Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Special Gifts for Friends


In addition to the Prayer Shawls I make, I also have added knitting Chemo Caps for friends who are going through chemotherapy. This blue cap went to a co-worker of Windy’s at Tri-Met. It’s made on size 9 needles with Chowchilla yarn. The smooth Brittany needles were very slippery. And so, I might add, was the yarn. I lost the stitches a couple of times and had to start over. Nevertheless, it came out very nicely and is much appreciated. A simple pattern available free from Craft Warehouse.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

Twinkle Toes!

For all the work I put into these socks I think I will be buried in them. First the confusion about how much yarn it really takes to knit a sock. Then the statewide search for more of the same color dye lot which in the end proved fruitless. Finally getting two skeins that matched and starting one sock and discovering it was going to be too big and frogging it. Starting over and breaking one needle out of each set of five, leaving me with only eight (it takes nine to knit two socks). And then finally getting almost finished and discovering, after I had gotten to the toe, that there was a mistake in the pattern and I had to unknit all the shaping.

By some amazing miracle, and help from my friend Linda, I have completed both socks and I have a pair. That fit! Wonders never cease. This was so much fun I am going to immediately start on another pair. I already have some yarn picked out. Saturday I am making a trip to the Yarn Garden for the new Tofutsie sock yarn, a blend of 50% wool, 25% soysilk, 22.5% cotton and 2.5% chitin (from shrimp and crab shells!).

I plan to buy sufficient yarn of the same dye lot. Did someone tell me that years ago? I also plan to purchase some new needles. Preferably steel or titanium or cast iron. I am just too hard on bamboo and the ones that aren’t broken are badly bent. This comes from knitting with the heel of my hand instead of my fingers.

Sock It To Me will continue and maybe this time will be less stressful. I love having a portable project that I can take along wherever I go.

Charity Projects


These are items that go out into the world to unknown recipients. The Yarn Garden supports charity knitting projects from time to time. One was the Red Scarf Project which I participated in. [See January 23rd entry.] I also joined in knitting helmet liners for our troops in the Middle East. The liners had to meet military color requirements. The military issue kevlar helmets don’t have warm wool liners and our service people are exposed to winds and bitter cold during the winter months. Riding in open trucks and humvees, they often encounter sub-zero wind chills. The helmets were sent to the troops for Christmas 2006.