Family Temperature Blanket · Knitting Olympics 2006/Williamsro · Knitting-Fibonacci Sweater · Knitting-Parcheesi · Knitting-Safe at Home for Davy · Knitting-St. Brigid · Ten for Ten - An Anniversary! · Twenty for Twenty - Another Anniversar;y · Unraveled Wednesday / Knit & Read

Unraveled Wednesday: Twenty

On this day, 20 years ago, which was the First Day of Spring, I wrote my first blog post.

In 2014, I managed a pretty epic (if I may be so bold) 10-part series to celebrate my 10th blogiversary.

This year, I thought I’d celebrate by sharing 20 of my favorite knits, since knitting was the #1 reason for starting a blog in the first place. That idea came to me in the middle of the night, but I guess it’s not all that new — I shared 10 favorites as part of the 2014 series (and there are some repeats)!

So, in a bit of a departure from the usual Wednesday unraveling, today I’m joining Kat & the Unravelers for Unraveled Wednesday with 20 of my favorite knits! I’m not going to link to individual project pages, but y’all can find anything you’re looking for on my Ravelry page… I am knitorious.

1. Cabled Pullover w/Kangaroo Pockets

aka #11 Turtleneck by Anna Sui in Vogue Knitting, Winter 2003/04. This was finished in 2004, knit with Rowan Polar, a yummy super bulky yarn (now discontinued). Katie wore this sweater a lot back in the day!

2. Alpaca Pure Shawlette

I think this was the first shawl I ever knit… Judy Pascale’s Simply Garter Shapely Shawlette. I knit this in 2004 with yarn that I received in a swap (also my first-ever swap). I would never have chosen that colorway myself, but found a pattern that would work and, lo & behold, it was a favorite/staple of my wardrobe for a long, long time!

3. St. Brigid

I fell in love with this sweater on sight, and it’s the #1 reason I learned to knit cables… and to knit from a chart. At the time, the only place to get the pattern was in Alice Starmore’s Aran Knitting, which was out of print. I think copies were selling for $800s or so. Thankfully, that’s been resolved & there’s a new edition. Anyway, finished right around this time of year in 2005, I knit it in Cascade 220. The photo, inspired by one in the book, was taken at West Kilbride, Scotland, on our first visit to the UK in 2011.

4. Fib

I might consider this my first triumph with color, using seven random hanks of Donegal Tweed that my sister Sharon had left over from a kit or two. Alexandra Virgiel’s Fibonacci was the main inspiration, but it’s really more of a Frankenstein sweater… finished in 2006.

5. Williamsro

I knit this as a member of the US Cable Team for the 2006 Knitting Olympics, which was a blast! (I still have my certificate.) Williamsro was designed by Cornelia Tuttle Hamilton, and the yarn — Noro Blossom & Cash Iroha — was a real splurge.

6. Cecil Cardigan

This was the cover sweater of Vogue Knitting, Spring 2003. Started in 2004, it languished until 2007 when Kate urged me to finish. I’d realized that it wasn’t really suited for me, but it was perfect for her! It was really fun to knit. I purchased the buttons at Tender Buttons when I visited NYC in 2005.

7. Habu Birthday To You

Knit for my mom from an amazing Habu Kit featuring Tsumugi Silk, it took me two years to make it, mainly because… it was weird (those Habu patterns are often… weird). It was knit in pieces, all going in different directions then sewn together, but they were so small… I remember thinking, This is never gonna work! But it did work, after stretching those pieces to within an inch of their lives. It’s an incredible sweater, which I finished in 2010, and my mother loved it so much — it was 100% her style. She loved telling me about the compliments she’d receive, and that she was so proud to tell people that it was knit by her daughter.

8. Parcheesi

My first blanket, and let’s call this my second triumph in color. Knit in 2010, while my sister Sharon was undergoing treatment for cancer, I finished it just a few weeks before she died in December. The pattern is Parcheesi by the wonderful Janine Bajus. You see this blanket every time you visit my blog, as it’s up there in the header. I will always treasure it.

9. Freestyle Cabled Cowl

Inspired by a couple of other cowls that I’d knit, and also by Fiona Ellis, whose taught a “cables” class at Midwest Masters one year (a long time ago), some of the cable motifs are normal, but others go off willy-nilly. I knit this in 2011 with some Plymouth Galway Worsted that I dyed myself.

10. Wisconsin Wedding Shawls

I knit these shawls in 2013 for Ali’s wedding. Her “Wisconsin Wedding” shawl is a pattern by Julia Trice called Mexican Wedding, and mine is also a pattern by Julia, Frambuesa, from the same collection. I used two different yarns, and dyed them both.

11. TTL Mystery Shawl ’14

I also dyed the yarn for this shawl — my first gradient. The pattern is Algiers by Kirsten Kapur. The MKAL started on June 1st, and my mom was admitted to the hospital on June 4th, then transferred to ICU a few days later. There was a wonderful group of “old gang” bloggers who formed an FB group for this knit-along, and it was a balm each night to check in with them. Mom died on June 23rd.

I’m sure I’ve written once or twice about how knitting has seen me through tough times — loneliness, worry, loss. I truly don’t know what I’d have done without it sometimes.

12. 2016 Rhinebeck Shawl

There was no time to knit a Rhinebeck Sweater in 2016, so I knit a Rhinebeck Shawl, instead. I love the pattern — Close To You by Justyna Lorkowska — and have knit it at least once more, and my sister Ann has knit it a couple of times, too. Also yarn that I dyed myself. As chance would have it, I’m wearing that shawl today! (It looks like winter is going to be making a couple of appearances over the next week.)

13. Making Her Own Arrows

This is a lovely “adventure” pattern from 2017 by Larissa Brown called We Make Our Own Arrows. It was potato chip knitting — so fun to pick it up everyday and see how it would go! Another scrap project, another triumph in color, I knit this for myself but ended up giving it to a friend.

14. Oblique

Oblique! A ten-year project (and not the only one), 2007-2017, start to finish. After 10 years, it didn’t fit me, but Maddy LOVES it! I’d like to knit another sometime. Oblique by Veronik Avery, knit it Cascade 220.

15. Gnomes

No list of favorites would be complete without mentioning gnomes! Susan B. Anderson and Sarah Schira are my designers of choice. I made my first little gnome(s) in 2018, a bunch more in 2020 while recovering from Covid, and a few mystery gnomes… another one to start pretty soon!

16. Safe At Home

Talk about Covid projects… this is Margaret Holzmann’s Safe at Home blanket, highly modified. This was knit for Davy (who’s going to be 4 in September!).

17. Hexie Love

This is crochet, so technically not knitting, and it’s also a WIP, as I have yet to master the border situation. And more color! The pattern is Hexie Love Actually by Greenletterday, which I started in 2021. The colors are Madelinetosh Unicorn Tails, and the background is Tosh Merino Light. I’m pretty sure this is destined to be Addie’s graduation blanket… which gives me another year-and-a-half to finish (I won’t wait that long)!

18. 5 Point Bomber

Last year’s wonderful project for Modern Daily Knitting | I Made It with Atlas! It was so fun to knit this project for the kids — with their input. Designer Holli Yeoh now includes coloring pages with the 5 Point Bomber pattern.

19. A Light in the Window for Mack

A fun little riff on Kay Gardiner’s A Light in the Window, this was knit for Mack’s high school graduation. There’s a lot of play on ONE color — mostly dye test skeins that I’d purchased a few years ago. I think he likes it.

20. Family Temperature Blanket

Another WIP, more color, more riffing… and tonight I’ll knit the last few rows of Ali’s panel and get started on Maddy’s — the last one!! I’ve already been working on this for over two years. I’m excited to wrap it up this summer. (Whatever will I do next…?? ha.)

BONUS MATERIAL

A gallery of little projects…

It’s hard to pick just 20 out of 133 projects! That doesn’t count the multiples… gnomes, dishcloths, hats, etc.

And, of course, THANK YOU!! Thanks for reading, laughing, encouraging, enabling, crying, comiserating, and just for being there. It’s changed in many ways, but I’d have never lasted 20 years without our community.

Family Temperature Blanket · Unraveled Wednesday / Knit & Read

Unraveled Wednesday

Today I’m joining Kat & the Unravelers for Unraveled Wednesday!

KNITTING:

I’ve been working on Ali’s blanket panel and making progress!

Rusty’s, Vicki’s, Katie’s, Ali’s… I’ll start Maddy’s soon!!

There’s been further progress since I took the photo yesterday afternoon. It’s winter, and I LOVE those cool colors… makes for exciting knitting!

There used to be room enough to lay the panels on the walkway outside the back door, but the blanket is too wide now. The only place big enough is the driveway… right out in front of the house… it’s always a little funny to style & take photos “in public,” but I risked it! I live at the end of a dead-end street, so chances were pretty slim that I’d be seen, anyway. And who even cares?? haha.

I realized the other day that I’m nearing the downhill slide on this project — one panel to go (and sewing up) (and a border). Maddy’s is the last one… and you know who’s going to be home this summer!? Suddenly, I’m very motivated to get this blanket finished by then!

It’s soon to be early Spring on Ali’s panel!

This is where it (the data visualization) gets even more exciting to me. Kate was born in April 1985 and Ali in April 1987; their birthdays are six days apart. Kate’s first year was spent on the Oregon Coast, while Ali spent her first year in Northeast Wisconsin. I felt like Kate had a bit more of a “curve” than Ali, but I just compared the charts and they’re pretty spot-on — still, just look at those temperatures! We always talk about how Ali’s summer was so hot… interesting to compare to mine, though, which was also spent mostly in NE Wisco — I think there was just no relief in the summer of ’87! I can’t wait to get Maddy’s data in there. She was born in April 1991, nine days after Ali’s birthday.

READING:

Reading My Southern Journey: True Stories from the Heart of the South, one or two essays each night before turning out the light.

Family Temperature Blanket · Unraveled Wednesday / Knit & Read

Unraveled Wednesday: Update

Today I’m joining Kat & the Unravelers for Unraveled Wednesday!

KNITTING:

I’m nearly to the end of September on Ali’s panel for the Temperature Blanket.

Ali’s panel as of 4pm yesterday.

Closing in on the half-way mark!

There’s not much to show yet, and I don’t remember exactly when I started, but this is the current Colourwheel Musselburgh for Maddy/Viv.

I’m very excited about making them both the same hat with the same yarn, but different…

Had a quick little chat with Maddy over the long weekend, too, and they are narrowing down their “dates in the States” for next summer… likely Maddy from about the middle of July, and Viv joining her for the first 2-3 weeks in August before heading back to Australia. They won’t be “here” here the entire time, as there are many places to go & people to see, but I’ll be happy for all the time we get!

READING:

Reading is just, like, super slow & the same… Meryl Streep reading Tom Lake. I’ve been exhausted at bedtime, so there’s been no reading there. I need the sleep, I guess.

Family Temperature Blanket

Milestone

I finished Kate’s panel for the Family Temperature Blanket (Rav) last night!! It was too dark to take a photo, so I’ll do that later today.

That means I’ll be casting on Ali’s panel tonight — the fourth of five! Woohoo! There’s a football game tonight, so I should make some progress.

Since I don’t have a blanket photo, some old zinnias on an old table will have to do. (Hm, maybe working on the new table will find its way into my weekend plans!)

Family Temperature Blanket

Unraveled Wednesday: Stripe City

I’m joining Kat & the Unravelers today for Unraveled Wednesday!

KNITTING:

Can’t stop, won’t stop! The Family Temperature Blanket is getting ALL of my knitting attention these days.

IMG_2011

The morning light is getting dimmer every day, but my phone does well with available light, so I hastily arranged all the panels on the sidewalk for a group shot. That’s my panel on the left, Rusty’s in the middle, and Kate’s underway on the right. I think I’m into December for her “April ’85 to April ’86 in the Pacific Northwest” panel. I finally took the time to learn the weaving-in method that’s most often used to trap floats in colorwork, and I love it… things are moving right along with much less dread. I get in a zone when I’m weaving in… but it often takes a while to work up the will & resolve to just.do.it. heh. Anyway, it’s so great to take care of most of that while I’m actually knitting.

READING:

Still working on The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida. I’m about half-way now! Maybe I’ll squeak by in time for zooming.

LISTENING:

I don’t know exactly when, where, or why, but not long ago, Spotify served me up a song called Meeting the Master by Greta Van Fleet.

https://open.spotify.com/embed/track/6jXwOrrBoutMICNxckeDNQ?utm_source=generator

It’s the kind of song that has me immediately cranking up the volume. Rock, vocals & guitar that immediately reminded me of HEART — in fact, I thought, Wow, she sounds like Ann Wilson — with a side of LED ZEPPELIN, RUSH, stadium/arena rock, hair band/glam. But modern. Turns out, it was the first single released from their newest/third album.

I was a little chuffed a couple of weeks ago when I had my “Liked Songs” playlist on while Kate & I made dinner and she was Soundhound-ing many of the songs, or asking me about them if Soundhound came up short. This was one of them. Last week, she shared another Greta Van Fleet song with me, and I said something about “her.” Kate said, I’m not so sure that’s a girl… I think it’s a guy! And sure enough, four guys — young guys — from Frankenmuth, Michigan, of all places. So, like, we’re practically neighbors! Anyway, I can’t get enough of them and thought I’d share.

Oh, and the story of the band’s name — and namesake — is pretty great, too!