tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-804958271958857802023-11-16T06:45:47.557+00:00Christine65Knitting, Crocheting, Spinning and Other ThingsChristine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.comBlogger241125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-24248044007643713952019-05-22T16:25:00.001+01:002019-05-22T16:25:29.083+01:00Granito - Finished!I was going to write a blog post last week about my progress on my Granito sweater, but I was on the sleeves, the maths for picking up the stitches for them (they're knitted down from the body of the sweater) was straightforward* and I was racing along. After I'd finished the sleeves, all that was left to do was put the stitches for the pocket backs onto the needles from the waste yarn they'd been put on and knit those. That was also straightforward because I'd scribbled notes on the pattern regarding how many rounds I'd knitted so far at various points in the pattern, so I knew how many rows I needed to knit so the pocket backs (facings?) finished where the hem ribbing started. <br />
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I sewed the pocket facings to the sweater at knitting group on Monday, sewed in the yarn ends I hadn't got around to doing and yesterday I soaked it and smoothed it out to dry on the floor in the spare room. Today, I got my sweater drying rack thingammy out and put it in the garden to speed up the drying process.<br />
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Here it is:<br />
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I'm pretty pleased with it. There are a couple of areas which could have been done a bit better, particular the top corners of the pockets. Because those lines down the front are made by slipping two stitches every other round, putting the pocket facing stitches on waste yarn distorted them a little bit. I also tried knitting on the pocket facings by knitting them together with the 'bar' at the back of the slipped stitch row, but that was too loose for my liking (I know of at least one person who's made this sweater who attached the pocket backs that way, which is how I got the idea to try it), so I undid it and just knitted straight down, which I don't think helped smooth the stitches out.<br />
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There were a couple of very minor modifications I made to the pattern. I went down a needle size for the ribbing at the hem (the pattern doesn't specify to do this) because I know that I don't knit rib particularly tightly and I thought if I used the same size needle as for the rest of the sweater the hem might flip up. I also knit the first and last stitch on every row of the pocket backs/facings to give me a straighter edge when it came to sew them onto the sweater. Other than that, I followed the pattern.<br />
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I had enough yarn, so didn't have to go with Plan B, which would have been knitting the lower part of the sleeves in a contrast colour and using the same contrast yarn for the pocket facings (I also got that idea from another Raveller). With that in mind, I did the neck ribbing after I'd knitted the main part of the sweater, then did the sleeves and finally the pocket backs.<br />
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The sweater weighs approx 540 grammes and used approx 1290 metres of yarn, leaving me with around 30 grammes of yarn.<br />
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Would I make it again? Yes. It's a fairly straightforward, but interesting knit and has a nice shape. If I made it again, I might modify it slightly and twist or cable the stitches running down the sweater instead of having the slipped stitch columns.<br />
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As it's a nice sunny day, here's a photo I took earlier of the sweater hanging up on the garden fence!<br />
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I've now started crocheting a rather large blanket, so a bit about that next time.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-85437000581644655442019-05-01T20:03:00.000+01:002019-05-01T20:03:14.958+01:00Not Knitting Socks!I finished DD2's third pair of socks:<br />
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They didn't take long and there's plenty of yarn left. I'm going to learn a different cast-on for the toe next time because my usual Judy's Magic Cast-On method means that to get the socks to match, I have to start the yarn at the same point in the repeat resulting in the little line of a different colour right at the toe. I think a figure-of-eight or Turkish cast-on might eliminate that, so I'll give it a go.<br />
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Not that I'm going to be needing to use such a cast-on for a while as I've cast on a sweater!<br />
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I've had my eye on <a href="https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/granito">Granito</a> by Joji Locatelli for a while now and decided to spin the yarn for it. I chose a merino/silk blend from World of Wool called Libra:<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhFGeBMiwNaAllVtTUC5lsiryJbcEPTr38xR5nKnOJ8XIVvKiZtsEPXv_4y04k_-YVSGWds2oVUl-waKCVPQyMJHIanQY5rGL9Od5SqCKtvlDfB8tu7w03fy_P0OG6wtaiMoGyTHovFL9U/s1600/libra.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="538" data-original-width="656" height="327" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhFGeBMiwNaAllVtTUC5lsiryJbcEPTr38xR5nKnOJ8XIVvKiZtsEPXv_4y04k_-YVSGWds2oVUl-waKCVPQyMJHIanQY5rGL9Od5SqCKtvlDfB8tu7w03fy_P0OG6wtaiMoGyTHovFL9U/s400/libra.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Photo borrowed from the World of Wool website</td></tr>
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This fibre is a blend of five colours of merino - Fuchsia, Jonquil, Clementine, Flo Pink and Citrus - plus bleached Tussah Silk. Once I'd spun it into a 3ply yarn, the colours had blended into a gingery-orange with pink hints!<br />
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This photo isn't actually the completely finished yarn though as, after washing and drying it, I decided it needed a bit more twist, so ran the whole lot through my wheel again and then washed and dried it for a second time!<br />
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I knitted a swatch and washed and dried it:<br />
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and was pleased that I got the gauge that I wanted (or close enough) so I cast on my Granito sweater last week and, so far, I'm pleased with it.<br />
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It's an interesting construction. It's seamless, but the construction is different to other top-down sweaters I've knit. The back shoulders are each cast on and a few rows worked, before being joined and then short-rows are worked to shape the shoulder slope before the stitches are put on hold. Each front shoulder is started by picking up stitches from the back shoulders, but with the wrong side of the back facing, which gives a decorative 'seam' across the shoulders and then each side of the front is worked, with more short rows before being joined up and then knitted down until the front is the same length as the back and then the front and back are joined and then knitted down until it's the correct length for the next stage, which is pockets! As if all that wasn't enough, can you see the vertical 'seam' at either side of the front? That's made by slipping stitches every other row.<br />
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I've had to stop and think about this on more than one occasion, but I'm loving it!<br />
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I'm just hoping I've got enough yarn (although I've got a Plan B) in cast I run out!<br />
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<br />Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-57837111408329332692019-04-18T15:10:00.002+01:002019-04-18T15:10:38.530+01:00Merino/Shetland SocksI've finished (yet) another pair of socks, this pair from handspun yarn.<br />
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I had 26g of blue merino/silk fibre from a bag of lap waste* I'd bought and 65g of yellow Shetland fibre, so I over-dyed half of the yellow Shetland with blue and green dye and left the other half plain yellow. Each colour was spun into a single:<br />
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The singles were then plyed into a marled skein which weighed 80g and was just under 300m in length, which is enough for a pair of socks for me:<br />
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I knitted these socks using my usual toe-up sock 'recipe' with gusset and heel flap and they didn't take long to knit (just under two weeks):<br />
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I'm quite pleased with them, although I'm not sure if some of the colour will bleed when I wash them for the first time.<br />
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Obviously, having finished these, it meant.....<br />
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Yes, a new pair of socks for DD2! We had a discussion this morning about which yarn to use. She was keen on another ball I'd got in my stash (Wendy Roam Fusion) but a look on Ravelry showed that it would be difficult to make a pair of socks that matched and, as that's important for DD2, she settled on this ball of Sirdar Heart & Sole instead.<br />
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I'm definitely feeling a bit socked out now though, so once these are finished, I'm definitely going to start a sweater, scarf, or a hat!<br />
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<i>*lap waste is a term used for a mixed bag of 'leftovers' from the factory, which can't be used to make a full 100g amount of fibre. You never know what you'll get and there can be a mix of fibres and sheep breeds.</i>Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-50479367040795115842019-04-12T11:57:00.001+01:002019-04-12T11:57:21.935+01:00Socks, socks, sockActually, FOUR pairs. I haven't cast on anything other than socks since finishing my stripey sweater and I realised I hadn't posted a picture of the finished socks I knitted for DD2, so here they are:<br />
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She only wanted ankle socks and they weigh 44g, so I only needed one 50g ball.<br />
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She then asked for another pair, so I knitted these:<br />
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These are WYS yarn and I think the colour's Pink Flamingo in the Cocktails range of colours. Ankle socks again, but these were about 6 rounds longer than the previous pair, but still used less than 50g of yarn.<br />
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I'm now being badgered to knit a third pair for her and I'm pretty sure she knows exactly how many pairs I've knitted for her sister and will demand the same number for herself!<br />
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I have knitted some new socks for myself. This pair were started at the beginning of December and finished at the end of February and were a pair I knitted "as and when" at knitting group when I had nothing else I could knit on whilst chatting, or when waiting for DD2's school transport to arrive. The yarn's Lorna's Laces Shepherd Sock Multi in Rainbow. 64sts round, on 2.25mm needles, the way the colours of the yarn stacked up have given the socks a much less bright look than I thought I'd get.<br />
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I also got some interesting pooling once I started increasing for the gusset, but that's usual for this yarn and has happened with every sock I've knitted with it.<br />
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I got some interesting pooling on the heel flap as well:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhXpcQKm2JGGui3tE-BS3dELTpCKbLcC7UXF13t84x55iyjW4nD7DWIu4GfiHsML_F1bnJ7Xm9qchAGMG0aTb1Oehc-0lsyhzrjfxZqVkG0i65S3JpEeIvr1cF0UrXfv-2zNtpwWL6fktE/s1600/1204e.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="320" data-original-width="240" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhXpcQKm2JGGui3tE-BS3dELTpCKbLcC7UXF13t84x55iyjW4nD7DWIu4GfiHsML_F1bnJ7Xm9qchAGMG0aTb1Oehc-0lsyhzrjfxZqVkG0i65S3JpEeIvr1cF0UrXfv-2zNtpwWL6fktE/s400/1204e.jpg" width="300" /></a></div>
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The last pair is from some handspun 3ply yarn I made from some Cheviot fibre. Cheviot is down type of fleece and is supposed to be hard-wearing and have non-felting properties. I dyed the fibre at home with food colouring, using white vinegar to 'set' the colours in the fibre. The yarn came out like this:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi06ESYdIDpxGrOr-Ca4eH9lwpI8iyJTSBvrABWjmc05Uk50MvYbuj8VZw1KCYFJhn-9JujA8yqN7Nv6TBacaZ7ehqm0RWaDPmeVhCSh3BJ_3QlRvUyp_em_XJvYpzxfwn3wAaVQ-8XASs/s1600/1204c.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="640" data-original-width="480" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi06ESYdIDpxGrOr-Ca4eH9lwpI8iyJTSBvrABWjmc05Uk50MvYbuj8VZw1KCYFJhn-9JujA8yqN7Nv6TBacaZ7ehqm0RWaDPmeVhCSh3BJ_3QlRvUyp_em_XJvYpzxfwn3wAaVQ-8XASs/s400/1204c.jpg" width="300" /></a></div>
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and these are the socks:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhl3CXwNQrY0GQpLO4G66S4_Q_mfI0bNoEEUrxV2d-AeaN86VdPEoVxGQatRlkn3P_k10cf94gPuIlfnBVCsd7pH6KX6skV_qbsU0w_T4mkNpq02bN-IOjgb3IX1gfJtpfLc8gxRx-RvcM/s1600/1204b.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="320" data-original-width="240" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhl3CXwNQrY0GQpLO4G66S4_Q_mfI0bNoEEUrxV2d-AeaN86VdPEoVxGQatRlkn3P_k10cf94gPuIlfnBVCsd7pH6KX6skV_qbsU0w_T4mkNpq02bN-IOjgb3IX1gfJtpfLc8gxRx-RvcM/s400/1204b.jpg" width="300" /></a></div>
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Quite subtle really and a bit like moss and lichen on the stone wall. These were knitted on 2mm needles and the fabric's quite dense and the socks aren't particularly soft to the touch, but I wore them to work last weekend and they were very comfortable to wear.<br />
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I'm still trying to decide what 'big' project to knit next (probably a sweater) but in the meantime, I've got another pair of socks on the needles for me and DD2 is breathing down my neck, telling me to get on with them so I can knit her another pair!Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-27153744561624610072019-04-03T13:43:00.002+01:002019-04-03T13:48:19.743+01:00A Cabled Yarn from Kent Romney fleeceSince I started spinning several years ago, I've made 2ply and 3ply yarns. Some of the 3ply yarns I spun using one single/strand of spun fibre, chain plyed (which means pulling the single through itself to make longish loops so there are three strands lying next to each other which are then twisted to make the 3ply yarn), but generally speaking I've spun plain yarns. In recent months, however, I've been reading one of my spinning books and thinking about expanding my spinning horizons.<br />
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A couple of weeks ago I pulled out a 100g bump of Kent Romney fibre from my stash and dyed it with some fuchsia pink and turquoise food colouring paste and ended up with it looking like this (this isn't the whole 100g; I realised as I was coming to the end of spinning the singles that I hadn't taken a photo of the starting fibre):<br />
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I then divided the 100g into four and then each quarter was spun into a single.<br />
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The next stage of making a cabled yarn is to spin the four singles into two 2ply yarns, but with much more twist than usual. When spinning yarn, the singles are spun one way (in this case, my wheel was going clockwise) and then the singles are plyed with the wheel going the opposite way. During plying, some of the twist of the singles gets taken out and, as the final stage of a cabled yarn is to ply the two 2ply yarns together in the same direction as the singles were (which then takes twist out of those 2ply yarns), the middle stage 2ply yarns need to have much more twist than would be put in a traditional 2ply yarn.<br />
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<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkg-iU5oF3zuzkI2-mHmnH2uTvjhSZehEu5BTktMiT4GCWrxl7g4AuTWbftICjKdRWxoMtAwwvmWMYMe9HBDuElhyp6fscb9aJYsTMec2_1H2BgFsbA5K_qME-jk2jbUuELA6KGGMJO_w/s1600/romney5.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="640" data-original-width="480" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgkg-iU5oF3zuzkI2-mHmnH2uTvjhSZehEu5BTktMiT4GCWrxl7g4AuTWbftICjKdRWxoMtAwwvmWMYMe9HBDuElhyp6fscb9aJYsTMec2_1H2BgFsbA5K_qME-jk2jbUuELA6KGGMJO_w/s400/romney5.jpg" width="300" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Two singles waiting to be made into a 2ply yarn - the middle stage</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYpjMbTJwmqrhTsao9ZqiV-PkD5Te-UbQ-yevVcsva_LzsPhFCNtFpRQKzVoKIQpxdQUOL05YOs3DXP7TKFqo2j15tqS-bd46CR_QscXh5U3y1VIeOB2kP4gXLyjtCb4ODEpQitXvGy2w/s1600/romney6.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="640" data-original-width="480" height="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhYpjMbTJwmqrhTsao9ZqiV-PkD5Te-UbQ-yevVcsva_LzsPhFCNtFpRQKzVoKIQpxdQUOL05YOs3DXP7TKFqo2j15tqS-bd46CR_QscXh5U3y1VIeOB2kP4gXLyjtCb4ODEpQitXvGy2w/s400/romney6.jpg" width="300" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">The two 2ply yarns waiting to be spun into the final 4ply yarn</td></tr>
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The final stage was plying the two 2ply yarns together, then it was wound off into a skein, washed and hung up to dry and this was what I ended up with:<br />
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Here's a close-up, which shows off the cabling:<br />
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What's interesting is how the bright pink and turquoise (there was a little bit of purply-mauve where the colours mixed as well) of the original fibre has become muted as the colours got spun together.<br />
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The final skein weighs 91g and measures around 158 metres and, according to my yarn measuring thingammy, it's a sport-to-DK weight yarn.<br />
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Did I enjoy making the yarn? Yes, although it was pretty labour-intensive.<br />
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What am I going to make with it? No idea! Cabled yarns are supposed to be good and hard-wearing for socks but I don't think I've got enough for that, although I could use a contrast yarn for the toes, heels and cuffs (although that would negate the reason for spinning a 4ply cabled yarn for socks as the heel's the bit that's more prone to wear).<br />
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Would I make a cabled yarn again? Possibly. I could definitely have put more twist into the middle stage of making the two 2ply yarns, which I think would have given better results (handspun yarn loses twist when it gets its first wash and I find it difficult to judge how much). Overall, I can see that it's a cabled yarn, but there are also areas where I've either under- or over-spun the final stage so the cabling isn't so evident.<br />
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At least I tried something different!<br />
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What I need to do now is get on with spinning the yarn I've been making on my spindle. It's another 4ply yarn, but the construction's slightly different to a cable. More about that in a future post though.<br />
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<br />Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-12218761682070497332019-03-05T14:47:00.001+00:002019-03-05T14:56:36.383+00:00I like it, but I don't love it...... yet!At the beginning of January (the 6th, according to my Ravelry project page), I pulled out the powder pink Drops Alpaca Silk and the green/purple/mustard Drops Delight that I'd bought when it was on sale at Wool Warehouse a few years ago. I'd had no project in mind when I bought the yarn (and I bought some in different colours as well), so it had sat in my stash, which I'm trying to reduce in size, so it was time to do something with it.<br />
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I'd liked the <a href="https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/breathing-space">Breathing Space</a> sweater by Veera Valimaki and a friend kindly gifted me the pattern. I swatched and washed the swatch and was happy with it, so I was good to go.<br />
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The yoke knitted up quite quickly and before long I was joining in the contrast, multi-coloured yarn and this is where things got 'interesting', meaning that although I like the sweater (and received compliments when I wore it yesterday to knitting group), I don't love it yet.<br />
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The construction is clever, with short rows starting mid-bust, which create the diagonal striping. Another friend recommended German Short Rows so I looked those up online, used them and was really pleased with how easy they are to do and how neat they look compared to other methods (one of my traditionally-done short rows at the neckline flopped and looked baggy, so I ended up pulling up a loop of yarn to tighten it up and tacking it down when I did sewing in of ends).<br />
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Once I'd done the short row section it was a case of going round and round, knitting two-round stripes in each yarn, doing some waist shaping on one side and increasing on the other side every 8th round, like in the short-row section. <i>Hang on a minute</i>, I thought. <i>What increase on every 8th round?</i> I'd mis-read the pattern and not done that part, so I ripped back to the beginning of the short rows (the Drops Delight doesn't really like to be ripped back very much, being a singles yarn, so I had to go slowly) and did them again.<br />
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A couple of days later I was back going round and round again, doing the waist shaping and the 8th round increases and, when I got to the end of one ball of yarn, I decided to put the body stitches on waste yarn and do the sleeves (I wanted to get those done so I could use the remaining yarn to knit the body as long as I wanted or until the yarn ran out as I thought I might not have enough). One on the waste yarn, I smoothed the stitches out and had a look at progress so far. <i>Hmmm; that looks rather wide</i> I thought. So, I tried it on. And.... it was HUGE! If I'd carried on, I could have pegged it out and slept in it (well, not really, but I'm sure you get my drift).<br />
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Guess what I did next?<br />
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Yep! I ripped it back to the start of the short-row shaping - again. Then I had a look at the examples on Ravelry and had a ponder for a day or two before making a decision on how to take this forward.<br />
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Bracing myself (and vowing that this was it's last chance; if it didn't work out after this, it was going into the bin) I started the short-row section for a third time, but this time, I only did half the increases across the mid-bust section that the pattern stated and once I got to the round and round bit, I didn't do any waist shaping or further increases, which gave a narrower sillhouette. In hindsight, I could have put in some increases on the left side, but only every 20 or so rounds, but overall I'm happy with the sweater and the fabric the yarn's made is nice to wear.<br />
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It's just that it turned out to be much less straightforward than it should have been and I'm still at the stage of being slightly resentful that I wasted several hours knitting and re-knitting.<br />
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I'm currently knitting a <a href="https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/victorian-knit-along-scarf">Victorian Lace Scarf </a> (a Franklin Habit/Makers Mercantile knitalong*), another pair of socks for DD2 and have some spindle-spinning on the go, but I bought a new sweater pattern today - <a href="https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/granito">Granito</a> by Joji Locatelli. I'm going to use some hand-spun yarn for it and once it's finished drying, I'll be swatching**.<br />
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* I'll post about that soon.<br />
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** If I've got the right needles as I think the ones I want are being used for the Victorian Scarf!Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-32596020334864414702019-02-27T14:39:00.001+00:002019-02-27T14:39:28.028+00:00Striping Socks from Deep Stash YarnI cast these socks on yesterday afternoon:<br />
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They're coming along quite well, but they're not the socks I was planning on making.<br />
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I've got several skeins of yarn I spun to knit into socks and intended casting on one of those, but DD2 had other ideas and badgered me yesterday, even going upstairs and choosing some yarn!<br />
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To be fair to her, I'd promised I'd knit her some socks ever since I made several pairs for her sister before she went off to Uni last autumn, so these <b>are</b> overdue.<br />
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The yarn's nothing special - some Regia Flusi Monster (or something like that) - bought several years ago on sale. I'd made a pair of socks in the same yarn (but a different colour) for myself, and didn't really like them. I think the yarn's aimed at knitting socks for children as the non-turquoise colour repeats aren't very long, but DD2 seemed to like it, so there we are.<br />
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Unfortunately (for me), I'm now not going to be allowed to get on with any of the other projects I've got on the needles until these are finished. Last night, she sat with her crochet and told me that she was making a cowl and "you carry on knitting my socks"! This morning, just before her school transport arrived, she said the same thing, so I think she's expecting these to be made inside of a week.<br />
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Oh well, I've got other things to show off, once I've done some finishing and blocking so I suppose knitting these socks gives me an excuse to avoid the dreaded sewing in of ends!Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-45344316146106341512018-12-18T11:49:00.003+00:002018-12-18T21:52:21.983+00:00Christmas WreathThis is me blowing my younger daughter's trumpet. I've mentioned on here before that DD2 is autistic ('traditional' type of autism with very impaired speech, etc). Despite her difficulties understanding many things in her life, she is very clever, but her language processing impairment means she finds it difficult to follow instructions. She's also resistant to being asked or told what to do (we're thinking it might be a condition called Pathological Demand Avoidance, which is an anxiety-driven need to be in control) so we have to tread carefully when trying to introduce new things to her.<br />
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When she learned to crochet, she first watched me and then made long chains, undid them and then made more lengths of chain, until I left her with one of my crochet magazines opened to the 'how to crochet' tutorial pages towards the back of the magazine when I went off to work and by the time I got home, she'd made a decent-sized square of crochet! Since then, she's made several dishcloths and washcloths, some of which she's given away to people she likes at school. In the last week or so, she's moved on to making scarves; quite narrow and not too long, but it's a step forward, especially as the first scarf she made was for one of her friends at college whose birthday it was.<br />
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A few weeks ago at knitting group, we were talking about Christmas crafts and someone mentioned rag wreaths, which interested me, so I looked them up on the internet, bought some fat quarters of Christmassy fabric from a local store and then went to Home Bargains and Poundland to buy cheap, small-sized decorations. Hubby ordered some wreath frames/rings for me from Amazon (he has Prime; I don't) and I spent a couple of hours one Saturday morning cutting the fabric into strips approximately 10cm x 2.5cm with my pinking shears, showed her how to tie them onto the wreath frame and that kept her occupied for several hours over the course of two or three days. The result?<br />
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I hadn't planned on her using quite so many baubles on the wreath (and had thought I might move some of them around once she'd gone to college) but posted a photo of it on Facebook and was told by a friend that I should leave it as it is, so I did!<br />
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As hubby had bought a pack of 10 rings and we had at least half the fabric strips left, I asked if she'd like to make one for Granny and she said she would, so another few hours of tying fabric strips ensued and some baubles added (not as many as on the first wreath though), finished off with one of the red bows and we'll be taking it round to Granny and Grandad's house when we visit them later in the week:<br />
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I gave one of the wreath frames to a friend so she could have a go, which still leaves us with 7, so I'm hoping there will be Christmas fabric on sale in January so I can stock up for next year.<br />
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I wasn't sure how these would turn out, to be honest, but they're very effective and make a change from tinsel, blingy wreaths. The rings are 8" in diameter and, once finished, just fit inside the large-sized square Dunelm freezer bags I've got (which press together to close) so if I squish out as much air as I can, the wreath should be able to be stored for next year.<br />
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If you fancy making one, then just search for rag wreaths on the Internet for ideas.<br />
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Craft-wise from me, there's not much going on at the moment. Our Christmas tree and decorations were put up a couple of weeks ago which means my weaving loom has been packed up and put away (there's no room for it in the lounge!) and my spinning wheel's been relocated in the dining room, so all I've got on the go at the moment is a pair of plain socks.<br />
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Wishing you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, I'll 'see' you in January.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-24195495958469184132018-11-27T11:53:00.001+00:002018-11-27T11:53:03.327+00:00A Couple of Quick KnitsI seem to be getting a lot of knitting done at the moment and have two more finished items to show off.<br />
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First is a <a href="https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/hitchhiker">Hitchhiker Scarf</a>, which I've made before and is a very popular pattern (over 30,000 projects on Ravelry; wow!). The yarn I wanted to use was some handspun merino which I'd spun earlier this year. I'd bought a colour pack of 10 x 25g bundles of fibre from World of Wool and it had sat in my fibre stash for at least a couple of years so I thought it was time to spin it. <br />
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I split each nest of fibre into thirds in order to spin a 3ply yarn. For the first single (or ply), I spun each colour end to end; for the second single, I split each colour lengthwise into 4 pieces and spun in the same colour order 4 times and for the third single, I split each colour into 8 and spun that in the same colour order as bobbins 1 and 2. After I'd plied the singles together (using my Jumbo flyer and bobbin) I ended up with a large skein of yarn that weighed 260g and measured 387 metres.</div>
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For my Hitchhiker scarf, I used a 5mm KnitPro circular. This pattern is very easy to memorise and didn't need too much attention, so was good knitting to do whilst watching TV or chatting at Knitting Group, so was a quick knit and, in fact, only took five days to complete. I blocked it last week whilst hubby was away and I was able to pin it out on the floor of the spare room/office and today I nipped outside while the weather was good (it's since got very foggy here) and snapped a photo in the daylight:</div>
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I'm very pleased with it and think I'll use it a lot, especially if the weather turns colder, as forecast. It's nice and wide, but not too deep, so can be wrapped around the neck a couple of times.</div>
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Having finished that scarf, I went hunting through my stash (hubby's made comments about how large it is so I haven't bought any yarn for at least three months) for something to make into an <a href="https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/escarpment-cowl-2">Escarpment Cowl</a>. DD1 will be home from Uni in three weeks and I thought that, rather than wearing a scarf which needs to be unwound, she might prefer a cowl so, when on a Tube train or a bus, she can just pull it off over her head. I hunted down the two balls of Sirdar Escape DK which I knew I had and started knitting. Again, this turned out to be a fairly mindless knit, apart from increases every other round and was soon knitted up. I modified the pattern very slightly in that I knit it a bit longer than the pattern said before joining and starting to work in the round (because DD1 has a larger-than-average head circumference and very thick, wavy hair) and did an extra four rounds/two ridges of the garter stitch border before casting off (and I used the JSSBO rather than the one in the pattern). The thing I'd forgotten though, was how much this yarn bleeds when it's washed, so I'm wondering whether to make another one to wrap up for her at Christmas (she tends to throw all her washing into the machine for one load as nothing she's got has bled). Oh well, maybe she'll just have to remember to handwash it -- or (most likely) wait until she comes home in the holidays so I can do it for her!</div>
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The colours are a little darker than the photo shows, but it's a mixture of blue, purple and fuschia pink. It's a clever pattern because it looks like a shawl with the point at the front, but just pops over the head (I couldn't get the back to sit right on the hanger, but the back goes down into a shallower point too), so there's not too much bulk under a coat.</div>
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I cast on something new yesterday evening as well and I also started a new weaving project last week, which I'll tell you about next time. I'm really getting things made, aren't I. In the meantime, I'm tied to the house today as we're expecting a couple of deliveries and it's just me and Jess at home today. I suppose it gives me an excuse to do more knitting and spinning as I don't want to switch on the vacuum cleaner and miss hearing the doorbell, do I!!!</div>
Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-89347101262088505992018-11-16T23:02:00.002+00:002018-11-16T23:11:19.608+00:00A New SweaterWhen I received Betty T - my Ashford Traveller spinning wheel - as a Christmas present from hubby and the girls, I started to amass a stash of fibre (to accompany the stash of yarn I'd accumulated over the years). World of Wool in the UK was recommended to me as an online supplier of fibre for spinning and, indeed, there is a lot of choose from. Before I started spinning, I'd considered wool as -- well -- wool. It was only as I started to look at the pretty braids of fibre being sold that I saw names such as BFL (Bluefaced Leicester); Jacob; Falkland; Corriedale, etc and the penny dropped that different breeds of sheep have different types of fleece. So..... every time I bought something prettily dyed from World of Wool (quite a lot of merino-based fibres, it has to be said) I added into my shopping cart a 100g 'bump' of natural coloured prepared/combed top from a different breed of sheep.<br />
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To the point where I had at least 12 (it might be 14..... or 16...... something like that).<br />
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So, I decided that I needed to get on with spinning these single bumps of yarn, which would become skeins of yarn in the region of 90-100g. My first thought was a blanket, so I started spinning each bump in turn into a worsted-style 3ply yarn. So far, so good -- until I got realistic and remembered how difficult hand-washing a 100% wool, easily-feltable blanket would be.<br />
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My thoughts then turned to a sweater. Aha! thought I; a colour-block sweater, much like that Agnes sweater from Brooklyn Tweed that I made two or three years ago. So, I had a look on Ravelry. I searched for colour block sweaters. I searched for boxy sweaters, but nothing came up for aran-weight yarn. I was disappointed for about a day, then had another look and still nothing.<br />
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I had a bit of a light-bulb moment though. Brooklyn Tweed patterns are noted for their detail in both instructions, measurements and schematics. Agnes is a boxy sweater. It is a forgiving type of sweater when it comes to ease and shaping. I could knit the smallest size with bigger needles than specified and it would be ok.<br />
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Actually no, it wouldn't (and I have no idea whatsoever why I thought it would). I cast on and after a couple of hours, some garter stitch bottom edge and a couple of inches of stocking stitch later it became apparent that I'd end up with a chest size of around 56" which, when your full bust measurement is 40", is one heck of a lot of ease. It got ripped!<br />
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<i>I Can Do This</i> I thought. I *can* convert a pattern written for a 4ply/fingering-weight yarn to fit both me *and* my aran-weight yarn.<br />
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What I haven't admitted until now (although I might have mentioned it when I wrote about my first Agnes sweater) is how much I like the neckline on this sweater. The double decrease is just so flipping clever, as well as stylish. I think the neck shaping (plus the garter stitch and rolled stocking stitch/stockinette) might have been the reason for me discounting other patterns which were actually written for aran-weight yarn.<br />
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Anyway, to cut a very long story short, I spent a few hours doing some maths (there might, or might not have been head-scratching, swearing and a fair few mugs of tea drunk) and came up with this:<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Front</td></tr>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Back</td></tr>
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I think I mentioned the neckline?<br />
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I finished it on Thursday (spent most of the day watching the Parliament drama unfold whilst sewing seams) and this morning I steam-blocked it so I could wear it to knitting group. It could do with a wet-block, but that might have to wait a couple of days until I can pin it out in the spare bedroom while hubby's at work (he uses the spare room as an office on the days he works at home).<br />
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Yarns used are:<br />
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Back: Brown Jacob; Oatmeal BFL; Manx Loaghtan<br />
Front: Brown New Zealand; Zwartbles; Light Grey Swaledale<br />
Sleeves: Manx Loaghtan and Grey Suffolk : Light Grey Swaledale and Grey Suffolk<br />
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Once it's been blocked and washed, I might sew some tape or ribbing around the the neckline. As well as giving the neckline stability so it doesn't sag, it also covers up the picked up edges!<br />
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I spoke to DD1 this evening and she seems fine. We hadn't heard from her since last Sunday, so were just checking all is ok as she's just over halfway through her first term and had phoned a few times a week for the previous couple of weeks so we were wondering if after the gloss and excitement of the first few weeks away at uni had been and gone, she was feeling a bit homesick, but she says she's just been busy. She met up with Granny a couple of weeks ago (to go to the Chelsea match - my in-laws have season tickets so DD1 used Grandad's ticket) and I've suggested that she tries to find a time to meet up with her father every once in a while when he's working in London, especially as his office is about 30 mins by public transport from her Uni!!!<br />
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I took with me to knitting group this morning a big tote bag with my interchangeable needle case (one of those small, metal briefcase thingammies from Paperchase), a few balls of yarn and a couple of patterns as I wasn't sure what I wanted to knit next, but decided on a new scarf in some handspun yarn, so more about that next time.<br />
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Have a lovely weekend :) I'm working my usual shifts tomorrow and Sunday, but new Smart-Tills were due to be installed this Wednesday just gone, so tomorrow could be fun (wish me luck!).</div>
Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-72119417587483950332018-11-07T20:16:00.002+00:002018-11-07T20:16:39.545+00:00Has it REALLY been that long?I can't believe it's been 16 months since I last blogged.<br />
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What happened? Life happened, that's what and I fell off the blogging bike and didn't manage to get back on again.<br />
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However, things have calmed down now and so I shall start posting things about my crafting again.<br />
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Nothing drastic or bad happened over the last 16 months, it was simply that life got much busier. <br />
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Both daughters started the last year at their respective schools in September 2017. This meant that a couple of months before that, DD1 started considering which universities to look round and apply to. We spent three days and two nights away from home, attending the Open Days at three of her possibilities and she went to look at another one with her school. Then came writing her Personal Statement for her UCAS application (I hadn't realised how important that is). She also had mock A-level exams and sat the Cambridge University entrance exam. Then came university interviews and offers. Of the five universities she applied to, four asked her to go for an interview and one gave her an unconditional offer without interview (if she put it as her first choice). She was offered conditional places at three of her choices and got a rejection from Cambridge (there were tears, but she soon got over it). Then came final choices and finally she sat her A-levels and we then waited for Results Day and were delighted when she got 3 A*s and an A which meant she comfortably fulfilled her first-choice offer and just over five weeks ago she and I went to London so she could move into the Halls she'd been allocated and start her degree in Physics at Imperial College London. I can't express in writing how proud we are of her and her achievements so far and how hard she's worked to get where she is :) She calls a couple of times a week (I think now that she's halfway through the first term and the excitement of the first couple of weeks is finished she's feeling a little bit homesick) and seems to have settled in really well and sounds as though she's met some very nice people.<br />
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As for DD2, she had to move from the SEN school she'd been at since a week after she turned 5 to somewhere else that offered a suitable place for her special needs. In short, I narrowed it down to one place and told the local education authority that if they couldn't confirm a place there, we'd have to think about the private school owned and run by the National Autistic Society (which costs lots of £ a year). She started at the school (sorry - College - we're not allowed to call it School!!) at the beginning of September and has settled in well, helped by knowing three girls she used to be at school with who are a year older than she is. It wasn't an easy transition as she was resistant to changing schools, but we got there in the end, but had some bumpy moments.<br />
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So, life has now calmed down and we've adapted to our new routine, so feel able to start blogging again, which means I need to dust off my proper camera and make sure it's got an SD card in it!<br />
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I'll 'speak' to you again soon<br />
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xx<br />
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<br />Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-48846827408707313142017-06-28T09:35:00.001+01:002017-06-28T09:35:09.837+01:00Some finished thingsA quick round-up of some finished projects.<br />
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First off, I finished my latest Attic24 Neat Ripple blanket:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhVs1boQYf1sNewTCmcSUX12myk7FuErzLq0nsn2HJyJ8u7sn4JFgkWERRlamdOs7DfgD6TQtudJP20WXeA7nfw5lqPJMjtZ32OcOzAVPiDrXyAFfSSGLIHcSbT3T91gfW8r1p7rWNk_RA/s1600/IMG_5005.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhVs1boQYf1sNewTCmcSUX12myk7FuErzLq0nsn2HJyJ8u7sn4JFgkWERRlamdOs7DfgD6TQtudJP20WXeA7nfw5lqPJMjtZ32OcOzAVPiDrXyAFfSSGLIHcSbT3T91gfW8r1p7rWNk_RA/s400/IMG_5005.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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Statistics:<br />
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<ul>
<li>Yarn - Caron Simply Soft, bought from Wool Warehouse (list of colours on <a href="http://www.ravelry.com/projects/Christine65/neat-ripple-2">my Ravelry project page for this blanket</a>).</li>
<li>Ten ripple repeats wide and - <i>I think</i> - there were 12 rows of each colour.</li>
<li>Colour sequence from the weighted random stripe generator on <a href="http://www.biscuitsandjam.com/stripe_maker_wt.php">Biscuits & Jam</a> .</li>
<li>The ends were 'filled in' to make the top and bottom edges straight before doing the border.</li>
<li>Amount of yarn used - just under 1.3kg, including ends (nearly 2,200 metres).</li>
</ul>
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<br />
For the border, I used each colour, doing two rounds of treble crochet (US DC), then one round of double crochet (US SC), flipping the blanket over after each round so it didn't skew. I finished off with a round of crab stitch/reverse double crochet.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjdk7D7wDxeXPYA6BwkCpJwgFtVO9CuzsyV5W8s0AHEMtK3PlUP7SjZcZLmMQsLWdyRrg9B1-6vt4jdvQM-OxnetI5h_n-z0RGeWztJX9cViTUmhuGivyAuNx9f5ir75oWaHsRxXP-MjM/s1600/IMG_5006.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhjdk7D7wDxeXPYA6BwkCpJwgFtVO9CuzsyV5W8s0AHEMtK3PlUP7SjZcZLmMQsLWdyRrg9B1-6vt4jdvQM-OxnetI5h_n-z0RGeWztJX9cViTUmhuGivyAuNx9f5ir75oWaHsRxXP-MjM/s400/IMG_5006.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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I enjoyed using the stripe generator as after the initial fiddling about refreshing the page until it produced a sequence that I liked it took away the pressure of which colour to use next. I also like the unevenness of the stripes. Most are one stripe high, but there are some two-row and one or two three-row stripes as well. I particularly like the top part of the blanket with the dark red, light beige, chocolate brown (which is a lovely colour and I never thought I'd say that about brown!), aqua and darker blue; those colours seem to play very happily together.<br />
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I've started another blanket, but more on that another time as it's a stash-buster and I've only done a few rows on it.<br />
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I've also finished a couple of pairs of socks in the last month:<br />
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A green pair from the Exmoor Bluefaced yarn I spun a couple of months ago:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrG4INxwMxc1ReIc32QgzRp9jCABhNsWqH97cTMBWQ30HyHfDJq-jBGjLtkjds5fvGzqsN4gAmwZv9vJDLuLdTPdZ9jQu8NnRWHDTze_DNHm4d9-u2yIjaZzvazq38wsW0v71l98JEwFE/s1600/IMG_5003.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrG4INxwMxc1ReIc32QgzRp9jCABhNsWqH97cTMBWQ30HyHfDJq-jBGjLtkjds5fvGzqsN4gAmwZv9vJDLuLdTPdZ9jQu8NnRWHDTze_DNHm4d9-u2yIjaZzvazq38wsW0v71l98JEwFE/s400/IMG_5003.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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These are fairly substantial due to the nature of the fleece, but feel nice on the feet and, to be honest, I'm quite liking these slightly heavier weight (in yarn terms) socks I've been making. My default needle size for commercial fingering-weight sock yarn (Regia, Lorna's Laces, etc) is 2.25mm but I with the socks I've made from handspun yarn I've been using a 2.5mm or 2.75mm needle.<br />
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The other pair of socks I finished is from two balls of Regia Arne & Carlos which I've had in my stash since the yarn was first available to buy:<br />
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This is the second pair of socks I've made from this yarn (the first pair was in 2015 in the 3657/Summer Night colour and they've worn well as I'm wearing them today!). This orangey/yellow colour is 3654/Twilight).<br />
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That's all my recent FOs. I've got a busy day ahead as I'm off tomorrow morning for a couple of nights with DD1. We're going to university open days in London (Imperial and UCL) and then Nottingham on Saturday, travelling by train and staying in hotels overnight :) Part of my busy day includes finishing off the first sock in the pair I'm currently knitting so I can leave it at home and start knitting the second while I'm away. I might put a ball of cotton yarn and a crochet hook into my bag as well (one can never have too many dish/wash cloths!). I'll also be taking one of my spindles with me as the Tour de Fleece starts on Saturday and our train journey home is Nottingham to Norwich and then Norwich to home. I've told DD1 that I won't make her go to Loop this time (but Liberty and maybe John Lewis may be on the cards if we end up on Oxford Street). Ooh - I've just had a thought; Harrods isn't far from Imperial* and I wonder if they still have a craft/yarn department!!!!<br />
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*The college I attended was in South Kensington, so although it was many moons ago, it's an area I know fairly well.<br />
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See you soon :)Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-80700321317972225562017-06-14T13:22:00.000+01:002017-06-14T13:24:42.125+01:00Spinning Round-Up: MayLate again! No excuses; I just haven't got round to writing this entry.<br />
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I haven't got any spinning FOs to show for May. I was going to say I've just been plodding on with my spinning, but that's not right because 'plodding' suggests it's a chore when the truth is, I've been enjoying what I've been doing.<br />
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The bright pink fluff is coming along and I finished the first single. When I first started using my spindle, I hand-wound the yarn off onto the inside of a toilet roll, but that took absolutely ages to do, so now, I tape some thinnish card around the core of my yarn-winder and carefully wind off from the spindle, which takes about a third of the time. Here's the first single:<br />
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The colours in this range from a very pale, almost-white pink through to that eye-searing bright pink on the outside of the cake. I finished the second ply yesterday evening and have started on the third, so hopefully I'll have a finished yarn to show off at the beginning of July.<br />
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I've barely done any spinning on my Turkish spindle, so no photos of that. I think I've spun a couple more rolags and I can see that the rolags I'm making are getting better with practice.<br />
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On my wheel, I've had progress on my sweater spin (yay!!). I filled each of my six bobbins with 70g of spun fibre, which meant that I couldn't do any more until I'd plyed two of the bobbins together to make the final yarn:<br />
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<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhtTLpbmOxKgMcjL0pwUO3bmjX30gM6Unpulb1kwE8K70R1f_bqO4_NRCbl-HDloaqk8dWkKGeQjkfMO4cW91n74-QrRalh1JjOUtlDFa82tNtLeLqglnhtIJX7nwD_0Ra3m035pwimNM8/s1600/IMG_4999.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhtTLpbmOxKgMcjL0pwUO3bmjX30gM6Unpulb1kwE8K70R1f_bqO4_NRCbl-HDloaqk8dWkKGeQjkfMO4cW91n74-QrRalh1JjOUtlDFa82tNtLeLqglnhtIJX7nwD_0Ra3m035pwimNM8/s400/IMG_4999.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Bobbins in a shoebox</td></tr>
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5p5ZF6uhdrPeOW3fqM_wrbpXatP23au0BDXIi74lTYcA-T9tPXEw-qfWSDKN1ZHeDdYieIkY6Rd8kD-8p4kBWy4VRHhQrJQHSpRl1zZm_TNMFLtvDi2ARXXulYmm3-Nr7f2qM1EX5VUM/s1600/IMG_4998.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg5p5ZF6uhdrPeOW3fqM_wrbpXatP23au0BDXIi74lTYcA-T9tPXEw-qfWSDKN1ZHeDdYieIkY6Rd8kD-8p4kBWy4VRHhQrJQHSpRl1zZm_TNMFLtvDi2ARXXulYmm3-Nr7f2qM1EX5VUM/s400/IMG_4998.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">First plyed skein of yarn!</td></tr>
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Because each skein of yarn I'm making weighs 130-140g, I'm using my jumbo flyer and bobbin to ply the two strands of yarn into the final yarn and that means my legs are getting a good work-out. In fact, I overdid it with that first skein as I plyed it all in one day, which was a bit silly because I've still got foot problems (plantar fasciitis in my right heel/sole). That first skein weighs 129g and is 378m in length, pre-washing, so I think I'm going to need five skeins in total. It'll be interesting to see how the yarn blooms once it's washed. I've made four more 35g batts on my drum carder and have just started spinning those up.<br />
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I've also started a long-term project on my other top-whorl spindle (I bought two the same, thinking that DD2 might be interested in learning to spindle spin, but she wasn't). I bought a 500g bag of mixed 'waste' fibre from World of Wool, so I've sorted it out into bundles of 30-35g according to colour and am going to spin each bundle into a single and will then make multi-coloured yarn by plying three singles together. This is an 'upstairs' project, so I don't work on it as much as I do my 'downstairs' things (a few minutes while I'm waiting for the bath to fill, first thing in the morning while I'm waiting for the teasmade to do its thing, if I wake up in the night and don't want to read, etc). The first bundle is purple:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnivAxUxjXECkPl1xxBRE783lgmVCB_CEi9HwuOh2cdMgiCzwKqVOlVx8k3zLVz0hzQO5PbeGwp4dfSIcekYOFKpom-glFN1srtZd9peTIJSP3QURwmOTEKDrOSD4VeKYYOKqHLmxZ98w/s1600/IMG_5009.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnivAxUxjXECkPl1xxBRE783lgmVCB_CEi9HwuOh2cdMgiCzwKqVOlVx8k3zLVz0hzQO5PbeGwp4dfSIcekYOFKpom-glFN1srtZd9peTIJSP3QURwmOTEKDrOSD4VeKYYOKqHLmxZ98w/s400/IMG_5009.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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Finally, not a WIP, but a new purchase. I'd seen large spindles for plying on a couple of blogs, especially <a href="https://www.etsy.com/uk/listing/497190812/medium-weight-steampunk-gear-top-whorl?ref=shop_home">this one from Snyder Spindles</a> (scroll down to see the photo), but the cost of post and packaging from the US, plus the probability of having to pay duty and post office handling fees meant I couldn't really justify ordering one, so I had another search on the internet and came across a UK company called Kerry Spindles, who makes a large-sized (68g or so) top-whorl spindle for plying. I was going to put in a link, but I don't really need to because I've taken a photo instead:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBMxx6PpjoVA1BMA1-wrLM5F6PHwMMMD_Si_24rVqrSVQBovAKqbP5dczqL7o7zEf0uCE2x28_qi8QJWFHLD1oNh_P3UkHGkI7m3rtaCqc4r80W5pSwx5qLg0NUN2p346wZL6L6SaRG1I/s1600/IMG_5010.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1067" data-original-width="1600" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBMxx6PpjoVA1BMA1-wrLM5F6PHwMMMD_Si_24rVqrSVQBovAKqbP5dczqL7o7zEf0uCE2x28_qi8QJWFHLD1oNh_P3UkHGkI7m3rtaCqc4r80W5pSwx5qLg0NUN2p346wZL6L6SaRG1I/s400/IMG_5010.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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Yes, I bought one! I also took a photo of it next to one of my top-whorl spindles so you can see the difference in the sizes:<br />
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The new spindle (which is naturally purple - the wood is <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peltogyne">Purpleheart</a>) is just under 4" in diameter and the lighter spindle is just under 2.5" in diameter. <br />
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In other spinning news, I've joined a team for the Tour de Fleece which starts on 1 July. The team I'm spinning with is the Wool 'n Spinning one, from a blog/vlog and corresponding Ravelry group that I follow. I've never done the Tour de Fleece before (<a href="http://www.ravelry.com/groups/tour-de-fleece">link to the Ravelry group</a> if you want to see what it's all about), so it should be fun.<br />
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So, that's my spinning summary for May.<br />
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I've got some knitting and crochet catching up blogging to do as well, which I'm hoping to do tomorrow.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-89108384344855981462017-05-10T09:40:00.000+01:002017-05-10T09:40:05.354+01:00Spinning Round-Up: AprilI'm a bit late this month, but this was because my husband took last week as annual leave from work, so my usual routine went out of the window simply because I was working around him!<br />
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So, what's been happening with me spinning-wise over the last month? Well, there's been a bit, but not a huge amount.<br />
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I finished the brightly coloured Neptune roving from World of Wool and I'm quite pleased with it.<br />
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It's a 3ply yarn and these were the three balls of singles I made:<br />
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After plying and washing, the skein looks like this:<br />
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Here's a close-up:<br />
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From a distance, the yarn has an overall brown look to it, because there were so many colours in it. I'll be interested in seeing how it knits up and if those colours and the barber-polling make the knitted fabric look more brown. Time will tell.<br />
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Anyway, the skein weighs 93g and is 267m in length. Not bad!<br />
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That was it for finished spinning in April. As for Spins in Progress:<br />
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I bought a bump of a merino blend in various pinks (because it was on offer) and when it arrived, well, all I can say is WOW. It didn't look *that* pink on-screen! I've divided the fibre into thirds and have stripped it down into narrow strips, trying to separate the colours (not always successfully) and am spinning it into three singles which will be plyed together once it's all done (it's taking a while; I think it's the brightness putting me off):<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">It's brighter than this. One of the colours is called Barbie!</td></tr>
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I also got out my hand carders and some oddments of fibre I'd got and have been making rolags, just to practice (because I'm not very good at hand-carding and need to work on my technique) and am spinning those on my Turkish spindle.<br />
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As you can see, I haven't got very far with this, but pick it up and do a few twirls when I've got a free minute or two.<br />
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My big spin of the year is very slow-going and fairly time-consuming. Because I'm making the batts I'm spinning, I have to first weigh the yarn for each batt (15g BFL, 10g silk, 5g Welsh, 5g merino) before putting them through my drum carder, carefully pulling them off and then putting it back through the carder a second time, to further blend the fibres. After that, I then spin the batts (two batts per bobbin). So, it's taking time and I'm not as enthusiastic as I could be because I don't keep my drum carder downstairs, so have to go and get it each time I want to make a new batch of batts (I've been making two at a time). On top of that, I've developed a slight problem with my right foot (plantar fasciitis) and doing too much spinning on my wheel seems to be exacerbating that, so I'm having to pace myself (as well as doing the exercises I've been given). So far, I've spun three bobbins of yarn, which is six batts and I've prepared another two batts.<br />
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<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUdLTfolIGj_EbTe1Yjva0qBZM_Da58oQxCa_JfFJFj3Q50Cd8z3rnJRwn0ikHJslnhV-8ly3XdRKJaIyyZRq9RWQbwqemnon7RGdc9Rw5qTmZx4kfqRk4g6bYNkUokbPiVXAmt1OnvzI/s1600/IMG_4983.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhUdLTfolIGj_EbTe1Yjva0qBZM_Da58oQxCa_JfFJFj3Q50Cd8z3rnJRwn0ikHJslnhV-8ly3XdRKJaIyyZRq9RWQbwqemnon7RGdc9Rw5qTmZx4kfqRk4g6bYNkUokbPiVXAmt1OnvzI/s400/IMG_4983.JPG" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">I've no idea why the Wii board is against the wall; I've just noticed it!</td></tr>
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I suspect that as it's black, that doesn't help as, let's face it, spinning something bright and colourful is much more exciting to do! Still, get it done I shall and I am enjoying the whole process of making a sweater starting with a few bags of fibre. <br />
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I've also been using some more of my handspun, so will show that off soon as it's not quite finished yet!<br />
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I'm going to spend some time this morning finishing putting the warp threads on my long-neglected rigid heddle loom as I have a project in mind. More on that another time as well.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-45257173781360072402017-04-29T22:14:00.002+01:002017-04-29T22:14:46.554+01:00Socks from HandspunSo, having produced some skeins of yarn on my spindles and wheel, I've recently got round to knitting with them, rather than putting them in a bag and adding them to my stash!<br />
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First off, was the spindle-spun grey/burgundy/lime green yarn which was the first I made on my drop spindle:<br />
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There's nothing particularly exciting about them. Each strand of yarn was quite thin, so they look a bit tweedy. What you can't see is that, at the cuff of one of them, the knitting gets much bulkier (and is therefore a bit wider than the other one), because that's the bit of grey yarn I spun first and it's lumpier than the rest! No-one will see the cuff under my trousers though, so I'm not going to worry about it.<br />
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I finished the next pair of socks yesterday. I'd like to say these were a labour of love but, if I'm being honest, it was more a case of "you're going to be socks if it bloody well kills me".<br />
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Several posts ago, when I did my February spinning round-up, I talked about this yarn and how I was disappointed with it. It's Teeswater, which is a long-wool breed of sheep (in dog terms, think of Afghan Hound rather than Poodle). I decided to go ahead and knit socks with it, but because I had less than 200m of yarn, I used a part-ball of dark green Colinette Jitterbug I had for the toes, heel and cuffs, otherwise I'd only be able to make ankle-length/tennis-style socks.<br />
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I haven't taken photos, but believe me, once I'd done the toe in the Jitterbug and was a few rounds into the foot, it felt like I was knitting with string. It was horrible; even more horrible than I thought it would be. So, I sighed a bit, put the knitting aside and had a think. I decided to unply the yarn a bit, to make it less twisty and twine-like and then see how that went. As my wheel was busy, I did the un-plying on my spindle (that's 3 or so hours I won't get back!) then re-skeined the yarn, washed it again and left it to dry.<br />
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I'd only ripped back to where I'd joined the handspun yarn after knitting the toe, so I was saved having to re-knit 20 or so rounds and the less twisty yarn did feel softer to knit, so I was much happier. Then I noticed the colour transitions were rather block-like. By this point, I was beyond caring, so just carried on regardless and this is what the finished socks look like;<br />
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I know you're going to be very kind and say they look nice and it 's an achievement to have produced the yarn at all, but they're definitely a bit funny-looking and not something you'd want to visibly wear, so please don't think I'll be offended if you give me an honest opinion (and there's always the danger that if you're too nice, I might offer to send them to you!!!!!).<br />
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I'm half-hoping they'll fall apart during the first wear, or will felt horribly within a few weeks. <br />
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What's the betting they'll wear like iron and won't felt, break or anything else that happens to hand-knit socks and I'll be stuck with them for ages and ages?<br />
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Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-30386691324367240592017-04-25T12:14:00.000+01:002017-04-25T12:19:59.907+01:00Comfortable FeetI don't know about you, but I hate having cold feet, which is why I like wearing hand-knitted socks so much (I can't remember the last time I wore shop-bought socks, to be honest; it's definitely been at least three years). I especially dislike having cold feet when I take Jess for her walks around our area.<br />
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When Jess and are out walking, I usually wear wellies or in the summer, Croc-like clogs. As part of where we usually walk is on the common ground behind our housing estate, I need footwear that's waterproof and (because *some* dog-walkers aren't very conscientious in their dog-walking duties) that can be hosed down if the need arises. I don't find full-length wellies to be overly comfortable so, when my in-laws asked if there was anything I'd particularly like them to buy me as a Christmas present, I said I'd like some ankle-length wellies, preferably some snazzy, patterned ones. Being a good son and spouse, hubby looked online for his mother and on Christmas Day, I unwrapped a box and in it was these:<br />
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You can imagine how pleased I was to receive them; they were just what I wanted.<br />
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I happily wore them, feeling ridiculously happy when I caught sight of them when I looked down and saw them sticking out from the bottom of my jeans.<br />
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However..... there was a catch and it's a catch that I've often found with other pairs of wellies I've owned.<br />
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Before too long, the thin fabric on the top of the insoles (which was bright pink) started to come away from the thin foam bottom layer and every time I took my feet out of the boots, the insole started to come out as well, and started to get wrinkled, needing to be flattened out and put back in place before I could wear them again.<br />
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So, I looked online for replacement insoles but a. they were quite expensive and b. the ones I found looked as though I'd have the same problem with them. I then remembered that I'd been able to buy replacement sheepskin insoles for the suede Ugg-type boots hubby had bought me years ago from New Zealand, so I looked online to see if I could buy something similar. Blimey, those had gone up in price since the last time I bought some and I couldn't justify the cost.<br />
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It was then that I had a brainwave! I have a large stash of yarn and I knew I had a random 100g skein of some Rowan chunky-weight yarn in a mid grey that I had no plans for (I think someone gave it to me). So, out came a large crochet hook and I crocheted up a rectangle of fabric.<br />
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Then the 'fun' started. I put the crocheted square into the washing machine and ran it through a cycle, but it didn't felt as much as I wanted it to. So, I put it in the tumble dryer on high heat. Still not felted enough. Back into the washing machine, this time with some towels and through the dryer again. Still too much stitch definition. I filled the washing up bowl with hot water and washing-up liquid and I punished the fabric, rubbing it and scrubbing it until I was happier with it (although it was now a bit soapy) and then back into the washing machine (with more towels) for a final run and then a dry. Hurrah! Finally, I had felt. A fairly hefty bit of felt.<br />
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I got a cereal box out of the recycling tub, took out one of the unsatisfactory insoles, smoothed it out on the cardboard and drew around it before cutting out the template. Then, I took the dry rectangle of felted wool and drew around the cardboard template, turned the template upside down and drew around it a second time and cut out my new insoles:<br />
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That was a few weeks ago now, so I apologise that I'm showing you a photo of insoles that have seen my feet lots of times.<br />
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I put them into my boots before Jess and I went on our afternoon walk and, oh my goodness, what a difference. They are *so* comfortable, as well as being warm.<br />
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They're so comfortable, in fact, that I'm thinking of making some more to go into the shoes I wear to work as my feet get pretty tired after a five-hour shift where I don't get to sit down for more than ten minutes. Next time though, I think I'll knit the piece of fabric as I think it might felt better.<br />
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Comfy feet; there's no finer feeling!Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-91383851698545777952017-04-19T12:52:00.000+01:002017-04-19T12:52:19.627+01:00I have an inkling........ my newest crafting 'toy' is going to be fun!<br />
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You may have gathered from posts I've written that, while he complains about the amount of space my crafting paraphernalia takes up, my husband is a bit of an enabler as he keeps buying me equipment to use (spinning wheel, weaving loom and drum carder) as well as skeins of nice yarn and bags of fibre for spinning. Well, at Christmas, the last present I was instructed to open (he wanted to keep it until last) was an Ashford Inkle Loom. In case you don't know, inkle looms are small weaving looms, used to make straps and bands (<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inkle_weaving">Wikipedia entry</a>). The difference between this and weaving on a rigid heddle (or floor) loom is that the weft threads (the horizontal ones) are squeezed between the long, warp threads so they're invisible (or barely visible). This creates a very firm fabric, which is what makes it good for items where you don't want any stretch (think guitar or bag strap).<br />
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I'd never even thought of buying an inkle loom and, to be honest, I was tiny bit disappointed because a. I didn't what I'd use it for and b. I was hoping for a tensioned Lazy Kate for spinning (maybe for my birthday; I'll drop strong hints!!!). Hubby had also bought me a book of patterns to make on the inkle loom and I read through that, read lots online and - finally - got out the box and assembled the loom a couple of weeks ago. Then I went stash-diving and pulled out some white cotton and some variegated green/yellow yarn which I was given and which I think is a wool/cotton sock yarn.<br />
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Warping for the first time (putting on the long threads) was, erm, 'interesting', not helped by DD1 deciding while I was doing it that she'd emerge from her room and come down for a chat! I don't think it helps that I'm left-handed and the loom is right-handed biased (like many things), so winding the yarn around the pegs feels a bit awkward. Anyway, I started weaving and soon got into a rhythm, once I'd got my head into inkle-weaving mode and beating the weft yarn down hard rather than rigid heddle-weaving mode where the warp and weft threads are both visible and lay next to each other, giving the 'over and under' appearance of the woven fabric.<br />
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This was my first band, which I finished last week:<br />
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This is the first pattern in the book that I was bought with the loom and is about 140cm long (I've no idea what I'm going to do with it!). It didn't take long, once I got going and worked out what I was supposed to do.<br />
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So, today I went back into my stash and pulled out a ball of blue cotton, a ball of orange cotton and a ball of grey cotton/linen that I knew were in there. I then chose another pattern from the book and warped the loom again:<br />
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You can see on the left where I've done the first few inches of weaving, including the first inch or so which is wider, before I got then tension right. This is going to be a strap for a bag I'm planning on making from the grey/blue/rust yarn I spun on my Turkish spindle last month. The two bits of cardboard are 'fillers' just after the start of the warp and will be taken out once the strap gets advanced around the loom (the warp is a continuous loop, so there's waste at the beginning and end - I'll take photos once I'm further on so you can see).<br />
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Here's a side shot so you can see how the warp winds around the pegs, giving lots of options for different lengths of band:<br />
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And, finally, here's a close-up of the weaving so far:<br />
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It's all good fun, but I've spent far too long looking at photos of finished bands that people on Ravelry have made!<br />
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I have been doing some knitting, I promise, but not a great deal, although I'm hoping to have a finished object to show you in a couple of days.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-85912650472327461622017-04-05T11:09:00.002+01:002017-04-05T11:09:21.645+01:00Spinning Round-Up - March<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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It's been just over a month since I last posted. This is because, knitting and crochet-wise, there's been very little to talk about, other than a hat. Everything I'm making at the moment is very slow going and then there was a pair of socks that I started twice before admitting defeat - the yarn just didn't want to be socks.<br />
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Spinning though, that's been a different story. I'm finding using my spindles so easy and convenient to pick up when I have a few minutes and even when watching television, listening to a podcast, or watching a videocast. So.....<br />
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<b>Finished Spins:</b><br />
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The fluff that I was spinning on my Turkish 3D-printed spindle is finished. This was the fibre from a bag of lap waste from World of Wool that I suspected was the leftovers from a custom blend someone had ordered. The first single that I spun was from - I think - the finished blend. The second single, the colours were the same, but less blended. The blend seems to consist of rust flax, silvery-grey flax, teal, black, grey and blue merino. I needed a bit more fibre to make up the weight of the second single, so found a couple of bits of grey which had also been in a lap waste bag. I pulled apart the colours of the second single, which gave a more stripey effect and then, once I'd done both, I plyed them together. Towards the end, as the weight on the spindle got heavier and the 'turtle' ball got bigger, it was a bit heavy-going and I wondered if I should have aimed for two smaller skeins instead, but I managed. <br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Finished Skein</td></tr>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Underside of the 'turtle'</td></tr>
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Close up</td></tr>
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The skein is 81g in weight and 277.5m in length. I'm planning on crocheting it into a smallish bag to use when I take Jess out for her walks, especially in the summer when I don't need to wear a coat, but need something to hold dog-walking essentials - bags, keys, phone, hand-sanitizer.</div>
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The other skein of yarn I finished spinning is the 3ply yarn using some merino I dyed using food colouring.</div>
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Two singles were spun from the dyed fibre and from the fibre I'd bought from World of Wool, I decided to use some yellow (I think it's called corn) Shetland for the third single and then I plyed them together:</div>
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89g, 376m. I'm really pleased with the way this came out and will knit a pair of socks from it.<div>
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I was going to ply the yarn on my wheel, but thought I might be able to get the whole skein on my spindle, which I just about managed. Again, because of the weight, the last 15g or so was hard going, so I'm not sure I'd do that again. As you can see from the photo below, the spindle was pretty full!<br /><br />
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Now, each third of fibre I spun was approx 36g, but I ended up with an 89g skein. I'm not sure, but suspect, that either I spun the Shetland a tiny bit thicker than the merino, or maybe it's a property of the different sheep breed, but I had leftovers of the self-dyed merino, so I plyed those two strands together and ended up with this 18g, 123m mini-skein (waste not, want not!!).</div>
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It's very pretty, with subtle colour changes, but I've absolutely no idea what I'm going to do with it! Maybe I need to spin something else to a similar weight and use it for a striping scarf/shawl. I don't know! Ooh - a thought just popped into my head. I could spin more of the yellow Shetland to a similar weight and stripe the two yarns together.<br />
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<b>Spins in Progress:</b><br />
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My Big Spin for the year is a sweater spin. I've got 700g of fibre in total and am (slowly) making it into batts. I've got a sheet of paper with what I'm doing so I don't forget and am making 35g batts, each of which has 15g black Bluefaced Leicester, 10g black tussah silk, 5g black merino (I think it's merino - it didn't have a label) that has a bit of dark brown in it and 5g Black Welsh (which is actually a very dark brown). The reason I added the dark brown bits is to break up the dyed black fibres, to give a bit of texture, otherwise it might look a bit flat. I have a sweater in mind for this, which I'll share once I'm further into this project.<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Excuse the carpet; Jess is moulting at the moment</td></tr>
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<br />My 3D-printed Turkish spindle is currently idle, but I've started something new on my wooden top-whorl spindle. I bought a 100g bump of space-dyed fibre from World of Wool, just to try it out. The colours are bright, but it's dyed in short lengths, which makes spinning each colour cleanly quite difficult. The 'bump' is also not as wide as braids from independent dyers usually are, so my original plan on spinning this have changed a bit (more on that when it's finished) but this is progress so far. One third has been spun and wound off the spindle into a ball (I use my ball-winder otherwise it takes ages by hand - a good half-hour):</div>
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and I've started the second third (I've split the second bit into thirds, lengthwise down the fibre):</div>
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<br />That's it! <div>
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I was going to show you the start of a pair of socks I've started using one of my handspun skeins, but I think this post is long enough already.</div>
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It's a brighter day here today than it was yesterday, DD1 is away at a music workshop until late this afternoon (DD2 and I will be going to pick her up as it's at a private school in a village 30 miles away) and I've promised DD2 we'll bake a cake today. In fact, we're going to make the pineapple & nut bread that Thistlebear showed off on her blog a few days ago, except I'll be using gluten-free flour and dairy-free spread. I'll snap a photo once it's made and compare hers and mine!<br /><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-46948493867457048382017-03-01T12:21:00.001+00:002017-03-01T12:21:06.064+00:00Spinning Round-Up - FebruaryI seem to have got my enthusiasm for spinning back - hurrah!<br />
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So, what have I been spinning during February?<br />
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The green Exmoor Bluefaced has been finished:<br />
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98g, 263 metres, so enough for a pair of socks. This yarn has a bit of a sheen and I'm rather pleased with it.<br />
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I continued spinning on my top-whorl wooden drop spindle, finishing off the dark red and then the light, bright green into three singles. Each single got wound onto the inside of a loo roll and then I used a shoebox, two straight knitting needles and a paintbrush to cobble together a lazy kate before using my wheel to ply the three strands together into a skein of yarn:<br />
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This is only 81g (I think I weighed the grey fibre incorrectly as there was less of that than the other two colours), but is 288m in length so, again, is destined for socks.<br />
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I spun the yarn on the right using my wheel and, to be honest, I'm a bit disappointed in it. My plan was to spin it into a sock yarn, so when I plyed the three strands together, I put quite a lot of twist into the yarn to make it harder-wearing. The fibre is Teeswater, which is a longwool and I prefer a woolier-feeling, softer fibre to spin (at times, this felt like spinning hair) and, whilst I like the look of it and it's got a nice sheen, the 92g skein only measures 184 metres, so if I use it for socks, I might have to use a different yarn for the toes and cuffs and possibly the heel turn and flap as well. I shall have a think.<br />
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<b>Spins in progress:</b><br />
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Last week, I was looking in the cupboard I have in the garage for storing 'stuff' such as cleaning products and came across a plastic bag of ancient Kool Aid and old bottles of food colouring. Promptly forgetting what I'd gone into the cupboard for, I brought them out, went into my fibre stash and pulled out the leftover cream/white merino roving from my Keith Moon sweater, some white/cream pencil roving from a World of Wool lapwaste bag I'd bought, plus some other random bits of white/cream fibre (that's probably merino as well), soaked them in white vinegar and water, gently squeezed them out and then laid them on a sheet of cling film. I then randomly splattered the various food colourings and dissolved Kool Aid over the fibre, wrapped it up in cling film and microwaved it to set the colours and this is what I got:<br />
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As there's only 72g of fibre, I decided to split it in half, spin each half into one single using my spindle and then use a toning colour for a third strand (which, of course, involved a purchase of various colours of Corriedale from World of Wool - it hasn't arrived yet, so I haven't decided which colour to use yet).<br />
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The first half has been spun up and wound into a ball ready for plying:<br />
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I find it very easy to pick up my spindle and do a few metres when I've got a few minutes, waiting for DD2's taxi to arrive in the morning and afternoon, waiting for the washing machine to finish its cycle, etc, much like knitting a pair of socks, when a round only takes a minute or two.<br />
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I've also got another spindle project on the go because I discovered, via a Facebook spinning group, that one of the members (who trades as Cat and Sparrow) is the European distributor for <a href="https://www.catandsparrow.co.uk/spindle">Turtle Made Turkish spindles</a> (she also has some nice-looking fibre, but I resisted temptation). These are 3D printed spindles and, as well as the bright colours, I like the idea of making yarn in an ancient way, but using tools made from modern technology. Here it is, with my first effort, which was a 4.5g, 9-metre micro-skein of yarn:<br />
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Isn't it cute? I'm now using it to spin some fibre from a World of Wool lap waste bag that a bit of sleuthing on the WoW website leads me to believe is a mixture of merino and flax; probably the leftovers from someone's custom order:<br />
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I've no idea what this will become, but it's good fun.<br />
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I also started something new this morning, which I'll talk about in a standalone post, I think, but here's a teaser:<br />
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<br />Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-82675112106232543912017-02-22T10:38:00.002+00:002017-02-22T10:38:39.638+00:00What a week!Last week was the half-term holidays for schools in our county, which meant I had both girls at home. I hadn't made any particular plans, but thought we might do 'something' on a couple of days, just to get out and about. Unfortunately, the best laid plans, etc..... The Friday that the girls broke up from school, I went off to Friday knitting group as usual and had a very pleasant couple of hours with our little group, then came home. I had some lunch and then took Jess out for her early afternoon walk and then sat down. Half an hour later, I started to feel awful. Hot, then cold and by the evening, my throat was very sore and all I wanted to do was go to bed. Fortunately, DH works from home on a Friday, so he cooked dinner while I flumped on the sofa. Saturday morning, my throat was feeling better, but I'd obviously been hit by a cold virus. I did go to work on Saturday and Sunday (mainly because it's very difficult for the management team to get cover at the weekend, especially at short notice) but wasn't functioning at full speed and came home feeling very tired after each shift.<br />
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So, to cut a long story a bit shorter, I felt full of cold and not up to much all of last week and am only just feeling more like my usual self. Having a cold impacted to some degree on my crafting, so I haven't felt up to knitting my Na Craga sweater and, although I've started the body cable pattern, there's not a great deal to show and it hasn't been out of the bag for about a fortnight. So, over the last couple of weeks I've mostly been doing a bit of spinning and knitting easy, straightforward things.<br />
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Some of the ladies at Monday knitting group are currently knitting hats, mittens, gloves and scarves which will be going out to Nepal with a volunteer one of the ladies knows as there are still many people without homes following the 2015 earthquake. I went into my stash and pulled out a ball of Cygnet aran I'd got and made a ribbed hat using <a href="http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/the-boyfriend-hat-2">The Boyfriend Hat</a> pattern, although I modified it from the original, using 3.5mm needles and casting on 120 stitches. <br />
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I then got out my bag of plain coloured Drops Fabel and, holding two strands together (I chose taupe and cream), made the same hat, but knitting in stocking stitch for the body of the hat and the crown. I won't do this again though and will do a different decrease sequence as the hat's a bit ruffly at the crown (but looks ok on, so I won't rip it back).<br />
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I also finished off my plain vanilla socks using Lorna's Laces Shepherd Sock in the Zombie BBQ colour:<br />
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There's nothing special about these socks, except for the pooling that occurred when I increased for the gussets, which is a bit bonkers!<br />
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I don't think I've shown the next thing off before (not sure why). A few months ago I felt the urge to make another crocheted Neat Ripple blanket (Attic24 pattern), using Caron Simply Soft. I'm using a 5mm hook and the blanket's 140 stitches wide (10 pattern repeats). I used the weighted random stripe generator from <a href="http://www.biscuitsandjam.com/stripe_maker_wt.php">Biscuits and Jam</a> and am about two-thirds of the way through the stripes. If I decide the blanket's not long enough once I get to the end, I might just start again at the beginning. This is a project I pick up every now and then when I don't fancy doing something else.<br />
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Obviously, despite my best intentions, I haven't sewn in the ends as I go, so that's going to be a bit of long job once I've finished the crocheting as most of the stripes are one row wide!<br />
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I'm hoping to get back into the swing of my Na Craga cabled sweater in the next day or so, but having felt so rubbish last week, plus having DD2 at home, I'm behind on housework, so need to get on top of that as the lounge and hall are starting to look like a spider hotel!<br />
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I'll be back soon-ish.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-66897605211635913212017-02-04T11:09:00.000+00:002017-02-04T11:09:01.972+00:00Spinning Round-Up : 2016 and JanuaryI've decided to post at the beginning of each month, logging my spinning progress during the previous month. I'm hoping by doing this, it might spur me on to be a bit more consistent in my spinning and improve my yarn-making skills! As this is the first one, I'm also including a skein I made last year, which I haven't talked about on here.<br />
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The skein of yarn below is waiting to be made into something that I can wear with fond memories.<br />
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It weighs 79g and is 241 metres in length (approximately sport-weight). The background behind it? I go to two knitting groups. Monday morning's is held in a local village hall and all are welcome (we get between 7 and 16 people each week). Friday morning's is much smaller. There are 8 of us in total if we're all able to make it and we meet in a local pub. Up until last summer, there were 9 of us on a Friday, but then we lost Joan, a lovely lady in her 80s, who had been battling cancer for some time. Joan was skilled in many forms of needlework and had amassed a sizeable stash of crafting materials, which one of the other ladies sorted through and then brought to one of our Friday get-togethers. In amongst the stash were various small bags and packets of dyed wool locks, bits of silk, etc, which we think Joan had used in her embroidery work. I took those little bags of 'bits' and carded them up into a batt, which weighed 34g. I spun the batt into a single of yarn and I then found in my stash some fibre that was steel grey, dark blue and rusty brown and spun that into a second single, before plying the two bobbins together to make the tweedy yarn above. I just need to find a project to knit the yarn into. Possibly a hat as it's not next-to-skin soft.<br />
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So, having spun that yarn, I pulled a new 'bump' of fibre from my stash and started spinning that. It's a 70/30 merino/silk blend from World of Wool and is called Phoenix. My plan was to spin a 3ply yarn with a fairly high twist to knit into socks and I'm pleased with the result:<br />
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I'm still not able to spin a 3ply yarn as thin as I'd like, but I think I just need to keep going and practice more. Anyway, this is nice and soft (probably won't last too long as socks, but that's the beauty of making things oneself; more can be made!) and is 97g and 261 metres. <br />
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That's finished handspun, so now onto WIPs!<br />
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On my wheel:<br />
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Some Exmoore Blackface (I think - I was sure I kept the label, but I've misplaced it at the moment). The fibre was bought from Hilltop Cloud and is a mix of greens. So far, I've spun two bobbins:<br />
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and once I've spun the last bit of the fibre onto the third bobbin I'll play the three singles together and see how much I've got. <br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">the cloud of fluff on the left is what's left to do!</td></tr>
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I was hoping to spin this for socks, but my plans may not work out as I don't think I'm going to get the metres I need for socks (we'll see - maybe!) and, at the moment, the yarn's not feeling overly soft, \although that might be because I'm comparing it to the merino/silk of the blue skein.<br />
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On my spindle:<br />
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Autumn 2015, I bought two basic spindles from Hilltop Cloud, hoping to get DD2 to use them. She hasn't shown any willingness to spin herself, but I have found that, with her sensory issues and input requirements, getting her to watch the spindle going round and round can have a calming effect on her, so I decided to try and be ready in the morning five or ten minutes before her taxi is due to arrive so that I can get her to watch the spindle, thus setting her up for her school day (and it does seem to help). Spindle spinning is, for me, a very slow process and so far, this is what I've wound off (yes, onto the cardboard tube from inside a loo roll!):<br />
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40g of grey merino.<br />
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To go with that (which I'm trying to spin thinly), I've now got some claret red merino on my spindle:<br />
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This has gone a little bit more quickly simply because I'm trying to do some every day and I'm about halfway through the red. Once I've finished that, I'm going to spin another 40g, but of a light spring green and then I'll ply all three together and see what I end up with.<br />
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I also started watching the Wool n' Spinning vlog/podcast towards the end of last year and have recently watched the episodes from last year where Rachel (the blog/vlog owner) started using a Turkish spindle so, of course, now I want one. Will I give in, or will I be good? I'll let you know next month!Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-61880983407515214232017-02-03T09:27:00.001+00:002017-02-03T09:27:59.617+00:00Norby Scarf - FinishedHurrah! My new scarf is finished.<br />
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I think the top photo shows the colour best.<br />
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After blocking (which I did using my wires) it measures just over 6.5" and is approx 6' 6" long, so can be wrapped around my neck twice, or folded in half and the ends put through the loop.<br />
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I'm pleased with it. In fact, I might wear it this morning when I go out to knitting group.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-71136017704478826932017-01-31T14:09:00.000+00:002017-01-31T14:09:24.387+00:00WIP Round-UpNow that I've got my Keith Moon sweater finished (and worn!), it's on to other things.<br />
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As usual, I've got a pair of socks on my needles. I started these right at the end of December and progress has been a bit slow:<br />
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The colours haven't come out particularly well in these photos - it's hard to find somewhere with decent light in these dreary January days), but the main colours are claret red, a dark auberginey purple, khaki green and a light greenish-yellow. The yarn is Lorna's Laces Shepherd Sock, which is one of my favourite sock yarns and the colour is Zombie BBQ! When I saw the yarn online and spotted the colour name, I had to buy it. Because I knit an elongated gusset on my socks, self-striping/colouring yarns do tend to give me some interesting pooling, but that's part of the fun of multi-coloured yarns and, unless I were to make my socks with an afterthought heel (which isn't a good fit for my feet), there's no way of avoiding the pooling.<br />
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Also on my needles (and progress has been very good since I started, to the point where I should cast off later today or tomorrow) is a new scarf. Back in July 2014, I posted about two yarns I'd handspun, from braids of fibre that had been dyed the same, but which I'd spun differently - <a href="http://christine65.blogspot.co.uk/2014/07/a-tale-of-two-handspun-yarns.html">link to post.</a> One of the yarns (the one where I'd blended the colours on my drum carder) was knit into a Norby hat in January 2015. This hat:<br />
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It's a hat I like very much (as does DD2, who has worn it to school today).<br />
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I'd been thinking since then about what to make from the second skein of that yarn I'd spun and I'd ummed and ahhed about it, thinking that I'd knit myself a Hitchhiker scarf (but then I knit one just before Christmas and didn't want to dive straight into another). Then, inspiration hit, as it does, on occasion. A Norby scarf? Why not! Using 3.5mm needles, I cast on 41 sts, knit 8 rows of garter stitch and have then knitted three repeats of the hat pattern, which a 4-stitch garter border on either side. It's going really quickly as the pattern is so easy to remember:<br />
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I think I've got about another 5 pattern repeats to go before I cast off and then I'll soak and block it, which will show off the pattern. I think I'm going to end up with a scarf 5'6" - 6' long. I'll let you know!<br />
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I also cast on a new sweater last week. I bought 16 (I think - that's what I could find in my stash anyway) balls of Rowan Purelife when it was on sale somewhere (Kemps Woolshop, probably) a few years ago and started knitting Alice Starmore's St Brigid sweater. However, a few inches into the knitting, I decided that, although the sweater is nice and is considered one of Ms Starmore's best cabled patterns, I wasn't really getting into it and it wasn't really 'me'. So, I frogged it, with the intention of starting again with the <a href="http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/na-craga">Na Craga</a> pattern, which I decided I preferred. Last week I finally got round to knitting a swatched as the pattern suggested and ended up going down a needle size to get gauge (which I thought I might have to do) and I cast on a few days ago and have done about 8 rows of the ribbing so far (this one is knitted in pieces and seamed).<br />
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<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Not quite as bright as this in real life - photo taken in artificial light</td></tr>
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I shall keep you posted as to progress and with a few more details about the pattern.<br />
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The only thing that's struck me is that the scarf and the sweater are similar colours and I can't help wondering if I've done it subconsciously. Maybe, with all that's going on in the world at the moment, I just wanted to stick pointy needles into something orange!!! Voodoo knitting? Now there's a thought.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-83041964772399613232017-01-25T11:45:00.000+00:002017-01-25T11:45:05.500+00:00Keith Moon Sweater - Finished!My first finished object of the year. <br />
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Yes, Keith Moon turned out to be a very quick knit and I cast off last Friday, soaked and blocked it over the weekend. Drying was turning out to be a slow process, so having patted it out on Saturday morning, when I got home from work in the evening, I folded a bath towel in half, draped it over the shelf in my airing cupboard and then carefully hung the half-dry sweater over it and left it in there until Sunday afternoon, which worked well (I usually hang socks and other small things in the airing cupboard to dry as well - woe betide any members of my family who use the front half of the middle shelf to stack towels!!).<br />
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Here it is:<br />
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Before soaking and blocking. Nice, but a bit wrinkled.<br />
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After soaking, patting out and drying. Much smoother and even.<br />
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I knit the pattern mostly as written, with just a few modifications:<br />
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<li>The sleeves in the original have a slight bell shape, which isn't really me and which I think I'd find impractical for my lifestyle, so I cast on fewer stitches and just increased at the same rate as the pattern stated until I had the right number of stitches. The sleeves are also full length rather than three-quarter.</li>
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<li>In the original, the hem facings of the body and sleeves are knit in the same colour as the lower band of colour (CC1 - in my case, the blue) and the i-cord edging is knitted in the second contrast colour (CC2 - green for me). However, I'd read comments about people running out of CC2 and having to buy more, so I used blue for the body hems and green for the sleeve hems because I thought that might use my yarn more efficiently, because buying more roving in the same colours and then spinning them up to the same thickness would be a pain. I also (as you can see from the photos) used different colours for the i-cords, so green for the bottom and neckline and blue for the hems. You can see the facings (before the i-cord was knitted on) in the photo below (it's the same photo from my last post about this sweater):</li>
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<ul>
<li>Many of the examples of this sweater I've seen on Ravelry have the neckline/collar standing up a bit, but I wasn't sure I wanted that look, so I deliberately knitted a little bit more tightly for that part, which pulled it in just a teeny bit, so the collar/neckline sits flatter.</li>
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Am I pleased with it? Yes I am. My only niggle is aimed at myself, because one of the skeins of yarn I spun was slightly thinner than the other three, but that's my fault for not making a spinner's control card so I could keep checking while I was spinning the yarn.<br />
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Would I make this sweater again? Yes, I would. It was a quick, easy knit, but with several nice features such as the faced hems and i-cord edgings. Would I change anything if I knitted it again? Probably. I might put it a few short rows across the back yoke of the sweater so it sits higher than the front. I might also sew down the neckline/collar facing rather than picking up stitches on the wrong side and doing a three-needle cast/bind-off as I think it would look neater. As it is, I might sew a length of ribbon around the neck edge, just to finish it off and hide the cast-off line.<br />
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So, have I cast on anything since finishing this?<br />
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What do you think? Of course I have, but I think I'll leave doing a WIP round-up for next time.Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-80495827195885780.post-38857362168675077542017-01-17T09:56:00.001+00:002017-01-17T09:56:19.109+00:00Keith Moon: A SweaterI had this idea that the next time I wrote a blog entry, I'd be showing you some cakes of yarn and maybe six or so inches of knitting. However, in the week since I last posted, this sweater has been flying off my needles. It's helped that the yarn is an aran weight:<br />
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This is the handspun merino which was my big spinning project during 2016 (I didn't do much spinning at all last year).<br />
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I cast on 6 January and by last Thursday, I'd got the body done, up to the armholes and I cast on the first sleeve on Friday morning and by Sunday morning, that was finished and joined up to the body:<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiEarFKFmq-VJNIO-ZhpMrp9SPY5LSeXu8NEsDR7oP-6gr4m8XriNuyGg10qoYb6JkNMjsyu0GXgXfGEtCJjro9aup2c9mA-6cOjgY8DCRnkUPJXEEL04OtCzyp4GD1KrAaQIuQyPCv0Wo/s1600/IMG_4768.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiEarFKFmq-VJNIO-ZhpMrp9SPY5LSeXu8NEsDR7oP-6gr4m8XriNuyGg10qoYb6JkNMjsyu0GXgXfGEtCJjro9aup2c9mA-6cOjgY8DCRnkUPJXEEL04OtCzyp4GD1KrAaQIuQyPCv0Wo/s400/IMG_4768.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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The pattern is <a href="http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/keith-moon">Keith Moon</a>, from the Yokes book by Kate Davies. It wasn't a design that immediately made me think I wanted to make it, but as I saw more and more examples and interpretations on Ravelry, the more I liked it and decided to spin the yarn for it. As I'd got some blue and green in a mixed bag of pencil roving I'd bought from World of Wool, I decided to use those colours for the stripes.<br />
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In the original, the hem facings are knitted in the same colour, but I decided to be a bit different and used the blue for the body hem and the green for the sleeves. I've also changed the sleeves. In the original, the sleeves are three-quarter-to-bracelet length and have a flare at the cuff. I started off following the pattern, but decided I'd be happier with a narrower cuff, so cast on fewer stitches and just increased at the same rate as the pattern said to.<br />
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On Sunday, I cast on the second sleeve and by this morning:<br />
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I'm about 17 rounds away from finishing the second sleeve.<br />
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Give it another few days and I reckon I'll have a new sweater to wear.<br />
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We woke up to a cold, frosty morning today. We had a bit of snow last Thursday. It didn't settle, but I had to drive up to DD1's school for her GCSE certificate presentation, which wasn't pleasant as in the places where there are no streetlights, visibility was poor as the snow was coming towards me. It was clear by the time we came back though, which was much better. When I took the rubbish bags out for collection, I looked up and saw the sunrise. My word: I haven't seen one like this for a while, so I grabbed my camera and dashed outside to snap a couple of shots before the opportunity passed:<br />
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Lovely colours; quite inspiring. By the time I took the recycling boxes out 20 minutes later, the sun had risen and the sky just looked light grey, so I'm glad I managed to catch the above shot. It always surprises me how quickly the sun and moon move around the sky. <br />
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I'm off to do some household chores and then I'm going to crack on with that second sleeve. Christine65http://www.blogger.com/profile/16466457829576632746noreply@blogger.com1