Author Archives: gillianknitter

Why do I travel?

I am going to be out of the country for 6 weeks.  I am not sure how often I will be posting knitting.  I expect to be posting mostly travel posts for a while.valuables Why put up with all the discomfort and frustration?  The knowledge that my IBS may get fired up enough to scare me into thinking it will never calm down again?  The stress of not being able to find a room when you have stumbled into a town where it is Holy Week and they have an important cathedral, or there is a conference in town taking up all the hotel space (luckily they don’t usually compete for the lowest end of the hotel market, but you never know). The fact that everything I have with me for weeks on end has to fit into a suitcase that is (23 cm x 40 cm x 55 cm or 9 in x 15.5 in x 21.5 in) … that is .05 cubic meters or 1.75 cubic feet, including an apnea machine that I really need to sleep. Not to mention the fact that the apnea machine needs electricity, which can be unreliable or even non-existent.first layer main pocket

I do it because every day I see things I wouldn’t get to see at home.  Different foods and cultures and architecture.  Different people and traffic patterns.  Different crops in the fields, sometimes difficult to figure out.  World Heritage sites. Mountains, rivers, oceans. Sunrises and sunsets that don’t have my neighbours’ houses blocking them.top layer, main pocket

I also do it because I am hoping to once again see something that strikes me personally as so beautiful that I get an aching and profound sense of future loss for the present moment.  I know I can’t remain where I am, but I will never be there again.  I can only really remember this happening three times in my life.  Twenty five years ago on a mountainside in Nepal while hiking the Annapurna circuit.  In the Uffizi museum in Florence, Italy while standing in front of Botticelli’s Birth of Venus, also 25 years ago now.  And finally on top of one of the pyramids in Tikal, 5 years ago, looking out at the rainforest canopy with other pyramids poking out and a rainstorm coming (someone from the star wars franchise obviously shared this one with me and put it in the movies).  I don’t know when and if it will ever happen again, but I continue to hope for it, and know my only hope is to travel.top pocket of packI have decided to show you all that I take for a 6 week trip.  I started a wish list in a laundry basket on the dining room table.  I rejected the dress, because my brother Charles in unlikely to want to go anywhere that would be appropriate.  IMG_20160322_084711

I don’t stint on socks, underwear and over the counter medications.IMG_20151008_090929

Happy St. Patrick’s Day

St. Patricks Day...Gillianknits.com

No Barbara today…just ribbing and stockinette, with a bit of intarsia.St. Patricks Day..gillianknits.com

Mum stayed over last night and was using words like “interesting” and “different”.  This morning she said it looked much better in the light.

St Patricks Day...gillianknits.com

not entirely happy with the pot of gold…or the seam beside it but hey..it’s done

St. Patricks Day..gillianknits.com

Originally I was going to knit the rainbow in, but I lost heart and just crocheted it separately and sewed it on.gillianknits.com

I used 10 points of decrease and decreased with knit 8 knit 2 together around, one plain round, then k7, k2tog, one plain round, etc. until I did just k2 together around.  I kept going with the k2tog another time and finished off the 5 stitches by running the tail through.

Changing on the fly, Barbara

gillianknits.comIt is one thing to see the little knitted black and white photo of a stitch in The Book, and it is another thing entirely to expect myself to instantly imagine a hat that works for the stitch.  It does happen sometimes, like the tam using the triangular stitch last week.  I just had to keep faith in the vision and carry it through.  I must say I was pretty chuffed with the final project, although several people have laughed when I modelled it for them.  A few others, however, share my taste.gillianknits.com

For this particular hat,  knew I was doing the Dots and Dashes from page 81 all along, but the hat changed several times before it finished.  I cast on 100 stitches and did the garter stitch rainbow,  I increased to 110 stitches because of the anticipated draw-in of the colour work and thought I would do the dots and dashes in black for a while, then do a rainbow somewhere in the same stitch and go back to black, like the last hat where I subbed the rainbow in for one repeat, and resulted in a hat I was OK with.  As soon as I started the pattern, I realized that plan was not going to fly.  I had thought that the garter stitch dots and dashes rainbow would echo that in the border and things would be OK, but I realized it just wasn’t going to work somehow.  I then thought I would just go with black dots and dashes to the top and put a topper to echo the base.  I kept going, but after a couple of inches, my vision was fading again.  Too busy, with not enough strength in the pattern to carry a whole hat.  It was definitely proving to be a “smaller doses” pattern stitch.  gillianknits.com

I decided to go to black for the bulk of the hat, which would tone it down and hopefully show off the dots and dashes a bit.   I looked at the next stitch in each of the chapters that dealt with single colours.  Giant Diamond Pattern, pg 32 was the winner.  I had to decrease to 105 stitches to get to  7 repeats of the pattern.  It is just a simple knit/purl pattern so there is no draw in at all and has a 15 stitch repeat, 90 would be too few for an adult hat, 105 is on the large side, but so be it.  I used 7 points of decrease and stacked the sl 1, k2tog, psso’s on top of each other above the big purled diamonds of the last row of the pattern.  I decreased every other row to 21 stitches.  i then did knit 1, k2tog knit 2, knit 2 together around and ended up with 15 stitches and did a garter stitch rainbow again, then went back to the base and filled in with black.  It has a bit of a Mulan vibe, but I am binge watching Once Upon a Time at the moment.  They have a lot of knitting I wish I had done.gillianknits.com

When obsessions collide, Barbara

gillianknits.comRight now, I have two obsessions.  Knitting the stitches from A Treasury of Knitting Patterns and Candy Crush Saga.  I know, I know, back in the summer I claimed to have beaten it, but apparently it is not that simple.  Number one, I didn’t admit it at the time but I had not conquered all the dream-world levels.  The parallel universe with the owl Odus.  I managed that a few weeks ago.  In the meantime, They have released new levels every week or so, so I have to keep beating them too, right?

Bite me Odus

Bite me Odus

Last night when my insomnia was in full swing and I was working away at yet another new set of levels, I was struck by the fact that the rainbows I am knitting are almost exactly the same hues as the candies in candy crush.   And I have a whole ball of each colour and I have only used a fraction on the three hats I have done so far.  It may be a while.gillianknits.com

I am trying to decide what knitting I should take with me on my upcoming trip.  Six weeks of knitting on planes, trains and auto-mobiles, not to mention in hotel rooms, coffee shops, etc…  I think I will have to crack into the lace chapter.  There is a lot of knitting with not much supplies in lace…lace weight wool is pretty thin.  Too bad The Book hasn’t fallen apart much around that chapter yet.  It is quite a heavy section still.  I think I mentioned last trip that I only take one carry-on backpack and a fanny pack.  I have to take my apnea machine and clothes.  I will probably take my Ipad. The laptop is way too heavy and bulky.  Luckily, even though we are going to a myriad of countries, I only have to take one (1″) Lonely Planet.  It actually has all but Greece of the 12 countries my brother Charles has on his list.  Eastern Europe doesn’t have that much on offer I guess.  I never actually start planning the trip until I am on the plane, so I haven’t looked at it yet.  I am not even sure why I do it that way.  Travel never really seems real to me unless I am actually doing it.  I don’t think about it much when I am not there yet.  Anyway, I am not leaving for almost two weeks and I tend to pack in about 10 minutes, so I don’t have to worry yet, except of course to make sure I have enough to knit.  After all, one can only take this failure to plan thing so far.gillianknits.com

Barbara stuff: cast on 105 stitches, Dutch Pyramids, pg 30 for the hat band.  Increase to 108, then Chickenwire Check, pg 80 for 5 repeats, with a rainbow in the third repeat.  Decrease one stitch per 6 stitch  repeat 2nd and seventh row of the 6th-8 row repeat, then on the 3rd row of the next 8 row repeat and the 2nd row of the next 8 row repeat.  Slip one, knit one around for 4 rows with white, then k2tog around do two rows with black, k2tog around again and finish.

I even did a tension square, Barbara

IMG_20160309_164451I don’t usually do tension squares.  I figure add about 15-20% more stitches for lots of stranded colours and 10-15 % for heavy cabling.  You can often look at the pictures of the cabling patterns and tell what is being drawn in.   I had no idea on this stitch, Triangular Stitch or Mock Kilting, pg 28.  Barbara just said it had a tendency to roll up into false pleats.  This sounded like it would work for a tam type hat.  I made a tension square on 49 stitches and did about 4 inches so I could get a good sense of how much take in the pleating caused.  I then measured over the middle 35 stitches to determine that 35 stitches drew into about 4 inches.  I multiplied this by 5 to get to the ballpark of 20″ (the nice thing about knitted hats is that they will stretch a bit).  I cast on 175 stitches.  gillianknits.comTo get the rainbow, I had to carry 7 balls of yarn back and forth.  I used a similar method to one I developed for myself about 30 years ago when I made this sweater for my sister in law:gillianknits.comI decided then to use a small ball for each of the colour stripes I carried up the front of this mohair sweater,  This meant I had 25 strands of yarn working in total.  I used to refer to this kind of stuff as my masochistic knitting.  I showed some tartan pillows a while back that fell in the same category.  I remember I had two slotted pieces of plastic and I put one strand in each slot, then put the other piece of plastic on top so the strands were basically running through one hole each.  With care, I could trade the places of two strands of yarn and make sure on the purl side they went back into their old places.  If you left this many strands to their own devices, you would spend as much time untangling as knitting.  This time I cut the slots from a shoe box, put the balls inside and closed the lid.  It worked really well and I only had to stop once to get my strands back in order when I lost concentration.gillianknits.com

I am not sure what anyone else thinks about this hat, but I was happy that it actually turned out exactly as I had planned.  When I had the main part of the hat knit, I picked up 4 stitches from each 7 stitch repeat so I had 100 stitches.  I then did garter stitch on the top, 4 rows per colour.  I used  8 points of decrease.  The first decrease needed to get rid of more stitches so I knit 10, knit 2 together, then knit 10, knit 3 together around.  Next time I knit 9, knit 2 together around then knit 8, knit 2 together etc.gillianknits.comAt this point I had what looked like a giant coffee filter with a rainbow on it.gillianknits.comI picked up 100 stitches from the opposite edge and did two rows of garter stitch per colour to finish the hat band.IMG_20160308_104126

Using up some pretty scraps, Barbara

gillianknits.comI was sorting out my spare bits and pieces of the Cascade 220 and Cascade Bentley I have been using lately and this bunch of balls caught my eye, so I decided to do a hat with them.IMG_20160301_212527

I made a rookie mistake and the second band was puckering because the colour work and ribbing both pulled in. I took it back a couple of inches and did the decrease before instead of on the last row (from 108 stitches for the Eccentric Check, pg 80 to 100 stitches for the Little Shell Rib, pg 47).  I had started out at the bottom with 110 stitches on the ribbing and decreased 2 stitches to start the colour work.gillianknits.com

Every time I see my friend Jen from pottery school and we talk about my hats, I feel like I am not artistic enough with them, so the next hat ends up some weird shape.  I finished the hat while I was talking to Heather and I sent her a picture, she asked about the stitches.  Her comment was “that’s eccentric alright”.  To decrease at the top, I had two points of decrease for a very slow decrease.  The pattern had a natural decrease point where you reduce within the ribbing by doing a slip one, k2tog psso in the knitted part.  I just didn’t do the k1, p1, k1 in that stitch on the next row, I just knit it, then when I came back, I did a p3tog on top of it, then next row a p2tog to finish getting rid of the repeat.  I like to use the natural decreases in the pattern wherever possible because I feel it gives continuity.  I did the next decrease to the right of the previous  one each time until I had two repeats left at the top and did the finishing.  The top wouldn’t flop, like the Santa hat I did before Christmas. Stockinette had no integrity, so it folds easily.  When you have a lot of patterning, things get stiffer.gillianknits.com

Sorry about the pictures, but I had lost the light and this puppy ain’t getting any better tomorrow anyway.

Almost as long in the planning as the knitting, Barbara

gillianknits.com

Spare me from myself, sometimes.  This time, I had a concept.  I was trying to get the feeling of one of those walls of art you see in galleries.  I was thinking of one at the AGO in particular, but I could not find an image of it online.  It took almost as long to plan this hat as to knit it.gillianknits.com

I had to figure out the stitches to use, how I was going to fill the spaces with at least one repeat of each stitch.  I had to center the knitting within the block, adding stuff that made sense.  I decided I wanted all the “paintings” to line up top and bottom.   I also needed the same amount of background between the individual “paintings”.  I also made an attempt at framing them by surrounding them with garter stitch, but I wouldn’t call that particular aspect a success on the aran coloured hat.gillianknits.com
The bottom, background and top were done in Diagonal Stitch, pg 120.  I cast on 120 stitches and worked 8 rows.  I then did two rows of garter stitch where I was going to place a “painting”, and continued with the Diagonal Stitch in between.  This hat also used Twist-Stitch Diamond Pattern, pg 120, Variation Smocking, pg 134, Little Knot Stitch, pg 132, Peppercorn Stitch, pg 133, King Charles Brocade, pg 31,  Pyramid Pattern, pg 29 and Twist-Stitch Waves, pg 124…8 stitches total.gillianknits.comOnce I had done 32 pattern rows and put the garter stitch on top of the “paintings”, I only had room for an aggressive decrease.  I used 10 points of decrease and decreased every other row.gillianknits.com

I went to movies last Tuesday (Oscar contenders, yeah!) while I was in the planning stages of the first hat and Christine, who was with me, said I shouldn’t do it in white, I should do different colours for the “paintings”.  I knew I was going to do the aran coloured hat because I love the texture you see with the off-white wool.  I told Alan when he got home and he said I had to do both.  This one was done on two needles and you can see the seam to the left of the orange/purple blocks.  Seams have always been a nemesis of mine.  I will have to ask for help sometime.  ANYHOW.  I had the rainbow of balls from the hats last week and thought, what the heck. gillianknits.com

Back to the planning notebook I went and worked out another layout, this time using Italian Chain Ribbing, pg 47 as the background and 114 stitches.  This meant I had to leave 6 stitches in between, but unlike the Diagonal Stitch which had a two stitch repeat, I had to line the “paintings” up so that a full pattern repeat went up between them, and I had to fudge the patterns sideways as well as height-wise so they fit properly.  The knitting was infinitely more complicated on this one, what with all that Intarsia going on and the balls getting tangled (themselves)  and untangled (painstakingly by me).  I outlined the paintings with a round of crocheted chain stitch to simulate frames before I finished the top.gillianknits.com

I reduced in the last row to 108 so I had 18 of the 6 stitch repeats left.  I decreased every 12th stitch, then every 11th stitch, etc maintaining the pattern as much as possible as I went.  (9 points of decrease, decreasing one stitch every other row).  This hat also used Pennant Stitch, pg.  29, Diamond Brocade and Double Diamond Brocade from pg. 30, English Diamond Block Pattern, pg 31, Inverness Diamonds, pg 32 and Diamond Stripe, pg. 33…7 stitches in all.  Two hats, 15 stitches…not bad, eh Barbara!

Barbara Walker Project…first year summary

Wow, it has been a year since I started knitting stuff with the stitches in A Treasury of Knitting Patterns by Barbara Walker.  Today I am not posting anything new, just recapping the progress so far.

  • Chapter 2,  Simple Knit-Purl Combinations:  47 of 67 stitches used
  • Chapter 3, Ribbings:  21of 28 stitches used
  • Chapter 4, Color Change Patterns: 60 of 78 stitches used
  • Chapter 5, Slip-Stitch Patterns: 15 of 49 stitches used
  • Chapter 6, Twist Stitch Patterns: 14 of 24 stitches used
  • Chapter 7, Fancy Texture Patterns: 7 of 33 stitches used
  • Chapter 8, Patterns Made With Yarn-Over Stitches: 3 of 36 stitches used
  • Chapter 9, Eyelet Patterns: 6 of 35 stitches used
  • Chapter 10, Lace: 1 of 107 stitches used (this is my year 3 project)
  • Chapter 11, Cables: 16 of 57 stiches used
  • Chapter 12, Cable-Stitch Patterns: 13 of 30 stitches used

This means I have used 203 of 544 stitches.  If I manage to keep going like this, I will be finished, as planned, in 2018.  For the most part, I am liking the project.  I love the endless discovery of knitted fabric with all its texture and colour.

These stitches went into 96 projects, all of which I designed using stitches from the book

  • 83 hats
  • 3 pairs of mitts
  • 2 baby sweaters
  • one cowl
  • one headband
  • one pair of socks
  • some doll house stuff (two blankets and 3 pillows)

I guess I wasn’t kidding when I named this blog.  Gillian does knit mostly hats!

 

Sometimes you just have to reboot the hat, Barbara

gillianknits.comHeather was home for reading week and I was bemoaning the fact that I thought the blog was much less interesting when I didn’t have her around to critique my hats.  I usually just have her father these days and the criticism I get from him runs to “ooh, I like that one” or ‘that’s terrific”.  He doesn’t like to offer opinion on colour or style.  In fairness, he did offer an opinion for the valentines hat, then I phoned my friend Rosemary and sent her a picture.  He got overruled.  Heather is much freer with her opinions, like the pink from the triple threat hats the other day, “it kind of makes me feel sick– like I ate too much cotton candy”.  Don’t hold back honey, tell me what you really think.  I did get an “I really like that hat” from her when the hat above was finished, so, yeah me.gillianknits.com

Sometimes I have to sell her on a concept.  Take this rainbow for instance.  I have always been a rainbow person.  I just love the pure colours and how nice it is to see one in real life.  We were in the wool store and she told me that rainbows were for children’s hats and I don’t do many children’s hats.  I don’t have any related children nearby, so I don’t have models.  Later, in the car, I said her cousin Ben had actually asked for the last rainbow hat I did, and he is ostensibly an adult.  At least the law school was willing to give him a degree and all.  She capitulated and I went back and bought the yarn.  This hat was pretty much a blast from my past.  Here is the sweater I was knitting when I was in labour with Jacob, 21 years ago.  (the rainbow was my idea…the pattern called for two colours in total)gillianknits.comNeedless to say the day he was born, many inches were ripped out and re-knit.  Also,when I was a field biologist in Algonquin park, we mapped the territories of White Throated Sparrows.  One of our biggest singers was banded with light blue over black colour bands, so I was thinking of this while I knit the black parts..gillianknits.com

This hat had totally not been working out.  I was at one of my local wool shops, Wool-Tyme a while ago and got a ball of Cascade Bentley from their discount bin.  I tried to do the hat with the Bentley in the background but I lost both the pattern and the pretty yarn.  I ripped this back and did the rainbow on this one and used the Bentley in the other hat.

STITCHES USED/DECREASE STRATEGY:  Blue/Rainbow …100 stitches of Lozenge Pattern, pg 29 then increased to 112 stitches (16 repeats) for the Gull Check, pg 78.  Decreasing four points of decrease.  Every fourth 7 stitch repeat was decreased completely to nothing over one 6 row repeat, then I moved on repeat to the right and decreased another 4 twice to 28 stitches and winged the final decrease.gillianknits.com

Purple/Bentley 99 stitches of Puff Rib, pg47.  This is a VERY loose rib and could have been done on fewer stitches.  It is not bad but quite loose.  Increased to 116 for the Linked Stripe Pattern, pg. 79.  Used 5 points of decrease and did (slip one, knit 2 together, psso) stacked above each other, every fourth row then every second row nearer the top.  In one place I had to not do the first two decreases because I only had 19 repeats, not 20 to start..gillianknits.com

It’s 80’s bagpiper chic, Barbara

gillianknits.comAt least that is what Heather called it when I finished it.  (read:  that hat looks like it was designed by an out of date nerd).  I said that tams were versatile and that you could pull them down over your ears and forhead if it got really cold out.  She said yeah, you can even use them like a balaclava if it is really cold and took a selfie.gillianknits.com

The top turned out passable, but nothing to write home about.gillianknits.comThe stitches were Triple torch, pg. 78 and Elongated-Stitch Waves, page 81.   I cast on 120 stitches.  Barbara had mentioned that the Elongated-Stitch Waves would spread laterally, and I had been meaning to do a tam-like hat for a while, so I decided to take this opportunity.  I decreased on the second white row, 24 stitches evenly around per time, 3 times (down to 48), then 16 stitches per time twice and got rid of them by k2tog arond and ended.