Saturday, December 27, 2008

New Needlecase

I made another sock needle travel case for my daughter, M, and it turned out even better than the one I made for myself. I used a leftover knitting gauge swatch that happened to be purple and found a pair of purple-handled scissors to put in the implement pockets. I drew out the template for the case on the heavy interfacing using rulers and a bread plate for the curve of the flap. I used this as a pattern for the decorator fabric and the lining.


There is a circle of elastic to hold the "book" closed along with velcro on the flap and at the lower righthand corner. The flap is to keep the sock needles from falling out. The case opens up to show two rows of pockets on the right, and a knitted surface on the left that used to be a gauge swatch to keep the yarn needles, safety pins for row counting, cable needles and a few pins stuck through the knitting.


You can see how much I have improved over the prototype that I made for myself:
Right now I am trying to finish up the husband socks that didn't make the finish line for Christmas. My younger daughter was wearing a really cute sweater this week so she let me take it and take the measurements off of it to reproduce at a later date, so I need to write up a pattern for that. A whole new year of knitting is about to start!

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Frosty Day

This is about as cold as it ever looks in our neck of the woods. I think the lowest ever temperature I can remember here was in the low 20's, and today it is in the low 30's with frost on the ground. Life is so tough in the Golden State, well at our elevation anyway.


I am finished with all of my Christmas crafting which is so unusual to be done ahead of time that I don't quite know how to fill the rest of the time until Christmas. Today I am cooking up a pot of vegetable soup and considering making some Christmas cookies.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

Retro Knit Saturday!

Here we are back in the World's Fair issue of Modern Needlecraft, Fall Winter 1964. This magazine sometimes had up to four or five fashions on a single page, and it is not a large magazine. The first photo below shows two pullovers and a cardigan. The cardigan is knit of a fuzzy yarn with the yarn held double so that the gauge is about 4 1/2 sts/inch. It is a classic man's collared cardigan with cable trim up the fronts and at the raglan seams. The bulky weight boat-neck pullover is knit in turquoise for the background color and 'oxford' (maybe a dark grey?) for the contrast color. It has dropped sleeves and is knit at 3 sts/inch. The 3/4-length sleeve pullover is knit of knitting worsted at 4 sts/inch. It has a ribbed yoke and sleeves and a cabled body.The cardigan on the left in the next picture below is a raglan-sleeved crocheted cardigan. The texture pattern is created by crocheting one row of sc and the next row of slip stitch. The sweater is made from the top down. The sweater on the right, a roll-collar pullover in knitting-worsted-weight yarn, was a style considered to be popular for college girls and campus life. The argyle plaid pullover has kimono sleeves and a boat neck and is knit in stockinette stitch.

Another page packed with fashions! The suit on the left is knit of mohair. The classic cardigan in blue at the bottom is knit with a double strand of knitting worsted from the bottom up. The simple red coat has raglan sleeves and a V neckline, and the classic shift dress has a pattern stitch made with 'double purl stitches', has a crocheted neckband, 3/4 sleeves and a belt made from yarn twisted on itself.
The outfits below were made on knitting machines. You have to love that hat is all I have to say about that. The left outfit consists of a coat, shell, skirt, jacket and hat. The coat and hat are lined/trimmed with fake fur fabric. The outfit on the right is a sheath dress with matching cape knit on the Passap Duomatic.

Here's the description for the center dress on the next page: 'Framed in center circle, this page, is wonderfully packable, lightweight shift that can be worn beltless if desired. Combining light toast and beige tones, checked shift is made of Reynolds' mohair yarn." Upper right shows another cardigan with embossed leaves marching up the front, but this one also has leaves on the collar. I couldn't think at first what the dolman sweater in bottom right reminded me of, crawling up the neck the way it does and with those short stubby sleeves, but then I realized that it looks like a lot of dog sweaters I have seen. It is supposed to be a French-inspired design.
Today I am going to start turning the heels on the husband's Christmas socks. I was looking for some decent color of Woolease to make him some more winter socks, but they only had 'girly' colors at the Michaels. The navy they had was much too bright, not a glum man color at all.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Butterflies

What a gorgeous day yesterday was! The spouse had yet another meeting down in Carmel, so I went along for the ride. I dropped him off at the office and then drove to Pacific Grove. This is the view towards the ocean through my windshield, and you can see the ocean and the fog bank behind it.I walked around a bit, investigating several antique shops, then I went into the (free!) natural history museum. While there, I went into the museum shop and bought small gifts for the girls and began a conversation with the nice lady behind the counter. She told me that this is the time of year that the monarchs come back to the area. Somehow I always thought that would be in the spring, not at Christmastime. She told me where the butterfly sanctuary was so I decided to try to find it. I promptly got lost, well, as lost as you can get in a small town, and turned in at the municipal golf course. I asked the cute guy at the golf shop where the butterfly sanctuary was, and he gave me excellent directions. I had only overdriven by about two blocks. I found the location and parked next to the adult school. Monarchs were flying around over my head and hovering over the ivy wall.

Access to the grove is a pathway between two lots.
My goodness, what a beautiful day it was. It is a little sad that butterflies are so hard to photograph unless you are a professional like these two guys with the biggest cameras I have ever seen (not only as big as their head, but as big as their head and an arm too). The following picture shows a flock of butterflies feeding on the grass.

The grove had pathways to walk on, and as you walked the lovely orange butterflies would buzz your head and swirl around you. They would land in the trees.
The lady park ranger person was holding a butterfly that she was trying to warm up by blowing on it, so she posed it for me on the ground:


What a lovely experience. Now that I know what time of year to go there, I will have to take the spouse with me next year.
After that, I drove down Lighthouse Avenue and went to Olio, my favorite store in the area. She had a very good selection of vintage sewing stuff. I may have purchased some items, including a wonderful pattern for a man's sport shirt from the late 40's in just the right size for the spouse. I see some Hawaiian shirts in his future.

Friday, December 5, 2008

Retro Knit Friday!

Here's the last few fashions shown in the Columbia Minerva booklet from the early sixties. The sweaters are worn with slacks, straight skirts, and the sheath dress, which seems to be back in style.
The first sweater is a jacket trimmed with wide ribbon. The ribbon is threaded through gaps in the knitting and trims the sleeves and neckline. The gaps are formed by tying on new balls of yarn for every separate section of knitting, then joining all the sections together. All of these sweaters are made with the yarn called 'Firenze' which knit up at about 3 sts/inch.
The suit has a short jacket and a straight skirt. The sleeves of the jacket are cast onto the body, and all the edges are finished with knitted facings. The jacket closes with applied leather tabs.
This is a nice classic little jacket with cable-trimmed front edges and 3/4 set-in sleeves. It looks great over a sheath dress. The pattern is written in four sizes, from 12 to 18. The size 18 was for a body bust measurement of around 39 inches.
Boy, this pullover has Super Texture - a ridged pattern in the bulky yarn. You would really have to be slim to escape the weight-adding properties of this sporty sweater.

My husband is reporting to me that he loves the Woolease socks that he got for Christmas last year. It hasn't been cold enough to wear them before this fall. He says they are very warm and comfortable and are wearing well so far.

Monday, December 1, 2008

December Projects

I got tired of little finicky crochet so hauled out my afghan to work on. I have already made 10 or 11 new squares. I think I am going to do a black border to mimic the look of Spanish wrought iron work, since this afghan is Latin themed.

I am also trying something I have never done with socks before: knitting both socks at the same time. I am not sure I like it yet, since it seems like you are on the same part of the sock forever and ever.
Now it is the spouse's turn to use the computer so I am going to go dig through the yarn stash to remind myself what is in there.