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Fingerless Mitts: A Quick, Happy Knit

Finished

Although it took me a week to finish these mitts, knitting a few rows here and there, you could easily manage them in a couple of tv binge-watching nights on the sofa.  The pattern, Ice Scrapers, is fun but easily memorized.  If you've already purchased it, make sure you get the updated version, as Amy has just tweaked it to make the directions for the thumb parts a bit easier to follow.

I knit my version in Plucky Cashmere Sport, and although that may seem a bit splurgy (and it was!), I used about half a skein.  You could get two pair out of a skein, especially if you did one pair a bit shorter.  I might have done mine an inch or so shorter before separating for the thumbs in any event, so this seems like a keeper of an idea to me.

Everyone needs a few quick knits in their tool kit for gift-giving, or, as in my case, for cold hands when your family swipes your gloves.  This pattern is definitely a keeper.

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Knitted Socks, Elliebelly Yarn (And, Early KAL Heads Up)

Ladymarysocks

My favorite sock knitter is Mommajnine on Ravelry.  She is absolutely fearless and will take on patterns that others look at and slowly sidle away.  Her socks are beautiful pieces of art. Every once in a while, I send her yarn and a month or so later, socks come back.

Elliebelly socks collage

The Turquoise blue socks are an older pair – she knit them about a year ago.  Despite their intricate cables, heavy wear, and a lot of washing, they still look brand new.  The pattern is called Roses for Margery and they are knit in Elliebelly's Juliet Sock Yarn.

The other two socks arrived just a few weeks ago and I'm already in love.  That's Paraphernalia in the gold, dyed on Elliebelly Merino Sock in the Oryx colorway, and Ocean Mist Socks, in the pale blue, which is Elliebelly MCN High Twist in the Lady Mary Colorway.  The Merino Cashmere High Twist has rapidly become my favorite fingering weight yarn.  I also used it for my Antarktis and think it's perfect for scarves and shawls.

I feel very lucky and grateful to Janine to have such lovely socks without lifting a finger.  I adore sock knitting, but don't always make time for it, which makes me think, perhaps a little bit early, that sock knitting would be a great theme for this year's Adventurous April Knitalong on the Ravelry group.  

Adventurous April is always one of my favorite KALs, and I am really looking forward to it this year.  Although April may seem far off, as I know from planning earlier versions of our annual KAL, it always comes up quickly.  I've put up the first thread on the Ravelry Group asking for input on KAL choices and hope you will join in, as it's so hopeful to hear from people early in the planning stages.  For those of you who haven't knit with us before, we typically welcome knitters who knit with any yarn, Elliebelly or others, and offer a variety of patterns.  It's always lots of fun.  So if you are interested, or even thinking about it, please join the group so you won't miss the sign up announcement or any of the pre-KAL chances to win some Elliebelly yarn.

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First Dyeing 2016

Mithrailcollage

I managed a bit of time on this last day of the holiday break for yarn dyeing, something that has been far too infrequent for me these last few years.  I have a project in mind that will need a specific yarn.  So I had motivation for this spate of dyeing.

I have a lovely, old, worn to pieces linen sweater.  It is a very simple pullover.  It's at least 20 years old and needs to be retired, having been worn heavily for activities with kids.

The pattern for its replacement is still a work in progress.  I've looked at a few basic pullovers but I'm also flirting with a pattern that has a cable down the front and another with gathering at the neckline. The yarn is a blend of linen and silk, Elliebelly Chemise.  I'm dyeing it into a silvery-gray colorway named Mithrail.  I don't anticipate starting this project until I finish up Glacier and a few other shawls I have in progress.  In the meantime, if you see any likely patterns, please let me know in the comments.

A note about this yarn: much of it was sold before Ravelry (it's so hard to remember that far back!) so there is none stashed other than my own.  But it is a lovely blend and there are a few companies that offer a similar blend of silk and linen.  Although knitters are often nervous about knitting with linen because its properties are so different than wool, please don't be!  Remember that it will soften and loosen with age, so don't expect it to sprong back into place like wool does.  As long as you're prepared for the drapey effect, your projects will turn out just fine.  One of my all time favorite knits is the Lida Shawl I did in Quince's Sparrow 100% linen, one of my all time favorite yarns.

image from images4-b.ravelrycache.com

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First Dyeing 2016

Mithrailcollage

I have a project in mind that with very specific yarn requirements.  So, I finagled a few hours yesterday to dye some yarn, something that has been far too infrequent for me these last few years.  

I have a lovely, old, worn to pieces linen sweater.  It is a very simple pullover.  It's at least 20 years old and needs to be retired, having been worn heavily for activities with kids.

The pattern for its replacement is still a work in progress.  I've looked at a few basic pullovers but I'm also flirting with a pattern that has a cable down the front and another with gathering at the neckline. Although my original sweater is 100% linen, my yarn for the replacement is a blend of linen and silk, Elliebelly Chemise.  I'm dyeing it into a silvery-gray.  I don't anticipate starting this project until I finish up Glacier and a few other shawls I have in progress.  But I wanted to have the yarn in hand so I could start to swatch and pick a suitable pattern. In the meantime, if you see any likely patterns, please let me know in the comments.

A note about this yarn: I sold it, for the most part, before Ravelry (it's so hard to remember that far back!) so there is none stashed other than my own.  But it is a lovely blend and there are a few companies that offer a similar yarn spun of silk and linen.  Although knitters are often nervous about knitting with linen because its properties are so different from wool, please don't be!  Just remember that your finished object will soften and loosen with age, so don't expect it to sprong back into place like wool does.  As long as you're prepared for the drapey effect, your projects will turn out just fine.  One of my all time favorite knits is the Lida Shawl I did in Quince's Sparrow 100% linen.

image from images4-b.ravelrycache.com

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This Week’s Knitting

Onestart

That whole saying about the shoemaker's children having no shoes?  So true.  Or, in my case, it's the shoemaker herself, who seems to never have gloves on hand.  I prefer fingerless mitts to actual gloves so I'm not pulling them on and off constantly.  I'm knitting this pair for myself in sport weight cashmere in hopes I'll have warm hands by midweek.  They are going quickly as I haven't been able to shake the icky sick that descended on our house with the holidays, so I'm going to perch on the couch today with my knitting and a nice cup of tea.

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Ringing Out The Old And Bringing In The New

~*~Happy 2016~*~

I love the start of a new year, so full of potential.  Knitting may seem — especially to others — like a small and inconsequential piece of our lives, with so many pressing, serious issues surrounding us.  But, to me, it's a critical piece of the balance that makes my life meaningful.  So I shamelessly celebrated New Years Eve, surrounded by family, food, champagne and my knitting.

Drachenfels

I spent the evening with Drachenfels.  Like many of you, I have a hectic life full of kids, work, cooking, care for an aging parent, and lots of other necessary tasks that limit my knitting time.  I'm not the knitter who magics up a sweater in record time (although there was that 6 week period in which I managed to knit this sweater for my darling youngest child, even though the effort almost killed me).  My works-in-progress often languish for months.  It's a little bit frustrating to see other, even newer knitters, finish off projects so quickly and realistically, but one thing I have learned is to be realistic about my capacity as a knitter.  I'm a working Mom, and a busy one at that.  I love to knit.  I would do it a lot more if I could.  But I'm creative about fitting knitting into the space that I have and loving what I knit.  In 2016, I'm not going to be an apologist for either the fact that I do make time to knit or that I don't have enough of it to be prodigious.  I'm just going to be grateful for and enjoy what I have and can do.

Mitts start

This brings me to a corollary point.  This year, I'm only going to knit things I love for people I love.  This has pretty much been my practice for years now, but I'm going to explicitly own it this year.  The cashmere yarn is not too precious to knit with.  So I started out yesterday with a pair of Ice Scrapper Fingerless Mitts and a skein of Plucky Cashmere Sport in The Villager colorway.  I stumbled across this skein while I was at the Plucky Shindig last year and spent a lot of time searching for more skeins in this gorgeous color, but it was, alas, a singleton.  My one skein has stayed on mind as I've looked at a variety of potential new projects.  I love this color and am happy to be knitting a pair luxury mitts that I can wear every day.  This year, I'm knitting for family, for close friends, for myself and I'm going to use ALL of my favorite yarn.  Life is too short to knit with cheap yarn.  I'm going to knit with the good stuff!

Wishing each of you a happy new year full of your own decisions about what matters to you and how to get there.  And, to end on the starting point: my knitting matters to me, which should be enough.  But to be clear, in a world that is often full of hostility and violence, what could be more important than creating beautiful, useful things in a spirit of love?  Without knitting, or whatever it is that brings each of us into a place of clarity and happiness, then the bad guys win.  So I'm going to make the world a better place, one knitted object at a time.

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Knitting in 2015

Here is a recap of my knitting year in pictures. I was fortunate enough to get in a lot of knitting in 2015 — on planes, during meetings at the kids' schools, while watching movies, in car pool lines, and any other time I could grab a free moment.  Here are the projects I finished in 2015 in two collages, the first showing projects knit in my yarn obsession for this year — yarn from the Plucky Knitter — and the second showing projects in other yarns.

elliebelly plucky knitting projects for 2015That would be, from left to right, Row 1: Cold Snap, The Conversationalist Hat, Forest Park, and Paddle.  Row 2: Frostline, Heritage Trail, Marled Hat, and Olivia.  Row 3: Moto Vest (modified into a cowl), Sugar Loaf, Vodka Lemonade, and Tipperary. Row 4: Zissou, Nevermind, and Arlo.

15 not pluckyAgain from Left to Right, Peerie Flooers, Barn Raising Quilt, Bulky Mittens, Lace and Cables Capelet, Antarktis, Sweet and Simple Cushion, and Skelter. Lots of the Barn Raising Quilt squares, as well as Antarktis and Skelter, are knit in Elliebelly yarns.

What does 2016 have in store?  I've got three projects in the works, as well as a fourth that I'm swatching for.  I'd like to finish them, along with a few new projects I have in mind, in the next few months.

In the worksDrachenfels, in the top left corner has been my slow moving, conversational knitting project for as long as it has been in the works, but it may be time to finish it off so I can wear it to ward off January's chills.  The Glacier sweater, top right, keeps taking a backseat to other projects.  There is also a little debacle with sleeves that are huge and need to be ripped out and started over.  But I'm looking forward to finishing it off!  The bottom right corner is my Summer Moon, which went into a forced hibernation when an IOS upgrade blacked out all of my charts in Knit Companion.  They've been fixed now and I'm going to make this my airplane knitting in January, despite the risk involved in juggling all of those balls of yarn on a plane.  And on the left is my Shaelyn shawl, which needs a bit more swatching so I can make sure I've selected the right size of needles.  If I can tear myself away from Drachenfels, I'm going to try and swatch for it tonight.

And after these four?  Oh I would say I've got hundreds a few projects in mind for the new year.  Need some inspiration?  My Ravelry queue is here.