Sunday 30 August 2015

Going out to buy Buttons

On Tuesday I decided to go out to buy some buttons for my jacket.  I have almost finished it.  I have knitted the button-band and was just about to start the button-hole band and then all that is left is sort out the length of the sleeves.  I have short arms so I usually need to make them shorter than the pattern suggests.  It is odd but most pattern writers seem to think that your arms get longer, the larger the size you are – but this is not the case – if you are large – you may need wider sleeves, but not necessarily longer ones.  After knitting for my mother and sister, I have found out that short arms is a family characteristic.

I normally buy buttons from Banbury Sewing Centre – and I went in there, but I got distracted by the new yarns that they have got in.  I did eventually get to the buttons at the back of the shop – but I couldn’t decide what to buy – I think I will have to finish the jacket first and then take it in and place various buttons on it to see which ones look right.

I didn’t manage to leave without buying some more yarn!


hand knitting yarns

I particularly like the Stylecraft Cabaret.  I think I have seen it advertised in one of the magazines.  I want to make a triangular shawl out of one large module – and so I decided to choose some yarns for this project.  The Sirdar Divine that I used for my wrap was particularly lovely – so I have chosen 2 more shades of that to try – a red and a green. 

Sirdar Divine


Stylecraft Cabaret

Rico creative reflection

Wasn’t I supposed to be finishing those jackets on my spare bed?!

Monday 24 August 2015

Noro Kureyon Jacket – Progress Report

I am still knitting the Noro Kureyon jacket that I started last week.  I have knitted the back and the 2 fronts and I am now working on the sleeves.


Noro Kureyon knitted sleevs

I decided to knit both sleeves at the same time so that I can make sure that they end up similar.  I was going to say “the same” – but that is very difficult to achieve with this yarn – I just want to make sure that each sleeve has a similar number of stripes and that the colour changes on approximately the same row.


double moss stitch sleeves

With Noro yarn you can either try to achieve a match or you can go completely the other way and make sure the sleeves and fronts of a jacket are not similar at all.
I am glad that I had so much yarn because I have found that several balls have knots in them.  This wouldn’t matter so much if the ball then continued with the same colour but it doesn’t.  I can understand that the yarn might break in production but I don’t understand why it isn’t knotted at that point instead of attaching a completely different colour.
I want to try to finish this jacket before I get bored and start something else.  I still have 3 partly-finished jackets on the bed in my spare room – I don’t want this to be another one.
I read in the latest issue of Simply Knitting magazine that designer Rita Taylor likes to knit while listening to sport on the radio.  This week I have been doing the same.  If the sport is on the radio – it is being described to you and so you can concentrate on your knitting without having to look at the screen!

Sunday 16 August 2015

Noro Kureyon Jacket

About 3 years ago I bought 22 balls of Noro Kureyon in Shade 242 – which is black, grey, red, green and brown.


Noro Kureyon shade 242

I intended to use the yarn for a coat using a Sally Melville pattern.  However, I didn’t start it and now I think I probably wouldn’t wear it – so I have found another pattern for a jacket instead.  It is a Debbie Bliss pattern from her book called Home.  I was surprised to find garments in this book – as the title suggests cushions and throws etc.  It does have those as well, but it has a few clothes.

Noro Kureyon knitted jacket


I have started the back.  It is double moss stitch and I may take it out yet, but at the moment I am happy with it.  I was a bit worried about the sizes – I was going to do the middle size of 3, but I have decided to make it a couple of inches smaller – and so I am now doing a size which is larger than the smallest size, but not so large as the middle size!  This means I will have to alter the fronts correspondingly.  I am terrible – I can’t leave a pattern alone. 

Sunday 9 August 2015

Shell-Shaped Modular Wrap – Finished Version

This week I have finally finished my shell-shaped modular wrap. 


knitted shell modules

To recap – this wrap was knitted in Sirdar Divine and was based on a pattern for a baby’s blanket which I found in a booklet that was free with Simply Knitting magazine.
In the end I used slightly more than 4 balls of the yarn.  I knitted 4 rows of garter stitch at each end of the wrap to finish it off. I did think about adding an edging to the sides because the irregularity of the yarn makes them a bit wiggly – but in the end I decided that an edging wouldn’t improve them.

Sunday 2 August 2015

Knitting Mysteries by Maggie Sefton

I love yarn, I love knitting, but I also love books.  This week I have been reading the latest of Maggie Sefton’s knitting mysteries that is available in paperback: Yarn Over Murder.


knitting mysteries Maggie Sefton

I quite enjoyed it, but it wasn’t as good as some of her other books as there was not enough knitting in it for my liking!
When I finished it – I went back to the beginning of the series and started re-reading some of the early books in the series.  The first one is Knit One, Kill Two which is excellent.


knitting mysteries Maggie Sefton

Some of the books have great titles.  I think Maggie Sefton ran a competition to come up with suggestions for future book titles.
In the stories, the heroine: Kelly, lives in a cottage just across the street from a yarn store – wouldn’t that be wonderful?

I am still knitting my wrap, but it is nearly finished – I know I said I would have finished it by now but this week I seem to have been reading about knitting instead of doing it!!