hood.  There are also cables along the sides that hide waist-shaping.

Armed with a list of possible yarns, E and I visited Webs to purchase the yarn for the project.  We paced the aisles of Webs' closeout warehouse for almost an hour before settling on the yarn that would become her new hoodie.  The yarn we chose wasn't a closeout, but a regular-priced "house brand", Valley Yarns Prescott.  We left the store with 13 hanks and I couldn't wait to cast on.

Prescott is a 100% alpaca dk weight yarn.  In it's hank, the yarn is very soft and cuddly.  My youngest couldn't keep her hands off of it!  The knitted fabric is drapey, soft and show the cables off well.  There's one problem, though.  The yarn is VERY splitty.  I keep adding stitches at random places and have to rip back to the point of contention.  Since most of my knitting is done in front of the TV or at the Y during M's practices, I've ripped out many many rows and I'm getting a little impatient with the project.

I'm conflicted about the yarn.  The price is great, $3.99 a hank, and it's super soft.  After the project is done and blocked, and maybe after a few washes, I'll decide whether or not I'll buy Prescott again.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Tiger Mom

There's been so much buzz about this Wall Street Journal article by Amy Chu.  I feel that I have to put in my two cents.  Personally, I got a good laugh when I read it.  Having been raised by Chinese tiger parents, I know that I have a very relaxed parenting style.  None of my kids played piano (though the youngest just started playing violin through the school), they were allowed playdates and sleepovers, and (gasp) all three girls took ballet lessons.  In fact, E is attending an arts boarding school where ballet is her "major".  She is actually auditioning to study dance at college next year.  My oldest daughter, A,  is studying Art at a private liberal arts college (double gasp!).  My son, J, plays computer games constantly, and youngest child, M, swims on a swim team.  I guess I'm not a Chinese mom, according to Amy Chua.

I don't think we need to go to the extremes that Ms. Chua is going through to raise successful children.  Though I guess success can mean different things.  My children are well-adjusted and happy.  They don't get straight A's, but A's show up more than any other letter in their report card.  Unlike me, they actually like spending time with their parents and look forward to coming home during their school breaks.  I know I'm much more permissive compared to immigrant chinese parents, but I'm also much stricter than my non-Asian friends.

In the end, I'm just surprised.  Out of all my siblings, cousins, and American-born Asian friends, none of us are as strict as Amy Chua. But then again, none of us are trying to sell a book...

Hats

I checked out a book called "Hat Heads" by Trond Afinnsen from the library and it inspired my to knit some hats.  The first hat I knit was a beret for my niece.  It was cast on and bound off while I was visiting my parents during the holidays.  I forgot to take a picture of the hat before I left it for my niece.

The next hat I knit was also a beret.  The pattern is called Urchin by Ysolda Teague and I used a discontinued Classic Elite yarn called Bravo.  It's a bulky yarn and it looks like a fluffy mohair yarn twisted with a thick rayon thread.  I was afraid that the hat might be a little itchy, but so far, no complaints from the recipient.

E's Urchin
The third hat was from the "Hat Head" book.  The book had a lot of cute patterns, but I don't know how the Knitkid (the author's alter-ego) was able to knit all those hats using a worsted weight yarn with size 4 needles! The first attempt, I used size 2 and 6 needles.  I had read some notes on Ravelry and noticed that some people had problems with the sz 1 and 4 needles the pattern called for. There's no way a toddler could have worn the hat I knit.   Maybe Norwegians have small heads?  I ended up using size 6 & 8 needles and a tubular cast-on (thank you Ysolda!) to be able to knit a hat big enough for a teenager to wear.

J's Silje

The last hat I knit is called Randi.  Since the pattern calls for bulky yarn I had to make some changes and calculations so I could use up some leftover Cascade 220 I had in my stash.


M's Randi
If I ever knit another hat from "Hat Heads", I will use the patterns only as guidelines.  Maybe my kids have extraordinarily large heads...

Sunday, January 23, 2011

T-shirt quilt

My niece turned 18 last month and I commemorated the occasion by making her a t-shirt quilt using shirts she got through her high school band.  The shirt designs were different sizes and shapes, so it took me a while to decide how to place the blocks.  Her only request was that the quilt have purple in it.

I didn't want to make a boring typical t-shirt quilt with uniform sized blocks and sashing around, but wanted the blocks to look as though they were appliqued on top of a big piece of fabric.  The pattern of the black leaves help mask the seams of the rows.  At least I think they do.  Anyway, I'm pretty pleased with the result.  Most importantly, my niece is pleased with her new quilt.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

New Year


Happy New Year!  It's January and I'm thinking of this year's gift-knitting.  The neices looked adorable in their new sweaters.  Maybe a knitted dress for Evelyn?  Her birthday is in June.


These are the bunnies I knit to go with the sweaters