fair isle swatch

So last week when I posted about traditional knitting gone modern, I had no idea where it would end up. I swatched a bit and played around, and had a really unexpected, funny, and useful idea!

You may look at the swatch above and think, “sock”.  So did I.  But then I thought about this-

bottletree pint glass

That would be a pint glass from my regular Friday afternoon hangout, The Bottletree.  It’s one of those deals where you buy the glass for $10 and get happy hour prices on beer forever and ever.  Which is, in my opinion, totally awesome.  But I have to make sure I can get the glass from point A to point B without breaking it.  And I’m clumsy.  And I like to knit odd cozies.  And sooooo….

This is going to be fun!  I’m probably going to rip back and start over with doubled yarn, and probably switch up the color selection a bit (those two browns are melding).  I think I’ll do a reversible “cuff” for the top to tuck in to protect the rim of the glass (stealing this idea from my friend Kristin, who crocheted a cozy for her pint glass a couple weeks back) , that way I can fold it over and out of the way for drinking.

This video shows a variation of the two-yarns-in-the-left-hand I use when I do stranded knitting, using the adjacent fingers to tuck the unused color back and out of the way while working.  I don’t tension my yarn much, so I just lay both yarns over my index finger, separated my my 2nd knuckle.

Another great resource for fair isle knitting are the great folks at Philosopher’s Wool, when I was first learning this video helped a lot (you can tell it’s been up for a while, because they warn it’s “not for dial-up connections”).  Ann Bourgeois uses a two-handed method that really clicks with a lot of knitters.  If you get a chance, check out the companion book, Fair Isle Sweaters Simplified, for more great tips and techniques.

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Today we’re packing up a wholesale order to go out, but the weather is sooo nice out, we keep sneaking outside!  Kristin, AKA my helper, Girl Friday that the knitty pattern was named for, is reskeining while I label.

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This is my temporary coaster.  It’s overkill, but this hotpad I crocheted from Rustic Wool was all I had handy.  It does the job, though!

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Ok, after a weekend to decompress and recover from my delightful cocktail of a headcold and jetlag, I’m back in the land of the living!  The backlog of KSD orders have shipped, and fiddle-dee-dee, tomorrow is another (DYE) day to get out yarn for Sock Summit orders.  I don’t think I’ll tempt fate by saying everything’s back to normal, but I’ve definitely made a dent!

Sock Summit was amazing, communal, eye-opening, joyous, over-the-top, exhausting, and exhilarating.  That many sock knitters in one place, and good things had to happen, right?  I got to geek out on my knitting heroines: Nancy Bush, Ann Budd, Priscilla Gibson Roberts, and (HOLY COW!) Barbara Walker, the doyenne of handknitting knowledge.  Here she is, with KSD yarn in hand:

OMG!  She's touching Kitchen Sink Yarn!

OMG! She's touching Kitchen Sink Yarn!

 

My neighbor down the aisle at market was the delightful Ed Jenkins, whose handcrafted spindles are just amazing.  I couldn’t resist a cute ‘turkish delight’ mini-turkish spindle:

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(pssst!  that’s not KSD fiber!  I strayed and bought some lovely plant dyed goodness from A Verb for Keeping Warm.  Hussy.)

The Ravelry party was lots of fun; I got to meet lots of great knitters while I hung out at the door prize table, showing off the lovely gifts donated by the party’s sponsors.

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I scored an amazing little doo-dad benefitting a great charity that any browncoats among you loyal readers will totally dig!  As soon as I find the charity’s contact info (in my massively disorganized swag pile), I’ll post more info here!

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Here’s Rodger and Kristin (Girl Friday), hanging at the ravelry shindig.  Note the excellent combo of good people, beer and knitting.  This pretty much sums up my week in Portland. 

Kristin and I went to a restaurant whose food doesn’t warrant much comment (sorry, but true), but the way they wrap to-go leftovers is pic-worthy:

That tin-foil crab is trying to make off with my drink....

That tin-foil crab is trying to make off with my drink....

More pics later this week!

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