Sunday, May 3, 2009

Knitting List

Okay, I know I just posted a few minutes ago, but I was looking through my list of knitting goals, and I felt like updating it.

This is what it was back in February:

  1. Bryan's Birthday present
  2. finish the scarf, purse, and poncho WIPs
  3. Hat for my sis
  4. fingerless mitts for myself and a friend
  5. Hooded scarf for mom
  6. house-slippers for my sis
  7. afghan for myself
  8. 25 assorted stocking stuffers
  9. first pair of socks!
  10. learn fair isle
Well, as of right now, I've completed numbers 1, 5, 9, and 10(mostly). Those WIPs? I scrapped the scarf, finished the purse, and that damn poncho is still sitting there mocking me. I'd almost forgotten about the hat for my sis. I need to pick up more yarn for it, anyway. I made myself a pair of fingerless mitts, and I'm trying to convince myself to do a pair for my friend this week, since I'll be seeing her Friday for her b-day, and that way I'd have a present.

Slippers - I've found a pattern, and I know what type of yarn I want to use, but haven't even bought it yet. That afghan is currently the bane of my stash (I had no idea lace knitting was so hard), but I have at least started work on the stocking stuffers. I'm about halfway through the first one, and I have yarn and a pattern for another. I'm debating what I'm going to do for the rest of my family. I know I'm making scarves for my aunts and sister, but I might actually buy something for my cousins and uncles. I don't think they'd want scarves or hats, really, and I don't actually have the money to buy that much yarn right now, anyway.

Still, generally, I'm doing pretty good - I've knocked off 3 or 4 of those items, which isn't too shabby for 2 and a half months. I've added a few more projects I want to do, of course, too, though, so maybe I'd better stop blabbering on to myself and get to work...

Fair Isle Knitting

Right, so, one of the things I decided I wanted to learn how to do this year was Fair Isle knitting - the pretty colorwork stuff that lets you do snowflakes and things without five hundred ends to weave in.

Well, I just finished my first little test swatch. It was...interesting, to say the least.

I generally have pretty high tension in my knitting - I definitely knit tighter than I purl, but I keep trying to fix that by pulling even tighter on my purl stitches, and, unfortunately, totally forgetting to do the opposite with the knits.

Let's just say that this really, really doesn't work so well with fair isle.

All those floats of yarn across the back of the work? Far too tight. I mean, it wouldn't be as stretchy as regular knitting, anyway, but, well...see for yourself:

Alright, it might be a little difficult to tell in the photo, but that turtle is very wobbly. That swatch will not lay out flat for me. I might try blocking it to see if I can fix it, but it's an acrylic yarn, so I don't think that's going to work.

Needless to say, I had better do a bit of practicing before I try to make an actual project with fair isle.

Other thing I learned, though, is that it's actually rather fun. I mean, the actual process of doing it is a bit frustrating, since it requires a lot of concentration, and I kept messing up, but it's pretty cool to see the image slowly form on the needles. I think the turtle's darn cute, anyway. Much better than the little learning charts I could find. I just got this one from a book.

Actually, I think I'm going to use the same chart to try out double knitting. It should basically work the same. But I'd better not try to work that out today. I do have some other projects in the works. I did the fair isle swatch as a break from one of them, actually. I need to get it done, and it's going well, but it's plain stockinette stitch almost all the way, which can get a bit boring. Especially since I'm not good enough at it yet to knit without looking at what I'm doing. If I try to watch something that's too involving, I forget to pay attention to what my fingers are doing, and next thing I know I have a whole bunch of mistakes I have to go back and fix.

Of course, sometimes I get mistakes even when I'm looking at what I'm doing, but that's beside the point.

Eventually, though, I will learn how to do fair isle, and make it look pretty. Definitely understand why it's generally only used as a border or something, though - it must take forever to knit an entire project in fair isle.

...which I'll be doing, hopefully relatively soon. After all, the whole reason I'm learning it now is so that I can make my nephew a Christmas Stocking, and that pattern is fair isle almost the whole way.