More Lace!
31-Jan-08
First up is a lace shawl I knitted. It’s a one-skein wonder, in that the pattern only calls for a single skein of yarn. The pattern is a little inaccurate, though. Not in the design itself, but in the amount of yarn I personally needed– I could easily have increased the size by another row of the feathery part at the bottom.

Edging detail:

Because I love beads, I used them in this shawl– they look silver, but are actually peach. The contrast with the teal makes them brighten to look silvery.
And I participated in the tatitandsee tat-along. The finished product is a hippo:

Mine is… well, it’s beginner art, yes?
I’ve also been working on a wrist cuff bracelet for a swap. Things were going along pretty well, I thought, and I was about 90% finished, with the swap deadline closing in FAST.

Well, sure enough:

Yep, right there in the middle of the bracelet, my knots came untied and one of my rings came unraveled. I’m going to start over with a more robust design (I was freeforming this one), and hopefully it will come together quickly so I can send it to my swap partner.
In the midst of these projects, I decided to tackle the Queen Kahuna Crazy Toes and Heels toe-up sock method on 2 circular needles. My first pair using this method:

This is using hand-dyed KnitPicks bare sock yarn. I dyed it back in August, and only now got around to knitting with it. I liked the yarn, and am glad I have two more balls of it in different colors. This pair of socks, which only goes partway up my calves, used exactly one half of the yarn I had for it. You know what that means, right? Yep– another pair of socks is in my future. One thing I don’t like about the socks is the heel– it is a bit “pointy.” I understand from the book I’m using that this pointiness can be adjusted for, which is why I cast on yesterday for another pair of socks in the exact same yarn, using the same needles and gauge:


More next time, on our trip to the Kennedy Space Center this weekend, meeting an astronaut, and learning how to drive a 16 ton vehicle.