Entries Tagged as 'Mittens, Gloves, etc'

Endpaper Mitts!

There was a time when patterns were merely described as “fair isle mittens” or “cabled socks” with AC-230 or some such official-sounding number attached to distinguish one raglan and its distributor from another. Knit-blogging has changed all that. Designs now have names of their own. To be sure, there were always patterns like Dorothy’s socks or some such, but patterns with names like Clapotis and Pomatomus have taken on a presence that is so much larger than the sum of their designers, yarns and knitters put together. Sometimes the knits seem like people - just as real (or virtual) as their knitters in the online world itself. Admit it, have you never felt that Clapotis was a slightly annoying French girl, or that Selbuvotter was actually was a hero from some Nordic saga? I find it fascinating how this new interplay of technology, language and communication is changing not only the actual craft, in bringing together so many different styles, patterns and ideas, but also its discourse. I like reading about why a pattern was named what it was - I don’t know if it always adds value to its attractiveness, but certainly, it makes it stand out. DROPS seems to be the only holdout in this regard, doesn’t it - doggedly continuing to mark its patterns as “Design 10-B7″ and the like!

All this being said, I couldn’t have cared less if Eunny Jang had called these the Sandpaper Mitts, instead of the Endpaper Mitts, because they are soft and wonderful and altogether quite lovely:

Endpaper Mitts

I decided to make them fraternal twins, instead of identical. I have been trying to design a rangoli motif onto a pair of mittens for the longest time now, but Life and Work have intervened in dramatic ways, and following someone else’s pattern is about all I can manage right now, it seems. No matter, for I quite enjoyed the mindless peace of just following the instructions.

endpaper cal cup

Details:

Pattern: Endpaper Mitts, from Eunny Jang (free!)
Needles: Size 1 bamboo for the main pattern, size 0 for the cuffs.
Yarn: Rauma 2 ply Gammelserie, in grey and navy. I used maybe 150 yards of each skein.

I bought this yarn in Oslo in 2004. It is perfect for fair isle, and given the way the grey stuck to the blue, I imagine steeking will be quite hassle-free with it. Not that I’m looking to steek anything anytime soon, but just a thought. As you can tell below, the grey is a lot hairier than the blue, I wonder if the extra dye on the darker yarn made it smoother?

endpaper closeup

Modifications:
I omitted one repeat of the long cuff, cause the mittens are long enough. The Italian tubular cast-on really helps to smoothly stretch them past your wrist on to your upper arm. I couldn’t decide which colour to use for the cuffs, and was worried about running out. So I compromised and knit them as mirror images, even though I wasn’t quite sure that this would look good. But in the end, I think I prefer my twins fraternal, even though it’s really not that easy to tell them apart when you peer closely. One seamlessly blends into the other, doesn’t it?

endpaper blend

If I were to make these again I’d probably choose a sharper colour contrast and even omit another cuff repeat. But these are really warm, and perfect for my chilly flat and office and running errands around town. And they go quick.

Endpaper fronts

Hot cup of tea

Sorry for being away for so long, folks, but I’ve been eating. And tearing from city to city. And having endless cups of ginger and cardamom tea in what has been a smoggy and biting, yet glorious Delhi winter, to say nothing of gazing at crisp, sunny views of the great Himalayan ranges from Shimla and Kufri.  Many of the items on the agenda posted last time have been successfully achieved and some pictures will follow, but here are some snapshots to start with. NSG, if you’re reading this, this photo of the gajar halwa my sister made on Christmas from these really blood-red fresh carrots is for you:

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I also ate something I have never eaten before: Sattu ka Paratha, which is like a fried, Bihari cousin of the Marathi thalipeeth. Absolutely delicious.

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Not much knitting has been happening, (so no red pullover progress) but the spouse has been enjoying the cups of tea at Ganga Dhaba and elsewhere in these:

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Specs: Knitpicks Merino in Asparagus, just over skein was used, on size 3 needles. Basic glove pattern from Katharina Buss. As you can see from the other photo, I started off making the fingers really long, into tipless gloves, but abandoned that idea because he didn’t find them that comfortable. They’re very soft and comfy!

Regular blogging will resume soon, but in the meantime, I hope everyone is having a good holiday season, and my best wishes for the new year!

edited: to correct some basic grammatical errors!

A Winter in Blue

bluemohairset.JPG
So here it is, the blue winter set, in Brooks Farm wool/mohair. The scarf, a Jane Sowerby design from Knitter’s Winter 04 was knit last winter around this time, not a time I want to remember with great fondness. Lots of job and home issues, the latter quite literally,  with the worst landlord in the world giving us a horrible time. I always think of him somehow when I wear this scarf, and that is not good. But it was wonderful to knit, very easy. The watch cap is my own pattern, made up as I went along, and the gloves are from Katharina Buss’s Big Book of Knitting.

Specs:

Scarf: Brooks Farm 100% mohair, took about 475 yards on a size 6, it’s about 6 ft x1.5 ft.
Hat: BF 100% mohair + 50% mohair/wool, one strand each on a size 6. Took about 200 yards.
Gloves: BF: 50% mohair/wool on a size 2, am not sure how much, but less than 300 yds. I don’t think I want to knit gloves again for a while. As I finished I was thinking: 42 loose ends to weave in, wtf? But then if you leave the ones in the fingers unwoven, who’s going to notice? Maybe I’ll try Nona’s totally cool top-down pattern someday, but not for a while.

And mohair, I have realised while picking innumerable bits of fibre from my teeth, eyes, collar and furniture, is a royal PITA. I mean, I like warm and fuzzy, but it doesn’t wear well at all. People ooh and aah over Rowan Kidsilk Haze, I just don’t get it.

Here’s a picture of the scarf taken a year agobluemohairscarf1.JPG
I wonder if reblocking and reblocking is the answer, though, because I fear that it damages the delicate fibres too. Ah well, at least it’s toasty.