This finger puppet is about actual size. I used the pattern HERE but made some changes. I used size 0 dpns and fingering weight yarn and started with two rounds of purl instead of ribbing. I knit it on 24 stitches in the round and the carrot is done on 4 stitch I-cord. I experimented with I-cord arms but found the process too fidgety.
You know I'm always whining about the total lack of any new knitting patterns that turn me on. The last color knitting book I purchased was over a year ago and the last knitting book I purchased was about 8 months ago. I used to gobble up knitting books on a monthly basis.

There are millions of quick/beginner/easy/simple/bulky/fast/hip/dummies/knit a sweater in an hour type of knitting books at bookstores today but publishers have forgotten the rest of us. So when I found THIS book I practically had a heart attack. It is currently on its way to my greedy little hands. I have to knit that wonderful purse on the cover.

Then I searched Amazon and found out about some upcoming books. Nancy Bush and Charlene Schurch have new sock books coming out, Vicki Square has Folk Hats, Robin Hansen supposedly has a mitten book that has all the designs from her previous books, Nicky Epstein has a book just on knitted flowers, and Melanie Falick's long-awaited book of holiday handknits should be published shortly.

My credits cards just ran shrieking from the room.
As you can see here, Peaches is hiding her face. She is currently ashamed to be seen because she is shedding so much. Fur is everywhere. I swear I've collected enough fur this week to build several new rabbits. I have no idea how people have angora rabbits in their houses when short hair rabbits can shed this much. The vacuum is definitely my friend.




I still need to clean the house and do my yoga before the Yankees-Angels play on ESPN. I hope to actually finish a knitting project tonight. Peaches' plans for today involve napping, making a mess with her hay, and eating Craisins. Tough life, eh?
I have so much to do this week. All I want to do is sit and knit and read through some interesting macrobiotic books I found at the library.

I love Anna Zilboorg's color combos. I'm working on a relatively plain pair of socks but using the colors from one of her designs. It is an easy way to come up with a color scheme if you have enough colors in your stash.

This photo is from her book Magnificent Mittens. I've been meaning to show it to you because if you look at the vertical stripes in the mitten's cuffs, you can see that she inadvertently switched which yarn is held in front. In my two-handed color knitting, I always hold the background color (the color I want to fade away) in my right hand and the color I want to be prominent in my left hand. (The theory behind this is that when you do two-color knitting the stitches made by your left hand will be larger and more noticeable. IF you're right handed to being with.) In cases where the colors change very frequently and there isn't a clear background and foreground color, I hold the lighter color in my right hand for uniformity.




I was going through my knitting files the other day and came across some old messages I'd printed out from CompuServe's old Fibercrafts forum. (This was many many years ago - early 90's maybe.) I was just learning how to knit. I had some intarsia questions answered at length by the woman who co-wrote the SWAK intarsia book. I printed out a fascinating message about color knitting by a woman who only knit Kaffe Fassett sweaters. There was a really in-depth conversation about buttonholes of all things.

That was a long time ago and the knitting world is completely different now but I realized why I still knit. The reason I knit now is exactly the reason I started to knit. Because I need wool hats. Because I need some gifts for the holidays. Because I need a certain type of sweater in a specific color. Pure practicality keeps me knitting. It is the same reason I have an herb garden or bake my own bread. Because I need those things. The thing that turns me on the most about knitting these days is my sock drawer. It is filled with all sorts of colorful socks and I enjoy having so many to choose from.

In that vein, I knit something I used to knit often in those early days. A washcloth. Yes, I know, I know. But I needed a new one and I enjoyed doing it. So there. The pattern is HERE.


Spring has sprung here in the mountains. I have peas, dill (for Peaches), and spinach growing already and I plan to start more seeds this week. Our lilac bush should bloom soon. I saw my first hummingbird of the season and Peaches keeps a close watch at the windows for the many cottontail bunnies hanging out in the yard.

I've also been spinning. Here is the angora I've done so far for the Colorado House Rabbit Society. I estimate I'm halfway done and hope to finish up by the end of the month.




The last skeins of angora sent to them were knit into a scarf and auctioned off at a charity event. The director wanted to buy the scarf for the girl who knit it. The girl who knit it wanted to buy the scarf for herself. The director had to leave momentarily so her boyfriend bid for the scarf. He was bidding against the girl who knit it and bidding went over $100. When he won and gave it to the director, she exclaimed that now she could give it to the girl who wanted it. Her boyfriend was crestfallen she didn't want the scarf for herself. So she kept it but felt bad she inadvertently hurt both her boyfriend and the girl who knit it.

Once I'm done spinning there will be plenty for at least 3 scarves this time. Peaches has to thoroughly inspect any rabbit fur I'm working with first of course.


I'm not sure I like the colors for the new mittens. I started a pair of socks but in the meantime, here is a pair of boring crew socks I made during the blog break. I always wanted some alpaca socks and these are knit from Cascade's Lana D'Oro which is an alpaca blend.




I would write more but I'm off to watch Baseball Tonight. I hope you are all having a terrific weekend.
Here are the second pair of Zilboorg mittens done in size 5 (US) dpns and Peruvian Highland wool. This is a nice pattern to use up tiny amounts of yarn. I will have the third pair done to show you on Friday.


I finished the second pair of Zilboorg mittens which I'll show you tomorrow.

ROY G BiV SOCKS










ROY G BiV stands for Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Violet. These simple socks are a good choice for new color knitters because the stranded section is only on the foot. That way you don't have to worry if the stranded part will stretch over your heel. I used Peruvian Highland Wool for the socks in the photo but these socks are a good way to use leftovers of various colors of any worsted weight wool yarn in your stash.

MATERIALS:

Size 4 US dpns

Worsted weight wool yarn: 2 skeins MC - Black
Small amounts of each of six colors: CC1 - Red, CC2 - Orange, CC3 - Yellow, CC4 - Green, CC5 - Blue, and CC6 - Violet.

Tapestry Needle for Weaving in Yarn Ends

GAUGE: 7 stitches to 1" over Chart A. To save time, take time to check gauge.

SIZE: Adult women's size 7-9

With MC, cast on 48 stitches and arrange 16 sts on each of three needles. Join, being careful not to twist. Work K2, P2 rib for 12 rows.

RAINBOW CUFF:

K 4 rows in MC. In CC1: K 1 row, P 2 rows, and K 1 row.

K 4 rows in MC. In CC2: K 1 row, P 2 rows, and K 1 row.

K 4 rows in MC. In CC3: K 1 row, P 2 rows, and K 1 row.

K 4 rows in MC. In CC4: K 1 row, P 2 rows, and K 1 row.

K 4 rows in MC. In CC5: K 1 row, P 2 rows, and K 1 row.

K 4 rows in MC. In CC6: K 1 row, P 2 rows, and K 1 row.

End by knitting 4 rows in MC.

HEEL FLAP: With CC1, knit 12 stitches and place remaining stitches on Needle Two. Turn, slip one, purl 23 stitches and place remaining stitches on Needle Two. (Divide sts on Needle Two on 2 dpns.) Work back and forth on 24 sts of Needle One only.

With CC1, work heel flap as follows:

ROW 1: (RS) *Slip one, knit one* repeat across row.
ROW 2: (WS) Slip one, purl across.

Repeat Rows 1 and 2 six times. After you do 12 rows in CC1 , change to CC6. Begin CC6 rows with the WS row. Work another 12 rows in heel stitch using Rows 1 and 2 above. End with RS row.

TURN HEEL:

With MC and WS of work, P14, P2TOG, P1, turn.

Slip 1, knit 5, K2TOG, knit one, turn.

Slip 1, P6, P2TOG, purl one, turn.

Slip 1, K7, K2TOG, P1, turn.

Continue to decrease in this manner, working 1 more st between decreases on each row until you have 16 stitches on the needle. End with a RS row. Do not turn.

GUSSET: With empty dpn and MC, pick up and K 12 stitches down the right side of heel and slip to 1st dpn; with 2nd dpn, knit across 24 sts of next 2 dpns, with 3rd dpn, pick up and K 12 sts down the left side of the heel then K 7 sts from the first needle. Needle One has 19 sts, Needle Two has 24 sts, and Needle Three has 19 sts. Beginning of the round is now at the center of the heel.

ROW 1: Needle One: knit to within last three stitches of end of needle, K2TOG, K1 .

Knit across Needle Two.

Needle Three: K1, PSSO (i.e., slip one, knit one, pass slipped stitch over), knit to end of needle.

ROW 2: K even across row.

Repeat Rows 1 and 2 decreasing every other row until you have 48 stitches remaining. K 5 rows in MC.

Work 24 rows of Chart A below.


CHART A


Try on the sock in progress. The toe decreases should start when the sock hits the top of the fourth toe. If you need extra length at this point, you can knit more rows in MC. (For my size 9 feet, I added 3 more rows of MC before the toe shaping.)

SHAPE TOE:

Switch to CC4 and K 1 row.

ROW 1: Needle One: Work to within last three stitches, knit two together, knit one. Needle Two: knit one, PSSO, knit to within last three stitches, knit two together, knit one. Needle Three: knit one, PSSO, pass slip stitch over.

ROW 2: Knit even.

Repeat Rows 1 and 2 until you have 24 stitches remaining. Divide stitches on two needles and cut yarn, leaving an 18" tail. Use kitchener to graft toe sts together. Weave in ends of various colors on inside of sock. If necessary, block sock by immersing in warm water then laying flat to dry on a towel.

Make another sock.

Copyright Nanette Blanchard, 2005. All rights reserved.


ABBREVIATIONS

K - knit
P - purl
St - stitch
Sl - slip
DPN - double-pointed needle
RS - right side
WS - wrong side
K2TOG - knit two stitches together
SSK - slip 1, slip 1, knit two together
PSSO - slip 1, knit 1, pass slipped stitch over
REP - repeat
Kitchener Stitch - Thread a tapestry needle with yarn tail from the mitten top. Working from right to left, with right sides facing you, for front knitting needle, pull yarn through 1st st as if to purl, leave st on needle. For back knitting needle, pull yarn through 1st st as if to knit, leave st on needle.

Now continue these two steps until all sts are worked. Front needle: pull yarn through 1st st as if to knit,slip off needle; pull yarn through next st as if to purl, leave on needle. Back needle: pull yarn through 1st st as if to purl, slip off needle, pull yarn through next st as if to knit, leave on needle.
I'm back from my much-needed blog vacation. I did get a little knitting done but didn't manage to work on my angora spinning project.

Here are some Anna Zilboorg mittens from the book Magnificent Mittens. I used Peruvian Highland wool and knit them top-up. I'm at work on another pair from that book now.




I am going to try to blog twice a week from now on. At the end of this week I will offer the pattern for the ROY G BiV socks.

Peaches had an exciting week. She jumped on a cardboard box which couldn't support her chubbiness. Somehow in falling off she managed to rip one of her claws out. Fortunately it didn't seem to bother her at all although she didn't mind getting extra treats as a result of her trauma. Poor baby!



HERE are two free lectures from the Teaching Company - How to Elect a Pope and Papal Elections: Then and Now presented by a Notre Dame professor. I haven't had a chance to listen to them yet but plan to soon.