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Cold Snap Hat. And It’s Just In Time.

Amy Miller's Cold Snap Hat was among the patterns released in in The Plucky Knitter's All Bundled Up Collection.  I started mine, with the leftovers from my Olivia wrap, the minute I cast off.  I couldn't wait because loved the yarn so much, with its beautiful teal green colorway, which seems to defy capture on film (particularly in late night hotel room photography).  And the weather forecast for Alabama was cold.  Very cold.

This is how my Cold Snap looked after that first bit of knitting.

Startframed

If you look carefully, you'll notice the cables are wonky.  I misread the pattern and inserted two purls in place of two knit stitches throughout.  The mistake popped into focus for me as I was finishing the fourth cable repeat.  In my defense, I've been fighting the flu for the last week, and it doesn't seem to do a lot to improve my pattern reading skills.

Rippedoutframe

So, I ripped out back to the ribbing to start over.  Yes, that fabulous background is me, wearing my husbands fleece pajama pants.  I'm not proud when I'm sick.

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A lot of people who have knit Cold Snap mention that it is a quick knit. I thought that those comments must have come from knitters who are not like me — I am a slow but steady knitter, with lots of distraction in my life.  But they were absolutely right.  It's a stunningly quick knit. I've been listening to one of my favorite authors, Haruki Murakami's, Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World on Audible (one of the guilty pleasures of being sick) and Cold Snap seems to be knitting itself.

You can follow my progress on my Ravelry Project Page for my "It's a Snap" version of Cold Snap.  I'll note needle sizes and other notes on the yarn and this project to help those who are starting out.  I'm going to sit back down and finish mine now.  It looks like I'm just in time!

Wintrymix

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Olivia At Last

Olbw

I'm done with Olivia!  Despite some last minute, late night concerns about finishing the short rows and some early struggles with fisherman's rib, I'm finished and really very please with the result.

Ol1

I like the color.  In case you've forgotten, since it's taken me months to do the knitting, this is the Plucky Knitter's Holloway colorway on her Primo Aran yarn.  Lovely.

Ol3

Let's be candid.  Because we are all friends here.

There are mistakes in my Olivia.  Mistakes I did not fix.  I struggled to fix mistakes in the rib, so I finally decided that the two places with mistakes needed to stay.  And I needed to embrace them because, well, Olivia is not perfect and neither am I.  Good reminder of my limitations.

Olw

I love her despite, or perhaps even because of, her mistakes.  She's so warm and scrunchy, even though the yarn grew and softened with a good wet blocking.  I'm hoping my model will give her back to me at some point.  It's been hours, but she still shows no signs of returning Olivia to me.

Olhat2

I've got almost three-fourths of the last skein left, so I've cast on a hat to match.  I love the host of cables. Hopefully with a three day weekend, there will be some time to knit this up.

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A Pom-Pom For A Knit Hat

Last year, I knit a series of wonderful hats for our family trip to Iceland.  I finished one of them, Fuego, mid-trip, during a hike to see some wonderful waterfalls and rainbows.

Iceland

But, I didn't have a pom-pom maker with me, or any knowledge about how to make one, not being a pom-pom kind of girl.  So Fuego came back home with me, pom-pomless.  There was a brief flirtation with one after I found out how to make one, but I attached it too loosely and then it got hot and Fuego never got her pom.

Until today.

Pompom

Fuego now has a big, fat, fluffy pom-pom.  She's complete, thanks to my fantastic Clover pom-pom maker.

Fuego was a fun hat to knit and I have no idea why this took me so long, but with temperature creeping down into the teens and snow in the forecast, I'm really happy to have her this weekend!

 

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This Week’s Edition of Knitting in My Carry On Bag

I feel like my travel knitting photos are becoming a fixture around here. I’m definitely logging too much travel time.

But, I’m excited to have received a skein of the yarn I need to finish Olivia in the mail yesterday. She is this week’s carry on knitting. And that’s a glimpse of my pink Malabrigo Lutz Jump hat, an all time favorite project for its beautiful cables.


This Week's Edition of Knitting in My Carry On Bag

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New Knitting Project: Tipperary

I liked my last Norah Gaughan project, this capelet, so much, that I decided to try another.  This one, straight off of her beautiful new website in her Volume 15 pattern book.  It's called Tipperary.

Tipperary

In a mere five more repeats, this small start will grow into a beautiful, full shawl, that I intend to wrap around my neck like a large bulky scarf — there seems to be a lot of that going on in my life this winter, proportionate to the amount of time I'm spending up north this year.

The yarn is my new and continuing favorite, Plucky Snug.  Swoon.

This is in the Steel Cut colorway, and it is still like knitting with butter.  I really adore the merino/alpaca blend with just enough cashmere to make it perfect.  Alpaca sometimes makes me sneezy, but in this blend, I have no trouble with it at all, and none of the hairy halo that I have found annoying in other Alpaca yarns. Five skeins of snug, or roughly 550 yards of this yarn, should do it.

I'm doing something new with this one, and using an app on my IPad called Knit Companion, which makes dealing with patterns a snap.  Although I'm just learning to use it, it lets you blow up those tiny lace (or cable) charts so you can actually see them, and keep your place in the pattern with a row marker.  Some kind Ravelry knitters pointed me towards Knit Companion and I'm really glad I tried it.  You can download a free version and do a couple of tutorials to see if it's something that might work for you.  I'm really glad I found it!

 

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Knitting with Dragons. Color Choices. Why I Knit.

Drachenfels, which means Dragon Cliffs in German, is also a wonderful pattern by Melanie Berg for a multi-colored, knit shawl.

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(c) Melanie Berg (with permission)

My plan is to knit it with sport-weight cashmere from The Plucky Knitter.

The issue?  Color selection.  I have some choices ahead.

Drachcolors1

Choice One: the blue color is Thank You Note, and truth be told, it is probably my all time favorite color.  The green is called Good Old Days, and the first time I saw it, I wondered who could possibly like it.  The answer is me.  I've got a hat on my needles in it, a sweater in a related shade in progress, and plans to do another sweater (because I want a pullover in this color in addition to the cardigan I'm knitting). I adore it, and although as a kid I was told I couldn't wear green, this one works for me.  And gray.  Because I love gray.

Drachcolors2

Choice Two: It's hard to capture the depth of this teal blue-green.  It's the same color as the Olivia I currently have in progress, which I've also been unable to get an accurate color photo of.

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Choice Three: I am not a colorful person.  But I could be, especially if I knit Drachenfels up like this!

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Choice Four: Ignore Thank You Note on the left, and focus on the delicious introduction of Cabernet, the red, with the pink (Decorum Dictates) and the light gray.  This one might be impossible to resist.

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Choice Five: My original thought was to go with the two grays and the scummy green.  But the contrast wasn't high enough.  Then Decorum Dictates, the blush pink, dropped into my lap while they were out.  The three on the left — pink, gray, and green.

Drachen6

Choice Six: Another strong contender (ok, they are all strong contenders or we wouldn't be having this wishy-washy post), I originally thought about doing this is the red and grays combination, and this is the yarn I ordered for Drachenfels.  And I still love it.  I love them all.  I think they would all be splendid.  So, I'm having a hard time deciding.

Drachen7

Choice Seven: Finally, there is this lovely concoction of gray, blue, and red.  It will look good with black, which is a must in my wardrobe.  It is both unusual and familiarly comforting.  I like it a lot.  But then, as we have previously established, I like all of them.

So help me out.  Let me know what you like and why.  What would be practical.  What would be whimsical.  Help me decide on colors for my Drachenfels, and consider joining me! Drachenfels has been knit 511 times on Ravelry (as of this posting) and in such a wide variety of yarns!

This project pretty much sums up why I knit.  Beautiful colors.  Wonderful, soft fibers.  Texture.  The planning is as much fun as the knitting.  The finished project will be surreal.  Truly, I cannot wait!

 

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Knitting Catch Up

With apologies — my long lovely weekend with this child

Eledited

kept me from blogging.  But, not knitting.  In addition to reporting that she thoroughly enjoyed visiting Georgetown and had a great time auditioning at the Washington Ballet, I have some knitting progress to share.

Ellieballtet

One thing I have come to accept about myself is that although I can pack a week's worth of clothing in a carry on bag, my "personal item" — the second carry on airlines allow — is exclusively devoted to knitting.  For this four day trip, I had four projects along with me.

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Top to bottom you can see my newly cast on Tipperary Shawl, the French Laundry colorway  portion of my Sugarloaf Cowl peeking out, a wee bit of my Vodka Lemonade sweater in the bag with the green zipper, and Olivia, which grew a lot on this trip.

Dalek

I'm indulging my inner geek here, and sharing my Da Vinci drawing style Dr. Who meets the Daleks project bag, which is Olivia's home.  

Oliviashortrows

My big knitting news is finally finishing the fisherman's rib portion of Olivia, and moving on to the short rows.  For some reason, short rows and I have never been friends before, but we are getting along famously this time.

Oliviawithgarter

There was, however, the predictable knitting disaster without which no trip would be complete.  Forgive the late night/hotel room/bad lighting photo, but it portrays the exact moment at which my lurking suspicion that the game of yarn chicken I was playing with my third skein of Plucky Primo Aran was going to end badly.  See the little bit of yarn that trails across the right front side of Olivia?  That would be the 12" of yarn left from my last skein.  And, at this point, I still have 50 short rows left before I get to the lengthy cast off row.

This was the first project I cast on with Plucky yarn, and I didn't stop to realize that the yardage for the pattern yarn, Plucky Traveler Aran, is different than the yardage for the Primo Aran that I substituted. Several other knitters noted the need to shorten the rib when knitting in Primo to conserve yarn for the garter portion of the pattern, but apparently oblivious, this girl knit a fulsome seven inches of rib and then came up short on the garter.

Thankfully, a kind knitter has already put one of her precious skeins in the mail to me.  I'm hoping for a good match and a bit of time this weekend, as I'm ready to wrap Olivia's squishy goodness around my neck. Love, love, love this pattern.