Showing posts with label knit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label knit. Show all posts

12.08.2008

Radical Lace and Subversive Crochet

"I wanted to turn an oversize, macho, gas-guzzling vehicle into a technological ghost by shrouding it in a white, fuzzy cover reminiscent of women's hard work from another time, another place." - Jerilea Zempel
Fibre artist Jerilea Zempel, known for public art projects that take a humourous and for some, a provocative approach to subjects like violence, war and the environment, was featured on the comedy news show, the Colbert Report last week, in a skit called America’s Fragile Borders. Her art, part social satire, part political activism, challenges viewers to reflect on the meaning of traditional historical monuments, as well as our use of everything from guns to gas-guzzlers. Examples include a piece installed outside a Polish military museum in 1995 called Guns and Rosettes in which she shrouded a Soviet tank with what appears to be an enormous pink doily. The Colbert Report skit, a spoof on American Homeland Security, chronicles Zempel’s experience this past summer. Upon returning home to the U.S. from Canada, she was detained by U.S. customs agents at the border after drawings in her artist sketchbook, showing an SUV adorned in a lacy white coverlet (a piece she now calls Homeland Security Blanket) caused the customs agent to suspect her of being an industrial spy. In October, the Plattsburgh, New York newspaper, The Press Republican reported the details in this article, Keene artist had a hard time getting back into the U.S.

The Colbert ReportMon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Nailed 'Em - Radical Knitting
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full EpisodesPolitical HumorMark Sanford

6.21.2008

Little shells silk socks

I haven't knit many pairs of socks this year but am currently working on these:

silkSocks

They're knit from a very fine single-ply silk yarn which doesn't have the elasticity of a 2 or 3-ply sock wool. To introduce a good bit of elasticity I carry along a single, very fine strand of cotton covered Lycra. After searching high and low for this product last year I finally found a huge cone of the stuff on ebay for $15 which looks like this:


The cone weighs several pounds and there are miles of Lycra on it which will probably last me for the rest of my life. I wonder whether Lycra has a shelf life? These socks are knit on a 2mm circular needle which is a bit slow going if you're used to making socks on a 3.5 mm needle, but they'll undoubtedly be ready when the snow falls.

The little shells lace pattern is quite simple to knit, and is worked on a multiple of 7 stitches as follows:
  • Rnd 1 - 2: K all sts
  • Rnd 3: *K1, yo, P1, P3tog, P1, yo, K1; rep from * to end of rnd
  • Rnd 4 : K all sts

11.26.2007

Magnificent socks

That something as humdrum as a sock can be elevated by love and then walked on, speaks to a certain magnificence. -Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, in Knitting Rules!



This year, after a 15-or-so year hiatus, I started to knit socks again, as it turns out, at a rate of about a pair a month. I've learned a lot about sock knitting this year, almost all of it over the internet. I've learned about self-patterning yarns, hand-dyed yarns, superwash wool, and how to hand-dye or paint yarn with KoolAid or Procion MX dyes. Furthermore, the short-row heel (and toe) is not terribly hard to knit. If, as in my case, you first knit up about 10 practice samples, you'll be good to go. The short-row heel is great, there's never a need to increase or decrease stitches, and the resulting socks look just a touch slicker, in my humble opinion, compared to a gusset heel sock. Self patterning yarns allow you to knit an entire sock with a single continuous piece of yarn and somehow I get a kick out of that. Oh yes, and a pair of socks can be knit on one 80-100 cm circular needle. With one circular needle, no lost needles! By purchasing undyed wool a pound at a time, I save a truckload of money (always a good thing) and of course by dyeing the wool myself in the colours of my choice, I experience a well deserved creative release and am a happier person for the day. I have purchased undeyed superwash wool from these two online suppliers, Angora Valley Fibers and Catnip Yarns , and am presently looking to try other sources. If you have a supplier of undyed super-wash wool that you absolutely love, please drop me a note.



2007
wool socks

This is my sock knitting bible, Sensational Knitted Socks by Charlene Schurch which contains everything you need to know to knit any size and style of sock, in clear language with patterns galore.


Other tricks I've learned and incorporated into my sock knitting are tubular cast-on and cast-off for double rib in The Handknitter's handbook by Montse Stanley and double invisible cast on for k1p1 rib in The Encyclopedia of knitting techniques by Debby Robinson.

This summer, at a quilt workshop I was attending, an award winning quilt artist made fun of another woman who was knitting a pair of socks. "Why are you spending hours making a sock when you can buy a pair for a few dollars?" she asked. I had to do a double-take because I would have expected the reason to be self-evident to a quilter. Go figure.

This week I bought a 1.5 pound cone of very fine cotton covered spandex yarn on eBay. As an experiment, when I get my hands on it, I plan to knit up some cotton socks and some silk socks by carrying the spandex along with the hand dyed cotton and silk yarns. I hope the added elasticity will make them behave like a proper sock should.

9.19.2007

Bricolage

bri.co.lage [brik‐ŏ‐lahzh] n. tinkering, fiddling, construction achieved by putting together whatever materials happen to be at hand; also : something constructed in this way. bri.co.ler [-é] v. to tinker, to do odds jobs; que'st-ce que tu bricoles? what are you up to? bri.co.leur [-oer] n. handyman, tinkerer, putterer.

Not long ago I butchered the short row heel on a sock I was knitting. The heel was badly offset and had to be ripped out and done over. Since it takes me about an hour to do a short row heel on 40 stitches, and because I really do not like to waste that kind of time, I decided to make some stitch markers to ensure that the job would be done properly on future socks.

There are some fancy stitch markers out there ( flickr, something from nothing) a few tutorials on how to make them (Sculpey.com, Wormspit.com, sheep in the city, knitting by geeks) and even the online Stitch Marker Exchange. But I was not in the mood for fancy, and opted for a quick and dirty solution.

miniPunchSets
These punch sets make holes from
2 to 8 mm, in 0.5 mm increments,
which corresponds nicely to any size
knitting needles I might ever want
to use.
Since I am currently
knitting on 2.25 mm
needles I picked two
punches, a 4 mm punch
to cut the marker (out
of a cottage cheese
container lid) and a
2.5 mm punch to cut the
inner hole.
step_2
Here's the finished
product...
endProduct
...what's left of the
raw materials...
holeyLid
...and voila, the stitch
markers in action.
inAction

7.15.2007

KoolAid dyeing with yarn

Kristi Porter wrote a good tutorial on dyeing yarn with KoolAid at knitty.com. I had seen a lot of this in my blog travels and thought it would be fun to try with my kids. It was tons of fun but it really got me wondering about the KoolAid, which in my hands behaved like some kind of industrial grade dye. So, obviously not the best stuff to be drinking.

The yarn below (top left) is a single-ply silk yarn that I love. It's very fine, much like a heavy weight thread. I painted a small skein of it to see how it would turn out. The colours are not as bright on the silk as they are on a wool yarn, but I quite like the results.




Here (bottom left) is a photo of the rolled silk yarn after it had been rinsed and dried. Above right is a small swatch (~2 x 6 inches) that I knitted up with it. I quite like the movement of colour from side to side across the swatch. I think this happened because the length of the individual colours painted onto the yarn was approximately the length needed to knit across one row of the swatch. The colours seem to shift a bit with each row so the end result is that several waves of colour seem to migrate back and forth across the swatch. Is this what's called pooling? Because I like it.

Flavours used:
  • The orange is orange
  • The green is lemon-lime
  • The blue is ice blue rasberry lemonade
  • The purple is grape

Here are the same colours painted onto wool:

rolledBall rolledBall


Here are the same colours on wool with a blast of tropical punch added to the mix:

yuyingSock


Additional links:
http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=koolaid+dye
http://www.ipomoea.org/emma/kadye/kadye.html
http://www.pburch.net/dyeing/FAQ/drinkmix.shtml
http://www.pburch.net/dyeing/fooddyes.shtml
http://www.thepiper.com/fiberart/koolaid/images/colorchart-max.jpg

2.13.2007

Knitting and Snow Sculpture

This snow sculpture entitled "Knitting Family Poems" was created for the 2007 Ottawa Winterlude National Snow Sculpture Competition by the Alberta team of Brian McArthur, Dawn Detarando and Will Truchon (it received the People’s Choice Award).



This is what the artists have to say about their piece:
"These two great hands knitting are symbolic of an essential activity that was typically passed down by generations of grandmothers, mothers, daughters and friends. This act of love and necessity brought families together for conversation by the fire, kept farmers warm during winter and made outdoor activities enjoyable, as knitted garments offered protection from the cold. The poem that adorns the garment provides lyrical play, describing the pleasures and trials of life during winter in this great country."
The poem on the front of the knitting reads,
Knit for
Bonté (kindness)
Warmth
Chaleur
Family
Famille
Love Amour
Life Vie

1.08.2007

Felting finished

What a snap. After finishing the big (Paton Classic) merino mittens I threw them into the washing machine, with the wash water set to HOT and the rinse water set to COLD. I threw in a few towels and a pair of jeans as this seems to be the standard practice according to the blogs I've been reading on the subject. It felt a bit odd (no pun intended) to launder brand new wool mitts, in hot water no less, but I was curious to see what I would get back. After a quick wash, they hadn't shrunk very much so I put them back in on a longer wash cycle, hot wash, cold rinse. The final spin finished and voila! felted mittens shrunk down to just about exactly the size I wanted. One nice thing about these mittens is that while they're still damp, you can pull and shape them a bit before they dry. They are incredibly thick and soft. I love 'em. Definitely something I will try again.

1.05.2007

Bitten by the mitten bug

Over the holiday my sister-in-law asked me if I had any old mittens that she could borrow. She needs a ratty old pair for a hiking trip that she will be taking this winter in Peru. She is going to hike the Inca Trail don't you know. Yes, I am envious! I haven't knit in over five years now and as I sorted through bags of holey old hand-knit mittens (which I have been saving to recover the wool someday), wool and double pointed needles, I got such an urge to knit a pair of mittens that I told her to pick out some wool so I could knit her up a pair. In the past I always put pattern all over my mittens, and as a result there would be a yarn-over every third stitch or so. This time I just knitted non-stop, no pattern. It went fast. And although she said to just knit something functional since she expects to be getting pretty dirty on the trip, I just couldn't bear to see plain empty mittens. So, I cross-stitched a snowflake on the front of each one. Surprisingly, I enjoyed the cross-stitching as much as I did the knitting. It's quite magical to see the image unfold stitch by stitch. I'm not a big fan of symmetry so I gave each mitten a different snowflake. They say no two are alike.


In the meantime I just happened to see a beautiful pair of felted mittens in a local yarn store. They were giving away the pattern with purchase of the yarn to knit a pair, so I bit, and after I finished the thumbs on the Inca mittens I started in on these



And yes, my hand is swimming in this giant mitten. But I gather they shrink up alot. I'm looking forward to felting them as I've never done this before, except by accident of course. I've read that the trick is a good hot wash followed by a cold one, then a hot tumble dry followed by more of the same until they fit just right. Wish me luck.