Saturday, 8 October 2016

The Lazy Weekend Sweater

Readers, the third in my series of weekend sweaters, all knitted from my (seemingly never decreasing!) stash.  This one is Nikhol Lohr's design, knitted from the remains of a value ball of Windermere Aran in tweedy, flecked cream.  It's a free pattern on Ravelry.

I love it, although it is more fitted than I anticipated, and I lengthened the sleeves and bottom by a few rows each, as I am tall.  I decided not to do the hood as I thought it wouldn't suit the fit, and it got it's first outing last weekend, with a dark denim skirt, black slip ons and subtle red lipstick, for a slightly vintage vibe.


So - the hoodie that I thought this would be remains yet to be done, although I am very happy with this result!

Monday, 3 October 2016

Yarn and Wool in the Blue Mountains, NSW

Readers, it was a celebratory weekend for me, so Mr Bromley Knits and I set out early on Saturday morning - destination Blue Mountains 

The Three Sisters

As well as the beautiful scenery, we had two knitting shops in the agenda.  The first was in the lovely town of Katoomba, a delightful mix of Art Deco, new age hippy and mountaineering.



The Granny Square, 55-57 Waratah St, Katoomba, is an offshoot of the Morris and Sons mini-chain of Australian yarn and wool stores.  Located in an olde-world shop, with whitewashed interior, it is filled with the Morris and Sons own yarn lines, as well as a good range of others - Noro, Patons, Debbie Bliss, for example.  



There are all the notions you could possibly need, as well as pattern leaflets, mags and books, including a pile of vintage leaflets for reference - something I loved.  I had been looking for some tweed for a current project, so purchased 3 skeins of their Morris Woollahra in the Mustard colourway.


The very knowledgable and helpful shop assistant helped me work out how much more I needed to purchase with Morris and Sons to get an AUD 50 voucher - it's definitely worth joining their mailing list/purchasing club.

Our next stop was a totally different experience 10 minutes up the road from Katoomba (or a stop or two further o the train if you are on public transport), in the quaint town of Blackheath.  The House of Wool is on Govett's Leap Rd, and is run by an indie dyer, with hand dyed yarn and fleece to die for - here are my purchases:


Located as one of the shops in an old house converted to retail, it's a lovely place to spend time.


There is also an excellent range of Australian merino available, and some unique accessories, like buttons, brooches, as well as a great pattern book range (one of only two places I've seen a copy of Alice Starmore's new edition of Tudor Roses, worldwide).  I will definitely be back!

Til next time - happy knitting!

Sunday, 5 June 2016

Knits for Rainy Weekends

Readers, in the last few years I have relocated from the UK back to my home country of Australia, and to a different part of Australia at that. Mostly, it is warm and humid here, with mild, wet winters which are occasionally cold (we had sleet  one weekend in the depths of winter last year).  Because cold weather is only occasional, the houses are not particularly well heated or insulated, and I have found I need warm sleepwear and warm sweaters for nights and weekends here.

To this end, I have started a relaxed weekend sweater collection, of which the One Night Coat is part:
I am wearing this today, over jeans and a long sleeved Breton tee shirt.

My latest FO in this collection is the Jo Sharp Women's Sweater, Version 2, from the Contemporary Knits book, and knitted in some Jo Sharp Rare Comfort Kid Mohair I'd had in stash for years:
It is more cropped than the original pattern, and has bracelet length sleeves, but works fine with jeans and a tee underneath.  I wore it that way yesterday, and it was super comfortable, breathable, and I got a compliment - always nice.

This collection is a great way to use up the stash - I'm planning to do something with some cream Aran tweed next....

Friday, 3 June 2016

A Return to Handspinning

Readers, a much overdue post. Full time work and part time study are taking a toll on my crafting time, and on all thing crafty in my life, like blogging about crafting.

At the start of the year I promised myself I would restrict my crafting to knitting only, until my thesis is done.  Well, I have had a minor slip on that, for a few reasons.

One is that this is a recent purchase:
It's an Ashford Traditional, and I picked it up for a very reasonable price from a local-ish member of the New South Wales Handspinners and Weavers Guild.  Now, I have been "good" in the sense that I haven't got the wheel going, but, partly to keep up my drafting skills, partly because my sister gave me a bag of fibre from her own, and others' animals to spin (I have since taught her to drop spindle, so there may be less of that in the future!), and partly because I had a twingey back for a couple of weeks and was more comfortable standing, I picked up my newest drop spindle and the bag of BFL (Blue Faced Leicester) I bought with it, and started to spin it:
The BFL is only labelled with the colourway (Licorice and Lime), but no maker/grower. I bought it at the Masham Sheep Fair a few years ago, before we left Yorkshire.

Before long I had enough to pop onto a bobbin on the Ashford's Lazy Kate (the orange is the leader yarn):
I had hoped for a finer yarn, but it was still slubby and coming out a heavy sport or light dk. However, I continued. I am sure I will spin finer, and more even, yarn in time.

I plied it on the drop spindle - a first for me, after a bit of Internet and YouTube research. I was surprised how easy it was to do, and it did even out the yarn although made it even thicker (heavy dk to worsted weight), and I lost overall yardage of course.

So what to do with a small amount of BFL? Again, a bit of Internet research came up with the Twinkletete hat by Alex Tinsley from Dull Roar, via a handy Craftsy link on what do with your handspun.

And here it is:
The brim is the 2 ply handspun, and the remainder knitted in some stashed dk with no label...

It took a couple of evenings, and I love it! My back is better now, so I am back to sitting at my desk at the weekends, but this little, and slightly forbidden, foray into spindling and making, was a tonic.

Tuesday, 26 January 2016

Public Holiday Progress Update

Today is Australia Day, and rather like Thanksgiving in the US it does have some negative connotations for some members if the community.  It iis a national public holiday in Australia, and so I am at home today.  I will be writing my thesis on and off today, interspersed with a bit of light housework and home admin, a walk (in between the heavy rain showers - still waiting for a good enough break!), and, of course, knitting!

The body of the Featherweight (by Hannah Fettig) is complete:


I am using Morris and Sons Australian 2 ply Merino Laceweight, and this is creating a gossamer weight cardigan in the colour French Grey.

Last night, while watching the Australian Open, I knitted a bit on the Spice Trade Shawl by Apple Tree Knits:


This is taking a little patience and concentration, and I have had to rip and go back several times, but I am determined to finish it. The yarn is Yikexin Wool, from Xian, China and so the pattern is perfect, I love the lurid spice colour.

Hermione's socks are languishing in their owl sock project bag:


But....I have had a new year lapse and some lovely yarn is on its way to me right now, from different corners of the globe! One is for a commission (but still fun to receive), the others are just for me - very exciting indeed and a great lift. Expect a post when they all arrive, and in the meantime enjoy your 26th January, wherever you are in the world, and whatever it may mean to you.

Saturday, 23 January 2016

Show Success!

Having just arrived back from our UK trip, I realised amid the whirlwind of returning to work that the annual Kiama Show was nearly upon us, and last year I had resolved to enter some of my knitted items. 

It was no easy feat to submit forms and entries for someone who works full time, but with a bit of help from Mr Bromley Knits, who has a bit more flexibility in his work schedule than I do, I managed four entries.

We spent this morning at the show, and I was delighted to find I had won a first prize for my recently completed London Shadows shawl:


And second prize for my One Night Coat:


My other two entries did not win anything - the Kolmarden Gilet, which I entered in the Vest section:


And an experimental arm knitted cowl, which I don't think I ever blogged, but still had, and so I entered it in the Creative section.

But I was super happy with my outcome!

Best in Show was a beautiful Shetland shawl:


And I loved this Highly Commended cushion:


I've already started planning my knits to enter next year (show regulations state that knits are to be completed in the 12 months prior to each show), and had a request to exhibit any blankets I have completed in an upcoming art installation! 

Happy days and lots of knitting mojo. If you've ever considered entering a local fair or show - do it!

Sunday, 3 January 2016

New Year, New Knits

Or should I say Finished Knits.  Finishing UFOs is something I really like to do as New Years Eve approaches, and if we stay in, I quite like to knit on the eve itself.    Having just arrived in beautiful Scotland, we were jet lagged so skipped the big Hogmanay celebrations, and I finished up three knits on New Years Day:


Anise, by Sarah Hatton, in Rowan New Shapes. I have the book, but this is available as a free pattern on Ravelry.  This knit is designed for big wool, but I used the heavy worsted/light chunky handspun I picked up at an op shop in Nowra with my sister last February, knitting the medium size on 10mm needles to create a loose gauge in this stiff and course wool yarn.  I had tons of it and also used it for the Pickles' One Night Coat:


So I have two yellow cardigans! One for each location that I spend time in; Anise can stay in Scotland.  I bought some yellow-brown coconut shell buttons from John Lewis in Glasgow earlier this week, but haven't attached them yet.  I wore Anise over a long sleeved white thermal and with navy leggings and boots on New Years Day, and have also been pulling it on as a bed jacket when sitting up drinking tea and surfing the net in bed during the long, dark, and cold northern winter mornings, so already getting a lot of wear.

I started Anise in 2015, but the following knit dates from 2014 at least, and perhaps earlier.  It began life as a poncho, subsequently abandoned.  It then morphed into what I hoped what be a warm hoodie in damp and chilly Yorkshire, using Susan B Anderson's top down raglan KAL recipe.  A yarn shortage meant I couldn't do long sleeves or a hood - abandoned again.  It was shipped to Oz with the rest of our stuff, so I threw it in my bag and flew it back to the UK, where it has become a half sleeved sweater:


I wore this on Jan 2nd with jeans and ankle boots, and it was very cosy.

And finally, I knit the top border on London Shadows, in coordinating black sock yarn as I had run out of the Katia Darling used for the bottom border and body of the shawl. This is awaiting blocking but here is a shot showing off the colours and drape:


London Shadows was a MKAL by Wild Prairie Knits which started on my birthday in 2015.  I participated as a treat for myself during a very busy year, and am very glad I did - I love it and what it represents; self care, time to do things I love and that restore me.  I will create more opportunities for this in 2016.

Saturday, 19 December 2015

2015 - The Knitting Year in Review

After a year of upheaval, change, strangeness and settling in, I finally feel a sense of getting into the groove of my new life in Australia's beautiful east coast.
   

Beautiful as it is, it did take me a while to settle back in to Oz after 19 years in Blighty!  Work has been great but unexpectedly all-absorbing, and I am trying to complete a thesis as well, meaning my crafting time is somewhat rationed...

However, some knitting has happened. 

At first, I struggled to feel like knitting in the humid late summer weather, before we got the a/c installed, and languidly knit on socks - my usual Vogue basic top-down vanilla pattern -although I did LaLa's afterthought heel in the second pair below to change things up a bit.



A few small housey projects came off the needles early in the year too:



Then, as the weather cooled I tried a few winter weight objects:




And attempted a cardigan (the Kolmarden from Knitscene); rather a failure due to gauge issues, yarn shortages and pattern issues, I tried modifying it to a gilet but will rip it in the new year, as it doesn't really work although I wore it a couple of times.


So far, so meh. I really needed to find my knitting mojo in this new place.  And I did - when a large commission of two vintage sweaters came my way, I took it, and the long but satisfying slog through these fired me up to knit for myself.



Immediately after, I knit up the One Night Coat, for some instant gratification.


I joined a MKAL (London Shadows) by Wild Prairie Knits as a birthday treat to myself, and I'm one clue away from completion.

I am knitting socks again - Hermione's Everyday, rather than my over-used Vogue vanilla pattern.


I am working on another mustard yellow cardigan, and another shawl - they will be my holiday season finish-off projects - photos when complete.

And I am close to finishing Gemma's wedding wraps, using the braided hug pattern.


There was a bit of sewing this year, but not much to speak of, and no spinning, although recently I acquired this through a contact:


This, my sewing machine, my beginners weaving kit and new adult colouring book are all going to have to wait until that full draft of the thesis is done - and I am looking forward to that!  It will be my "reward".

Have a wonderful holiday season.

Saturday, 17 October 2015

It's A Nice Day For A....

White wedding wrap:
This is a sample on the way to being a kind of capelet - I am copying a photo. I have knitted a little more on it since, trying different cable and rib combinations until I get the closest match. It's a fun process. When it's done, I will use the sample to wear at home on cooler evenings - I much prefer to do "useful" swatching and sampling as I personally dislike doing purposeless knitting (clearly a product knitter at heart!)

I'm using Sirdar Bonus Aran in a tweedy cream, because I had it lying around, but the final product will be in a plain ivory colour in something soft.

In other knitting news, I have progressed the One Night Coat (by Anna and Heidi Pickles), and have just split the arms from the body. I have finished the cuff of one sock, and am a clue behind on the London Shadows MKAL.

Saturday, 10 October 2015

Two Vintage Jumpers

Readers, for months I have been slogging through obligation knitting. I am glad to be at the end of it, and am so ready to knit some projects just for me.

Here, however, are the finished objects:
Marion Foale's Classic Jumper in 4 ply Australian Merino (Empire from Morris and Sons):
And Marion Foale's Croquet in 4 ply Pima cotton from Morris and Sons:
I am thrilled with both, and they will be packaged up to make their journey to London on Monday.

Completing these feels great, and has given me great knitting mojo. We are about to be descended upon by overseas guests and they will be sleeping in my knitting room, so today I will be extracting three projects to sustain me over the coming weeks:

My current WIP, London Shadows, by Cindy Garland - part of a Mystery Shawl KAL so I can't post any pics. I am just about to start Clue 3, and am using stashed Katia Darling pure merino sock weight in colour  205 (purples, pinks, slate greys). The London theme sucked me in, as did the release date of the first clue being my birthday. The Katia's gothic colours are perfect. The shawl calls for optional beads but I didn't have any that worked in my bead stash, so might sew them along the edging as an afterthought (and hopefully that's not too much information!)
So that is the shawl on the needles, and I need, cast on so I can pick up and put down easily over the coming weeks, a shawl, a pair of socks, and a sweater.

For socks, I will just pull out some sock yarn from my stash and cast on my usual vanilla pattern, and they will work for commuting, travelling in the car and evenings in front of the TV.

For a sweater, I have my eye on the One Night Coat by Anna and Heidi Pickles. It is now a little unseasonal, but I need some instant gratification after two fine gauge sweaters, and it will be useful next winter. I'll be mixing two stash yarns, a heavy wool and a mohair, in yellow.
And I do have a bit more obligation knitting to do in due course - 3 Aran weight wedding wraps for a winter wedding early next year. 

Saturday, 4 July 2015

Knitting, and a bit of sewing

So I have been working on the Classic Jumper by Marion Foale (a vintage knit) for JF in London. After we had an email conversation about it, she ordered some lovely 4 ply merino from Morris and Sons Sydney in the colourway Glass and had it posted out to me here on the NSW south coast.  Picking it up from the post office was a challenge, but eventually I managed it and am nearly done on the back and front, above.

It has lovely design features, like fully fashioned increases and decreases, a three needle bind off at the shoulder seams and the inset sleeves worked down from the armhole. These make it a pleasure to knit although there is a LOT of stocking stitch!  Luckily this suits my current lifestyle and knitting time (evenings, after work, commutes).

Knitting for someone else has got me sewing - today I pinned and basted the 30 Minute Coat (free online instructions from Threads magazine) and plan to complete it tomorrow.  I used a large rectangle of woven wool fabric in stash I had always planned as a jacket.

I have just planned what to do with the rest of the fabric stash I brought from the UK - more PJ pants, another A-line skirt, and the Schoolhouse Tunic.  




Saturday, 25 April 2015

Knitting in Kiama

Well, the end result of a year of intense planning and travelling, and of general planning for some years before that, is now achieved and we have relocated (again) to the beautiful seaside town of Kiama on the NSW coast.


Within two weeks of arriving, I had started a demanding (although enjoyable) full time job a commute away in Sydney.


The summer months were hot, sticky and busy, and its only now, post Easter, that I feel some semblance of routine and settled-ness. The weather has grown cooler, and I am knitting properly again, rather than little bitty projects which give me instant gratification but don't soothe my soul in the same way.

My main project this weekend is the Kolmarden Jacket, from Knitscene Winter 14/15, to which I have made pretty major modifications and have toyed with ripping out completely. In the end I have persevered and should have a completed pic for the next blog post. The mods have partly been about my yarn shortage, and partly due to pattern errors which made me not want to trust continuing as written.  Here is an early progress photo.


I picked up my Susan B Anderson raglan KAL hoodie as well. I have a similar yarn shortage with this one so am thinking short sleeves, slipover style, with hood - probably more suited to the climate anyway as it is knit from Harris and Donegal Tweed.

A couple of shorter projects have come off the needles too - a shawl and a cravat are "a block away" as the Knitmore Girls say.

Some recent photo highlights:


The curvy squares tee gets worn.


The sea foam shawl from One Skein Wonders in Debbie Bliss Angel Prints.


Chair socks from the Toronto Knit Cafe pattern protect my (already scratched) wooden floors.


La La's top down afterthought heel socks in Knitglobal, colour Ocean.


Autumn comes to Australia - time to pick up the needles and get stuck in!