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!

Sunday, 1 February 2015

Knits for the home, and a spot of sewing for me

As 2015 beds in, life is once again becoming more settled for me and this has meant more knitting, and a return to sewing at last.

Mostly, I've been knitting for the home - quick projects that serve a purpose:


Peg bag, from a free pattern on Rav and made from a scratchy and heavyweight cotton bought in Cambodia (the lovely Cambodia Knits in Phnom Penh).


Coasters, using the same yarn, from the useful One Skein Knits book.

And, on my long commute, socks:


These are the basic top down recipe from Vogue Knitting which I have been using for years.  The yarn is Knitglobal (apparently made in Bradford) in the colourway Dale; I have another pair OTK in the colourway Ocean - but doing those top down with an afterthought heel to spice things up a bit.

This morning, I gave my new-to-me handcrank a whirl and kicked off a 2015 sewing challenge - there will be something sewn every month.  Here is the handcrank:


I picked it up for £6 on eBay and it works like a dream.

January's challenge was a skirt. I cheated a bit on this one, as this skirt is a refashion not a sew-from-scratch, and I did most of it late last year! But it needed some finishing, so it does kind of qualify for January:


This was an ill fitting sample dress I picked up for a song in Hoi An, Vietnam. Using nail scissors and a hotel sewing kit I cut the bodice off, and hemmed the waistband roughly. I subsequently wore it on our travels a lot, either with a loose white shirt or black tee/vest over the waistband.  My January project was to neaten up and even out the waistband so I could achieve a fitted look.  My goal is to wear it to work this week.  Here is a closer shot:


I also made a start on February's challenge this weekend - a short sleeved top:

This picture shows the top only cut and sewn together - I have to finish the edges yet, and made it with a printed viscose I had in stash (bought from Oxfam I think). I used Simplicity 9078, a vintage 80s sewing pattern which I have used twice before - this Christmas top is another, longer example of the same pattern:


Here is the pattern leaflet, with great 80s styling (although I have styled it similarly in the photo above!)


So it's great to be in a settled place to craft again. I have a busy year ahead as I'll be working full time with a long commute and writing up a thesis, and although this made me hesitant about committing to the sewing challenge I think I'll actually need the r and r some weekends!


Monday, 17 November 2014

An FO (and WIP) gallery of my travels so far...

Readers, I am away travelling so here are some highlights and some knitting: 

- The wonderful Wolle wool shop in central Vienna
- Changing Seasons Beret - taken on the train to Vienna
- The Smushion cushion cover, photographed in the hotel in Vladikazkav, Russia




North Ossetian scene, Russia:


The Ethereal Shawl, completed in our hotel room in Hanoi:


Central Hanoi:


OTK: Curvy Squares Tee (but not sure about it!) - photographed last night in Quy Nohn, Vietnam:


Sunrise in Quy Nohn this morning:


Thursday, 4 September 2014

On the Road

I am currently on the road, and you can follow my latest travels with yarn here:
http://bit.ly/1lB9Dmx

Sunday, 1 June 2014

FO Catch Up

Oh dear - it's been a very long between posts!  It will be easier if I start with my most recent knits and work backwards I think.

My most recent FO was a pair of ribbed men's socks, finished last week for my dad.  These used my old faithful top down Vogue Basic Sock Recipe and used nearly a full Schoppel Wolle Zauberball in the olive, green and grey colourway. My father loves handknitted socks and models them from his armchair here:
On the long journey home from my folks I used the remainder of the Zauberball to start a Kindle cover:
Further back, I completed the 3 Hour Sweater with no real mods except going down a needle size and knitting longer sleeves in Wensleydale Sheepshop Longwool Aran:
This is my second 3 Hour Sweater and this vintage pattern is a great standby - quick and a nice end result. It does take longer than 3 hours though, and the instructions like most vintage patterns assume knowledge and are not overly detailed.

I also started a dove grey zippered cardigan but quickly abandoned it - the cables made it too complex to knit without chart reading and I didn't like them anyway. 
My knitting time at present is all travelling or evening TV watching - so I need simple, repetitive patterns which I can quickly build up a motor memory for.

And another FO - this vest was actually meant for my dad (hence the emergency sock knit prior to visiting him!) but came out too small. However it fits me, and looks rather nice, in a librarian-ish way. This is the Everyday Vest from Mel Clark's book Knitting Everyday Finery, and I used Louisa Harding Kashmir in DK. I guess my gauge was off, but I am glad it was easily repurpose-able.


I've squeezed in a few hats as well:
Sugar and Snap by Jane Burns
and this Mushroom Hat:


Well, that about catches up on my FOs - time to get on with some actual knitting!

Tuesday, 11 March 2014

3 hour sweater - the front

So far has taken more than 3 hours (I have completed the back) - but is a quick knit.