subtlefire: Chibi Sherlock Holmes with sheet music in background (Default)
Happy new year, everyone! Have you recovered from the holidays yet? I spent 10 days with only dialup for internet (barring a few desperate excursions to a café) so I am still catching up. I spent part of yesterday catching up on podcasts and... OMG! I got a mention on Stringchronicity! Maire wisely googles her show from time to time and thus caught my previous mention. *waves* Hi!

She also called me on being a slacker blogger. Yep, I'm pretty bad. I think of lots of things to write about and even start planning out what I want to say, but a lot of that doesn't ever make it out into the world. Part of this is because these things tend to occur to me while I'm at work or zipping down the interstate at 70mph and shouldn't really drop everything to write up my yarn adventures. (And then Very Important Work Things occur to me when I'm in the shower or just about to fall asleep. Of course.) That and the bouts of dialup are my only excuse.

So today's post is a catch-up of topics that don't require pictures. Yes, I am too lazy to upload pics right now. Come on, my camera is all the way on the other side of the room inside my bag. ;)

One of this year's goals, like last year, is some serious destashing. I had planned to have another Personal Sock Club (which I totally thought of before Stephanie Pearl-McPhee mentioned hers on her blog!) and complete at least one sock a month. That way I'm 6 pairs happier in my sock drawer and 12 skeins smaller in my yarn bins by next January. This worked well last year and left me plenty of time for other things, so I'm doing it again. Then I ran across the 12in2011 Ravelry group, a support group/cheering section for those who need to destash and to get things out of their Ravelry queue that have been sitting around too long. Since that's only six more FOs than my plan - and surely I'll complete six other things in 300-some days! - I joined up. One FO per month should be the very least I can do.

With all this destashing talk, anyone who has followed me here from Ravelry is probably wondering why I just added about 5 squidillion skeins to my stash there. Part of this project is being honest with myself about what I have. This will also add to my sense of accomplishment when Ravelry ticks something over from "stashed" to "used". The stuff I added was only one giant bag from the closet o' doom, where craft things go to languish indefinitely. There is still uncatalogued stuff in the plastic storage drawers that I hope will eventually contain the entire stash.

I am working on some socks in a KnitPicks yarn that is cursed. That definitely deserves its own post, so I'll just say that the rest of you are safe because the colorway is long discontinued. I'm not even sure if the second skein has the same curse or just the one I'm using right now. The only way to know is to soldier on until I get this first sock cast off, take a deep breath, and charge ahead with Sock #2. I'm tempted to light candles or incense or something before I start it. ;)

Last January, I managed to do a whole pair of socks in one month, leaving me space to focus on my Ravelympics hats in February. Those socks were much less problematic, so if I want a January FO, it's going to have to be something fairly simple. Thus I started a Jesse's Christmas Hat yesterday, and am over halfway through it. This is a very simple, quick pattern that yields a lovely unisex hat (depending on your color choice) that is stretchy enough to fit almost anyone.

I am considering having a re-do of Ravelympics on my own this year, maybe for only one week this time, and probably in February. I did so well, despite some crazy stuff that went on, that I would like to duplicate that level of productivity. In fact, having a goal that I needed to focus on probably helped me keep churning out hats instead of feeling sorry for myself. It won't hurt for me to drop out of tv watching, fanfic reading, and Ravelry boards for one week. Any catching up I have to do from that will probably be outweighed by the relief from stash guilt.
subtlefire: Chibi John Watson with tea and cuddly sweater (Sherlock_John+tea)
Hello, new people who have added me! I'm guessing you've all arrived from fandom? Nice to meet you, and I hope you find my ramblings entertaining, if not useful.

The Watson hat stalled out over two things. First, my "final" test knit was to the point of starting decreases when I realized I had not switched needle sizes after the ribbing as I intended. Do I just go with it, or rip back and start over? If it was just another hat, I wouldn't bother, but this is srs bizniz if I am expecting other people to take the pattern seriously. After it spent much time sitting on the coffee table getting disappointed looks that it didn't speak up 25 rounds earlier about this problem, I decided that it really didn't need a needle change after all. It's not that pretentious. ;)

Second, the charts. Always the blasted charts. Here's a tip: If you chart something on graph paper, rework it a lot, your final calculations look like the dog's breakfast and no-one but you could possibly interpret it correctly, rechart it on a clean page. Otherwise you will gleefully get to the final section of your very exciting project only to find that your stitch counts follow no known mathematical laws. I know now why people shell out for the expensive charting software. Since I'm busy shelling out for food, gas, and yarn, the graph paper industry is safe for a while.

Speaking of yarn, my charge through my destashing plans is about to be hampered by a sweater. Specifically, the Watson Sweater, which I have the privilege of test knitting. I'm using KnitPicks Swish DK which is wonderfully soft and pretty. And, as much as I complained about the wait for it to arrive, it didn't really take any longer than it normally does for an order.

I applied myself the last few days while waiting for the yarn to arrive, got through the hat, and finished writing up the pattern today. I have a few friends in mind for test knitters. I've spent so much time with it, I really wouldn't know if something completely illogical has set up camp in my instructions. I'll let other people puzzle it out while I get back to the Badass Cuddly Jumper of Awesomeness. :)
subtlefire: Chibi Sherlock Holmes with sheet music in background (Default)
As a long-time Sherlock Holmes fangirl, I had to watch the new BBC Sherlock and enjoyed it immensely. The biggest flaw in the show, aside from the fact there are only three episodes, is the astounding lack of knitwear to stare at and copy. The exception to this is Watson's sweater in the first episode, "A Study in Pink". Here's a better look at the stitch pattern, though the image is flipped, since the cables are all left-crossed in the episode.

A few people on Ravelry suggested similar sweaters, but of course none of those matched quite right. Then TexturedKnitter posted an outline/ recipe for an Elementary! Watson Sweater. If I knew anything at all about building a sweater, I would already have the yarn ordered for this one. I'm quite sure someone else will pick it up long before I reach that level, but the charts are not without interest.

The beautiful thing about charts is that you can take them and plug them into just about any garment (or other knitted object) as long as you can make the stitch counts work. Since I'm on a hat kick, I decided to try these with a hat. The stitch count for 3 repeats seemed a little high for worsted weight, but I gave it a try and, after fussing with the decreases a lot I had a not-bad hat that fit me fairly well but will probably work better for a man. Okay, I was planning on giving it away anyway.

My next attempt was 2 chart repeats with bulky yarn. This turned out about the same size, and my re-reworking of the decreases looks a lot less funky. Look, Ma, I wrote a pattern! I'm pretty darn proud of myself, even if it was mostly borrowed.

It will be a few days yet before I'm ready to post a final pattern. I need to do one more test knit to make sure the pattern works with the weight yarn I want and the decreases look good. (I've only changed the decreases about 6 times now.) I want to see how the cables relax once they have been washed and dried. Then I need to take loads of pictures of hats looking good, and a few of what not to do. But I'm excited!
subtlefire: Chibi Sherlock Holmes with sheet music in background (Default)
Hello again! I did not, in fact, forget about this blog. I did, however, manage to do quite a lot of things in the last several months that could have been posted but (obviously) were not. I may try to backtrack and share some projects. The first thing that should be noted is that, when I boxed up Ravelympics hats to send to Caps for a Cure, I found that I had miscounted. In fact, I made 23 hats in 14 days. That broke my brain again.

Sadly, the next brain-breaking thing that happened was when I looked at my stash and realized that, minus nearly two dozen hats, it was still the pretty much same size. So much for that fabulous idea. I'm still churning away at the destash, and found a few good, standard patterns that I can pull out depending on the weight and texture of the yarn and crank out a nice stack of chemo caps.

I'm all about the caps right now, not only because I have a massive amount of appropriate yarn, but because I finally have a local treatment center to donate to. A local group is making knitted knockers for UT Medical Center and the hospital was also eager to get some caps. Fortunately, hats are a good, portable size, so they can go almost anywhere with me, and the pattern I'm working with the most is only ribbing and stockinette until the decreases, which makes it good conversation/ tv/ podcast/ listen-to-a-new-album knitting.

I think that is what I am going to do now. I just discovered Arctic Monkeys and should probably know more than one or two songs before I start flinging their music at anyone who will pay attention to me for five seconds.

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subtlefire: Chibi Sherlock Holmes with sheet music in background (Default)
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January 2011

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