Category Archives: sock it to me

My not-so-secret-anymore pal is better than your secret pal!

My not-so-secret-anymore pal is better than your secret pal!

When Carissa e-mailed me about my second package for the Sock It to Me Swap, she asked if there was anything I was craving. Truth be told, I want brownies and cheesecake pretty much constantly, but we’ve tightened the budget a LOT around here and those things aren’t cheap, so I’ve been going without. I told her brownies, but I didn’t think they’d ship well. A few days ago, that darling angel sent me a 4-pack of all-natural chocolate chunk brownies from Dancing Deer Baking Company, along with a Mona Lisa bookmark, a small bar of Badger sport bar ginger & lemongrass soap, a tube of Badger ginger & lemon lip balm, and a blue & brown wrapsack. Thank you, Carissa! I’m keeping the brownies for myself, mwahahaha. None for the boys! Pictures will come later when I can find the connection cord for my computer, the gratitude for the package has already languished long enough. I’m sure Llamaface knows where the cord is. I’ll bug him for it tonight, since there are cute Booger & David pictures to share, too :)

sock it to me swap contest #2 entry

sock it to me swap contest #2 entry

Even though I won the first contest, I still wanted to share the love I have for certain yarns, so I’m entering contest #2, too.

The Yarn Harlot said, at her first reading in Portland, that it’s impossible to have a favorite yarn, that they’re all so different and used for different things that you can’t pick. I knew very little about yarn then and said, “But my favorite is merino!” And she said, “That’s a whole breed! There’s a lot you can do with one type of sheep!”

And I’ve come to realize she’s right.

You can make a cabled chemo cap for a coworker (Karabella Aurora 8 in color 21)

gaylynn-hat.jpg

You can make gorgeous green socks for your sock pal (Cherry Tree Hill supersock solids in Loden)

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You can make a baby sweater (Blue Moon Fiber Arts Socks that Rock). It has yet to be knit, so no photo. I’m planning on using a discontinued colorway and “Fred Flintstone,” which is no longer on the website, striping them every 2 rows and it makes a sort of rainbow, it’s pretty neat.

So yeah, I’m still a bit of a m3r1n0 wh0r3, but I won’t shy away from silk blends or a good bulky wool for a felting project, either.

My pal is awesome, part II

My pal is awesome, part II

So over at the other blog, I posted that I wanted to read Barbara Kingsolver’s new book in preparation for this project I’m undertaking.  My secret pal for the Sock It to Me Swap sent me a copy!  Hooray!  Unfortunately, Powell’s included an invoice in the book that has the billing information in it, so now I know who my “secret” pal is (hence linking to her over there *points*).  I do have to say that she seems really fun and nice (I have yet to meet a knitter yet who wasn’t) and she lives close enough to Llamaface’s mom that next time we’re down there I’m going to try to meet up with her for knitting and tea, if she’s amenable to that :)

Thank you, Carissa!  And happy belated anniversary to you & your man :)

my pal is awesome

my pal is awesome

I’m doing this swap, along with 40something other knitters, and my secret pal decided she’d break my package into 3 parts. The first part arrived a few days ago :)

That’s a really pretty card, some cute (store-bought) monkey anklets, TAZO calm (chamomile) tea, Barbara’s Organics chocolate chip snackimals cookies, and a purple dolphin-shaped project holder.

There were 2 bags of those cookies. Want to see what happened to them?

First there was this…

then there was this:

Thank you, secret pal!

ooh a post about knitting!

ooh a post about knitting!

I’ve started the first item for the book, even though I haven’t heard back from the agent yet. I figure I may as well get a jump on it, because even if she doesn’t accept it, someone will. There is a market for this, I know there is. 65 MILLION knitters in North America (not to mention however many across the globe), some of them have to be less than 5’2″ or have small breasts or just be skinny or know people who are. I’m planning on making this a “wardrobe staples” type book. 5 sweaters, 5 tanks and t-shirts, 5 skirts, 5 pairs of socks and 5 “one size fits all” projects like a bag, a hat, etc. for a total of 25 pieces that can be mixed and matched and worn with all manner of things. One example is a sweater I have in my brain. A gorgeous jewel-tone merino/silk blend (more silk than wool, I want it to shine) that could be worn with a black taffeta skirt for a prom or company holiday party or with jeans and high heels for a date night. Most of the patterns for smaller people that I’ve seen come from “teen” knitting books, and all of the “teen” knitting books I’ve seen are full of fun fur and neon colors and drop shoulders and ponchos. I think they’re all designed by people who [a] have forgotten what it’s like to be a teenager and [b] haven’t looked around at what teenagers are wearing these days. Teen girls are, for the most part, quite fashion-conscious and none I know would be caught dead wearing a sweater that looks like it came directly from the skinning of a Muppet. Not to mention that no one over the age of 25, at least not anyone with any good sense, would wear an oversized tangerine-orange drop-shouldered sweater with a rolled hem and think it looked good. *shudder* I came into my own, fashion-sense-wise, a bit later than most, but I’ve got a good eye now. While I usually stick with a well-fitting t-shirt (black or grey) and well-fitting jeans (light blue, low-rise, boot cut), I’ve seen enough episodes of “What Not to Wear” and sighed enough times at my mother’s own disasters that I’ve got most of it figured out (just a hint: leopard print belongs on pimps and gals in Queens, not on vest-and-tie combos, and CERTAINLY NOT at a wedding, and please for the love of all things holy stop wearing socks with sandals. One or the other. And tevas do not belong with slacks).

Now that’s out of my system (wasn’t planning a rant, but there you go), I want to propose a knitalong. I’ve decided that I’m going to make Baudelaire socks for my sock it to me swap giftee, and I want some company. There was a Baudelaire-specific KAL last July, but the link is down for whatever reason. So if you have some yarn kicking away (haha I slay me) in the stash and want to make lace and/or cable socks, not just Baudelaire, but perhaps something else, I’ll make a button today and we can have check-ins on Fridays, starting next week.

OH!  And one more thing: First pattern for the Allison/WhyMommy charity drive is 95% done.  It’s a doll, bigger and differently shaped than the ones I sell now, knit in one piece from the top-down.  I have to finish writing instructions for the clothes, and then it’ll be ready for y’all to snatch up.  I didn’t get any test knitters yet, so there’s no pictures in the pattern, but I’m sure someone will come through for me!

sock it to me swap contest #1 entry

sock it to me swap contest #1 entry

Why did I start knitting? Because I’m a craft wh0re – crochet, cross-stitch, embroidery, basic macrame, beadwork, and needlepoint were the things I could do then; I have since also learned cardmaking/scrapbooking, knitting, and spinning – and I prefer the way knit sweaters look, when compared to crochet, which is the other fiber art I knew how to do in the winter of 2002. I got a how-to-knit book from the Discovery Channel Store, some cheapie Red Heart acrylic and aluminum Susan Bates needles from The Store Where Evil Dares to Tread™ and proceeded to get more frustrated than I’d ever been in my life. Stupid Cable cast-on. Stupid English method. Stupid book with no gauge written for the patterns. Stupid, stupid, stupid. Then along came another wonderful book. I was in a real yarn shop getting yarn for a hat that I wanted to make for a friend who was stationed in Iraq. Actually, she was in Kuwait at the time, but she was scheduled to go to Iraq soon, and would be spending Christmas there. And Christmas in the desert is cold. So I made her a hat. I got so tired of going around and around and around so slowly that I wound up crocheting the crown. Technically it wasn’t my first project, but it was the first project that I didn’t frog. I made mittens out of autumnal varigated Red Heart. Worsted weight on US size 4 needles. I followed the pattern in the Kris Percival book, but without any gauge or needle size recommendation, I was lost. They would have been perfect for a preschooler; my hands are small, but not THAT small.  Plus, the pooling and puddling of this particular yarn was driving me bonkers.

So this is the Dharma hat, my first FO that stayed an FO.  You can see where I got tired of knitting and just took the “easy” way out.  I would have done the whole thing in knit, but I wanted it there by Christmas and I’d already worked on it for over a week.  Now?  It would take me a day or two.  For the whole thing.
dharma hat 2

After that, I made a few scarves, a few more hats, a purse or three, and then all hell broke loose.  I developed a taste for “real” yarn.  I found bamboo needles.  I started cabling and working intarsia and fair isle.  I started making baby stuff and Christmas gifts and birthday presents and housewarming gifts.  That was nearly five years ago, and I’m so far down the rabbit hole, I can’t even see the sky anymore.  But that’s ok, because I have this lovely wool to keep me warm and dry.

Wouldja liketa takeah surrrvay?

Wouldja liketa takeah surrrvay?

Does anyone else remember that Animaniacs clip? Anywho, I signed up for Sock It to Me, a secret pal swap, and the first order of business is posting my answers to the general survey so my pal knows what to send me :D

  1. What are your foot measurements? (Please give shoe size, length and circumference.) In US sizes, I wear a 7 or 7.5, UK I’m a 38. They’re 9.25″ long and 8.5″ around and the best socks (IMO) are snug-fitting ones made using the negative ease calculations in Knitty’s Universal-Toe-Up Sock pattern.
  2. How long have you been knitting? How would you rate your experience? (Beginner, Intermediate or Advanced.) I started knitting November 2002. I fell face-first into it and there’s nothing I won’t try. Except lace. Because I have an aversion to using pins to block anything (2 cats & a toddler will do that).
  3. What is your favorite color? Your least favorite color? I love most shades of purple, green, and pink, I have a lot of clothes in aqua/teal/turquoise, and I’m on a serious orange kick right now (in terms of socks), but because of my skin tone I need to be careful with reds and yellows. Cranberry is ok, for example, but tomato and salmon are not.
  4. Do you have a favorite fiber? What type? If I could knit with nothing but merino for the rest of my life, I’d be ok. I’m a serious merino wh0re.
  5. Do you have any allergies to certain fibers? I love alpaca, but it makes me itch. And I hate mohair AND it makes me itch.
  6. Do you have an Amazon, or other type of, wishlist? (If so, provide the link.) Nope. I have one for Andy, but this is about me, for once :)
  7. What techniques, if any, would you like to learn? I’d like to learn reverse-knitting (where you don’t flip the work around) and learn to spin better. I’m a dab hand at drop-spindling, but it’s too slow for my taste.
  8. Do you have a sweet tooth? What are your favorite snacks? I have zero impulse control around sweets, especially baked goods and chocolate. We avoid dairy as much as possible in our house, because my son is outgrowing a mild sensitivity, and I try to avoid high fructose corn syrup when I can, but a good chewy chocolate chip cookie or fudge-like brownie (NO NUTS!!) sound really good right now.
  9. What is your family situation? (Children, Husband, Pets…etc.) George is the husband, also known as Llamaface. Andy is my toddler son, born November ’05, known as Boogermonkey on the blog. Poquita is our black & white cat, and Mo Rocca is the orange & white one, and they’re both slightly evil. Boogersibling is expected sometime in March.
  10. Do you prefer straight or circular needles? Metal, plastic or wood? For small projects like dishcloths & swatches, I use my trusty clover straights. I’d love to try some wooden needles that have a slightly sharper point. For anything round, I use either an Addi Turbo or a Knitpicks Option, and for small round things I use two circulars. I can’t stand the Clover circs (Rabbitch’s review of them is spot-on, IMO) and plastic gives me the heebie-jeebies
  11. Besides socks, what are your favorite items to knit? I like baby stuff and toys because they’re almost instant-gratification & take very little yarn. I have yet to finish a sweater for myself, though that is a goal for this pregnancy: make a maternity sweater.
  12. Is there a pattern, (sock or otherwise), that you are dying to try? Too many to list, really. I especially like the Bayerische socks and the Clessidra socks, but my feet are so small that I’d have to have a VERY VERY small gauge yarn in order for them to fit properly.
  13. Do you like to read? What are you reading currently? We’re listening to Half-Blood Prince (US audio version) at night in preparation for Deathly Hallows; I’ve read HBP twice already, but I’ve just now gotten Llamaface into them, so we have to catch up for his sake. I like “smart” books like Cold Mountain and The Secret Life of Bees and Three Junes, but I’ve also been known to lose myself in funny chick lit like Jennifer Weiner’s Good in Bed or Bridget Jones’ Diary
  14. Do you collect music? (On an iPod or MP3 player.)Before Betsy I, my faithful and trusty IBM Thinkpad, became a doorstop, I had over 600 MP3s on her, all downloaded from Napster before Metallica got a hold of them & kicked their ass in court. Now I’m slowly building my collection again. I like that I can load stuff from CD into iTunes and then return the CDs to the library :)
  15. What kind of music do you listen to? Dave Matthews, Dar Williams, Bob Dylan, Ben Folds Five, Maroon Five, and *whispers* Justin Timberlake are in heavy rotation at the moment. Mostly, I like smart lyrics with a good beat or impressive melody, a little vulgarity is ok, but I’ll leave the misogyny (i.e. most rap, with the exception of the Beastie Boys and Will Smith) to someone else. You will never, ever, ever find country among my collection, either.
  16. Is there anything you collect?Knitting books, wooden spoons and pretty glass jars (they’re functional!), and turtles. I also love marble magnets (they were our wedding favors) and maps and postcards.
  17. What are your hobbies, aside from knitting?Reading, surfing the web, exploring the neighborhood, card making, and baking. If we had the money, I’d take dance lessons.
  18. Are you participating in any other swaps or knit alongs? Nope, this is my first
  19. Do you have a favorite scent?I like the smell of most anything baking, cut grass, chamomile tea, and fresh lemons. I can’t handle most commercial smells because they’re too overpowering, especially now with my super-human sense of smell. I used to LOVE bath & body works, especially sweet pea and cucumber melon, but now even walking past the store (even when I’m NOT pregnant) gives me a headache; I nearly passed out in Sephora when we went to NYC.
  20. When is your birthday? (You don’t have to add the year if you don’t want to, LOL.)August 23. And I meant it about the cupcakes :)