My greatest achievement in February was making a single handknit/felted dryer ball stuffed with wool yarn scraps from years of knitting projects.
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My greatest achievement in February was making a single handknit/felted dryer ball stuffed with wool yarn scraps from years of knitting projects.
They were both supposed to be rabbits, but the one on the right is so clearly a toad that he looked miserable when I put ears on him. For his dignity, I removed them.
quietly working on a new project…… but it’s stripey, very stripey……….
I can’t tell if this is horrible or really kitschy and adorable 👀 Experiments like this are always fun, even if they don’t work out the way i want!!
Maybe i’ll frog it and try to beads out on something else instead
Thinking about experimenting with knitting using different size needles in one project.
Something like casting on to the recommended size needle, and using a two- or three-sizes larger needle for the other direction.
Has anybody tried something like this?
Experiment number two
Keeping in mind the results of the last experiment I'm not going to be tapering off the end for the tail. I'm pretty happy with how the tail ended up up. I think that part of the pattern will hold up in the real thing. For this part I want to focus on the body shaping.
Judging by the way the tail curved I'm guessing that the longer the short row is compared to the length of the total row the more dramatic the curve. So I increased the length of each row to 15. It made sense at the time.
Here's what I ended up doing.
Cast on fifteen stitches
Rows 1-10 k
Row 11 k5 wt k5
Row 12-13 k
Row 14 k7 wt k7
Rows 15-16 k
Row 17 k9 wt k9
Rows 18-19
Row 20 k11 wt k11
Rows 21-22 k
Row 23 k13 wt k13
Rows 24-25 k
Row 26 k11 wt k11
Rows 27-28 k
Row 29 k9 wt k9
Rows 30-31 k
Row 32 k7 wt k7
Rows 33-34 k
Row 35 k5 wt k5
Rows 35-40 k
Cast off
The curve is pretty subtle on this one. I'm using the knit rows between my short rows to space them a bit. But maybe a sharper curve would be better? Something like
Cast on fifteen stitches
Rows 1-10 k
Row 11 k2 wt k2
Row 12 k4 wt k4
Row 13 k6 wt k6
Row 14 k8 wt k8
Row 15 k10 wt k10
Row 16 k12 wt k12
Row 17 k14 wt k14
Row 18 k12 wt k12
Row 19 k10 wt k10
Row 20 k8 wt k8
Row 21 k6 wt k6
Row 22 k4 wt k4
Row 23 k2 wt k2
Rows 24-34 k
The curve is a bit more pronounced. Obviously it's a little shorter without the spacer rows. I don't care for the more pronounced gap you can see on row 24. There's probably a way to prevent that, but I'm not sure how.
Here they are side by side.
I can do better. I can perfect this.
Cast on fifteen stitches
Rows 1-10
Row 11 k5 wt k5
Row 12 k7 wt k7
Row 13 k5 wt k5
Rows 14-15 k
Repeat rows 11-13 three times
Knit ten rows
Cast off
I'm getting closer! Just a few more adjustments and I'll be just about there. I think I cast on and off a little too tightly that time, but that's ok. This is mostly for the shaping practice any way.
I’m doing sone experiments to work out a pattern for a bag/child I want to make.
That’s a rough sketch of what I want to achieve. To that end I’m noodling around trying to figure out how best to make the shape I want. I’ve never really written my own pattern before, so I thought it might be a fun thing to document for the internet.
This is the result of my first experiment.
I’m working it on a smaller scale so I can knit these mockups a bit faster. I’m using short rows for the shaping of the curve.
Here’s the pattern I used if anyone’s interested.
Cast on 10 stitches
Rows 1-4 k
Row 5 k2 wt k2
Rows 6-7 k
Row 8 k4 wt k4
Rows 9-10 k
Row 11 k6 wt k6
Rows 12-13 k
Row 14 k8 wt k8
Rows 15-16 k
Row 17 k8 wt k8
Row 18 k to last 3 stitches k2tog k
Row 19 k
Row 20 k6 wt k6
Row 21 k to last 3 stitches k2tog k
Row 22 k
Row 23 k4 wt k4
Row 24 k to last 3 stitches k2tog k
Row 25 k
Row 26 k2 wt k2
Row 28 k to last 3 stitches k2tog k
Row 29 k
Repeat last three rows until three stitches remain and cast off.
Results
The curve of the tail is very dramatic, but the curve in the body area isn't very noticeable at all. I might have to begin the shaping half way through the final product. Next experiment will be longer short rows to see if that makes the curve more dramatic.
At the very least it’s a good start.
I spent a week in Las Vegas to help my sister sell her amazing glass work at Glass Craft and Bead Expo. Knowing that we would need things to keep us entertained between customers, Cleo brought some yarn made from sari scraps for me to play with, and play I did.
I had a knitting project with me (of course). Socks (double of course). Unfortunately, the size 1 needles I had with me were much too small for knitting strips of fabric. I could have waited until the end of the our work day, found a yarn store, and bought some fat needles. But as soon as I had this unusual yarn in my hands, I wanted to know what it would look like knit up. So I dug some pens out of my purse and used them as needles.
Humble Bic pens doing the work of giants.
It worked much better than I imagined. I had to push the fabric on and off the pens with my fingers, applying more pressure than you would with regular needles. The pen tips were easy to slide into the stitches and I only got a little ink on my hand in the process.
Minimal pen marks. I was surprised.
While the pens weren’t ideal tools, they did work. I knit up all the yarn we had to make a narrow, multi-colored scarf.
The finished scarf
Cleo models the final product
The biggest down side: both pens gave their lives to make this scarf.
I knew I was killing them early on. I tried to make a note with one and it wouldn’t write. That’s when I saw the ink all globbed in the bottom and knew something was wrong.
As far as I can tell, repeatedly flexing the pens broke the inner tubes. Fortunately, the ink didn’t leak out of the pen proper.
I was pleased that my knitting hack worked as well as it did. In fact, I’m thinking I should try using pencils next.
Have you tried doing needlework with non-traditional tools? Did it work?
Knitting Hack: Using Pens As Needles #knitting #creativity #ballpointpen I spent a week in Las Vegas to help my sister sell her amazing glass work…