Sunday, February 22, 2009

Queen of Beads Redux








Every time I start a new sock pattern, my Future Ex-Boyfriend (FEXB), tells me that this one is the prettiest sock I've ever knit. I've knit quite a few socks, but this time I think he may actually have it right. This may be my favorite sock ever.

It is the Queen of Beads pattern from the January 2009 Blue Moon Fiber Arts Rockin' Sock Club made with Knit Picks Essential Kettle Dyed Sock Yarn in the Eggplant color. I also used a slightly larger bead than those included in the January kit (I think these are e-size beads). I stopped the beads when I got to the instep to allow the comfortable wearing of shoes, and improvised a diamond pattern down to the toe.

And may I say the combination is magical. I love the way the beads stand out like frozen dew drops on wild grapes.

I finished the RSC kit and then was faced with the reality of long empty months before the next installment. I decided to make the fun last even longer by knitting a second pair, one pair to keep, one to give away. Perfect.

And I'm throwing in some non-knitting related shots of my backyard taken at twilight a week ago.

Spring is coming! I can see it in the evening sky...

Friday, February 13, 2009

Little Feet

I think that even the most mundane items are cute in miniature. I recently knit my first pair of toe-up socks and it finally clicked that socks, at least plain un-patterned socks, are pretty formulaic. Since I had some left-over sock yarn I was inspired to just pick up some needles, cast on, and see if I could knit a tiny sock on the fly.

I used size 00 needles and about 3 grams of sock yarn (about 15 yds).

  1. Cast on an even number of stitches, preferably divisible by 4 (since I like to use 4 needles, this works best for me - use your own judgment). I used this awesome cast-on from Knitty - Magic cast-on for toe-up socks. This leaves you with a nice smooth toe that looks like it was perfectly grafted, and with some practice is pretty easy to do. I double-up my needles to add a little "give" when I'm using this cast-on, since the first round can be a little awkward.

  2. Setup row: follow the Magic cast-on directions and knit the stitches on needle 1 and needle 2.

  3. Divide the stitches onto 4 needles for the first increase round. In my case, that's 2 stitches per needle.

  4. Needle 1: k1, Inc 1 in next st, k to end of Needle 1. Needle 2: k until 2 sts remain on left needle. Inc 1 in next st, k1. Needle 3: k1, Inc 1 in next st, k to end of needle 3. Needle 4: k until 2 sts remain on left needle. Inc 1 in next st, k1.
  5. K 1 row even.
  6. Repeat the previous 2 steps until you have the desired number of stitches. I like to go with a multiple of 4 so the stitches divide evenly onto my needles. In my case, I cast on 8 stitches, so I'm going to increase until I have 24 stitches (6 per needle). If I had cast on 12 stitches, I would increase until I had 32 stitches. Just use your judgment and stop increasing when the toe looks good to you.

  7. K in the round for about 20 rows, or until you are happy with the length of the foot.

  8. Heel Shaping: Move the 6 st from needle 2 to needle 1 and set needle 2 aside. You will now work on 3 needles, with 12 st on Needle 1 and 6 st each on needles 3 and 4. You will be working back and forth on needle 1 only for the heel shaping. K to 1 st before end of needle 1 , turn, YO and p to 1 st before start of needle 1.
  9. Turn, YO and k to 1 st before YO from previous row.
  10. Turn, YO and p to 1 st before YO from previous row.
  11. Repeat the previous 2 steps until 4 st remain (RS row). K to first YO.

  12. Ssk, turn, sl first st, p to first YO on WS.
  13. P2tog, turn, sl first st, k to first YO on RS.
  14. Repeat the previous 2 steps until all heel stitches have been worked.
  15. Attach Heel to Foot : Redistribute stitches on needle 1 to return to working with 4 needles (6 sts on each needle). K 1 row, picking up 1 st between the heel and the foot stitches at the end of needle2 and the end of needle 4. This will close the gap between the heel and foot stitches. K 1 round even (14 sts).
  16. On the next round, k across needle 1, k to 2 sts before end of needle 2, k2tog, k across needle 3, k to 2 sts before end of needle 4, ssk. (12 sts).

  17. K in the round for about 15 rows, or until you are happy with the length of the leg.

  18. Ribbing: Work about 5 rows of k1, p1 ribbing and bind off loosely in pattern.

    You can use an i-cord to connect 2 mini-socks and hang them over your rear-view mirror, or you can attach an i-cord loop to make a really cute key chain, ornament, or gift wrap embellishment. Who wouldn't love a gift of hand-made socks with a little matching key chain?

    Seriously, how cute is that?

Friday, February 6, 2009

But why WILL you say that I am mad?

2/6/2009, 5:00 PM

I have at least twenty projects on my needles right now. Every new project started the same way: the first glance, the building excitement, the planning, shopping, swatching, and the thrill of the cast on. So why is it so easy to abandon something that was so enthralling in the beginning? For me the death knell usually sounds when I realize I made a mistake fifteen rows back, or that I could or should have done something in a different, better way.












I'm just not emotionally equipped to calmly rip and tink back to the offending section for a redo. I'm much more inclined to move on to the next pattern that caught my fancy (probably long before I finished casting on the now-abandoned project). Is it lack of discipline, fear of failure, an obsessive compulsive need to be perfect from the first row? I recognize that I have a problem.













At least I THOUGHT I recognized that I have a problem. Apparently not. See the "Best Of Show Socks" from the SOCKS . SOCKS . SOCKS XRX book. If I wasn't rip-roaring insane before I started these (emphasis on the rip), I will be if when I finish them.













This is my idea of extreme knitting. Three colors in every round. Many, many opportunities to mess up the pattern. Lots and lots of floats to pull too tight or leave too loose, that taunt me twelve rows too late. The only thing that could be worse is if I elected to take these on as my Knitting Olympics project.












The pattern is lovely and well written. I was entranced by the stark beauty of the neutral colors playfully pitting the dark against the light.












And apparently, I'm just delusional enough to think that I could overcome my many issues to take these on. It's been five weeks, four cast on's, three total frogs, and seventeen tinks. Thanks to my under-estimation of the pattern complexity, over-estimation of my abilities, and the certainty that I am clever enough to modify the pattern on the fly, all I have to show is one half of one sock.

It is a personal triumph that I have not abandoned this project, and it is a tribute to the designer for creating something so beautiful that I HAVE to see these through to the end. The bitter end.

Did I mention that I think I'm going to run out of yarn somewhere around the toe decrease on the second sock?