I was told that alpaca tends to grow, so the second swatch is a needle size down. I really think my stitches are more even, but it might just be that I'm getting more confident with this yarn and needle combination. The yarn is slick enough that it was initially hard for me to hold the needles and yarn without stitches falling out.
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Swatching Saturdays: Alpaca Cloud
Today and for the past few days, I've been working on the swatch for my Featherweight Cardigan. I'm knitting a 36 stitch wide swatch, planning a 4"x4" swatch. I first tried on the recommended needle, then a strip of garter, then another block on the next size up or down, depending on the unblocked gauge of the first block, whether it was too large or too small. This is the first 3" of the gauge swatch.
The first block is almost 4" tall, and more than 5" wide. The first block isn't quite 4" because I got quite bored of knitting with the size 6 needle once I realized it wasn't going to work well for my gauge. My gauge, straight-off-the-needles, is 30 stitches per 5", which is mathematically the same as the gauge recommended, 24 stitches per 4", but the height isn't quite measureable because my kids knocked the stitches off the needles, and I didn't do a perfect job picking them back up. I have really no way of knowing whether I've slipped some stitches or whether they're just incredibly tight, until I block it, because I can't really follow the individual stitches.
I was told that alpaca tends to grow, so the second swatch is a needle size down. I really think my stitches are more even, but it might just be that I'm getting more confident with this yarn and needle combination. The yarn is slick enough that it was initially hard for me to hold the needles and yarn without stitches falling out.
I was told that alpaca tends to grow, so the second swatch is a needle size down. I really think my stitches are more even, but it might just be that I'm getting more confident with this yarn and needle combination. The yarn is slick enough that it was initially hard for me to hold the needles and yarn without stitches falling out.
Friday, June 8, 2012
Eating the Garden
So I really, really like salad. I like all of the fresh, green things. I like the crisp, white things. I like the red things with tons of flavor. I like trying dressings and seeing which flavor overwhelms the vegetables, which brings out the brightness, which encourages bitterness to just be flavor.
I like eating my vegetables. But I like eating fresher vegetables better, when the lettuce still has that sort of rubbery crunch, before it wilts in the refrigerator. When the tomato is acidic and sharp, and the flesh is firm.
One of these days, my garden is going to give me the freshest vegetables ever. If I can remember to water it.
Tuesday, June 5, 2012
Tomato Tuesday: Deeply Rooted
The tomatoes from last year did extremely well. I'm very proud of them for the children they left behind. The biggest one in this pot is a volunteer of the tomatoes from last year. I pulled it because it was too close to the sidewalk, but it will go back into the ground soon. The smaller ones are volunteers from Juliette's garden. Since I got last year's tomatoes from Juliette anyway, they're distant cousins.
This year's tomatoes got planted, finally. They waited in their little 4x4 cells until I was ready. Their new homes are perfect: deep, wide, and filled with Potting Mix and Bumper Crop (potting soil and something manure-like.) There's a tiny bit of dolomite lime at the bottom, mixed in to the dirt, at the suggestion of the cashier at the nursery.
Three well-rooted tomato plants, joined by a jalapeno, way at the end, by the rusted oilcan and the wooden bridge. At least 60% of each stem, from the top of the 4x4 cell, is beneath the surface. Tomatoes have the ability to turn their entire stalk into a root system, so I'm taking full advantage of that fact to give them the best roots possible.
On the right side of my front door, the mint keeps spreading as far as it can. I keep pulling roots out of the areas it's not supposed to grow, but it keeps sending out new roots and shoots. Here it is crowding the new kid, basil.
I love mint. But it has no sense of propriety.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Swatching for Featherweight
Sometime earlier this spring I decided I wanted to knit a Featherweight, which is a cardigan knit from laceweight. I chose Alpaca Cloud, a very fine laceweight made of baby alpaca. I have Dill and Stream, and I'm planning to knit the cardigan out of Stream (a dark denim color).
Last Saturday, I started a swatch, before I bought the pattern, just to see if I liked knitting laceweight on size 6 nickelplated needles. I put the needles and yarn in my purse, and started at a baby shower, after I took it to the zoo but didn’t take it out of my purse. The next day, partly to show off, I worked several rows in church.
Today I measured what I had so far. The stockinette section came out an even 5 inches, so stitch gauge is right on the money, but row gauge is a bit long, 12 the only problem I can see is to make sure arms don't grow too long, I guess. The fabric is airy, but with a sort of net-like effect. I feel like this is maybe a lighter laceweight? I like this yarn. I can see myself burning through miles of it.
The swatch has a garter border and a stockinette section inside. I cast on 40, for a more accurate check, and always knit the first and last 5 stitches. The pattern page called for a gauge of 24 st/in and 36 rows/in, and my central 30 stitches measure an even 5 inches, which is exactly right. I haven't gotten more than 2 inches into the swatch, and my row gauge isn't right (yet!) but it's on the side of too long rather than too short. I wonder if alpaca blocks well.
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Tomato Tuesday: Digging the Holes
Partly Saturday and partly yesterday, I dug the holes for my tomatoes. During the process, I found three volunteers from last year's rotten tomatoes that fell from the vine before I could pick them.
Today I almost did nothing but the yarn sampler. Over 100 minis in the last 24 hours. Which sounds good, until you realize that there are 500 minis in the worsted side. I have to do the exact same feverish pace all week to finish before Matt gets here.
WIP Wednesday tomorrow: Kwalla socks, a storied life.
Today I almost did nothing but the yarn sampler. Over 100 minis in the last 24 hours. Which sounds good, until you realize that there are 500 minis in the worsted side. I have to do the exact same feverish pace all week to finish before Matt gets here.
WIP Wednesday tomorrow: Kwalla socks, a storied life.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Tomato Tuesday
This afternoon, I replanted a plant (some kind of oregano) that was drying out too quickly into a shadier spot. I replanted it deeper, and put in hydration bottles (water bottles filled with tap water and rapidly plunged upside down into the dirt).
I have watered my tomatoes, and the first yellow flowers are starting to bloom. It's almost worth having tomatoes just for the hopefulness of those yellow flowers.
I have watered my tomatoes, and the first yellow flowers are starting to bloom. It's almost worth having tomatoes just for the hopefulness of those yellow flowers.
Sunday, May 13, 2012
Hi. Been a while.
I keep knitting when I have time. I've done 6 socks now, of which 2 are pairs. Working on another 3, one of them will match one of those already done, and the other two are 2 at a time and will match each other.
Learned to spin. Pretty proud of my efforts; once plied, the yarn is really nice and I would knit with it. My first effort is about a worsted weight plied on itself. My second effort was just to see how thin I could spin. Yesterday morning I plied it into a Navajo ply and it turned into a very even fingering-weight purple yarn.
Can't figure out how to post pictures right now. Hopefully I will be able to in future posts. It may just be an issue on my tablet.
Coming on Tomato Tuesday: picking the spot and digging the holes.
I keep knitting when I have time. I've done 6 socks now, of which 2 are pairs. Working on another 3, one of them will match one of those already done, and the other two are 2 at a time and will match each other.
Learned to spin. Pretty proud of my efforts; once plied, the yarn is really nice and I would knit with it. My first effort is about a worsted weight plied on itself. My second effort was just to see how thin I could spin. Yesterday morning I plied it into a Navajo ply and it turned into a very even fingering-weight purple yarn.
Can't figure out how to post pictures right now. Hopefully I will be able to in future posts. It may just be an issue on my tablet.
Coming on Tomato Tuesday: picking the spot and digging the holes.
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