I have been knitting like a crazy woman these last two weeks, trying to get the girls' Candy Cane caps done in time for Nativity (we celebrate January 7, so I made it with a week to spare!) and also my own scarf to go with the dress I made.
The caps are so stinking cute! I found some self-striping yarn on yarn.com, and vastly overestimated the amount I would need, so I will probably knit myself a cowl or somesuch with the leftovers. Because you can never have too many candy-cane striped accessories.
Of course, I didn't read the instructions closely on the first one, and it has been a few years since I made the last one, so I forgot about slipping the stitches along the increase line at the back of the cap, but I kind of think it doesn't matter. In any case, it will help me tell them apart, since the girls are basically wearing the same size cap now.
Next up: a cowl to match a skirt I just made. I'll talk more about that skirt when I do a proper sewing post about it, which will be when I finish the cowl! I'm using Stockbridge yarn from Valley Yarns because I really love how soft and pliable it is. It was also the correct shade of green, so there's that. I think I'm going to use a waffle stitch pattern, since it looks the same on both sides, and do a basic short wide scarf that is seamed in the middle. I made a garter stitch version for my husband when I first started knitting, and I really like the looks of it. It is simple and fast, so once I cake up those skeins, I should be good to go!
And my own Christmas scarf: a Miss Marple scarf! I used the leftover Brava yarn from my failed Almost Lady Gansey sweater from the fall. I wish I had made the middle part a smidge longer, but I was following the pattern instructions, and it seemed long enough. It works, and I know garter stitch does stretch with time. Apologies for the frightful color combination with my sweater--it does go very well with my Christmas dress.
And a bit of unselfish knitting: a cardigan for Ponchik. I'm using the In Threes cardigan pattern, and using my leftover Amherst yarn from the Ramona cardigan this fall (I had bought almost twice what I needed, based on the pattern estimates; this seems to be a common theme--do knitting pattern designers just guess at the yardage? I'm starting to think so) I miscounted somewhere between the second and third tiers, and had to rip back a bunch, but I'm past that now and working the upper part of the yoke. I have a few more rows and then divide for the body, which should make it go faster.
Finally: my Stockbridge nonpareil cardigan, which I'm really enjoying now that I've worked out the waist band pattern. For those just tuning in, the stitch pattern on the original was totally masochistic, and written by someone I'm convinced never actually tried to knit it. I changed the pattern to a twisted rib stitch, which is similar to the look of the original, but much easier to execute and memorize.
The pattern has you make the waistbands first, and then cast on stitches to the top and bottom. I've just cast off the ribbing on the bottom edge, so now I have to cast on the stitches at the top half of the back piece. It definitely has a "hand knit" look to it, but I'm hoping that blocking may help with that.
As for reading. I read Interrogating Ellie a week or so ago. I can't decide if it is a good book with some uneven bits, or it is a bad book with some good bits. It is based on the author's mother, and I think he didn't have an editor during the publication process, as the book seems a bit rough to me--there were significant gaps in the storytelling, and I felt there were some details that should have been included for clarity. There are some turns in the narrative perspective that are disorienting at times. That said, I really liked the story, and kept reading it to find out what happened, but I was distracted by a number of things in the actual writing.
After that, I picked up The Milliner's Secret, the sort-of-follow-on book to The Dress Thief (TDT). I read The Dress Thief a few months ago and really enjoyed it, so I figured this one would also be good. So far, I'm enjoying it. Some of the minor characters from the first book show up in this one as well, and it references things that happened in TDT. I'm poking away at Rod Dreher's How Dante Can Save Your Life, not because I'm not interested, but because each section gives much to ponder and I want to give the book its full due. I'm also finally caught up on magazines (except for the year-end edition of The Economist, which I intend to savor).
Linking up with Ginny for Yarn Along!












