Wednesday, February 22, 2012

amazing

I am still amazed at all my work now since I'm in this program. I am knitting better (obviously) and I have started to have a little more confidence. Not a lot. Just a little.

My work use to be such a hassle. Having to reverse the patterns & not knowing exactly why my work didn't look exactly like the patter. HASSLE!

Here's some of my latest work. One of my biggest loves. Lace.



It's going to be pretty I think when it's all blocked out & finished.Its the :)) cats meow! I am so excited! I feel so hopefull that I will be a master knitter. I am trying so hard!

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

the results are in! Packette was in mail!

Lesson 1 ‘graded’

Received my packette from Ms. Arenda & I can’t believe how fast it went to her, she graded it & sent very helpful detailed instructions, and mailed it back to me! Thanks!
The following is a quick noting of her response to each swatch to me.
Swatch #1- The tension is pretty good. I need to re-re-re-re watch the video on it & re-re-re-re-re erad teh blog of her TIP OF THE WEEK.
The increases were properly placed but weren’t worked correctly. I knitted and purled into same stitch & that isn’t correct. I’m going to have to re-re-re-re-re try to learn how to do that.
Swatch #2- Stockinette tension was pretty good. She marked a few stitches on right side. Wrap yarn under the needle rather than over the needle. When doing the type of increase I did I need to do in the first row of knitting, not ribbing. The ribbing was a bit loose.
Swatch #3- The increases on right well made. The ones on left aren’t quite right. Maybe twisted the left leg of the stitch? I don’t know…going to have to re-re-re-re-re-re-re watch the videos to try & get this just right.
Swatch #4- The last 3 increases on the left are great. She marked a column of stitches on the right. Mine weren’t bad, she wanted to point them out. She marked 2 increases on left. the first one is a right slanting increase the second one is the open form of this increase. Left a hole, more like a yarn over
Swatch #5- Yarn overs are fine.
These are something I’m going to have to get better at….but I’m trying to keep in mind that until starting this program I was twisting all my stitches & doing them all wrong. That’s the reason why my work didn’t look exactly right. I had to reteach myself to knit the correct way. I’m going to try to concentrate on the positive instead of beating myself up at my imperfect work. This is why I’m taking these classes so my work can improve.
I will not cry. No one needs to know that I re-knit some of these swatches more times than I can count and they still weren’t “perfect”……

oh & she noted that I didn't need to block all of the swatches. I guess that old habits die hard! I block everything.lol.

Friday, February 17, 2012

of broken foot and tracking mail

I haven't posted on here much because some ugly hit & run incident that left me with at the very least a broken foot. I'm hoping that it's not going to be longer than 6 weeks.

That being said, here's how things stand


I consider this my prep-class for my Masters program & is necessary in my opinion an absolute must for me to feel like I have covered all the bases to have truly earned my masters in this area.
1/13/12-paid for my membership to The Knitting Guild Association and officially starting my road to my masters...basics, basics, basics first
[On My Road To Masters][1] is my blog that I am using to track my progress in this undertaking. lol
AJHoliday1's Channel on YouTube is my reference point for this programs 'how to'.
1/26/12- I don't know if I am prepared enough to send this in. I'm going to have to think on it & re-study and look at the blocks to see if I can fix any of the millions of mistakes. Right now all I can see how I didn't do them exactly right & I don't think that I've blocked them correctly. :( I'm a harsh teacher. I don't know...I'm so unsure.
[HOW TO MASTER][2]
2/13/12-after 2 weeks of hell with my broken foot, etc. after being a victim of hit and run I finally mailed off my lesson 1. I re-knit some of the pieces 8 times because I wasn't satisfied. I'm still not very happy. I'm afraid I will have to re-knit.
Lesson 1: USPS tracking:


03112550000222117453


First-Class Mail®


Delivered


February 16, 2012, 3:58 pm

LEXINGTON, KY 40502 

Expected Delivery By:
 February 16, 2012

Delivery Confirmation™






Out for Delivery


February 16, 2012, 9:39 am

LEXINGTON, KY 40517 






Sorting Complete


February 16, 2012, 9:29 am

LEXINGTON, KY 40517 






Arrival at Post Office


February 16, 2012, 4:26 am

LEXINGTON, KY 40517 






Depart USPS Sort Facility


February 15, 2012

LEXINGTON, KY 40511 






Processed through USPS Sort Facility


February 15, 2012, 4:28 pm

LEXINGTON, KY 40511 






Processed at USPS Origin Sort Facility


February 14, 2012, 12:37 am

JACKSONVILLE, FL 32099 






Acceptance


February 13, 2012, 2:21 pm

SAVANNAH, GA 31410

Saturday, January 28, 2012

01/28/2012- Readers Digest Knitters Handbook by Montse Stanley

In my personal opinion Readers Digest Knitters Handbook by Montse Stanley should be required reading by anyone that wants to learn to knit, learn more about knitting, be ecouraged by seeing new ways to get designs.....

I can't get over seeing pics of things that were knitted in the 1800's that's still in great shape (considering). It's so surreal to think that something someone knitted that long ago is still around, muchless still beautiful. I am still in awe.

Listed below are my personal notes from the book. All rights reserved to the original author and Readers Digest.

Pg 14- The size of stitches with needles depends upon yarn tension. Length of yarn drawn thru.

pg 15- The stitch size of a fabric is measured by the number of stitches and rows to a given square, normally a 4"x4".

pg 16- when designing, check stitches at 2-3" deep sample check row count later over the partly knitted project.

to measure sample
1-places tape (edge) measure or ruler at least 2 stitches away from left edge and mark with straight pin.
2-keeping tape horizontal, place another pin at 4"
(with fine yarns you can do smaller sample measure 2" with extrememly thick yarns you may need 6-8"
too many stitches go up needle size
too few stitches go down needle size.
stitches in repeat xs 4('")______
                                               width or length of repeat.

pg 19- to know how many stitches in 4", then know how many to get certain width just divide stitches in 4" _______
               4(")

yarns affect character of stitches. Never decide on a pattern without first knitting it in the yarn you intend to use.

pg 20- to know whether a stitch is nearly square medium or wide, find out the gauge in 4" divide number of rows__________
                           number of stitches

under 1-a rare tall stitch
1.0 square
1.1-1.2-nearly square
1.3-1.6-medium
1.7 and over-wide

a chart/graph is done on ratio/graph paper garter stitches in not use square

-Problems-
pg 22- slanted- this may be caused by a very high twist in yarn by continuously twisting stitches-stresses fabric
*uneven fabrics-something is wrong with gauge

pg 42-yarns
basically 2 types
natural-animal or vegetal (cotton i.e) may shrink
man made-fibers, acrylics, etc

blends best of both
pg 43
shrinkage test with sample
cut paper to exact size of sample or photocopy eample
wash/dry block and then compare

elasticity-wool is good

silk, man made, vegetal are not

resilience test-
cut an 8" strand of yarn
stretch it as far as it will go, measure to see how far it stretches release and measure again. Yarn that does not lenghten, or remains stretched w/ these yarns are not resilient. ALWAYS BLOCK SAMPLES

page 44
to check if 2 different yarns are the same thickness use yarn gauge or cut short length of both, link the 2 lengths, twist both well->if a bunp is felt yarn is different thickness

page 45
colors
solid
heather mixtures-are very subtle combination of fibers-dyed & blended b4 spinning
twists-are combinations of piles of different color
ombre-yarns have different shades of the same color appearing at regular or irregular intervals.

pg 46
colorfastness test
1 take white cloth (4") fold cloth and wrap 8-12" of yarn tightly around
wash/dry
unwind yarn. If cloth is still white color is fast.

pg 47
lables have
fiber content
weight
cleaning instructions
approx length in meters (yds)
suggested needle size and gauge

the manufacturers recommend a guague of 24 sts and 32 rows of stockinette stitch. An average knitter will obtain this with 4mm needles then use 3.5mm needles for ribbing.

pg 49 join yarn at end of row
when nearing the end of the yarn to see if theres enough left for another row, (2 rows actually)
fold what is left in half
make slip knot
knit 1st row
if you have reached the knot b4 end of row 1 you won't have enough for row 2.

pg 127
if darts are placed in a regular sequence a curve will form

pg 159
vertical stripes are worked in jacquard if they are narrow and intersia if they are wide

pg 162
intarsia-aka geometric, aka tartan, aka collage, aka patchwork knitting
when changing from 1 color to the other wrap 1st color around 2nd

pg 163
jacquard-aka fair isle, aka stranded aka 2 color, aka double knitting

Thursday, January 26, 2012

1/26/12- unsure and scared

http://www.ravelry.com/projects/SugarMomma/tkga-basics-basics-basics

I have posted my blocks project on Rav. I can not tell you how many times I've knit, re-knit, re-re-knit (you get the idea) these little blocks. I'm still not satisfied with them. I don't know if I ever will be.

I have answered all my questions, completed my Bibliography/ Reference List and gone over them & re-looked over them...over and over...so much so that now it's a blur. I'm not sure if I'm making sense or not with how I answered the questions.

I don't know if I will even mail these in. I don't know. I may feel like I need to re-re-re-re-knit before I send them off. I just wish I felt more sure of what I've knitted.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

slow go.......

I'm just trying to keep my head above water.....trucking right along........slow go...........

why I love knitting socks

I have had this love-love affair with socks since I first taught myself to use DPN's, and then later magic loop just so that I could knit them.

I've knitted baby socks, gigantor 6'8" tall brother socks, size 4 little woman mil socks and everything in between. I've used patterns, made up patterns, thrown away pages that I coudn't turn into patterns....I've almost pulled out my hair, pulled out my DPN's because of dropped stitches or some other travesty...

I've shown off with pride socks that I've made, looked back on them years later & wondered how in the world I even knitted that and it stayed together and a million other things.

And all of that was before I found out the truth of my knitting.......as readers of this blog knows I have been twisting my stitches & going backwards (and making things so hard on me!)....

I love socks because I can make them to fit my flat feet & not have the budge where my arch should be...I love that I can knit toe socks & make the pinky toe part of the sock just right for my crooked pinky toe.

socks are small enough of a project that you can take them just about anywhere. When you take them out there's usually a conversation from others wanting to know what I'm doing...etc. They can be complicated so that I have to concentrate with every stitch, or simple enough that I can do mindless knitting. I love that.



Here you see a picture of a pair of socks I knitted for just me with a pattern I made up...



the other foot I tried to duplicate stitch type lizard. Believe it or not people actually can tell that's what it is looking at it in real life....

since learning everything I was doing wrong I can't help but see the millions of mistakes that I've made in my knitting projects. It almost makes me cry to think of the projects I've sent out without knowing I was crossing my stitches and going backwards....and it makes me so sad to know that I didn't have to re-do all those patterns the way that I did in order for them to look like the picture...I just needed to get my stitches right.

out of everything I am most looking forward to knitting correctly it has to be socks. I can't wait to sit & knit a pair of socks & see my finished work. I can't wait to see how they wear & how they hold up....they've always held up so well, and I hope that continues with my new adventure.

Socks can cheer you up on dreary days. Who can wear a pair of brightly colored socks and feel depressed? What a conversation starter to have someone compliment you on the colors, ask you where you got them & then act impressed to find out you knitted them yourself.

if I could answer one question & never answer again it would be
"Aren't they more expensive to knit socks than to buy a pair?"
"yes...they are...but I do love them so & they are fantasic"(says I)

What is your favorite thing to knit?