One hundred and counting…

I am astounded by the fact that this is my 100th post!  It’s hard to believe but I have somehow managed to keep at this for quite a while now, and have reached this milestone.  I thought that I would take this opportunity to say a few words about the genesis of the blog and it’s trajectory.  I was pushed into blogging by my daughter, Emma.  I didn’t think that I had the skills to do this (I am something of a techno-phobe.)  I also didn’t think I had that much to say (in hindsight this is seriously funny).  I really didn’t think anyone would be interested in anything I did manage to say.  Emma was convinced that I was wrong, and she wore me down over a long period of time.  In the beginning, I wrote the posts, and Emma did all of the technical work for the blog – she is responsible for the layout and design.  Emma also took total creative control over all of the photographs, and served as fashion stylist.   Both Emma and I have been exceedingly picky about each and every post from the very beginning;  she would not accept a poor quality photo, and any of those you may find in my archives are ones I managed to sneak past her.

Anyone who reads this blog regularly will know that it is to some extent a family project.  Doug and Leah, while not having starring credit, contribute enormously to this effort.  Neither one has ever complained when I ask them to take endless photos, or to model for them.    One, or both of them, reads over every post before I hit the publish button, and provides unflinchingly honest feedback.  They hold off until late to put on a family movie, because I have to read through a post for the 17th time to make sure there are no typos, and then read it an 18th time just for good measure.  They put up with my endless knitting commentary with good cheer.

Looking back over the past 99 posts, I certainly have favorites.  The Retrospective Knits posts that we put together while on holiday in Arizona were really fun for the whole family and we all enjoyed making them immensely.  This was a three part series, but the first is my favorite.  I also like the post A Tale of Two Falkenbergs, which is a history of my knitting over the decades.  Emma wrote a very funny post about photographing knitting, Move Over Mom, which I love.  I am also very fond of the Wearability Wednesday series.  The most popular posts that I have done, on the other hand, (in terms of hits) are a post where I talked about how to do German Short Rows, and a post about copyright issues involving Kate Davies and her Owls sweater.

Last August, Emma moved to another continent to start university and her role in the blog diminished.  This means that I had to learn how to do all sorts of tech-y things by myself, thus demonstrating that you can teach an old dog new tricks.   Though Emma’s day-to-day contributions to the blog have been consumed by her busy and totally cool life away from home, she continues to be my sounding board in all sorts of ways.

So, what’s new for the blog over the next 100 posts?  On a personal note, I have big changes in store.  In August, Leah will also be heading off to university; like her sister, she will be in Canada.  This means an empty nest for Doug and me, about which I am already feeling melancholic.  I have also, somewhat crazily, decided to mark my empty nest by going back to school part-time while continuing to work full-time.  I would have thought, after finishing my PhD 20-some years ago, that nothing could ever make me enroll as a student again, but for some time now I have been toying in the very back of my mind with getting an MBA. If any time would be right for this move, it would be now.  So, starting in October, I will have some pretty serious commitments on my time.  I worry that they will interfere both with my knitting, and with my blogging, but as I find each of these activities rewarding, I will try to keep it all in balance.

I also plan to take my knitting in new directions.  Emma and I have been trying our hand at designing sweaters.  We have a number of designs worked out on paper, and I hope that later this year, I will take needles to yarn and start knitting some of them up.  When that happens, I will blog about the process, in particular about our unique design collaboration.  It turns out that Emma and I work well together in this respect – we have different skills to bring to the endeavor and a very good way of pulling the best out of each other.  With any luck, we will soon be incorporating some design elements into these pages.

I will definitely continue with the Wearability Wednesday posts.  These are fun and interesting, and I think informative for knitters.  I have two of them lined up now for June and July.   I recently wrote my first book review, and I may incorporate more of those. Also in the planning are a series of posts based around my collection of knitting magazines from the 1950s – 1970s.

Now a slight switch of topics –  after my last post, in which I mentioned I had been nominated for two Sugar Sweet blogging awards and a Liebster award, I discovered that even earlier (a month ago) I had been nominated for a Liebster award by Helen Knits and had somehow, don’t ask me how, managed to miss it.  I can’t believe this!   Seriously, Helen is awesome!  Her sweaters are fabulous, her photos amazing and her website really cool.  Her photos are taken by her husband, James, who is a seriously great photographer and always makes Helen look terrific (he is a professional photographer and web designer and a good one).  Please, go check out her site, and thank you Helen for nominating me.

Also, just as I published the previous post, I was  nominated  for yet another Liebster award by brown bird vintage. Thank you; I have really enjoyed the opportunity to read your blog.  I am completely thrilled to have suddenly been getting so much recognition from fellow bloggers and for the opportunities it presents to get to know new blogs (but secretly hope that the award season is drawing to an end, so we can all get back to knitting and chatting about knitting.)

I thank everyone who has supported me in this endeavor, both by putting up with me and by reading the blog.  If I don’t run out of things to say (which is highly unlikely) I expect to be here for my 200th post.

And now for a pinch of mutual admiration

The blogging world has lately been abuzz with awards.  I think there are many categories of blogging awards, but the ones I am talking about here are given by bloggers to bloggers. They have a format whereby your blog gets nominated, and then you in turn are supposed to nominate others. They come with a set of rules, which often morph over time, regulating how many blogs you nominate, and sometimes a set of questions you are supposed to answer.   As my daughter Leah put it, “They are chain mail for bloggers!”  Exactly.  Now, I have never been one for chain mail, and if anyone was ever going to wreck the chain on a chain mail letter, it would be me.

However, the purpose behind these awards is to recognize bloggers whose work you admire.  As an opportunity to spread the word about blogs, particularly smaller or newer blogs, this is a method that works well. This week, I have been nominated for not one, but three, of these awards!  It is lovely to have this recognition from my fellow bloggers.  I didn’t know any of the blogs who nominated me, and this has given me a chance to go check them out.   This has been fun.  I send a big thank you to  Yarn tales at Hill Creek who nominated me for a Liebster Award and to  whatzitknitz  and The secret life of a crafter, both of whom nominated me for a Super Sweet Blogger Award.

I cannot help but ponder that if everyone who receives one of these awards in turn nominates another 11, or 13, or x-many blogs, in very short order every blogger on the planet will have a bucketload of them (I am surrounded by statisticians all day).  So, I send my thanks to my readers, including those of my readers who are bloggers themselves; I am pleased that you find my scribblings informative and that you come back here occasionally to see what I am up to.  But I also take these awards with a grain of salt; they are all about spreading the word, and in that sense, all power to them.  I have to admit that I have been so busy writing my blog the last 18 months (and doing the knitting that forms a large basis of it’s content) that I don’t have all that much time to read blogs these days.

Since I am so bad at following directions, I will reciprocate simply by pointing out a few blogs that I like to read.  Here are five blogs that span the range from very popular with big readerships to very small, and cover a range of topics (I present them alphabetically).   If readers are in favor of the idea, I might repeat this exercise occasionally.

1.  Advanced style.  When I wrote a post recently about style and ageing, one of my readers (thanks, Lea!) sent me a link to this blog.  Ari Seth Cohen takes photos of stylish and creative older people, many of them impromptu photos he takes of people he spies on the streets.  This blog is fantastic!   Most of the older women (and men) he photographs have more style in their little finger than a whole catwalk full of celebrities have put together.

2. blairistan.  Blair is a great knitter.  She has very similar tastes in sweaters to mine.  I have been really enjoying Blair’s posts this year because she recently moved from the US to England (in fact, she lives very close to me, though we have never met).  And, in a way that reminds me very much of me when I first moved to Europe 20 years ago, she travels as much as she can.  So at the same time as I chart her progress through a pile of gorgeous sweaters, I can watch her model them in charming UK villages, in Paris, in Malta, and all over the continent.  Fun!

3. Brain pickings.  This is a wildly popular blog that is hard to describe.  It is about psychology, culture, art, books, science and design.  I found this through a discussion at work with colleagues (my day job is in the cognitive neuroscience field). This blog is the work of Maria Popova, who calls it a “human-powered discovery engine for interestingness”.  I dare you to read this blog and not come away with ten books you absolutely must read now.

4. Kate Davies designs.  I love Kate’s blog.  I love her designs.  Kate is a scholar, and has a huge wealth of knowledge about the history of knitting, and about social aspects of knitting and other needlework.  Kate doesn’t need me pointing you in her direction; she is one of the big players in the knitting blog community.  The thing I love best about Kate’s blog, however, is how much it makes me want to be in Scotland.  The Scottish Tourist Board should put Kate on salary.  Her photographs and commentary of Scotland are fantastic!

5. Knitted notes.  Ella subtitles this blog “knitting and blogging in Italy in times of economic crisis”.  As you can guess from that description there is a lot more than knitting here.  The first thing I love about this blog is that Ella writes each post in English and Italian.  I love to read blogs in other languages, and I love that Ella takes the time and effort to do this.  She documents her knitting and designing process, complete with beautiful drawings of her designs.  She also writes with passion and humor about politics and feminism.  And to top it all off, each weekend she watches and reviews an old movie.

Well, that’s enough blog chat for now.  It is cold and dark and rainy out, which means it’s a perfect time to knit!

Venetian Audrey modelled

IMG_6465In February, I finished knitting my Venetian Audrey sweater for Emma.  Since Emma was in Vancouver (and it wouldn’t fit me or Leah), I published a post with unmodelled shots.  Emma is now back home for the summer, so I am happy to be able to bring you some modelled photos.  (Lots of modelled pictures; this will be a photo-heavy post).

I blogged about this sweater quite a bit during both the planning and the knitting; you can find these posts here.  I actually found it quite nerve-wracking to knit this without Emma around to try it on.  As the sweater has a huge amount of negative ease built into it, and the ribbing makes it hard to measure properly, I spent many hours with a tape measure and a frown, trying to size it properly.

As you can see here, the fit is fabulous.  I must admit, however, that when I sent it to Emma, I hadn’t yet blocked it.  I wasn’t sure it needed it and didn’t want to make a mistake in the blocking; I really needed to see it on her before I could judge appropriately how much blocking it needed, if any. I was kind of annoyed that Emma didn’t send me any photos of her wearing it.  When she came home and I complained, she pointed out that she thought it perhaps had need of a little tweaking.  (Emma has very exacting tastes; on the other hand, she is invariably right about these things.) The sweater has really benefitted from a good block.  I didn’t stretch the ribbing out at all, but I pinned the lace out, and added a good three inches to the sleeves and two to the body.  (I knit the sleeves a few inches longer than the pattern called for, and then blocked them out even farther.  If you plan to knit this pattern, don’t be afraid to build in lots of negative ease, and add lots of length.)

As readers of this blog may recall, I re-wrote the pattern for this sweater.  First, the pattern as written is knit in pieces and seamed.  Though I don’t normally mind this type of construction, it really didn’t seem to make sense for Audrey.  So, I knit the pullover in the round, bottom-up; knitting the sleeves in the round on DPNs and then attaching them at the yoke, and knitting the yoke in one piece.

I also re-sized the pattern.  This is because, as I have pointed out here many times before, Rowan patterns run big.  If you think you are a size 12, you should knit your Rowan pattern in a size 8.  Since Emma is already at the smallest size, I had to do quite a bit of math to get the sweater to fit.

Audrey has beautiful shaping details.  The waist decreases, knit into the 2×2 ribbing, are gorgeous.  They are very architectural, with columns of ribbing moving in and out across the canvas of the sweater.

The yoke and neckline are also beautifully shaped.   The line of the neck is elegant, sweeping, striking.  The lace is subtle; it is a garter stitch lace, which gives it a lot of texture.  We blocked out the peaks of the lace pattern to give it an undulating edge.

Emma wears it here with jeans and heels, but it is easy to dress up or down.  Last year, I wrote a post about my original Audrey in which I showed how easy it is to style it in different ways, and also how flattering it is to many different body types; you can find that post here.

I knit mine in Rowan Calmer, but the sweater is much more elegant knit in the Madelinetosh DK.  The colour is very rich, and the ribbing controls the tendency to pool; I didn’t need to alternate skeins.

I  am really happy with this one.  I think the fit came out just right, I love the colour, the yarn is soft and warm, the style is sexy and classy, and it looks fabulous on Emma (even when caught on candid camera – hehe!).

Two projects are slower than one

I am knitting along on two projects at the same time lately, my Exeter jacket and my Neon cardigan.  Both are being knit for me (I am so selfish right now)!  Exeter is a fabulous double-breasted jacket knit with tons of cable-y goodness:

That’s a closeup of the back.  The cables are intricate and beautiful, with lace integrated into the cabling.  It is fun to knit but slow-going and tricky.  Although I have mostly internalized the pattern by now, I still need to concentrate.  The Neon, on the other hand, once I got beyond my initial stupidity (documented here) is easy and takes little thought.  It is good TV knitting, or holding-a-conversation knitting.

Depending on what else I am doing at the time, I am switching back and forth between the two, sometimes quite literally.  Last weekend, when we had pleasant weather, I sat in the garden knitting. When I was by myself, I worked on Exeter; as soon as someone joined me I would put the Exeter down and pick up Neon.  As soon as I was by myself again, I switched back.  While the jacket will likely still take months to finish, the Neon is coming along quickly.  I am just a few rows short of where I will separate off the sleeves and then it will move even faster.

Of course, if I could bring myself to ignore all those luscious cables for a few weeks, I could whip this out super quick, because everyone knows that two projects are slower than one.  I can’t do it though.  There is something absolutely hypnotic about watching the progression of the cables across the back piece of the jacket.  How could anyone resist?

The Neon, while being an easy and intuitive knit once you get started, is still keeping my interest intellectually because of it’s construction.  Knitters today are really moving towards knitting top-down seamless sweaters.  While this has the obvious advantage that you can try the sweater on as you knit, I have never thought the shoulders are properly fitted using a top-down approach.  With either a raglan sleeve or a yoke construction, the shoulder is never as neat as with a properly inset sleeve.  Recently, a number of new methods have been developed for shaping a better shoulder while knitting top-down and seamless.  One of these is the Contiguous Method, developed by Susie Myers.  Many designers are now incorporating this method into their designs.  I have wanted to knit one for awhile.  When I saw that Neon, designed by Joji Locatelli, incorporates a contiguous shoulder, it moved to the top of my to-knit list.

As you can see from the above photo, the shoulder resembles a set-in-sleeve, in terms of its shaping and general architecture.   However, it is knit in one piece with no seams.  I think my execution is not perfect, but I will fix that up in the blocking. So far, I am really liking this.

The Neon is going to need some serious blocking, both to get it to fit (it’s a bit snug) and to get the lace to pop.   It really is a lovely pattern and a fun knit.  Joji is meticulous in her instructions.  If you are looking for a summer cardi, I would recommend it.

In the meantime, our short glimpse of spring has disappeared.  I was shivering in the cold and rain while taking these shots.  And the wind tried to make off with Exeter:

Never fear, the wind and I had a tussle, but I won.  I am now enjoying the indoors, cooking up a storm (butter chicken and spicy eggplant) and sneaking a row in here and there.

How to be stupid at knitting

Last weekend, I got up early on a Saturday morning and decided to do some swatching for my next sweater, Neon by Joji Locatelli.  Here is a photo of Neon:

copyright Joji

As you can see, the cardigan is knit in a pretty, lacy stitch pattern.  This pattern, Tulle Stitch, is a 2-row repeat.  You can’t get much simpler than a 2-row repeat.  This is my first pattern from Joji, but I can tell you that it is meticulously written.  There is no guesswork involved in a Joji pattern.  She even tells you exactly how many stitches to cast on for your swatch and how to measure it.  So, here I am at 7am on a Saturday.  Doug and Emma had returned home the evening before from Canada.  They are in jet-lag city and are bound to sleep for hours.  Leah is also unlikely to wake early, and if she does, will probably stay shut in her room.  I have literally hours of prime knitting time stretching out before me.  I cast on my swatch before I even make coffee (egads!).

Now the tulle stitch is a 2-row repeat, but since the pattern is offset on every alternate repeat, in the interests of being very thorough, it is charted as 4 rows.  I am sitting on the couch, needles in hand, freshly wound ball of Plucky Sweater yarn at my side, and the Neon pattern on my laptop.  A message pops up saying that my laptop is out of juice and needs to be plugged in immediately, or it will close down.  The cable is upstairs, and not only do I not want to wake Doug up to get it, but I am highly lazy.  So, I grab a piece of paper (the back of a yarn label) and hurriedly scribble down the pattern for the swatch.  I then close down the laptop and cast on for my swatch.  Row 1 of the pattern stitch looks like this:

Row 1: k1, * k1, yo, k1 * to end

This is what I write:

Row 1: k1, * k1, yo, k1

Now for those of you unfamiliar with knitting terminology the star (*) in the pattern means to repeat, in the following sense – you repeat the bit between two stars.  So to knit row one, you would start with a knit stitch, and then do k1, yo, k1 over and over again until you reach the end of the row.  Easy, huh?  But that is not what I wrote.  The star notation is only used in pairs, it makes no sense otherwise.  So the fact that my scribble has a star on row one implies that I need to be repeating something.  This is what I knit:

k1, k1, yo, k1, yo, k1, yo, k1, yo, etc. etc.

This means that I am somehow interpreting my scribbled notation as:

Row 1: k1, * k1, yo * , end k1.

Okay, so this is stupid, but not outrageously so, and could easily be done by anyone who has not only neglected to drink their morning coffee before starting a new pattern but is also too lazy to charge their laptop.  Does my stupidity end there?  No, it does not.

After a few rows, I can tell that there is something seriously wrong.  The swatch looks wrong.  There is no rhyme or reason to the pattern.  It does not look pretty.  Furthermore, it is impossible to “read”, which means that even after a few rows, I could not tell where I was supposed to be in the pattern just by looking at the row underneath.  So, I rip it all out, make myself a cup of coffee, and sit down once again, now properly fortified, to knit the swatch again.  And, of course, even though I look at the pattern again and again, I never even realize that it is missing a star, or notice that my brain is automatically filling in the missing star into the equation, and filling it in wrong!

My second attempt at a swatch looks as wrong as the first.  But the lack of any symmetry to the pattern stitch is only part of the problem.  You see, on the second row of the pattern repeat, you are decreasing one stitch out of every three.  Notice, that my mistaken interpretation of the pattern means that on every odd row, I am increasing one stitch for every two, and on every even row, I am decreasing one stitch for every three.  This means that the number of stitches on the needle will keep growing….and growing…and growing.  After only a few rows, my swatch has doubled the number of stitches.  How could this be?

Thoroughly annoyed by now, I run upstairs, grab the cable (waking up Doug in the process), come back downstairs, plug in my laptop, and start reading the pattern.  Clearly, if the tulle stitch is continually multiplying the stitch count, there must be something in the sweater pattern that continually decreases the count.  But no, the pattern has no such stitch-decreasing mania (and is also very well written and organized).

Doug walks into the room.  He is jet-lagged and half asleep.  “I am a stupid knitter!” I say to Doug.  “Un huh,” he says while making himself a coffee, clearly not thinking this topic worthy of comment. (This is like asking “Do I look fat in this?”  A sensible husband will know that no response is a good response.)

I decide to log into Ravelry and search for an answer to this stupid problem.  First, I look at the finished Neon cardigans.  Lots of them, all beautiful.  I notice that the knitters all make comments like “fun pattern” and “easy knit”.  One knitter even said “Thought it was going to take me 2 weeks, but only took me 11 days, not bad.”  Aargh!  I am getting really annoyed now.  I look at the forums searching for other people agonizing over the pattern; surely someone has commented on the fact that the pattern increases exponentially.   Or that it MAKES NO SENSE AND LOOKS STUPID!  Or, maybe it’s just me.  “I really am a stupid knitter!” I yell to Doug.  “Sure, honey,” he says, clearly paying zero attention to my plight.

I make myself yet another cup of coffee (a double shot espresso latte).  I sit at the dining room table.  I very carefully read over the pattern again, the whole pattern, every line.  At some point a light bulb clicks on: “I missed the star!,” I say to Doug.  “I wrote the pattern stitch out wrong!  It is not k1, yo repeat, it is k1, yo, k1 repeat.  Well, jeez, ” I bang my palm to head, “that makes sense!  See, now it increases one stitch out of every three, and then decreases the same number on the alternate rows!”  I shout this, as if I have had an epiphany, on par, perhaps, with Newton and the apple.  “See, Doug, I am NOT a stupid knitter.  I’m just stupid!”  Wisely, Doug doesn’t respond.

Post epiphany, I knit the swatch.  It looks beautiful:

The pattern is lovely. Furthermore, it is intuitive.  It makes sense.  I can “read” it, from the row beneath.  As for the sweater, once you get past the initial inch or two, the pattern is easy and intuitive.  (The yarn is also gorgeous, but that will be the topic of a subsequent post.)  Here is a progress shot, proving I have indeed advanced from swatch to sweater proper:

I like to think that sometimes even genius knitters have their stupid moments.  I imagine Elizabeth Zimmerman yelling at her husband “But this pattern makes no sense, Arnold!”.  Or Barbara Walker, tearing her hair out, saying “There’s too many increases here!”  Then, at least I’d be in good company.