Beach Baby W’illow

Willow and I spent last weekend in Whangamata with Mum and Coco-the-dog. To be honest I spent a lot of the time lounging about reading and taking naps – I hate the sun! – but Mum and Wil did lots of splashy water play and sandy beach play and doggy ball games and playground jaunts.

Willow in Whangamata

Willow in Whangamata

Willow in Whangamata

Babies in elephant-print ruffled swimming togs: TOO CUTE.

Today is JSR’s second day of a new job. He hasn’t been working since a prolonged illness last September, and Willow and I have loved having him home so much, but of course months without income have been stressful. His first day seemed to go well, and I really hope he enjoys the work.

I decided this was a good opportunity to reboot my daily schedule, so now we are all getting up with JSR’s alarm at 7.30am, as opposed to the, er, 10-11am rising Willow and I have been doing lately. We’ll have to see how this changes her sleep times, but I’m hoping for either a return to afternoon naps or an earlier bedtime. I know a time shift doesn’t really affect how many hours I have in the day, but I do feel much more productive when I get through all the laundry and chores before lunchtime!

W'illow sleeve

I cast on for another toddler sweater this morning. I’m making Knitty pattern L’illo for Willow in a bright red wool. Perhaps I will call it W’illow! It’s quite a complex textured saddle-shoulder cardigan and I’m looking forward to the challenge. So far I’ve just got a little piece of sleeve but the stitch patterns are fun already. The only change I plan to make to the pattern is an alteration to the grafting at the centre back, since the half-stitch jog in alignment is rather obvious and looks sloppy to my eyes. I’ll see what other kind of join I can make when I get there – either a tidy seam, or a little strip of stockinette which will graft neatly.

Sage Acacia and Ivory Petal

Two more finished knits! Knitting and reading are the only things I’m really enjoying at the moment, so I’m doing a lot of both…

Sage Acacia Summer Top

This top I finished for Willow last night. I started on January 1st so it’s a properly-2012 finished project :)

Sage Acacia Summer Top

The pattern is Acacia by Georgie Hallam, and the yarn is Spotlight Yarn Bee Down To Earth in Sage. That’s a cotton-acrylic blend, which I would never buy now, but I’m trying to work through my deep stash. I remember getting this for $1.50 a ball on Trade Me years and years ago! And it was a little hard on the hands, but has turned out a more pleasant fabric than I would have expected, not plastic-y at all.

Sage Acacia Summer Top

Ravelry project with technical details here: Sage Acacia Summer Top

Ivory Petal Baby Blanket

The other project was finished late last year, a baby blanket commissioned by my mother for a new baby of her acquaintance. She gave me free reign on the pattern and yarn, so I chose a traditional cream colour, but in a heavier weight than might be expected in order to make a strong lace pattern. It’s a square blanket worked from the centre outwards with diagonal ribs, making four triangular lace sections, with a garter stitch border.

Ivory Petal Baby Blanket

The pattern is Abby’s Blanket by Kirsten Kapur, and the yarn is Bendigo Woollen Mills Luxury 8 ply in Cream. The baby is due in late autumn, so a snuggly blanket should not be a problem!

Ivory Petal Baby Blanket

Mmmm, squishy! And so soft, I see myself using this yarn a lot in the future.

Ivory Petal Baby Blanket

Ravelry project with technical details here: Ivory Petal Blanket

Christmas Knitting 2011

The hats and scarf I knitted for Christmas presents this year!

Christmas Knitting 2011
Clover Slouch Beret for niece Jessie. The yarn is Cascade Indulgence in Denim and the pattern is the Ballard Slouch Hat by Felicia Lo. Ravelry link

Christmas Knitting 2011
Blueberry Swirl Hat for niece Stella. The yarn is Bendigo Woollen Mills Rondo in Ocean Spray, and the pattern is Basel by Woolly Wormhead. Ravelry link

Christmas Knitting 2011
Flock of Fans Hat for Maisie. The yarn is Skeinz Vintage in Wedgewood and the pattern is an improvised beanie shape with a stitch pattern from “Knit & Purl Stitches : 250 to Knit” edited by Erica Knight. Ravelry link

Christmas Knitting 2011
Blue Whisper Hat for Brydie. The yarn is Plymouth Encore Worsted in Blue Veil, and the pattern is Madison by Becca Sheffler. Ravelry link

Christmas Knitting 2011
Heavenly Cloud Scarf for SIL Anna. The yarn is Rowan Kidsilk Haze in Heavenly and the pattern is Party Lace Scarf by Lisa Sisk. Ravelry link

Christmas Knitting 2011
Weaving Through the Storm hat for Dad. The yarn is Skeinz Possum Merino in Storm and the pattern is an improvised beanie shape with a stitch pattern from “Knit & Purl Stitches : 250 to Knit” edited by Erica Knight. Ravelry link

Yes, they’re all blue! I didn’t even realise until the last one – I guess I just like to grab blue shades when I’m picking up single skeins for little projects :)

Two Hats

Coral Crown Hat

This is the hat I made my mum for her birthday. I chose a streamlined beanie style to stay put without fuss during her active outdoor pursuits, in 100% wool to keep her ears warm. When I think about my mum I think of warm colours like reds and yellows, so I picked this coral shade of Cascade 220 yarn and matched it with the simple lace pattern of the Windy City Hat. I improvised a bit with the ribbing, using my favourite twisted German cast-on, a twisted 1×1 rib, and then my very first vikkel braid.

Coral Crown Hat

Otto got in on the photo shoot too. Cats and knitting, BFF!

Ravelry project with details here.

Raspberry Swirl Hat

I’ve also finished another hat for Willow. This one is Basel by Woolly Wormhead, which was the most complicated thing I’ve knit yet in terms of needle acrobatics. I love the effect though, with the columns of twisted stitched swirling like a galaxy, and I’m very likely to knit the pattern again.

Raspberry Swirl Hat

The Crucci Drift yarn I used is quite tufty and has a bit of thick-and-thin variation, so the stitches don’t look perfectly even, but it’s going to get mauled by a toddler so no matter :)

Ravelry project with details here.

Here’s a little video of Willow being adorable putting the hat on all by herself:

Willow’s Words, and also a Hat

A finished project I can show you! This was originally going to be one of my gift knits, but it turned out too small for the intended recipient – I was winging it without a pattern, just making a basic hat shape with some slip-stitch colourwork inspired by a blanket design – so it’s now Willow’s winter hat for next year :)

Aqua Mosaic Hat

I like the way the top swirls in, it reminds me of a little bundt cake.

Aqua Mosaic Hat

And the pattern is a little like tiles, perhaps in a swimming pool, so I’m calling it my Aqua Mosaic Hat.

Aqua Mosaic Hat

Ravelry page with details of yarn and so on here.

Willow’s speech has sprinted ahead in the last week. She’s learned to say eyes, nose, face, neck, banana, cake, car, socks, flower, slide, peekaboo and comb as well as becoming very consistent with greetings and a few other expressions like oops and cool. We only count words when she uses them unprompted and in context, so there’s a lot more she will repeat after us but hasn’t broken out with spontaneously yet. It’s so exciting after only saying cat for months and months! She now asks “wha-za?” (what’s that?) all day long which is a good reminder for me to keep naming objects for her. I tend to spend my day in monastic silence otherwise, which I’m sure isn’t very helpful. I’m told I will eventually want her to stop talking so much, but for now every little word makes me happy!

Plague House

Willow is sick

Usually Willow’s TV time is fairly moderated, but when she’s sick I don’t think there’s any harm spending a day on the couch with a blankie and Nick Jr – and some kittypals. It’s just a cold so she’ll be fine, but she has a runny nose and raspy cough and isn’t sleeping well. JSR has the same thing, and I’m feeling a bit bleh myself. PLAGUE HOUSE!

Willow cuddle
A snuggle for an unimpressed Pippin.

My knitting progress has been slow recently. I have mostly been working on a pair of socks, except it turns out my hands really don’t like small needles. Each time I work on them the fingers of my right hand go numb, then later they ache. I’ve tried slippery metal and grippy wood, DPNs and two circulars and magic looping, and they all have the same result.

Deep Rivulet socks

I’ve got this far on the first sock (including the heel which you can’t see, it’s jolly difficult to photograph the back of your own foot!) and it is very comfortable, but I really can’t afford to hurt my hands so I’m going to frog it and double or triple the sock yarn up to make chunky slippers instead. I’ve never had a problem crocheting or knitting DK/worsted weight yarns. I’d love to do some delicate knitting but it’s just not worth the risk. I need my hands in tip-top shape!

Now, do I make a sensible plain pair of slippers, or the ones with the curly elf toes?!

Orange Jam

Last week the guilt of having oranges fall off our tree finally got to me and I made some of them into jam. I was under the impression that sweet oranges would make a delicious orange jam, rather than stinky old marmalade, but I was mistaken. JSR likes marmalade so it won’t be wasted, and it does look pretty, but it’s not what I wanted. My attempts at orange cake haven’t gone well either, but there’s always fresh squeezed orange juice!

I’ve been doing better with banana cake. This is one I made yesterday, with a new frosting recipe I hadn’t tried before. The method is unusual – you cook flour and milk together to make a thick goo, then stir it into creamed butter and sugar – but the result is delicious. It’s like a vanilla buttercream, but lighter and fluffier and less overwhelmingly sweet. Mmmmmm.

Banana Cake

The Coat of Hate

I finished knitting the Tomten coat for Willow yesterday!

Nubby Forest Tomten finished

She… she kinda hates it.

As soon as we put it on her she tears it off again. It’s actually quite hilarious as she’s never reacted like this to a piece of clothing before. The wool is very soft, not scratchy or itchy at all, and she wears plenty of other knits, so I’m not sure what the problem is!

I managed to get a few photos with my mum to help hold her today:

Nubby Forest Tomten finished
Our best effort…

Nubby Forest Tomten finished
…then some frantic grabbing…

Nubby Forest Tomten finished
…and it’s coming off!

I will put it in the wardrobe for a while, and see if she forgets about her loathing. There’s plenty of room in the sleeves, and if it gets a bit tight I can always pick up stitches and make the front bands wider as I have a couple of balls of yarn left over. We’ll see how it goes next winter… I’m not upset, these things happen when you craft for children, and I had a good time knitting it – until the second sleeve, at least, by which time I’d really had enough garter stitch.

I won’t be able to blog about knitting progress for a while as the next seven (!!) projects in my queue are gifts for various people who may be reading this, but I will have lots of reveals in the coming months!

This week I set up a use-it-up shelf in my pantry. It’s dedicated to various grocery items that I have purchased for one reason or another but don’t normally use – the ones that get pushed to the back and end up being thrown out five years past expiry. I put half a dozen things on the shelf, which is right at eye level, and I am making a concerted effort to craft meals to finish them off, replacing each one with something else as it is used up.

The shelf currently contains:

  • rice stick noodles

  • small tin of sweet chili flavoured tuna
  • seameal custard (which we do eat, but I’ve ended up with three boxes)
  • cornmeal (bought to make cornbread; it turns out JSR doesn’t like cornbread)
  • orange jelly crystals
  • vegetarian stir fry sauce (quite mysterious as we’re not vegetarian!)

In the last few days I’ve used up half of the rice stick noodles in a Vietnamese chicken salad, some of the cornmeal in muffins for Willow and I, and a package of strawberry jelly crystals, so I think I’m doing okay! There are plenty more oddments, doubled-up packets and things nearing expiry so I won’t run out of items for the shelf any time soon.

I also used some of the cornmeal to make an Orange Cornmeal Cake on Wednesday. I found the recipe while searching for other things to do with cornmeal, and since we also have a tree full of oranges it was very convenient. The only alteration I made was glazing while hot with a mixture of icing sugar and orange juice, instead of sprinkling granulated sugar over the top, which looked like it would get very messy.

Orange Cornmeal Cake

I probably wouldn’t bother with this recipe again. The orange zest made it a bit too marmalade-y for my taste, it wasn’t very sweet, and the bottom got brown while the middle was barely cooked. But it was still a cake, which I will not turn down, and it looks nice in the photo :)

Poorly Babe

Willow is still sick. Not sleeping well, not eating well, and such a sad, confused little face. This is the first significant infant illness we’ve had to deal with and it’s awful. Aside from feeling sorry for her and wishing I could make her better right away, the sleep is the most difficult part. We haven’t got her to settle before 11.30pm for the last week and she’s up for hours during the night too, then waking at her normal time. I can’t sleep while she’s chirping even if JSR has the situation entirely under control, so I’ve been getting deliriously tired. (A couple of days ago I prepared a bottle for her… then held it out for Pippin to take. Oops.) We’ve been pulling out the ‘last resort’ card of driving around until she drops off at least once every day, sometimes two or three times. Plus hours of cuddles and rocking and soothing pats and lullabies.

I have the chance to write now because my MARVELLOUS, WONDERFUL, SPECTACULARLY GENEROUS mother offered to look after Willow for the weekend so we could catch up with ourselves. They left at lunchtime and I slept all afternoon, snuggled up with JSR (who is also still ailing) and Otto, and I am looking forward to an early night with my book. Usually when we’re baby-free I like to try and go out and see friends as much as possible, but this time my focus is SLEEP, and a little bit of reading and house-keeping in between naps. Two days of rest should charge me up for at least another week of intensive mothering, and hopefully Willow will have recovered by then!

The only thing of any use I’ve managed recently has been some more knitting, a few rows here and there. The little coat I’ve started making for Willow is coming along well – it looks like a big rectangle so far, but I divided for the armholes just after this photo was taken. There’s some short rows in there too, so it’s not exactly a rectangle, though it still feels like one to knit. (Time for some lace or colourwork after this, I think…)

Nubby Forest Tomten start

The yarn is The Rare Yarns Company Surino Slub in Slub Fern, given to me by my friend Becs. The garter stitch is making a soft, bumpy fabric and I hope the pointy hood will make Willow look like a little wild pixie. I’m calling the project my Nubby Forest Tomten.

Nubby Forest Tomten start

Ravelry page with more pattern and project details!

Sweet Sparrow cardigan finished

Sweet Sparrow Cardigan finished

Actually I finished this 10 days ago, but kept trying to take a decent photo of it on me… no luck, so I’m settling for the flat-on-a-table shot!

For my first adult size knitted garment I am very happy with the result. I’ve worn it a few times and the only real ‘problem’ is that the button holes are too big for the buttons I chose so it tends to fly open – but fixing that is just a matter of taking a scrap of wool and needle and putting a stitch into each hole to draw it in a little. I’m getting some pilling under the arms too but that’s OK, I find with most wool garments that once the initial pills emerge and are removed it all settles down.

The cardigan looks flared when laid flat because there are more stitches in the hip than the bust, but that’s just how I am. When I put it on the A-line shape disappears and it’s got the same amount of ‘wearing ease’ all over. I could have gone a little smaller, especially across the shoulders and upper arms, so next time I will choose a smaller size for the top and make even more of an adjustment to the bottom. My gauge was consistent with my swatch, I just overestimated when figuring out the measurements I wanted.

I feel confident to try virtually any intermediate-level knitting pattern after finishing this. Bring it on! (My next project is actually very simple, an Elizabeth Zimmerman “Tomten” jacket for Willow which is entirely garter stitch and almost seamless, but after that I’ll do something more challenging.)

Ravelry page with more details on pattern, yarn and adjustments!

Tweedy Turn-a-Square hat

I took a little break from knitting my Sweet Sparrow Cardigan last week to make this hat for my brother Ross’s birthday.

Tweedy Turn-a-Square hat for Ross

It’s the Turn a Square striped cap pattern by Jared Flood of Brooklyn Tweed, made with Cascade 220 in Sparrow and Crucci Lambswool Tweed in Mink.

[Ravelry project link]

The round stripes turn into squares at the top – clever!

Tweedy Turn-a-Square hat for Ross

I can see why nearly 9000 people on Ravelry have made this hat, it’s a fun pattern with a great result. I may have caught the hat bug now, even though I don’t wear them myself… can I give a bunch of woolly hats for Christmas in the middle of summer? I think I can :)