Friday, June 10, 2005
I took the time this morning to slip some stitches onto an extra needle so you can see more progress than the usual red lump photo would show.



The clear patch of diamonds is part of the center panel. Above it is a row of "fountains" - a texture pattern also appearing in Barbara Walker's Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns (p. 272). After that comes some garter stitch, and then six or so rows of the arches I spoke about yesterday. It's hard to see them because the rows are bunched up against the needle.

But in taking this picture, there was a bit of heartbreak experienced:



See those blurry stitches still on the temporary needle?? They've laddered back between one and four rows - in the middle of one of the more complex sections of the pattern (the knitting equivalent of the bread always hitting the floor jam-side down.)? Obviously some reconstruction here is needed, as I have no intention of ripping back six 700-stitch rows on behalf of a measly five stitches. That possibility still exists if I can't rescue them, but I always try before I punt and rip.

Needless to say, this is the last time I try photographic grandstanding with a lace project in process.

Friday, June 10, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, June 08, 2005

... that I'm not sylph-thin, and that I do finish wearables:


This rather blurry picture was taken by the 6-year old, which explains the low center of reference and focus quality. (Bloggers have no shame, and willingly press even small children into service.) I'm tallish and some say intimidating, but not THAT tall or intimidating.

The item being worn is my Raiisa tee. So far I haven't gotten a good photo of the thing, either on or off a wearer. I've provided the pattern but the charts for it are massive, and not for the faint of heart. I'm very pleased with the end product. Sausage arms and barrel body aside, it's one of the more flattering summer knits in my closet.

As to the short lines, odd line breaks and general strange formatting here on String - I'm not quite sure what's going on. Blog-City had a major upgrade earlier this week, and all sorts of minor things have gone awry. Please bear with me.

UPDATE: Several people have written to say that this photo doesn't prove that I exist, as it could have been taken of any random headless person. I concur, and would be happy to continue to be just a figment of everyone's imagination, except for this. (I suppose I should update that page, as the gnome is now finishing up first grade.)

Wednesday, June 08, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Monday, June 06, 2005
Still humming along on Alcazar. I'm almost through Chart #2, the fountain section. Again, one very minor (and absolutely obvious) glitch on the half chart. In row 21 there's a blank box. That should be read as a knit stitch. The problem looks like it was caught and fixed by hand on the full-chart version.



I'm enjoying this one. It's going much faster than I expected. One thing that makes the Carter patterns fun is the patter that accompanies them. Yes, some people just want the pattern. I happen to enjoy the way she fills out her instructions with an accompanying folk tale, or takes valuable space to explain the symbolism of or thought process behind cher design element choices. For example, this pattern is inspired by the buildings and gardens of the Alcazar, a palace in Seville, Spain. Parts of the palace are Moorish in origin, parts were added by various later rulers, including Pedro the Cruel and most recently - Franco.

If you look at Carter's design and then at the palace pix above, you can see the tiled mosaic floors, fountains, cobblestone paths, and arched doors and pierced screens that inspired her. Very nifty.
Monday, June 06, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Friday, June 03, 2005

What makes a good knitting bag?? That depends on the knitter. Some like the granny-style standers - those bags on a frame. Some like backpacks. Others live and die for the absolute latest Vera Bradley?design. While I'm probably closest to the backpack set, I have my own ideas. For me it's about minimalism and function, not style - so a parade of freebies has mostly been what I've used.

I'm thinking about this today because The Resident Male just returned from a conference at which he received an excellent bag. I snarfed it up immediately. He didn't stand a chance.

What I want to find:

  • Ample, roomy interior deep enough to hold a large project
  • Pierce-proof sides
  • Sturdy bottom square enough to sit up on its own
  • Wide enough to accommodate long single points
  • Light weight
  • At least one large width zippered pocket for safe pattern stowage
  • Comfy handles long enough to sling over my shoulder
  • A zippered top, so that when the thing is tossed in the back seat of the car, nothing tumbles out
  • Additional inside pockets to hold notions
  • Not looking like a knitting bag (no prissy, cutesy or country-kitchen themed patterning)
  • Low cost.
Here's my (very boring) new bag:



It hits all the high points - lacking only interior pockets, plus it's mostly waterproof/water resistant. It may be boring but it's 99.5% perfect as a knitting bag. I'm delighted.

Here are several others from my collection.






The red velvet one covered with embroidery and bits of wedding saris is beautiful and capacious. It was also a highly appreciated gift. It's extremely fragile, as the sequins and jewels have a habit of shedding. Plus it's very floppy. Too beautiful and too delicate to schlep around, this one lives in the living room, lounging around on display and holding my upstairs project of the moment. (Yes, I have different projects in different rooms, and often work on what's closest rather than my primary project.)? Gorgeous, but a B- mostly?for limited utility.

The little green canvas tool bag was one I went out and bought. It's rugged, with lots of pockets around the outside. I loved the style, but didn't think hard about how useful it would actually be. Unfortunately it's too shallow for a big project, the splayed outer pockets spill their contents, and the handles are too short to make carrying it around comfortable. As a knitting bag it rates a C-.

The small blue embroidered bag was a find at the Gore Place Sheep and Wool Show. For the past several years there has been a Hmong family from Viet Nam displaying and selling hand made items? - bags, pillow covers, hangings and other pieces decorated with traditional cross stitch and quilting. This little bag is just big enough for one pair of socks in progress. It's quilted, so it (mostly) resists needle point penetration. It's got a small zipper pocket on the outside that holds notions. The straps are long enough that I can sling it over a shoulder and knit directly from it while standing. I've got a couple of these, each holding socks in progress. One lives at home and one lives at work. They're ideal take-alongs for doctors appointments, the infrequent lunch break, waiting on post office lines, and knitting during other bits of found time. A solid A-. A specialty bag, excellent for socks or other small projects;?downgraded a bit because I tend to use ridiculously small (and sharp) steel DPNs that can stab through both it and me.

And the last bag - the woefully dirty el cheapo cotton trade show special is the type of bag I use most often: souvenir nerdbags from technical conferences. ? No pockets, no sturdy bottom, no zippered top, no point-proof sides, but ultra abundant. This particular one might be considered a Geek Collectible. It's from the very first release of Oracle for the Macintosh. It was already old when I began using it to pack extra clothes to accompany The Older Daughter to day care, and she's now 14. This type of bag merits a solid B+. Not the best by far, but serviceable, and best of all - free.
Friday, June 03, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Thursday, June 02, 2005
Alcazar continues. As mentioned before, progress will be slower now that rounds are more than 500 stitches. As you can see though, I'm averaging four or so per evening:



This blurry photo was taken by stuffing my bag-like Alcazar over the corner of one of my sofa pillows. The area below the horizontal line of meshes is the side edge of the center square. The area above is the new part added on around that square's perimeter. You can see what I meant by picking up in the side meshes - each one of those big openings had one stitch picked up in it, with YOs in between pick-ups.

No problems with Chart 2 so far, and the pattern (once established) contains enough internal clues so that it's easy to proof as I go along. For example, there are central double decreases that always line up in a particular stitch column. If one is off alignment it's pretty clear that something odd happened between the current spot and the last one. As a result I haven't deployed my usual swarm of stitch markers to mark the repeats.

My opinion so far on difficulty is that I probably wouldn't recommend Alcazar as a first lace project to someone who has never knit from a chart before. BUT I think that anyone who CAN follow a chart and who has the patience to do so for 500 stitch rounds should have no problems at all - whether or not they've ever attempted a lace project before.
Thursday, June 02, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, June 01, 2005

I am so flattered!?

My friend Nancy has done an amazing thing with some graphs from The New Carolingian Modelbook. She took the tulip repeat from Plate 5:1, and the dragonflies from Plate 12:2, some snappy color choices, a good eye for placement, a comfy garment shape, and a true talent for stranded knitting and came up with this:



I'm tickled pink (and blue, and green, and yellow...)

Details on the graphed patterns

Tulip - This pattern was published at least?three times?prior to 1600 (early pattern book publishers freely copied off each other.)? The first appearance of it I've found is a book entitled Furm Oder Model Buchlein, put out in Augsburg, Germany, 1524.That makes it from?one of the earliest extant books of graphed patterns. (It's theorized that broadside sheets were sold prior to entire books of collected patterns, but none of those leaflets survive.) The?other appearances of the tulip pattern?I've stumbled on were in Matteo Pagano's Trionfo Di Virtu, Venice, 1559; and Sessa's I Frutti, also Venice, 1564.

Dragonflies - This one is my own, inspired by insects appearing in a series of Italian pattern books from the 1530s.



The excellent photo was taken by Nancy's friend Terri (credit where credit is due). Nancy didn't tell me the yarn she used, but she's a frequent visitor - perhaps she'll see her masterpiece and leave a comment.

For those looking for a copy of TNCM, it's hard to come by. The publisher did a disappearing act shortly after the book came on the market. Copies continue to trickle out for sale, and it sometimes shows up used or on eBay. Both Amazon.com and abebooks.com list used copies as being available, although some of them are at grasp-the-chest-and-stagger high demand/collector prices.

Wednesday, June 01, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Tuesday, May 31, 2005
I've finished the center square of Alcazar, and have successfully picked up the requisite number of stitches around its perimeter. This was relatively painless as picking up sessions go because of the highly sane way in which the pick-ups were structured. If you go back to Friday's picture, you'll see that there are mesh-like spaces along all four edges. The directions say to achieve the correct number, all you have to do is pick up one stitch in the first mesh, do a YO, pick up a stitch in the next mesh, do a YO, and so on. And it worked! I managed to get the correct number on the first pass on each side.

So now my Alcazar is totally on one circ, and I'm in the midst of the several rounds of plain knitting that precede the next chart. Which explains this enigmatic sack-like object:



There's one bit of advice in the pattern that will be a bit of a pain. When working this piece in the round instead of doing the sides flat as trapezoids to be corner-seamed later, Carter suggests twisting the last and first stitch of each side together (doing a left twist or right twist, it shouldn't matter) on every odd numbered row, in order to give the corners a bit more stability. That's fine with me, except that I've got markers at each corner. I'll either have to take them off and replace them (a fumbling around style pain); or move them one stitch to either the left or the right so that they aren't mid-twist. If I do the latter, I'll have to remember that every subsequent chart of the piece is going to be off by one stitch (a different but entirely mental?pain).

Happy Birthday to Me

It's that time again. Last year the kids asked what I wanted for my birthday. I said "Good children." And the younger one piped up "Covered in chocolate!" Which led to the older one drafting up my all time fave birthday card:



To be truthful, at this point just I celebrate anniversaries of my 21st birthday. How many has it been? The stock answer is "Several."
Tuesday, May 31, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Monday, May 30, 2005
As you can see from this photo, Alcazar is on a roll. I'm almost done with the center square. If you've ever knit a shawl of this type, you'll know that the center square usually goes quite quickly in comparison to the wave upon wave of outer design elements as they present themselves across an ever-increasing circumference.



Unblocked and unstretched, my center is about 17 inches (43.2cm) square. Although the stuff I'm using isn't very stretchy, I think it will block out to between 19 and 20 inches (48.2 to 50.8cm) square. A rough eyeballing of the pattern's finished item photo gives me the estimate that the width of the finished center is approximately a third of the width of the entire finished piece. That makes me more or less on target to make a shawl that's about 60 inches (152.4cm) across, tops. The pattern specifies a finished dimension of about 56 inches (142.3cm), so I'm in the ballpark, even though I'm using a very different yarn and a needle three sizes smaller than the one specified.

I did find one minor typo in the pivot format half-charts. On row 155, there's a stitch marked as a SSK the first time you encounter it in the row's repeat, S1-K2tog-PSSO through most of the rest of the row, and a K2tog the last time it appears on that row. It should be just S1-K2-tog-PSSO EVERY time it's hit on that row. The full format chart doesn't have this mistake. (I can't comment on the rest of the full format chart, as I haven't been following it.)?
Monday, May 30, 2005 1:00:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  |