Oct 22 2008

preemie hats for charity

I had whipped most of these up to donate over a year ago for a time-specific cause and had a batch left over that never got sent in. My mother recently started a new job in a hospital with a NICU that could use preemie items, so I pulled these out and made a few more.

I don’t really follow a pattern, since I want variable sizes to fit newborns and preemies of all sizes. I use random yarns and hooks and play with making a 10-stitch straight swatch until I get a gauge I like.

Chain 3, and work 12 dc in the first stitch. Join with a slip stitch. You can continue to work in rounds, or work in a spiral. Work 2 dc in each stitch around until you have 28 stitches. (How you play with that number, 28, is the key to a larger or smaller hat.) Work a single dc in each stitch around until the hat is as long as you want. Finish off the round with a slip stitch, or if you’re working in a spiral, work a sc, then a slip stitch to end the spiral. Add a picot or shell stitch border for a more frilly effect.

On a side note, the road trip went horribly. My sister got into a massive argument on the way back on Sunday over me being overprotective because I pulled the sunshade cover over Spice’s carseat just in case her son threw something. Mind you, he bit my sister just 6 hours before. I told her to drop me off at the next fast food stop and had the spouse come pick me up. ::shudder:: What a lunatic.


Oct 14 2008

on the needles

It’s the middle of October and I’m in a bit of a knitting panic. I had wanted to gift hand knitted items for the holidays to many, many friends and family and I just don’t think I’m going to be able to do as many as I’d like. :-(

The weather turned here suddenly over the weekend. I was up in the middle of the night and the winds were howling around and I realized it was fall already. It was chilly and I shivered a bit that night, being too lazy to go downstairs to get another comforter. The next day, some conversation with the spouse yielded the discovery that the heating isn’t turning on. Joy.

I’ve been bundling up myself and Spice and am feeling the need for warmer clothing for her. Yes, we live in sunny, warm Hollywood, CA. But our house is in the hills and shaded by lots of trees and is older and badly insulated. The downstairs living room, kitchen and guest room are all quite cold and when it’s windy outside, you can actually feel the draft like a whisper of a breeze indoors! All of this is just to point out why thick woolen soakers on Spice is not such a crazy idea…

Since I crochet faster than I knit, against rationality, I bought Victoria Schiffen’s Dragonfly Longie pattern to whip up some longies. I did because I had started a pair of knitted longies off the top of my head in super bulky Burly Spun, learned how to do short rows on fly only to realize that I didn’t understand the general butt shape I needed. For some reason, crochet just makes so much more structural sense to my brain, so anything I crochet first makes more sense when knitted later. So I bought the pattern and felt instantly foolish because if I’d just sat down with a cup of tea and a sketch book, I could have figured it out myself and saved myself $12. *sigh*

(Hmm.. Harley is leaning against my cold feet. Warm cat. Maybe I could make cat bed slippers somehow, to always keep a warm cat on my feet…)


Anyhow, the longies turned out pretty nice. She suggests a #7 hook, which I do not have. I have three G/6’s and four H/8’s, but not a single #7? Odd. I used the #8 and it’s a little ‘holey’ for my liking, but that could be because I used Lion Brand Fisherman, which always runs a little thin for worsted weight. I’ll be trying the next one with Cascade 220 and a G/6. I also strayed from the pattern in a very impatient-me type of way. The bulk of the pattern is worked in the round by joining each round with a slip stitch, chaining one and starting the next round. For some reason, I hate doing this and prefer to work in one long spiral, so I did that for the legs and the hips/waist. You can only really tell from the back, where the spiral starts near the center butt piece, and at the “end” where the fpdc/bpdc ribbing starts. I can’t tell at all on the legs. I haven’t decided yet if the convenience is worth the look; from other people’s pictures, the joined rounds result in what looks like a seam running up from the middle of the butt, which I think I find equally unappealing. I haven’t quite decided yet. :-)

These longies are super fast, but it’s still pushing my other on-the-needles projects out..

What’s awful is that this pushed out the other projects I wanted to do by Christmas.

  • Kitty Pi in grey for Harley. Using Brown Sheep Burly Spun.
  • A shawl for my mother’s friend Dorathy.
  • Socks for me in Colinette’s Jitterbug.
  • Red hat for the spouse. I’ve been promising this for, like 3 years.
  • Scarf for the spouse. I picked up the yarn for it, Garnstudio’s DROPS Alapaca in Goteborg maybe 2 years ago. *sigh* See a pattern here?
  • A cute hat/scarf/mitten set for my nephew.
  • A red and black scarf for my cousin.

This on top of Spice and household-y things and trying to get sorted for traveling over Christmas. Eek!


Oct 1 2008

iPhone knitting


Okay, so of all the things you can do with your iPhone, you can’t actually knit directly with it.. but almost.

Store knitting patterns on your iPhone using Evernote. After trying for ages to find a practical way to use this slightly clunky desktop app/website/iPhone app, I’ve found it’s great for storing patterns I’m currently knitting. Sign up online and create a new note. (You can download the desktop app for either Mac or Windows, too.) Copy and paste the pattern text into your new note. You can even drag a picture into the note, too, which is great for cables/braids or even charts. Install the Evernote iPhone app, login in from your iPhone and you’ll see your pattern there. :-)

Track stitches on your iPhone with Stitchminder. It’s a free app, and despite the slightly garish background of a blue ball of yarn, it works pretty well. Ironically, the preset column counts don’t have a heading for tracking stitches. Instead you can choose from column names like row count, increase/decrease row and pattern row. Make sure to set your Auto-Lock setting (Settings > General > Auto-Lock) to something like 5 minutes, so that you don’t have to unlock everytime you finish a row.

Now all we need is an iPhone app for Ravelry. :-) Any other ways you use your iPhone to help with crafting?


Sep 21 2008

renewed commitment

I feel so useless lately. I know the whole “taking care of a whole person” bit, but I can’t help but feel that I’m just not accomplishing enough. And frustrated because I don’t have the time or energy to get more done. Work is pretty much shot. I might spend an hour with my hand in actual code, but that included hours spent in my head working out the problems first – and my head is nowhere near clear enough to do that. I have an attention span “the length of a flea’s nose”, as an old friend used to say. I consider the spouse lucky if I follow him talking for more than five minutes. All my mind can think of is baby, and other than that, my demeanor is pretty vapid most of the time. How on earth is this a biological survival skill??

At this point I’m capable of the following: eating, sleeping, showering, feeding baby, changing diapers, bathing baby, playing “wiggle out the farts” with baby, doing laundry and limited driving. Okay, so some days I only eat about 600 calories and I’m often so spaced while driving that I make myself say the color of the stoplight out loud before the intersection. Still, right now, that’s about all I can manage.

I’ve recently added knitting back to this list. Knitting usually takes more brain cells for me than crochet, but lately I’ve been on auto-pilot with it. The whole “sleep when the baby sleeps” thing doesn’t work for me because I don’t easily sleep with daylight and she rarely sleeps long enough for me to get in a nap, too. So I’ve found that twitter and knitting are both things I can do in 20 – 30 minutes chunks, between her and some laundry and maybe a cup of tea. I’ve finished a baby vest, and am almost done with some gorgeous wristwarmers that I’ll probably sell on Etsy. Next up are some scarves, a wool diaper wrap and perhaps a pair of socks. The other morning, I photographed many (but not all) pieces of my copious yarn stash to list on Ravelry. This made me realize just how much good yarn I have that needs to be knitted into something useful… hence, the knitting spell.

If you knit or crochet and you’re on Ravelry, check out my notebook and send me a hello! I’m also on twitter and always looking for new friends to follow.


Sep 15 2008

silliest dog sweater ever

If I were a dog, I’d be embarrassed to wear something like this. My mother loves these silly “thong” sweaters on her dog, though. Poor chihuahua doesn’t even have the smarts to be a little abashed. I had made my mother a scarf last winter, a gorgeous thing in black Blue Sky Alpacas Bulky, with a single strand of black and silver Rowan Kidsilk haze. I found some leftovers from it and whipped up a matching thong sweater. *sigh*


Sep 14 2008

grey

It’s grey in L.A. today and hot cocoa stuffed with BonBonBar vanilla marshmallows is delish. Too bad I can’t figure out how to lick the inside of the mug…

The spouse is recovering nicely, thanks to lots and lots of vicodin. :-) My mother drove down for a surprise visit on last Monday, which was an unexpected godsend. She’s a nurse, so it was doubly good to have someone handy to keep an eye on the sleeping-all-day spouse as well as be able to hand the baby over once in a while. We lounged around for the most part, drinking tea and coffee and hanging out in the kitchen. The kitchen part is fun, because we both love cooking and it’s hard not to look at a jar of pecans and start imagining warm pecan pie. She woke up early one morning and cleared out and rearranged all my kitchen cupboards! Yea, Mom!

Now she’s spending the weekend with my sister, and the house is quiet. I’ve resurrected some old knitting/crochet projects and have filled up the recent downtime from Spice with laundry, the kitchen, crochet, tea and books. I whipped up some booties for her to wear under her baby legwarmers in some buttery soft , and frogged the newborn baby bolero I was making to make a sleep soaker instead. I also just finished Stardust last night and it was fantastic. (I’ve been a fan of Neil Gaiman since Preludes and Nocturnes, and aside from the Sandman books, my favorite book is still Neverwhere.) Now that I’ve read the book, I can add the DVD to my Netflix queue in good conscience.

My mother and sister are going for dim sum this morning and invited me. Given the recent drama, I’ll probably bow out, but dim sum! The spouse, being vegetarian, has a tough time finding something edible there, so I usually only go with my mother and sister. *sigh* I’ll just have to content myself with being curled up here with my tea, a blanket, cleaning out my rss feed reader and try desperately not to think of hot, steaming nor my gai.