Thursday, March 31, 2011

In the Nick of Time

I did it!  I finished my second Angee sock before March ended.  I cast on and knit the ribbing Sunday night, continued through the week, and bound off about 20 minutes ago - Thursday, March 31st at 10:20-ish PM.  Four days!  One sock in four days.  And I must say, it's a long sock and used two full 50g skeins of Patons Crox FX yarn plus 10 or so grams of a third.  (Thank goodness I was able to pick one up shortly finishing the first sock in the same dye lot.  Plus the yarn went on clearance at Michael's so I wouldn't have been able to get it now.)

I don't mind the mismatched striping, but the toes bug me a little.  One toe striped and the other didn't.  The one that didn't was actually the start of the 3rd skein of yarn and didn't have any striping in that first run of color.

Completed "Angee" socks
(Shows one striped & one non-striped toe)

Another view of my Angee socks

I am now set up to cast on tomorrow for my April socks!  Although I have an Usborne book fair on Saturday and need to be prepped and packed up by tomorrow night to leave the house around 7:00 AM on Saturday.  I'm determined to get all of book fair stuff ready to go before casting on more socks.  The only question is...
Can I resist???

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Angee's Mate

Many moons ago, I began a noble quest to bring into creation that which would robe the dogs that carry my frame.  Alas, afore the completion of a copper mate to my initial endeavor, I found my enterprise lacking, thus delaying the realization of my goal.

Okay, fine.  In February I started a pair of socks, finished one, and got total second sock syndrome and never even cast on the second one.  (Somehow that sounds much lamer than the first paragraph.) 

Here's the first, lone sock...

My first "Angee" sock from
Cookie A's "Sock Innovation"

Since I finished both my March KAL socks and it wasn't April 1st yet, that left me with four days before I could cast on my new socks.  Then I heard this tiny voice calling me from a project bag in the corner.

"I'm lonely!  Knit me a mate!  It's me - Angee!"

I'm a sucker for sock whining, so I did it.  I cast on my second Angee sock Sunday night!  The leg is almost done and I'm hoping tonight to start the heel flap.  If I'm really, really good and become a knitting machine the next two days, I may finish - or get very close to finishing - the pair by this weekend.

Just in time to cast on Mona.

And Bavarian Cables.

And maybe Skew....

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Done!

I did it!  Thelonious socks are done!  I just finished my cast-off posts in a couple of Ravelry forums and had to post them here, too.  They look better in person, but the pattern would have been much more visible in a solid color.  Oh well, live and learn.  Next time I'll knit them in non-variegated yarn.  (Next time - ha ha!  That's funny!)

Home Stretch & April Sock Planning

I'm in the home stretch with my Thelonious socks.  Only another 1/2" to go before I start the toes.  My goal is to finish them by the end of the weekend, which means before I go to bed tonight.  I just walked in from an Usborne book home party, so hopefully I'll have enough time after dinner to get them done.  I'm so excited!  And just in time for the April knit-a-longs (KALs) to start...

For April, I plan to knit two or three pairs of socks for various KALs.

Sock #1
Wendy Johnson's Bavarian Cable Socks from "Socks from the Toe Up"

Stock photo for Bavarian Cable Socks

My plan so far is to knit them in a dark, solid teal color.  I have some Lions Brand Sock-Ease yarn in colorway "Snow Cone."  This is the same yarn that I used for March's Ribbed Ribbon socks, just a different color.  Not my favorite yarn to work with, but it's thin, and I find that Wendy's socks run a smidge big for my narrow feet so a thinner yarn will give me a smaller gauge which gives me smaller socks.
Sock-Ease Yarn in Snow Cone

Sock #2
Cookie A's Mona socks from "Knit. Sock. Love."

Stock photo for Mona Socks

I'm going to knit them in purple so that not only will they qualify for the "Knit Sock Love" KAL, but I can also use them for the "Solid Socks" KAL since their sock color for April is purple.  Purple isn't my favorite color, but if I end up hating them, they'll become a gift.

Knit Picks Gloss in Cosmos

 And even though two pairs of socks in a month was an accomplishment this month (if I finish tonight, I'll have 4 days to spare!), there is a third pair I'd like to knit for the Sock Knitters Anonymous KAL.  Their April theme is unusual construction - socks knitted differently than the usual toe-up or cuff-down construction.  I really want to knit a pattern called Skew - they're in my socks-to-knit queue - and they fit the requirements.  Check them out - instead of being knit straight across the foot, they're knit on a diagonal.

Sock #3
Lana Holden's Skew socks

Stock photo of Skew socks
And take a look at the heel - that's definitely an unusual construction!


I have some awesome rainbow self-striping yarn that I want to use just like the person who knit these socks did:


How awesome that I have the same yarn in my stash - woohoo!  (Okay, fine, I admit it.  I don't just happen to have the same yarn.  I purposely bought it so I could make these socks.  So there.  You got me.  But I bought it a couple of weeks ago, so officially it is stash yarn now.  HA!)

Enough typing.  More knitting.  Thelonious.... I'm comin' for yoooouuu!!!!

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Knitting Field Trip #1

Today, Michele, Leigh and I expanded our usual knitting gathering to include our first field trip.  We visited the Sheep Shack in Holden, MA.  While the sock yarn selection wasn't as extensive as the one at The Yarn Shop in Uxbridge (our next field trip location), the woman working there was extremely nice and helpful.  We managed to find some yarn and pattern books (books were 50% off!) to buy. 

Leigh, Michele & Me

I picked up "Around the World in Knitted Socks" by Stephanie van der Linden, which has been on my wish list.  It has a lot of mutli-colored/stranded/fair isle patterns, so I won't be getting to it anytime soon.  It's my goal sock book.  (Probably even more so than "Knit. Sock. Love.")

I also got my first hank of Dream in Color Smooshy sock yarn in a beautiful green colorway called "Go Go Grassy."  It really does feel very smooshy!  The sales woman even wound it for me into a cute yarn cake.  Love it!  Now I just need the perfect pattern...

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Keeping Knit Picks In Business

The mailman just brought my latest Knit Picks order.  The two knitting needles and the bottom skein of yarn (Tree Fort) were for my Mom's birthday present.  I really wanted the rainbow yarn to make knee-high socks using a pattern called Skew, and then it was so close to free shipping that I added a couple more yarns rather than pay the shipping.  (How's that for justification???)

Stroll Sport - Neapolitan (2)
Stroll Felici - Rainbow (3)
47" circulars - sizes 0 and 1
Stroll Tonal - Golden Glow
Stroll Handpainted - Tree Fort

And if that's not enough, tomorrow Michelle, Leigh, and I are knitting and then going on a field trip to a LYS (local yarn store) - The Sheep Shack in Holden.  Good thing I had 26 people in last Wednesday's Zumba class.  One hour of Zumba equals yarn for eight pairs of socks - woohoo!

As for actually using some of my growning stash of sock yarn...

Last night I knit the heel flaps for my Thelonious socks.  Because the heel required shifting stitches (unlike some patterns where you just work the heel on one existing side of stitches), I had to take the socks off the circular needle onto dpns (double pointed needles) to readjust.  Since they were on dpns anyway, I decided to work the heels individually and then return both socks to the circular needle to finish working in the round once I get to the feet.  Here's a picture showing both socks with finished heel flaps:


You can see one red needle at the top of each sock which is the end of the heel flap.  There are two needles in each sock about 2" lower where the leg ended.  The extra needles are just stuck through the socks going up and down in the photo so I don't lose them.

Even though both skeins of yarn are from the same dye lot, you can see they obviously didn't start in the same point of the color patterning.  The left sock started in a darker portion and now is working into a lighter section as shown by the remaining skein above it.  The right sock started out lighter and now is working into the darker yarn.  Veeeeery interesting...  I guess we'll see how they look when they're done!

Monday, March 21, 2011

UFO becomes FO!

Stymied by the title of this blog post?  I'll bet most people never realized that there is a whole world of knitting terminology and acronyms.  We covered "frogging" in an earlier post, but I've discovered even more!

Tink - When you make a mistake and have to un-knit a section of a project.  Here's the cool part - "tink" is "knit" backwards.  Love it!

UFO - The dreaded "unfinished object" that sits around gathering dust and taking up needles that could otherwise be used to start another sock project that could also languish.

FO - Hallelujah!  A "finished object!"  It's done, all set, cast off, finito!  The project can now be worn, shared, given as a gift, or otherwise moved into the happy world of DONE.

Check it out, I have a FO!  Last night I finished my Ribbed Ribbon socks!  My wonderful husband, who is just getting over a cold, even stayed up an extra hour to keep my company while I furiously knitted to reach my goal of finishing the socks over the weekend.  I used a sewn bind-off to keep the top edge of the socks stretchy and make sure they'd go over my heel easily.  It was the first time I used it, and I kinda liked it!

Are you ready to see my socks?  The lighting wasn't very good because it was 11:00 PM, but the pics will give you a decent idea of how they turned out.  Drum roll, please!


"Ribbed Ribbon" socks - - pattern by Wendy Johnson
Cast on: 3/1/11
Cast off: 3/20/11

First thing this morning, I posted cast-off posts and pictures on the three March KALs for which these socks are eligible. Ta-da!  Cross your fingers for me that mine get picked in the random drawing to win some free sock yarn.

For the remainder of the month, I'll be continuing to work on my Cookie A. "Thelonious" socks, as well as the pink "I Heart Toe-Up Socks" (another Wendy Johnson pattern) that has been one of those stunted UFOs for a month now.

Come April, I'll be casting on Wendy Johnson's "Bavarian Cable Socks" for the "Socks from the Toe Up" KAL plus Cookie A's "Mona" socks for the Knit Sock Love KAL.  I'm thinking a bright teal-y color for the Bavarian Cable, and I'm not sure for the Mona socks.  The yarn will have to be solid or semi-solid/heathered for the pattern to show up.  I do have a nice Gloss fingering yarn from Knit Picks in the Masala colorway.  Here's the swatch from their web site, but the color is actually prettier in person.

Masala Gloss color swatch from Knit Picks swatch

Oh, I just realized that I have pictures of the yarn wound into two "cakes" using my new ball winder!  (An early Mother's Day present from Chris.)  And that brings us to another fun knitting term.

Cake - The cylindrical "ball" of yarn created by a ball winder.  It sits flat, the yarn pulls from the center, and it looks like a little yarn cake.

One of two Masala Gloss yarn cakes

It's so cute, I could just eat it up!  And doesn't the color look so much better in the photo of my actual yarn than the swatch from the Knit Picks site??? 

Okay, I'm hungry so I need to go have breakfast and then fold laundry and knit.  Thelonious, here I come!

Friday, March 18, 2011

What's With The Zombie Yarn???

I had no idea that zombie-themed yarn even existed until yesterday and my discovery of the Zombie BBQ colorway from Lorna's Laces.  But a quick search on Etsy.com turned up at least two other zombie-esque yarns, including this awesome one:

Zombie Apocalypse by Out of Step Dyeworks

I love the gray/white/hint-of-yellowy-green mottled look with a splash of red thrown in here and there.  Why yes, I am dead and decaying, thank you very much.  And before I forget... BRAINS!!!  Chomp chomp blood spatter goodness.  

I had to search to see what people have knit using this yarn.  (Have I mentioned yet what a fabulous search Ravelry has?)  Check out what I found!  My favorite - socks!  And even better - Zombie yarn socks!


But I didn't buy it.  I want to.  But I didn't.  (Trying hard not to type "yet.")  It did go into my etsy favorites which gives me at least a sense that I did something about my yarn lust, but deep down I know it's a bottomless pit that I'll never order from because I already have a lot of sock yarn and just ordered Zombie BBQ yesterday.  

But if anyone is looking for a gift for me -  you know, just because you love me or maybe want to do a random act of kindness....  Click here to make me happy.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Going to a Zombie BBQ

I discovered the freaking coolest yarn colorway today.  It's by Lorna's Laces and the color is Zombie BBQ.


I checked out a few projects on Ravelry where people have used this yarn. 


Tell me - how cool is this yarn?!?!  I had to have it.  So I searched for it.  And yes, I found several sites that carried the correct brand of yarn.  They even had the zombie colors... just not in stock.  Out of stock.  Backordered.  Unavailable.  But such was my mania, my desire for Zombie BBQ that I continued my search.  At last, I found it at tightlywoundyarn.com - able to be added to my cart and ordered!  A shiver of zombie satisfaction rolled down my spine as I placed my order.  My most expensive sock yarn to date.  But it will be worth it, oh yes.  

I shall have zombie socks.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Sock Yarn Doesn't Count As Stash

I got yet another order from Knit Picks (knitpicks.com) today.  This order originated when I found out that they carried chart holders - a magnetic case with a snap closure that you can put your knitting charts in and keep your place with bar magnets.  I've been making copies of my charts then using post-it notes to keep track of where I am.  It works great until the post-its start losing their stick and falling off.  There's nothing more fun than pulling a paper chart out of my knitting bag only to discover that I have no idea where I left off so I need to "read" my last row of knitting to figure out which of 20 rows I finished last.  Uh-huh.

Anyway, I absolutely needed the magnetic chart holder.  Then my husband informed me that he had planned on buying me a ball winder for Mother's Day.  I graciously informed him that he can buy it now and then wrap the empty box to give to me in May.  :)  I also needed one more long circular needle in a size 1 since the ones I have are bamboo and I hate them.  Skinny bamboo points feel splitty to me, I'm afraid I'm going to break them, and they are not nice when doing k3tog (knit three stitches together) or ptbl (purl through back loop).  And since there's free shipping with orders of $50 or more, why pay $7-8 shipping on a $40 order when you can get $10 more stuff and pay nothing for shipping?  Am I right?  And of course a little extra yarn somehow ended up in my cart as well.

KnitPicks Stroll sock yarn in Peapod (2) & Midnight Heather (2).
Ball Winder
Stroll sport sock yarn in Mink Heather (2)
Stroll hand-painted in Make Believe (1)
Stroll tonal in Gypsy (1)
Emergency fix keychain
Magnetic Chart Keeper
Nickel-plated 47" size 1 circular needles

I had another order at the beginning of the month to get some fabulous multi-colored yarn and some needed notions.
Masala Gloss (2), Watermelon, Tree Fort
Deep Waters, Queen Anne, Juice Box, Springtime
Stitch markers, 47" circulars size 2 & 3, tape measure
Opal Heather Palette Yarn (2)
Flash Dance Sock Kit (Blue Yonder, Cartoons, 2 Sorbet Multi) 

Then there was this yarn store I discovered in Uxbridge, MA called The Yarn Shop.  I was out for a chiropractor appointment two Mondays ago and decided to check it out, so I took an alternate route home past the store.  I really had to fight the urge to leave empty-handed, but my patriotic duty to support a small, local store got the best of me.


Is it wrong to want to roll around in my sock yarn???

My sock yarn plastic bin is just about full, which means no more purchases until I use some.  With four pairs of socks in progress, I'm bound to finish at least one soon, which means I'll be able to cast on another.  But as any serious sock knitter will tell you, sock yarn does not count as stash.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Darn Yarn

I worked on my new Thelonious socks for a couple of hours yesterday.  After a little clarification from someone on the Ravelry forum for this KAL, I started working on the leg part.  It's actually a very cool pattern that "travels" down the leg where two parts eventually intersect and become a single pattern the rest of the way.  Unfortunately, it seems as though I have not chosen the best yarn for these socks.  The variegation is obscuring the pattern which puts me in the position where I need to decide if I'm going to continue or frog and start over with different yarn.

Both cuffs and a few rows of the leg/ankle

Close up.  Can you see the pattern along the edges?

Notice that the skeins of yarn also did not start in the same place in their color cycle, so one cuff is darker than the other.

Decisions, decisions....

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Knitting ADD Strikes Again

Yesterday was a good knitting day.  I spent the early afternoon with my knitting buddies, Michele and Leigh, at Michele's house starting with lunch (I made lentil soup), and then an hour and a half knitting.  Leigh wanted to do some 2-at-a-time socks and needed help starting, so I showed her a video on how to cast on for those starting with the cuffs, which I hadn't done yet since my 2AAT socks have all been toe-up.  Michele was working on the Petra Hat that she had started a week or two ago, so I helped her switch from circulars to double pointed needles for the crown decreases.  She ended up finishing the hat before I left - it turned out so cute!

I had decided not to cast on the socks from the 2AAT KAL since I wasn't feeling the Melissa Morgan-Oakes 2-at-a-Time socks book that has the pattern they were knitting.  So I worked a few rounds of my Ribbed Ribbon socks while I was at Michele's.

When I got home, I grabbed the mail and there it was - Cookie A's latest book - Knit. Sock. Love.  And it just so happens there is a KAL knitting the patterns from that book.  It's their third month and they are knitting a sock called Thelonious.

Thelonious sock photo from Knit. Sock. Love.

So I did it.  I cast on another sock project.  Hello, Thelonious!  Coincidentally, they are worked from the cuffs down instead of two-up, and I had just learned how to cast them on to help Leigh.  It was a sign.  It was meant to be!

Now, Cookie's patterns in this book are a bit more... involved than her first book, and some of those are fairly complicated.  The Thelonious pattern calls for 10 stitch markers per sock, which means I needed 20 in order to work both socks at the same time.  I actually got it down to 16 total since I didn't need ones for the start and center of each round using magic loop.

Thelonious cast-on with Knit. Sock. Love. book

Close up of one Thelonious sock stitch markers

You're impressed, aren't you?  Don't be - I'm not that far in yet.  I'm just crossing my fingers that I can pull this pattern off and I don't have to frog them!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Wednesdays - Not Just Hump Day

It's Wednesday!  I love Wednesdays because most weeks it's the day I get together to knit with my friend, Michele.  I started teaching Michele to knit a couple of months ago - I think it was the middle or end of January.  She picked up very quickly and after 3-4 weeks of learning and practicing, she made her first project - a washcloth.  After finishing one for each of her two children, I had her start a new project last week - the Petra Hat from a pattern on Ravelry.  It's the one I mentioned in yesterday's blog entry, except I rewrote it so that she could work it from the bottom up rather than starting at the top of the crown.  The reason for this is that she had only worked with straight needles so far, but would have had to start with double pointed needles working crown-down, and they can be downright fiddly to work with at the casting-on point.  By starting bottom-up with a split brim, she could use a circular needle but work back and forth as she had done on straight needles, then join and work in the round, then move to double pointeds when the circumference gets too small for the circular needle.  It's a much less stressful way to be introduced to the dpns.

Anyway, it's our knitting day!  Recently we've also been joined by Michele's (and my) friend, Leigh.  The three of us used to meet regularly at the cafe in Barnes & Noble back in November to work on our novels.  We all managed to start and finish at least 50,000 word fiction novels in a single month thanks to support, companionship, and caramel macchiatos.  Leigh works at Michael's and is a knitter herself, so we've become a little knitting group.  It's nice to have time set aside to work on projects and to also be social.

We usually meet in the morning, but today we're meeting at 11:30 for lunch and knitting.  Anytime food is added to an event, it makes it that much better!  I'm taking a pot of lentil soup that's currently simmering on the stove.


I think our dog is wondering why I'm cooking so early in the day.  He knows something is up so he's giving me those sad puppy dog eyes as if to say "Don't leave me.  Stay and pet me.  I need love.  My life is soooo hard."
Rogue giving me his sad look

But alas, I must continue to work on my Ribbed Ribbon socks while the fire is hot!  I have thus far resisted the urge to cast on another pair of socks!  Today I plan to work more of the gusset increases on these ones instead.
Ribbed Ribbon Socks - starting gusset increases

Hmm... soup is simmering, carpet has been vacuumed, laundry is in the dryer, and I have an hour until I need to leave for Michele's house.  I guess it's time to knit!

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

One Pair Done! Plus Updated Book Recommendations.

I did it.  Instead of casting on a new project, I finished one!  Two actually.  Okay, so I started one but finished two, but the one I started wasn't socks, it was a hat.  Two nights ago I finished the pair of socks I was knitting as a gift - with 10 days to spare!  I'll post details and a photo once they've been gifted.

Yesterday, I cast on a winter hat (Petra Hat pattern on Ravelry.com) in a bulky yarn with size 11 needles.  Let me tell you, going from fingering weight yarn (a 1 in thickness) to bulky yarn (a 5 in thickness) and size 0 needles (2.0 mm) to size 11 (8 mm) was a HUGE difference.  My fingers were so confused at first, but quickly caught on.  It's amazing how fast a project can go with big needles and thick yarn.  I knit 90% of the hat yesterday then finished it this morning before 9:30 AM.  No picture yet - I'll try to take one before I send it.  This is my fourth pay-it-forward gift for 2011.

What's a pay-it-forward gift, you ask?  In January, I posted a note on my Facebook Wall saying that I wanted to give a handmade gift to five people - the first five people who posted comments to my wall post.  The only requirement is that they copy the same message to their walls and promise to give hand made gifts to the first five friends who reply to them, and so on.  I've already made and sent three of the five.  The first was a crocheted blue and white ripple baby afghan to a friend of mine whom I met at our group exercise certification testing day.  I ended up becoming her Zumba mentor as well since she later became licensed to teach Zumba.  She's pregnant with her second child - a boy.  (Her first is a girl.)  The second gift was a mesh shopping bag for my friend, Meri.  I have to knit another one for myself - it will be great for the farmer's market!  (Pattern is in the latest Stitch 'N Bitch book - Beyond the Basics.)  The third pay-it-forward gift was two white knitted washcloths to a fellow Usborne Books (www.UsborneMA.com) consultant.  The hat becomes the fourth gift and will go to one of my Usborne customers and past hostesses.  The fifth person is my Mom and I'm not going to write what she's getting because she reads my blog!  :)

Okay, so I cast on and finished a hat, plus finished the gift socks.  In addition, I've reached the gusset increases for the off-white Ribbed Ribbon socks that I'm doing two-at-a-time.  The heel is looming, but I'm hoping it will be straightforward.

I almost cast on a new pair of socks today.  After all, I finished a pair, and with two pairs on hiatus, that only leaves me with one pair on which I'm actively working.  My plan was to start a pattern called "Twisted Baskets" from Toe-Up 2-at-a-Time Socks by Melissa Morgan-Oakes.  However, I have to admit that I'm liking the book less and less.

On the positive side, it introduces a great concept - knitting socks two at a time.  It is also spiral bound which means it lays flat and makes it so much easier to deal with the book.

On the negative, the patterns are written in a very strange way and often take 4-5 pages.  Don't get me wrong, I love when patterns are detailed, but these patterns are drawn out in a way I don't like.  They are neither clear nor concise, and seem to be easy to misread.  In the Ravelry knit-a-long (KAL) where people are knitting from this book, I've seen more posts about frogging and redoing the socks than in any of the other sock boards I read (about 6 or 7 different ones).  It also seems as though some people interpreted the instructions for the toe differently so there are varying number of rows of increases as well as knit-only rows.  There are also several people who have already said that they've modified the pattern to use a different toe that works better.  A couple of knitters have also posted questions/issues with the gusset and one has already frogged hers at that point.  To me, all of these things aren't good signs.

I would still like to participate in the KAL (more to potentially win free yarn than for the sock themselves) but if I do, I'm going to let a few more people start ahead of me so I can learn from their issues,  Plus I think I'd just start with the toe that I know (and coincidentally it's almost the same as the one she uses in her sample sock pattern but not in the Twisted Baskets pattern). 

Finally, the instructions for knitting socks two-at-a-time weren't nearly as detailed as I'd hoped, and the photos were lacking.  I learned more from youtube about doing 2AAT socks than I could have with the 2AAT books, so I have to say that at this point, I unfortunately don't recommend them unless you really want to get every sock book out there.   So here are my updated sock book recommendations:

Recommended books:
Socks from the Toe Up by Wendy Johnson
Toe Up Socks for Every Body by Wendy Johnson
Sock Innovation  by Cookie A.

Not recommended (unless you really want an expanded collection of sock books):
2-at-a-Time Socks by Melissa Morgan-Oakes
Toe-Up 2-at-a-Time Socks by Melissa Morgan-Oakes

TBD:
Knit. Sock. Love. by Cookie A. (but based on her first book, I think this will go in the recommended category.)

Ta-ta for now!

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Yet Another Sock Book

Hello, my name is Melissa and along with knitting socks, I'm addicted to sock knitting books.  

I just ordered the latest for my collection - Knit. Sock. Love. by Cookie A.  She's also the author of the book & patterns in Sock Innovation from which my single "Angee" sock was knit.  There is a knit-a-long (KAL) on Ravelry.com that's knitting socks specifically from this book, so if I want to participate sometime in the next several months, I'll need it.  It's so new that the library doesn't even have it yet, so I ordered it directly from her site - www.cookiea.com - for the same price as Amazon, and it will be a signed copy. 


Here are the other sock knitting books that I have:

Sock Innovation by Cookie A.
Her first sock pattern book, this book devotes the first 50 pages or so to sock design and construction.  Cookie deconstructs a sock into its main parts - ankle, heel & gusset, foot, toe - and gives great information about creating your own socks.  Even if you aren't going to be designing patterned socks, it's awesome to know just how many stitches to work across on short row heels based on the number of stitches on the heel.  She also discusses how certain patterns or stitch types are stretchier than others, why cabling uses more yarn, etc.  It's very informative not even considering the pretty patterns.  As a reminder, here is what the Angee sock from this book looks like (as knit by me), even though you can't see the stitch pattern too clearly:



Socks from the Toe Up by Wendy Johnson
I think this was my first purchased sock book.  I like Wendy's patterns because they are cute but more straightforward than some of Cookie A's patterns.  Plus this book has three "plain vanilla" sock patterns that are straight stockinette (no fancy stitch patterns) but use a variety of heels and toes that she describes in detail at the beginning of the book.  You can create a basic sock to fit your foot using measurements of your actual foot to determine how many stitches around you'll need, then choose which type of heel or toe you want to include.  These "plain vanilla" patterns are perfect for your first toe-up sock and also for highly variegated or self-striping yarn where the colors would obscure any fancy stitch pattern knitted into the sock.

By starting socks from the toe-up, you don't have to worry about running out of yarn - you can always stop when you run out after reaching the ankle and working up.  (Provided of course that you allocate half of the total yarn to each sock.  I weigh my starting ball/skein, then wind half of it into a second ball until both balls weigh the same, then cut the yarn to give two separate, equal-weight balls.)  You also start working the pattern just on the top of the foot since the bottom is plain stockinette (for comfort and fit in shoes), then after the heel you may work the stitch pattern the whole way around the ankle depending on the specific sock pattern.

Toe-Up Socks for Everybody by Wendy Johnson
A second toe-up sock book from Wendy, this book has more cute patterns and even has one or two girl patterns that I can use to knit socks for Francesca.  There are lace, cable and colorwork sock patterns as well as tips on resizing patterns to fit your feet.

I should note that most sock knitters swing one way or the other when it comes to knitting socks toe-up or top-down.  Those who start at the cuff and work down love that you can adjust for calf/ankle fit right from the start.  You know at a very early stage whether the sock will be too tight or too baggy around the leg, and if you will be able to get it over your heel (the widest point a sock has to traverse.)  The toe-up sock lovers note that you never have to graft a toe if you start there (apparently some people have a huge toe-grafting aversion), that you can knit to exactly the length of your foot, and that you don't have to worry about running out of yarn before finishing the toe.  It's not a big deal if your socks turn out a little shorter on the leg than planned, but socks without toes aren't as desirable.  (Unless you're knitting yoga or pedicure socks.)

The toe-up vs. top-down debate can be heated.  This one is better!  No, my way is better!  I'll never knit another top-down sock!  Blah blah blah.  For me, at least so far, I'm fine with either way.  I'm one of the few, the proud...

The bisoxual.

And now back to our list of sock books....

2-at-a-Time Socks by Melissa Morgan-Oakes
Toe-Up 2-at-a-Time Socks by Melissa Morgan Oakes
I mentioned "second sock syndrome" in an earlier blog post.  This is when you knit one gorgeous sock with a great amount of satisfaction only to discover that your desire to knit the second sock is less than zero.  After all, with so many gorgeous yarns and sock patterns to knit, who wants to knit the same thing twice???  By knitting socks two-at-a-time, you either have zero finished socks or two - never just one.  Genius.  The first book introduced the method whereby you knit two socks at the same time on one long circular needle from the top down.  The second book obviously uses the same idea but works in the other direction starting at the toe.  This is the method my current main sock project is using.

I have to say that I'm not as inspired by the Melissa Morgan-Oakes patterns as I am by those of Cookie and Wendy, but it may be due to the photography in the books.  The photos of the finished socks in the Cookie A. and Wendy Johnson books are crisp and beautiful (especially in Cookie's) with multiple shots of each from different angles.  By comparison, the 2-at-a-time book's photos aren't quite as appealing.  Not that they're bad at all, they just have the misfortune of being viewed side-by-side with books that have photos like these:

Cookie A.'s "Pointelle" sock from Knit. Sock. Love.

 Photo from Knit. Sock. Love.

Sanquhar Socks from Toe-Up Socks for Every Body


But my opinion may change after I knit a few of them, since socks in person are often much more appealing than photos of them.  We shall see!

There you go, my quick and dirty reviews of sock books should you be a sock knitter yourself (or may someday be).  Now I guess I should go knit since I'm overrun with patterns!

Friday, March 4, 2011

Sock Schizophrenia

I spent quite a bit of the day today knitting on the fourth pair of in-progress socks that I had cast on.

Ribbed Ribbon socks after first pattern repeat on food

Pretty good, huh?  And yet I admit, I was extremely tempted to cast on a fifth pair for another KAL (knit-a-long) on Ravelry.


I will not cast on another pair of socks until I finish the pair for my friend.  I will NOT cast on another pair of socks until I finish the last 37 rows of the pair for my friend.  I WILL NOT CAST ON another pair of socks until I finish them!
So far it's worked, and I haven't cast on another pair.  But I WILL finish a pair this weekend, giving myself permission to cast on another pair.  It would be crazy to have five sock projects going at once, right?  Right?  But would it really be five???

See, of the four pairs in progress, the "Angee" sock has one done and the other isn't really started - not even cast on.  So can that really be counted as "in progress?"  I mean, come on, nothing is actually being worked since it hasn't even been cast on.  So it makes perfect sense to say that I am 100% done with one sock rather than 50% done with a pair.  The whole glass half-full vs. half-empty thing.  That second sock is a whole 'nother project, not even started, so it doesn't count.

That leaves me with three in progress.  With only 37 rows left in the second sock that's going to be given as a gift, I can pretty much count those as finished.  Just another couple of hours left, which I can whip out anytime.  Negligible.

The pink "I Heart Toe-Up Socks" pair is getting close to the heel, and has been put on the back burner while I work the "Ribbed Ribbon" socks for three - count 'em - three Ravelry KALs, each with potential prizes of yet more sock yarn.  (Unngghhhhh... *drool*)  So naturally I'll focus on those over the heart ones.  Both are two at a time (2AAT) on 47" size 0 needles by the same author and from the same book, so basically they are the same socks and should count as one combined project.

There you have it.  I have exactly one sock project in progress right now.  How's that for justification of adding yet another cast-on to the list?

No, no, no!  I will not cast on another pair of socks until I finish the pair for my friend.

I may be having some sock knitting schizophrenia. 

Thursday, March 3, 2011

I'm Not Crazy, But This Guy Is.

I came to realize this morning that I'm not crazy when it comes to socks and sock yarn.  After all, how crazy can one get over a period of only three months?  (If I'm still knitting 3-4 different sock projects on a consistent basis next year around this time, then we'll revisit the crazy-sock-knitter status.)

But this guy.... he is definitely full of sock insanity.
http://skacelknitting.wordpress.com/category/brian/

Seven pairs of socks at one time on a huge circular needle.  All with a different pattern and yarns.  He is absolutely, certifiably sock-knitting crazy.

And he's my idol.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Lifelines & Frogging

I will post in the next couple of days regarding my sock yarn stash, but have a couple of different knitting topics to cover today.

First of all, I admit that I need to finish some of the socks that I have started.  Yesterday I was going to town with the pair that will be a gift while I sat at gymnastics, and I completed quite a few rows.  Then my coat sleeve caught on one of the double pointed needles (dpns) and pushed it up and out of all of its stitches.  There they sat - fifteen tiny little loops just hoping to be picked up again before they started popping back through the loops on the previous rows.  Trying hard not to panic, I slowly and carefully began slipping the needle back through each itsy-bitsy loop.  The good news is that I got 14 of them back on the needle.  The bad news is that the one I couldn't get had already popped out and started a "run" in the sock.

Not having a tiny crochet hook, I pulled out the too-big plastic one I keep in my knitting bag in a futile attempt to pull the loop back through to where it belonged.  Soon realizing that I needed something smaller, I grabbed my extra dpn to try to use to snag the loop.  (Four dpns hold the knitting and the fifth is used to actually knit across them.)

At least I thought it was my extra needle. 

Turn out that I grabbed one of the other needles that was holding stitches and pulled that one out, leaving another line of 15 loops hanging and vulnerable.  I started to hyperventilate.  Luckily, I managed to get them all back on the needle and refocus my attention back to the dropped stitch.  In the past, I've been able to use a small crochet hook to "reknit" a dropped stitch back up to the current row and pop it back onto the needle.  But for some reason, I just couldn't do it yesterday.  With each attempt, the dropped stitch "ran" further and further down the sock.  I could have cried and if I wasn't in public, I probably would have.  The thought of ripping out the entire sock and starting over made me want to scrap the whole pair.

Taking a deep breath, I decided to try a technique that I have never used before - a lifeline.  A lifeline is a scrap piece of yarn (or even dental floss) that's threaded through the loops of all the stitches on the needles,  often before the start of a difficult part in a pattern.  That way, if you mess up, you can rip out to the yarn/floss which is holding all those loops, replace the needles through them, and start again from that spot.  Note that I had not threaded a lifeline in my sock because it's not a difficult pattern, it's just knitting around and around.  So I took a tapestry needle and some scrap yarn, and attempted to run it through every stitch of a row of knitting a couple of rows below where the "run" ended.  Once I had the lifeline placed, I took a deep breath and pulled out all of the dpns (on purpose this time).  Then I ripped out all of the rows I had just knit plus a few more until the lifeline yarn stopped me.

Hallelujah, I had caught all of the stitches with the lifeline!  I carefully replaced all four of my dpns through the stitches, removed the lifeline yarn, and had 37 seconds to spare before the end of Francesca's gymnastics class.  That was 24 hours ago and I haven't touched that sock since.  There's some bad sock mojo that needs to dissipate first.

Let's talk about "frogging."  I keep hearing this term used in the knitting community - well, reading it actually since it's all over Ravelry.com.  "I frogged my first attempt."  "I forgot the yarn overs so I may frog it and start over."

I gathered that it meant ripping out your knitting, but wasn't quite sure why.  So I asked my best friend, Mr. Google.  The term comes because of the well-known cry of a common frog.

"Rip it.  Rip it."

Yeah, it's pretty freakin' cute.  Not quite so cute when you actually have to do it, though.  I had hoped that yesterday's frogging back to the panic-placed lifeline would be my only experience with this amphibious term for a while.  Ah.... I had a dream....

With three pairs of socks in progress, I promptly cast on a fourth pair in between loads of laundry folding (of which I did six loads today!).  This pair is to participate in a March KAL (knit-a-long - another new acronym I learned recently) on Ravelry.  Everyone knits the same pattern during the month and posts photos, stats, and discussions.  Of those who finish, prizes from yarn-related sponsors are given out via random drawings.  For sock KALs, most of the time the sponsors give hanks of sock yarn, of which I'm addicted.  So I started another pair of two-at-a-time (2AAT) toe-up magic loop socks.

Cast-on  for "Ribbed Ribbon" socks from "Socks from the Toe Up"

Oh boy, oh boy, I was cruising with these socks!  The toes seemed to fly by twice as fast as the "I Heart Toe-Up Socks" ones had.  I started the pattern and got through 8 rows on each sock - I was starting to see the ribbed ribbon pattern!  So exciting!  Yep.  Things were looking goo-ood.

Then a tiny flicker of something in my subconscious made me look back at the toe portion of the pattern where you do a row where you increase the circumference of each sock by four stitches, followed by a row where you just knit without increasing.  Ha ha haaaa.  Yeah.  Seems I forgot the knit-only rows.  No wonder it went by twice as quickly.

So I frogged the whole thing.

In the past 24 hours I have done a lot of knitting and have absolutely nothing to show for it.  I actually think I may be negative a few rows after my dropped stitch debacle at gymnastics.  And now it's time to make dinner and then head out to teach Zumba.  But after that....

Watch out yarn.  I'm coming, and I'll be knittin' ya.