Declaration

One score and ten years ago, our foremothers suffered under the tyranny of acrylic.

Today we are free to pursue the happiness of merino (and alpaca, and cashmere, and BFL, and tanguis, and silk, and…)

fourth of july

And so, I say unto you, my fellow American knitters, go forth and celebrate your independence! I know I am. =D And if you have a free moment, Franklin would like you to read the Declaration. Sit down, John, and open up a window, and we’ll all hang together today. And the rest of you…well, happy Sunday!

Just ducky

Hello, Internets!

I have had some adventures.

I went to a baseball game. My team did not win, but I got to see some fireworks as well as Quackerjack, my favorite badass mascot:

You don't mess around with Jack

He acts all sweet around the kids (and the couples getting engaged, another thing I got to witness!) but this is one truly attitudinal duck. He will waggle his tailfeathers at the opposing team in a most insulting manner, and he expects them to thank him for the privilege. Now if only the rest of the team could pick up on that attitude…

There’s been actual, honest to goodness ducks around here, too. Don’t believe me?

Leaves are delicious

My Sister the Teacher does a Duck Unit with her second graders every year in June. They adopt duck eggs from a local farm, and watch the ducks hatch and grow in order to learn important facts about life cycles. All three eggs hatched healthy ducks this year, so unlike years past we are not having to dive into the toughest lessons right away. Instead we get to enjoy the ducks being fluffy and adorable for a few more days, until they go home with their new adopted families.

Make way for ducklings

I can’t stand the cute. I just can’t stand it.

In between all of that, I made some socks.

Summer Socks

Summery, yes? My usual top-down/heel-flap stockinette, from my carefully hoarded stash of Knitpicks Dancing. This colorway is Ballet. They are not exactly difficult, these socks. I could knit my “usual” sock recipe in my sleep at this point. (Actually. I am pretty sure some of these socks were knit in my sleep.)

They make me very happy anyway.

Tune in later, when we play a fun new game called I Ran Out Of Yarn For This Shawl I’m Working On And I’m In Denial But While I Work On That Please Help Me Figure Out What Color Would Work Best To Finish The Border. First I have to finish gnashing my teeth and shaking my fist at the universe, but that shouldn’t take too long.

Read up on Revival

Last weekend I visited Melissa and we hung out and drank some Austrian beer (oh, Gösser, I am so glad to have made your acquaintance again) and watched some hockey and some movies and some television. (I introduced her to last year’s awesome Star Trek reboot; she has been introducing me to Six Feet Under. We are equally pleased with both things.) We toured the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania and climbed through all sorts of old train cars. We drank a lot of coffee and created some delicious blue-cheese-and-mushroom stuffed bison burgers for the One Local Summer challenge. I’d link you but Melissa hasn’t written them up on her blog yet. Tsk.

Anyway. It was a lovely weekend and it revived my spirits, so it was only fitting that I ask Melissa to help me photograph my Revival Socks.

REVIVAL
Revival Socks by missy

Project: Revival Socks, by Glenna C
Yarn: Green Mountain Spinnery Spinnery Sock Art-Forest, in an unnamed blue color
Needles: US2.5/3.0mm
Notes: I LOVE THESE SOCKS.

Seriously. Look at these socks.

Revival socks 2 by missy

(Also that spectacular photograph!) So Glenna has a knack for twisted stitches, and she uses them perfectly in this pattern. It’s not hard to knit at all: the pattern has a great rhythm that is very easy to grok and once you get the hang of it you won’t need to look at the chart again. I had so much fun knitting them up I was sorry when I grafted the second toe. However, I am also looking forward to wearing them, so I have gotten over that.

If you’re looking for a pattern to learn twisted stitches on, I think this would be a great choice. And if you want to recapture your sock mojo? Also, great choice. Glenna’s brilliant and I am very glad she keeps making up designs for me to knit. (Wait, what? She’s not just doing it for me? I’m going to pretend I didn’t hear you say that.)

In short? Knit these socks. You will not be sorry.

And now, back to watching the World Cup. USA/England just wrapped up, and was that not an awesome game? This is going to be the best month of football ever.

Unexpected Interlude

Sometimes knitting on the train means you get into interesting conversations. Last night the conductor paused as she was collecting tickets, leaned over, and asked me, “Is that a sock?”

It was, so I let her get a look, and she spent a good five minutes exclaiming and asking questions while I explained how it worked. She wasn’t a knitter, but she must know knitters, because she knew all the right questions to ask. Then she wanted to know if I had made up the design, so I explained that no, but a friend of mine had.

“Well, it’s lovely! You should tell her!” And off the conductor went, clicking tickets on her way through the car.

Conversations like that are a little burst of energy to get a sock done:

Revival Sock, halfway done!

But then the grill got fired up to make hamburgers and I got distracted but how surprisingly pretty sunlight in smoke can be.

Sunbeams

Can you blame me? No, you cannot.

Scenic

I’ve got a backlog of things blocked and finished to show you…

Traveling Sock

…but the Traveling Sock and I are in Vermont until tomorrow, soaking up the beautiful views. Traveling Sock says hi, by the way.

Aurum

So, as promised, here is the Olympic project I did finish:

OLYMPICS HAT
Olympic Hat

Pattern: Olympics Reindeer Hat, by Helena Bristow, which she kindly created by deconstructing the hats worn by the US Olympics team for the Opening Ceremony.
Yarn: Stash diving! The red and blue are Knit Picks Wool of the Andes, and the White is Webs Northampton.
Needles: US 4/3.5 mm and US 6/4.0 mm
Notes: I fell in love with these hats immediately, because they were just so lovely. If you have no idea what I’m talking about, well, here:

olympics hat

That is the hat. (There were other hats, like the awkward medal-logo intarsia thing that Lindsay Vonn was wearing, but they were just not as awesome as this one.) It was designed by Ralph Lauren Polo, and they sell their version, but those versions are pretty pricy, and there’s really something shameful about buying a hat when one is perfectly capable of knitting their own version with their own hands. I fell in love with the design, and I knew I wanted one of these hats, but I wasn’t expecting to make it as an Ravelympics project.

Then I hit the really long rows on the raglan shaping of my Featherweight sweater. Those are long rows, guys. Over 400 stitches a row. They were taking forever, and I was getting, frankly, bored. And I was starting to become concerned about finishing. I needed a break, and my stash has some red and blue and white worsted that looked just about right. So I put the sweater aside and finished this hat in two nights. I KNOW. Something about switching from laceweight to worsted was just inspiring, and despite the inevitable struggle to keep my gauge in colorwork in order, it just clicked beautifully.

I did make a few modifications, mostly born over the fact that I didn’t have a whole skein of blue, so instead of doubling the hem as the original does, I did a few rows of ribbing on a smaller needle. I also chopped out the last chart, which was the colorwork at the top of the hat, and just did a solid red, and made the tassels red to match. I started the decreases earlier as well, since this hat was tall. And finally, I did the reindeer antlers with a duplicate stitch to avoid having long floats in those sections.

This is a big hat. See:

Olympic Hat

I’m really happy with how it came out. It’s insanely warm and I think it will make an excellent hat for winter sports. And shoveling. Which I hope to not be doing again until next winter. (I just jinxed it, didn’t I.)

And despite the fact that the Featherweight was not completed before the end of the Olympics, I finished my hat so I get a medal!
Bobicus Maximus

Medals are like the icing on an already delicious cake.

I might make this hat again someday. My row gauge was obviously gigantic in comparison to the original, and my colors didn’t match at all. The original has stately dark red and federal blue. I love my more cheerful, bright colors, but they do make for a different impression. I think I would enjoy having the choice between the more serious versus playful versions, and if I could get the row gauge to cooperate I could take a stab at the colorwork in the crown. All of this is to say I loved making this hat so much I’d be willing to make it a second time.

And, just to add to my glee, I did finish the sweater, and wove in the ends yesterday and now it just needs a wash and block. So I think it was an excellent experience all around.

I’m kind of missing watching fun sports like bobsled and curling, though. I think I have Olympics withdrawal. When does the World Cup start again?

Success!

Guys, I can’t believe it, but she pulled it off.

Melissa would like to present proof that she managed to redo the edging on her Ravelympics project before the torch went out:

Success!

I am halfway through picking up stitches for the collar of my sweater, while I watch Russia’s introduction. I have a feeling if I knew the folklore that is being referenced I’d be a little less confused. Note to self: read up on Russia before 2014!

Serious Citius Fail

So the Vancouver Olympics closing ceremonies are later today, the men’s hockey final is blaring away on the television downstairs (I like both teams, so I am simply rooting for whoever is down at that give moment. Haters to the left.) and I am knitting with Melissa, while her husband makes poutine and nachos (fine sporting foods of our gold medal competitors, of course).

My sweater? Is missing a collar, so it won’t medal:

Olympic Sweater

But it looks pretty good as it stands, so as far as I’m concerned it finished the race.

Olympics Sweater

All is not lost! I finished a knock-off Olympic hat, inspired by the beautiful colorwork numbers the American athletes wore during the Opening Ceremonies, and that medaled. I think I’ll give it its own post.

Sadly, Melissa did not have the same luck that I did. I present a little Olympic photoessay which I have entitled Faster, Stronger, Drunker:

First, the Rathlete warms up with a sports beverage:
Refueling

She continues to stay hydrated, despite the rigors of a difficult course:
Desperation

But finally, even she must recognize that she has been defeated:
The agony of defeat

There’s still three inches of border to knit on, and…only three inches of yarn. She’s going to have another, er, sports drink and see if she can’t get some mittens wrapped up before the torch goes out. I’m going to join her and start picking up the stitches for the collar on my sweater. Further updates as we get closer!

Sing of happy, not sad

Anybody else who grew up with Sesame Street remember that one? I rediscovered it a few years ago, and now it earworms its way into my brain frequently. Today is a day to sing of some happy.

Since January is over, so is my little fundraiser. I totaled up my sales of October Leaves, figured out what half of the profits came out to, and I’m really really proud to announce that with your help, I will be making a donation to Doctors Without Borders of $285. (I threw in a buck and change to make it a nice round number.)

Thank you to everyone who bought or gifted a copy. I hope you enjoy knitting your mitts up. I know I keep saying it, but I’m so proud of all the knitters (and crocheters) who pitched in and did this amazing thing. For example, LSG, my home base on Ravelry, has been keeping track of member donations and the current total comes to over $47,000! And Casey over at Ravelry set up a special tag for all the designers donating money from their patterns — I might have done some shopping in there over the month as well. There were a whole lot of people pitching in and they all get my thanks.

Aestlight
The snowman in my backyard approves of you all and your generosity. Thank you all for your help.

Hibernating

The weather has alternated between cold and colder lately, and it makes me want to curl up next to the fire and just stay there. The problem with that plan is that I forget to show you things, like my finished Ron socks:

New Year's Socks

Which socks I have worn several times already and I adore. Oranges and blues and dusky purples, mmm. I really hope Opal makes more Potter-themed yarns for the next movie, and that there are more colorways I can belatedly fall in love with like I did with this one. More like this, Opal, thank you kindly.

And then there is the Wollmeise Aestlight:

Wollmeise Aestlight

It’s finished now, although it wasn’t when I took this picture. Here it was only past the bird’s eye lace. Now, the long, long border is done, the ends are all woven in and it just needs a blocking — tomorrow, hopefully. And then I will have to figure out how to best photograph it, because it came out delightfully huge. I am very excited to wear it; I just have to figure out what I’m making to go with it. Such trials.

And then, there’s the work in progress:

Clapotis

Yes, it’s a Clapotis. I have to knit one every year. It’s a law. Go check. This is going to be a companion to my Anemoi mittens.

And I’m even working on my spinning:

Handspun

I’m still terribly new to all this spindle business but it’s slowly coming together. See? I have yarn!

In between all of that I’ve been watching pattern sales slowly grow and counting how much money I will be able to donate. I’m well over $200 now, and yesterday I reached 200 copies of October Leaves off to new homes. (You know Count von Count? Yeah, just like that. TWO! TWO HUNDRED COPIES! AH AH AH.) I’m really looking forward to hitting send on that donation and sending some of this largess, this community, to where it’s needed. Just a few days left until I can give you all the grand total. (See how subtle that hint was, stragglers?) And in the meantime, you all have my most heartfelt thanks, for buying October Leaves and all the other patterns out there who teamed up to make such an amazing fundraiser. I am so, so proud to be a part of this community.

Now, all of you go cast on. I want to see your mitts. I’ll be right here, curled up with yarn, hibernating.