Knit Meter

Saturday, April 13, 2024

Last of 2023

 

It has taken a while for me to show this finished item because I have wanted decent photos of me wearing it.

This is the cardigan finished in 2023.

 


The yarn is Berocco Folio and given to me at the end of 2020 from a friend of a friend’s destash. I really wanted to make a garment with it but it would have to be colour blocked or striped. This yarn started life as a different pattern in April but was frogged due to size problems. In my Ravelry searching I found another pattern for a cardigan with stripes. It is a free pattern as the designer basically wrote up the notes for the garment she made herself. Nothing wrong with that and just what I wanted.

The black was the smallest amount of yarn had, thus only used for the neck and welt ribs. As with so many of my cardigans, the buttons were the problem; as in what to use. I purchased shell buttons from Sew Vintagely, and they turned out perfectly and no more expensive than JoAnn's.

I am really pleased with the finished item. 



 

Thursday, April 4, 2024

An Extra Finish in March

 

I have said that I want to have fewer projects on the go this year. So when I started this project, I had to remind myself to finish another project and then come back to this.

As I have fewer projects I am working on, I have been keeping them under my side table. I thought it would be nice if I had a basket that I could put them in. All the ones I saw online were not very big and then I remembered that a YouTuber had crocheted some baskets. Off to check out patterns and gather yarn.

This is the pattern I chose. I started with four strands of Noro and the hook size recommended although I did change the hook size downwards twice and ended up using a 6.5mm hook. The base of the basket/bag could definitely do with being firmer. The premise of the pattern is to crochet a circle until it is the size you want then work upwards to create the basket/bag and then add handles. Mine came out to be more of a bag than a basket and next time I will use as small a hook as I can manage without ruining my hands. I used a lot of yarn in this project, most of it that I was given but some from my own leftovers. Mostly DK or worsted weight. If I used a thicker yarn I changed to three strands of yarn and if I used a thinner yarn I changed to five strands of yarn. All yarn was joined with a magic knot.

I worked in a circle until the base was the size I wanted, worked a round of single crochet through the back loop then worked up to created the depth of the basket. After completing the handles, I worked a round of crab stitch (reverse single crochet). Although it would have been nice to have a more sturdy item, overall I am very pleased with it and will likely make more.

I started it towards the end of January, while I was still working on the blanket. And as I only want one crochet project at a time, I made myself stop and work on the blanket and then come back to this. I also had a bit of a problem with one of the cats who thought it was her cat bed.


 

This is a great stash buster as overall I used in excess of 2000 metres of yarn.


 

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Three Birds With One Stone

 

Once again, thanks to sock knitting I have a completed project. Although this wasn’t absolutely necessary for March as I had three completions in total.

I am very excited about this pair as three boxes were ticked off in their making. (OK two plus a bonus.) Firstly with a pattern theme of STEM I was able to choose a pattern from a book I own. This was published in 2013 and I cannot remember how I acquired it. But I have not knit a pattern from it until last month. The pattern uses two colours and I used one of my oldest yarns plus a yarn I purchased at Vista Fiber Fiesta in 2022 to support the dyer. The coloured yarn is from Riverstone Yarns who are no longer dying and the sparkly white is from Lazer Sheep Yarns. This was the yarn I purchased at the event and I was so happy to see that they had a plain yarn amidst all the colour.

The pattern is Symmetry by Stephanie van der Linden from her book Op-Art Socks. When I was just a few rows into the pattern, I was second guessing my colour choices but I am pleased I continued.