Friday, February 28, 2025
Thursday, February 27, 2025
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
Weekly SO
Originally I wanted to write about something totally different (not even about knitting, but fashion), but, I have to get it out of my system.
I absolutely HATE, when others want to use your content to their own gain.
Meaning, I post about something I do, and they advertise their own event (product, service, etc) or agenda, disguised as a comment. Or I make a group about something, work with that group, and they, once again, advertise their own thing, without asking me.
I like to think I am fairly sensitive, I often share events, products, pages, and whatnot, but that is my page, my group, my work, I want to decide what I want to advertise, endorse, offer, thank you very much.
I think it is extremely bad form to do that.
Okay. I'll get off my horse, and next week there comes my opinion about... well, you will see.
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
Short Comment
Monday, February 24, 2025
Weekly pattern
This week, I choose something from Ravelry's hot right now list. I know it's been there for a while, as it was published in 2021, there are more than 2000 projects to it, and the you-tube knitting vlogs/podcasts/etc mention it quite often.
The Halibut sweater.
I am rather ambivalent about this. I know it is VERY popular, I know, Caitlin Hunter is rather popular in general, I have the Alpine Blossom in my plans.
I understand the appeal, I understand the fun in the fish motif, I understand that it would be fun for someone who likes fish, likes to fish, interested in the ocean-world (from biology viewpoint), etc.
The pattern could be a fun addtion to the wardrobe for them, it could be fun to wear for a winterwalk right next to the ocean.
However, I am not one of those people.
I don't like fishing (except for a music festival called Fishing on Orfű, LOL), I don't like to eat fish. I am not a marine biologist type. For god sake, we don't even have a seaport in this landlocked country to have a winterwalk there.
Besides, the pattern is to broad scale for my taste, and the used yarn is too thick (for my taste) the finished sweater has way too much ease.
My preferance is finer motifs, thinner yarns, and fits that follow the body's lines more closely, so I while I undrestand why is it so popular, I would not knit it myself.
What about you? Do you like it? Would you knit it?
Saturday, February 22, 2025
The wonders of Blocking (knitting basics)
You asked, and I promised, and here we go.
How to block a sweater?
Let's start with why block a sweater? As I already wrote in that long time ago posted post about swatching, that when you put knitted/crocheted items into (warm) water the water fills the space between the fibers, the fibers soften and loosen up and become more malleable.
I do the same for cotton, alpaca, wool, stuff. And I do the same for those that have more than 30% manmade fiber, though I don't really use yarns that have more than 40-50% acrilyc.
I know that some say, that you can steam-clock things, I have tried it, but I prefer the wet-block. Also, you have to be very careful to use heat for stuff that has manmade fibercontent, as, especially acrilic and/or poliamid can easily go limp under heat, and you cannot undue that.
Friday, February 21, 2025
What the Friday?
In which I am trying to figure out what the friday I was thinking, when I started this or that UFO.
Actually though I completely forgot about, was not that big of a mistery.
It took me a while to find it, but it is the Flaming June pattern
Since I still like it pretty much, and I had the yarn packed with the piece on the needles, I will most probably finish this.
Thursday, February 20, 2025
New Year's Renaissance
It seems all I do lately is knit, but the truth to be told, I am battling demons, and knitting is one thing I hold onto, because first of all yarn does not asks questions, yarn understand, second of all, I know how to do it. Mostly. Not to mention, that one of the thing is for the New Year's Good Luck sweater, that I only knit on that until it is finish.
I am thinking a lot about sewing, and I do things that takes me closer to sew, got some patterns printed, glued and cut, I have fabrics washed, but for the moment, I am the queen of procrastinating.
In the meanwhile, as I said, I am holding onto knitting like I'd do it for dear life.
You've seen, that I finished the New Year's sweater, and by now I managed to block it, and we even took some photoes of it on Saturday.
Excuse for the missing smiles, part of the reason was that it was effing cold. Norbert even asked if I am sure that it is a good idea to take off my coat for photos in minus C°'s, but at least that I did not want to postpone longer.
As you see, at the end, I decided on the almostred dark burgundy color, and Elenor Mortensen's Renaissance sweater.Wednesday, February 19, 2025
Weekly SO
Underwear (as undershirts)
I've been listening to some knitting podcasts on Youtube, and when I first heard that one of the podcasters wears her (wool) sweaters without anything - maybe except a bra- I was like hmmm. She must be the odd one out. But then I heard another one, and then another one, and as we all know, one might be a chance but three is a trend.
I was like WHAT?
She did not like a certain yarn, because it is ever so slightly prickly (do not get me started on "prickly/itchy", etc yarn, LOL), but she does not wants to wear anything underneath... because she gets hot, but then she still sweats and she needs to wash her sweaters frequently...
Now, I would NEVER EVER wear a wool/alpaca/angora/cashmeere (basically -mostly- protein based / animal fibers) sweater directly on my skin. I would always wear something, at least a T shirt underneath.
I did not, even, before I started to study historical clothes, but after that, not even that much. Whenever I am asked, how do I wash my wool sweaters, my answer is usually that I rarely do. Not only, because I have many, and I do not go out that much, but also because I always wear something underneath them. It is one of the basic teachings of historical dress, and if nothing else, we should learn as much. Just as I am often asked about my sweaters and washing, we are often asked about how did they washed those big, natural fiber dresses, and the answer is the same. They did not. Were they dirty or smelly? Also NOT. Why? Partly because those clothes were hung out to air, (wind, sun and cold does wonders). Patly, because, they were undershirts (chemises) underneath, and they washed those. And washed those frequently. I also wash my T shirts, undershirts, etc rather frequently.
Things with cellulose based fibers (cotton/linen) are somewhat different, I used to have some summery tops, and I might even wear a cotton sweater with a tank top (instead of something with sleeves), but I still feel the urge to wear something underneath.
And let's not even talk about dressing appropriately to certain conditions, because climate change threw a lot of things off its course, but we, I think, can agree, that it is not the swetar's fault (and not the yarn's) if we are hot?
Tuesday, February 18, 2025
SC (Short Comment)
Monday, February 17, 2025
Weekly Pattern
Sunday, February 16, 2025
Gone to the movies (Nosferatu costumes)
To watch Nosferatu.
My son asked "Since when do you watch horrormovies?" And he was absolutely right. I don't do horrors, I can't even watch a simple Dr. House episode... But then why?
"Sweetheart, it is set in 1838. I was looking at the clothes, not the gore."
And I was. Of course I was interested in the story, back in university, I had a class on "fantasy" literature that took us thtough from The Monk through Dracula and Frankenstein to the Clockwork Orange and the Hungergames.
But the clothes, the clothes! Did I tell you that I am a nightmare to watch a historical movie or a period drama? In fact, as Norbert said not long ago: "I kind of got used that you keep commenting on clothes in historical movies, but now we can't even walk around you doing the same?" (I was criticising a street-sculpture of a 19th century playwright, who was depicted in a modern suit.)
Anyhow, back to the Nosferatu costumes, the movie is set in the 1830-ies, and we know that 1830-ies fashion is often ridiculous, and that is why it is rarely used in movies, but here they did not shy away from the ridiculousness, but fully embraced it. The extremely puffy sleeves, the folds, the ruffs, the piping the lace, the underwear (did you see that fan-backlacing? I have to make a corset with those one of these days). They had headwear! Lacecaps, and even bonnets!
You all know that I am not a fan of black dresses, but that mourning gown...
I am tempted, I am tempted.There was only three moment, I drew a sharp breath of dissaproval. First at the yellow dress at one of the early sceenes. I get that they wanted to portray the calm (sunny?), but that shoulder????
Saturday, February 15, 2025
Start a shawl (knitting basics)
For most knitters who knitted their share of shawls, this technique may seem obvious. But then, a friend asked me for a very fast and very simple shawl pattern. As usual, I started to seach in one of the two obvious places, DROPS (the other is Ravelry, naturally), and while the DROPS Site has a handful of basic, top-down triangular shawls, that could be knit with as thick or thin yarn as possible, none of them had the garter tab start, that is small, simple, but elevates how the edge of a shawl look.
What is this "garter stitch tab"? ever wondered how shawls seems to have no beginning, because it looks like it is knitted from the top down, but you cannot see the start, because it has a garter stitch edging... all the way?
This is how it is worked.
Also, you can knit the WHOLE shawl with garter stitch, then you will HAVE to use the markers, and still increase on every first row, and just knit all the way back in the worng side row. If you keep the middle stitch stockinett (knit on the RS, and purl on the WS), that can add some visual interest to your simple shawl.
So there you go, now you know (on way of) how to start and knit your very first, very simple shawl.
Friday, February 14, 2025
What the Friday?
I do remember, that I have knitted a Golden Wheat cardigan more than a decade ago, from a different color of the same yarn. The peachy orange color suited me rather well, when I had orange-y red hair, however, with the silver, I look like a three day old corpse in it.
Thursday, February 13, 2025
Inspired pink
Ever since about ten years ago, I knitted my "Inspired" sweater, I designed for myself, with corrugated ribbing (BTW, I still wear that sweater), I wanted to make it from 1) different color 2) in a cardigan version.
Realizing the idea after so long was a sudden decision, when I picked this bunch of yarn up in a second hand place, and there was that reddish colored not full ball.
It is the same top down, funnel-neck (wider then a regular high-neck), round-yoke construction as the old sweater was.
I like the final result, where the color does pop up in the edges, even if only small bits of it.
The buttons are old buttons, I brought back from Miami with me in the late nineties (and even in Miami they were a flea-market/garage sale buy, so they might even be older than that), but the reddish-pinkish shade was perfect for now.