Wendy Bernard's Blog, page 13
July 10, 2012
Cast On Bind Off Book Review and Giveaway
When it comes to casting on and binding off I have basically done it the same way since the day my grandmother taught me. Except for one of them. Grandma was a basic knitter. When she cast on to knit, she did the backward loop method. This is super easy to teach to people first learning to knit. I don't think she knew of any other way, but I assume--and I can't ask her if this is the case because she doesn't remember me anymore--that she didn't know any other type of cast on.
Anyway, I think I have told the story to you before, but I knit a bunch of swatches when I was little and that was pretty much it. Kind of like Girlfriend has done. And then I dropped knitting. Kind of like Girlfriend has done. And then in high school I knit a long striped scarf for a boyfriend and it rolled furiously and most passionately (I didn't yet know the part about adding a garter edge) and he loved it anyway. Then I never knit until I was pregnant with Girlfriend. But sitting there on a Friday afternoon a long time ago in the LYS, I showed off a sweater that I had altered to be a maternity tank. I was so proud. Then the owner walked over and tut-tutted about something. I asked what was wrong and she sneered, "What kind of cast on did you use? A backward loop? That is not good, not good at all!" And the rest of the group nodded in agreement.
Well, let's just say later I quietly checked out other options and settled on the long-tail cast on in secret. Since then, and it's been about nine years, that is the only way I have cast on except, of course, when I'm needing to do a provisional or cast on in the midst of a row and then either backward loop or cable cast on gets thrown in. What I'm getting at are actually two things.
Numero Uno: Never shame someone when they're doing something for pleasure. It's not fracking rocket science and who the heck cares if I used a dang backward loop?
Niban: If you have a no-nonsense guide to a multitude of cast ons and bind offs that will serve you well and it's not the likes of a huge encyclopedia that can double as a weapon should a burglar try to break in, then Leslie Ann Bestor's Cast On Bind Off will be a great book for you.
Although I'm perfectly happy doing the three or four in my personal repertoire, I really like the idea that instead of fiddling at the top of a top-down cap (I knit my caps and berets from the top down most of the time) that there are two in the book that will suit me well. There's a Circular Cast On that uses a crochet hook and then there's the Invisible Circular Cast On that does not. Both are pretty simple and from now on, I'll use them when I knit or design new caps. She also covers provisional cast ons, which are obviously on my radar with all the top-down stuff I do, as well as multi-color cast ons that look pretty easy. All techniques are shown side-by-side with step-by-step photography.
The only thing I didn't find--and to tell you the truth I don't know if they exist--are multi-color bind offs, which I would really like to try.
Her publisher will award a copy of this resource to randomly selected commenter on Knit and Tonic. All I ask is that you leave a comment with your favorite cast on or bind off method.
I'll leave this post open until Friday, July 13th (whoops!) and alert the winner via email. Thanks for playing!
BTW: There is a whole Blog Tour going on. If you want to increase your chances of winning, here are the next three blogs in the tour: Zeeneedle, Ramblings of an uncluttered mind and Neoknits.
July 7, 2012
Singing Roy Orbison Songs Right About Now
I just came home after leaving the house for a couple of hours. Things are sad in here. Girlfriend and her dad left for the other side of the globe last night. They got on a flight at 1:44 a.m. and as I type, they are still in the air. They won't be at their destination for awhile yet. I am sad and feeling alone.
Much of the time, Girlfriend drives me crazy. Anyone with a little one will attest to that. Kids just drive you nuts. Funny thing is, though, once she is gone I'm sad and I miss her.
On a typical day she asks me so many questions that I cannot answer. Almost so much, that I want to fling myself out the window.
"Hey mom. What is a coincidence?"
"Hey mom. Who is your favorite Muppet?"
"I like Miss Piggy, but Elmo is another favorite."
"Elmo isn't a Muppet, mom."
"Yes, he is."
"No, he's not."
"He is."
"He's not."
"Is."
"Not."
"Is."
"Nuh huh."
"Huh huh."
And so on.
So I've been sad and they haven't even landed yet.
They'll be gone two weeks.
For now, I'll avoid the house and try to do some work (and have some wine).
I did ask Girlfriend to take a picture of something that interested her each day while she is away. And on her layover in Taipei she sent me this picture.
I am very pleased. She must take after her mom--in terms of her sense of humor, that is.
Meanwhile: I am working on those Mitini Mitts. I have so much time on my hands that I actually weighed the ball, then weighed one completed mitt before casting on for the second one. This pattern is supposed to take just one ball. Guess what? The finished mitt is 17 grams. The remaining yarn is just over 17 grams. The total ball weight before knitting? Just around 35 grams. Tonight, while I finish the second mitt, should be interesting...
July 4, 2012
They Gave us Their Hairs and We Sighed
When you're around so much yarn, you get jaded. I mean, when there's just so much around you, you eventually become indifferent. Yeah, over there is the Woolmeise. Over in that corner there is the Koigu. And back there, is the Rowan.
You know I'm kidding, right?
Even though I'm not a sucker for some yarns, particularly handspun, superwash wool, super duper chunky and junky, or metallics (unless used with panache and a pointy pinky) if you give me a neat-o package with something beautifully done, maybe a little ball of something with a matching pattern that does it justice (and is portable) I will probably inhale just-so.
When you see this, I think you'll know what I mean.
When I was at TNNA the other week, I stopped by the Blue Sky Alpacas booth and nearly swooned when I saw this little ball of their Royal Alpaca and accompanying pattern for Mitini Mitts. Normally they package this yarn in larger skeins, but they had a fantastic idea to package these "petites" and sell the little balls and patterns that just take only one ball. The pattern is just amazing. You open the little booklet and in there is the pattern and a little postcard showing one of the alpacas who gave their hairs so that we can knit. (I like to say "hairs" because it always reminds me of a woman who used to come into the salon--yes, I was once a hair stylist--and plop herself down and say "I need my hairs cut. They've gotten really long. Yup, Those ones in the front, they're really pesky!")
Anyway, I've cast on for the mitts and lucky for me, I have plenty of young ladies around me who'd love a pair.
In the meantime, for those of you who are celebrating Independence Day, I hope you are safe and happy. I also hope that you don't get stuck at a community pool like the one in our neighborhood. (It's so crowded it even had a Facebook page at one time.) The other day, I had myself in such a lather over the crowds, the noise, the clueless parents who allow their babies wearing diapers into the already slimy hot tub, those who insist on filling the postage stamp-sized pool with huge blow up toys and runover the little ones, yadda yadda. Sheesh, I was so lathered up that I fantasized about stabbing the toys with my size two circulars. Lucky for me, I managed to end the day without incident.
And if you were me, you wouldn't, either. Just look at that yarn and breathe! It works *nearly* every time.
June 27, 2012
Things I Have Learned While Traveling.
This past week, I traveled to Columbus, Ohio for TNNA (It's a Needle Arts Association meet-up) to sign books and see other designers and yarnies and pretty much anyone else who is interested in making a living in these-type arts/businesses. I always know what to expect at these things--well I used to not know what to expect but now I do--and it is actually a lot of fun but tiring too, especially if you're someone like me who doesn't enjoy traveling alone.
First and foremost: The event was great. I got to see some designer friends who I only get to see at these meetings and I loved talking with literally hundreds of shop owners and other attendees for whom I signed books.
Second and most top of mind, to quell my fear of flying and being in situations that make me scared, I decided from the get-go that I'd take a mental note of the things that amuse me while I did whatever it was that I had to do. Not necessarily knit-related, either. Sorry. Knitting is a biggie for me but other things are more interesting sometimes. I mean, really: All we have is knit, purl, knit through back loop, purl through back loop, knit one below, purl one below, twist to the left, twist to the right, ssk, k2tog (the hardest one to type), make one, knit front and back . . .
Oh Wait: Maybe I should take my last assertion back. We have plenty to think about beyond knit and purl. Probably at least as much as an Olympic diver has to worry about while standing on that really high platform wearing teeny tiny Speedos. Har. Please don't get me started.
If you go to the Burbank Airport it is best to have wine before you go through security. Otherwise, you may not get the opportunity to talk up two friendly strangers from north of Bakersfield picking up a niece. Not such an unusual thing, except they hadn't traveled and were both carrying luggage. She ordered a Singapore Sling.
If you're in the window seat on the second leg of a long journey don't fall for the guy smushed in the middle of you and the guy on the isle who claims he's starving. I fell for it and handed him a packet of the black pepper crackers that came with my eight-dollar "fruit and cheese plate." He proceeded to pass wind to the tune of black pepper for the next hour. When he grumbled how hungry he was again, I again handed him the other packet of crackers that came with the "meal." This time a nice buttery flavor. Take a wild guess what happened for the next two hours.
Wait a day before you exclaim to the bartender "Wow! Those Garden Association Folks are really rowdy!" until after the next night, when the knitters actually arrive and settle in. The knitters totally blow the gardeners away. And I'm serious when I write this.
Hide your iPad in your dirty pajamas when you leave your room at the Hyatt Regency, Columbus.
If you happen to be in Columbus during the the local festival ComFest, you might want to skip it.
People go semi-naked. And let me tell ya, I'm pretty sure Megan Fox and/or Levi Johnson don't attend ComFest. I confess I was warned by the locals.On the way home, specifically on the first leg and longest of your journey, pray that you don't get stuck sitting next to the gal reading "50 Shades of Grey." (Bold and italic intentional. Really, really intentional.)
The End.
Here's me signing books at the Unicorn Booth. In total Wendy Fashion, I forgot to ask anyone to take pics until the thing had ended. So, after everyone left, I found my tech editor, Sue McCain, and asked her to look interested in what I was doing.
BTW: Head on over to Jimmy Beans Wool. They're having a book giveaway of Custom Knits 2.
June 18, 2012
Slip-Two Slouch
The great thing about knitting a smaller project, something like a hat, is that if the pattern is interesting and not too difficult that it can worm its way into your brain and chances are, you'll end up knitting more than one of them.
This is how it is with this Slip-Two Slouch. It starts with a top-down swirled slipped stitch crown and the rest of the hat is a nifty slipped stitch herringbone pattern that shows off hand-dyed yarn beautifully. Although this pattern features instructions for two different weights of yarn--sportweight and DK weight--it is really adaptable to other weights of yarn and sizes. Why? The stitch repeat requires a multiple of four stitches so all you need to do is add or subtract multiples of four to adjust your gauge or final head circumference.
Here are the particulars:
SIZE
Average Adult
FINISHED MEASUREMENTS
22" circumference approximately 9.5" tall
YARN
Sportweight Version: Cephalopod Yarns Bugga! (70% superwash merino, 20% cashmere, 10% nylon / 412 yards / 40 ounces): 1 skein Red Eft (Shown on the right)
DK Version: Mirasol Nuna (40% merino wool, 40% silk, 20% bamboo / 191 yards / 50 grams): 2 skeins Fuchsia (shown below)
Make note of fiber content when substituting yarns as silk and bamboo add significant drape to the DK version.
NEEDLES
Sportweight Version: One 16” long circ needle and/or one set double-point needles size US 2 (2.5mm)
DK Version: One 16" long circ needle and/or one set double-point needles size US 5 (3.75mm)
Change needles size if necessary to obtain correct gauge. Be sure to wash and block your swatch.
NOTIONS
Stitch markers; yarn needle
GAUGE
Sportweight Version: 32 sts and 44 rnds = 4”
in Transverse Herringbone
DK Version: 24 sts and 32 rnds = 4"
in Transverse Herringbone
DIFFICULTY
Intermediate beginner
Both written and charted instructions are included. Yarn Stores: Deep South Fibers is my wholesaler and has hard copy patterns available.
Click on the button below to buy a pdf copy. It will be sent to you in a zipped PDF file via email when payment is made or eCheck clears. Thanks!
$5.25
June 12, 2012
My Glamorous Life and Why My Neighbor is Afraid of Me
Shoot. I'm so used to having an in-house photographer, but these days, he's so busy with his own photography and editing that I don't feel like I can or should ask for an impromptu photo shoot every time I want to get a picture for the blog.
So, in the spirit of do-it-yourself-ness I whipped out my iPhone and tried a few finished object shots to show you. This is that swirly herringbone cap that I've knit a bunch of times and this orange one is my favorite one. If you can't see the herringbone or the swirl parts that are created by slipped stitches, just squint and pretend. That's what I do sometimes with my husband. Seriously, if I squint, and the light is just-so, I swear he looks like just like an Indian Brave on the cover of a romance novel (I'm not kidding).
Oops. Out of focus.
I didn't know that this phone had a flash. Must turn off the flash.
You can see the herringbone on one of my heads.
Oh, wait: The last two pics are both sideways.
I can't win.
But the hat is going to be a winner. I have the charts all ready to go and I'm writing it out line by line so those of you who don't like charts won't have to rely on them for this pattern.
Meanwhile: I was looking in one of my little notebooks that I keep in my purse to write down things that I think are funny/fantastic/special/yadda. This is something that I heard HWWV say and immediately wrote down: "She must be a victim of really good self esteem."
The end.
June 5, 2012
Remember This?
This was something I knit months ago, after working up a couple of cowls that I discovered had been done before. I even had the resulting cowl pattern edited and paid the tech editor before I discovered that something else existed that was really close to what I thought was an "original" design.
But loving that whole slipped stitches thing, in this case a herringbone stitch, I put my thinking cap on and reworked the design into a top-down slouch cap instead. The swirl you see at the crown here took awhile to figure out and segue into the herringbone stitch but it was totally worth it.
This pink one is what I came up with using Mirasol Nuna (a medium weight merino/silk/bamboo blend). Since the time I made this pink one, I have made two more. Each with a different gauge of yarn.
So recently, when I got some Skinny Bugga! by Cephalopod Yarns (a fingering weight superwash sock yarn), and wondered what to do with it, I decided that the slip stitch pattern I used here would work well given the way it was dyed.
Anyway, here it is, blocking. This Red Eft colorway is to die for.
Meanwhile: I got to thinking about blocking and displaying knitted things.
Ever notice how many shawls you see displayed on trees?
On bushes?
Fences? (Notably chain-link, oy.)
Socks on fake feet?
Knits are notoriously hard to "display."
In my defense: Here's my Skinny Bugga! slipped stitch slouch cap sitting on top of a rice bowl on top of a vase on top of a patio table in the wind.
I will let you know when the pattern is ready. I plan on including two weights of yarn and a couple of sizes. This is intentionally over sized so it doesn't muck up my naturally curly hair.
P.S. If you think you notice a difference between the top picture and the bottom one, you're not delusional. The photographer in the house is not . . . in the house.
May 31, 2012
There's More to California than, say, Bikinis
I just called my girlfriend who lives in what they call a historic home in Long Beach to ask her what type of historic home she lives in. "Is it Spanish Revival? A Revival Bungalow? Is it Mission Style?"
"It's a Spanish Revival. The one next to me is a California Bungalow."
Then I asked her how to tell the difference between her home and that bungalow next door. "How am I supposed to know? I have a Spanish Revival home. The bungalow has more windows and wood. I just got home from a run and I'm sweaty. Mine is Spanish Revival. That's all I know."
"Real quick and by the way: What's a Hoosier cabinet?"
"Hell if I know."
Actually the conversation didn't go exactly like that but it was close. Who'd have thought that California had more to it than beach babes in sweaters (gasp) or babes posing on couches with pool boys in the background? (double gasp).
Turns out, there's a whole other world out here. And it has little to do with beaches and babes. It's all about the California Revival Period, something that you don't hear very much about unless you're an architecture buff or someone who is more well versed in art history and design than I am.
Stephannie Tallent, in her book, California Revival Knits, focuses on the style, lines, design elements, and history of early-ish turn-of-the-century design of California architecture including the tiles, textiles and colors and applies all this to the design of her 14 patterns in the book.
What I like most about this book is that she talks about how she studied this architecture and took all the inspiration and created knit designs that reflect the period.
I say this because, as someone who has written books on the subject of knit design and who has also sat through endless speeches and lectures by and about other designer's design process--speeches that were so tedious and so lengthy that I wanted to eat my pantyhose--is that the refreshing (and pithy) essay at the beginning of Stephannie's book was worth the price of the e-book or physical book a
lone.
I'm serious when I write this. Stephannie is so clear and succint about the design process that I can say that I have learned from her. Even her brief discussion about mood boards is a revelation.
Meanwhile . . . I have this yarn from Cephalopod Yarns. This one is Bugga! I must do something with it but I still haven't decided. Thoughts from readers are totally encouraged.
I was thinking about a cap for my Pilates instructor but I love orange so much I just might have to keep it.
May 28, 2012
The Five-Year Socks
These socks took five years to knit. Well, not really five total years, but five years in the making from the original thought/offer to fruition. The first time I met my stylist, the one who has worked on all the books with me, Mark, somehow the topic of socks came up and then next thing I knew I was falling all over myself offering to knit him some socks.
What was I thinking? This guy is over six feet tall and must have size 12 feet. After I noticed these things, I turned coy and asked him all about his family. Does he have a (tiny) mom? a (tiny) sister?
Yes! A tiny mom, he reported. I decided that I will make her socks and he'll totally forget about the ones he wanted in the first place! Yes, tiny socks! Quick socks! Yes. Quick socks!
And so I did.
These were a breeze. I sent them off, all wrapped up in tissue paper thinking that I was all done. That I didn't need to knit any more socks for anyone unless I absolutely had to. I mean, I had a book to write and stuff to knit for the book, right? I sent them off and she loved them. I even got a nice card, thanking me. Mark commented a couple times that she would tuck them into the drawer, nicely folded, and didn't want to wear them because they were too nice to wear. Oy. And then another book came and he asked me again if I would knit a pair for him.
Glutton for punishment, I said "Hell yes." (I didn't even shrug. I just spurted: "Yes!")
Aw crap. So, I took another look at his feet: Really big. I then decided these would take some time and they should accompany me everywhere. Through the years, they have been with me to Phoenix, Denver and Mount Washington. They have been with me to Calabassas, even in the same parking lot our guy Justin Beiber valiantly fought off a
paparazzo. They have been with me on a south bound train. They have been with me on my patio (hence the dog hair). They have been with me during Girlfriend's violin lessons. They have been with me for the longest time. In fact, while we were driving on the 101 to Sherman Oaks for lunch with my sister and her family and while I was finally seaming the toe today, I got sorta sad.
What will I knit next?
There's nothing on the needles!
Someday, I'll wear pajamas in the daytime.
(Oh wait: I already do.)
I love my friend, Mark. These were totally worth it. And if he never wears them I will show up on his doorstep at 4:00 a.m. for no reason at all and demand mashed potatoes with extra butter.
(Shibui Sock Yarn. Color unknown. It looks brown to me and it is fabulous)
May 21, 2012
Two Weekends Ago
. . .
we were sitting there working on our balls and my wonderful Temari* teacher looked up over her own ball and remarked, "Wendy, you're not afraid of color, are you?"
One part of me felt a little weird because honestly everyone else's balls looked way more traditional and gorgeous, but for some reason, I needed mine to blow my eyeball(s) out.
If you are curious, those pins right above the dragonfly are marker pins. You use them to create your butterflies and other creatures. Thing is, now that I'm looking at the placement of those pins . . . See how they outline a butterfly that's flying in the same direction as the dragonfly below it? Now that I see it, I'm realizing that I need to change the orientation. I don't want all the butterflies and dragonflies to fly in the same direction. I want them to crash into each other.
Speaking of color, I got two skeins of yarn from Cephalopod Yarns. You have probably heard of them by now. When I wrote Custom Knits Accessories, Sanguine Gryphon supplied yarn for the Skylark Stole, but since then, part of the company evolved into Cephalopod. I love their yarn so much that I grabbed these two. The orange-y one is Bugga! DK in in Red Eft and the bronze one (it is so gorgeously shiny) is Nautilace in Stargazer. Bugga! is a great example of a dk "smooshy" yarn. When I first opened the package and
spotted it I thought I absolutely needed to make maybe two hats--there is enough yardage there, I think--and while I was laying on my reformer a couple of days later (the Pilates type) at the gym I looked up at my instructor and asked him if he'd ever consider wearing a quietly moaning orange hat. He said he would. I figured he'd say yes because by now you all know that for some reason, gym rats in SoCal tend to wear hats--the knitted kind--to the gym and for the life of me I will never understand why.
Thing is, I want to make a folded brim and knit in a saying so on the inside portion he can read something. I can't think of anything yet, so until I do or have a good suggestion, I'll hold off.
But to get the juices started:
"Live long and prosper."
"Santa says 'shop early for Christmas to avoid crowds.'"
"Do or do not; there is no try."
"Knit your own hats, bitches."
"Lay back and think of England."
Meanwhile, I will keep you posted on this wonderful new yarn. I'm working on a huge project that requires a lot of knitting on the sly, so it's hard for me to blog/show-and-tell these days. I hope you understand.
BUT and on another note: If you're around tomorrow (Tues), join me for a webcast at Planetpurl.com. I'll be there (and on video--with makeup and hairdo for sure) at 12 noon EST (or freaking 9:00 a.m. PST) for awhile to talk about Custom Knits Accessories. You can log in and ask questions, too. Plus, I'll answer them all. Unless, of course, you want to know anything at all about quantum physics or how to fix a window.
*Temari is an ages-old art/craft/whathaveyou of Japanese embroidered thread balls. Looks hard, but it isn't. It's actually kind of a hoot.
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