Tuesday, March 25, 2014

 Dave's sister Theresa and her husband have been so great and helpful to us with our house.  They helped us put up shelves in all our closets, helped us hook up our washer/dryer and built drawers for our kitchen among many other things.  They've even gone to Menards to buy materials themselves and we've been nagging them for the amount we owe them.  They basically said don't worry about it which was so generous but she did mention that their church bazaar was always looking for knitted dishrags so I made her a stack of Warsh Rags from Mason Dixon Knitting.  These were all knit from cotton yarn I already had in the stash and it was a fun challenge to see how many combinations I could get while trying to use each color/way up completely.  I will make her sorry she ever asked for dishrags!



 I finished my second jelly roll blanket from my scrub scraps.  I pieced this one using the diagonal seam method and was impressed with it but I held my breath a lot because more often than not, the strip would look crooked.  I used a 1/2" seam when I started sewing the long strip and any imperfections were hidden but you really had to watch.  I also stopped after each long seam to press it open rather than doing it all at the end.  I love the finished blanket but the only thing I don't like is that because of the construction, it doesn't come out with nice right angles so finishing was a little trickier.


I backed this one with a busy green/gold chevron print.  This one turned out a little wider than the last one and I'm very happy with it.  I still wouldn't take something like this to the fair.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Jelly Roll Fun


I saw this video on someone else's blog a while back and have been thinking and thinking about it.  I have made quite a few blankets but I wouldn't call them quilts because as careful and fussy as I am, I can never get the pieces and edges to perfectly match up.  Years ago I made a simple patch work blanket using 6 inch squares cut from the scraps of my scrub tops.  Cutting out the squares was tedious, as was sewing together the individual pieces.  This technique really appealed to me because strips can be different lengths and you only have to measure 2 sides of each piece versus 4.  I also loved the randomness of this method.
 
Here are my 40 odd scrub tops from work.  My hospital changed to color coded scrubs for the various departments almost 2 years ago and these have sat in a bag ever since.  We actually used that bag as a door stop for a while!  I know I am a compulsive saver at times but I really didn't want to throw these away.  They represent my 14 year nursing career and were all made from carefully chosen beautiful prints of fabric.  I always tried to be seasonal with my work tops.


All the strips I cut were 3 inches wide and as long as I could squeeze out of the scrubs.  I cut the scrubs apart first, cut the pockets and neck casings off and then using my rotary cutter and mat, cut long strips from the back panels and middle fronts and then short strips from the arms.  It took me almost 2 days to get through all of them. 

Then I separated out each print and stacked them all up so they were evenly distributed.  I did some fancy math to figure out how many strips I'd need to make a full/queen size blanket and decided I'd need 4 stacks.  Oh, can you tell which scraps were Dave's contribution?


I sewed the strips together end to end but next time I will do the angled method.  This blanket was so much easier and forgiving to piece together.  It was almost mindless which is my kind of project.  When it comes to projects like this, I am a firm believer that busy is better and this is certainly a busy blanket!  I backed it with a very busy chevron print.  I have enough strips for at least 2 more blankets and I just bought 4 more queen size cotton battings on sale for 70% off!  We learned this winter that you can never have too many blankets when company comes and they make such great gifts because everyone can use and enjoy them.

Photo Op

Mom keeps telling me she wants a picture of me wearing my new sweater so I obliged her.  I was on call yesterday and took advantage of my clean hair to take a picture.  Lopi came with me for the photo.  She sat very nicely when commanded but wouldn't look at the camera.

Here is an action shot where I'm trying to get her to look at Dave for the picture.  I just love this sweater!  It is so comfortable and warm over a long sleeve t-shirt.  It is fastened with 3 buttons on the top third of the sweater and the lower fronts hang slightly open.  I used 3 large buttons from Grandpa Maynerd's button box and am pleased as punch to carry a bit of him with me.  I have so far only used his buttons on knitting I've done for his great grandchildren so it was nice to keep 3 for myself.  We miss you Leonard!  :)
My brother and his family came this weekend to stay with us and we had a St. Patrick's themed menu.  I made a corned beef brisket in the crack pot with cabbage, potatoes and carrots and baked a craggy loaf of soda bread.  We had to have something sweet to go with the coffee so I baked green tinted snickerdoodles.  I wasn't sure the green dough would look green after it was rolled in cinnamon/sugar but it looked pretty good.
Here they are all baked up.  Top 'O the Mornin' to ya!

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Photo Finish!!!!

I had resigned myself to the plain fact that I was not going to finish my sweater before the Olympics concluded.  I spoke with my mother on the phone yesterday and was lamenting that very thing.  This is my weekend to work and I had run out of time.  But then...yesterday at around 1630 I was in the shower and the phone rang!  The staffing office called to ask if I wanted to be on call the first 4 hours of my shift and if we were still over at 2300, would I want to be on call after that?  My answer of course was, "Boy do I!?"  I then proceeded to knit the rest of this sweater!!!  Oh me of little faith!  Now all it needs is some blocking and shaping and for the buttons to be sewn on.  I was reading on other blogs about people entering the WIP category where instead of starting and completing an entire large and challenging item, you set a goal to finish off a certain number of WIPs.  Maybe I'll do that one next time.  Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go crash into bed! 

Thursday, February 06, 2014

Olympic Swatching

 I am gearing up for the Knitting Olympics and did a little swatching yesterday.  I plan to knit Ditto out of some dark gray Patons Classic Wool that I already had in the stash.  I will use a size 5 and 7 needle to achieve the proper gauge.  I thought the Olympics started today on the 6th and put some serious thought into cheating a little.  I work tonight and my entire family is coming tomorrow for our family Christmas (FINALLY!) so I will be a little busy the next few days.  Since the Olympics are in Russia, I thought surely they are already competing because of the time difference.  Sadly I just confirmed that the opening ceremonies will not be broadcast until tomorrow night and you can't start until then.  Shoot.
Here is a picture I took on my cell phone in the grocery store yesterday!  I know I am easily amused but I just love it when they build things out of pop for the seasonal displays!  I will have to dig to find it but I have a much classier picture of the Olympic rings mounted on London Bridge from our trip two years ago.  Enjoy the games!

Sunday, January 19, 2014

More Gloves!






I am really enjoying these gloves!  The magenta ones are for my sister to go with her lime green winter coat.  They are knit from some Cascade 220 Superwash Paints.  The teal pair are MINE and knit from some Malabrigo I had in the stash.  Mittens are warm and wonderful but gloves are warm and dexterous.
 
 
I also made a blankie for Lopi.  I found this woodland print at Joann's and I was going to bind it with double fold bias tape but I'd mistakenly bought single fold.  I finished it instead with some stray yellow satin binding I had on hand but now it looks like a child's blanket instead of a doggie blankie.  She sleeps with us in bed but lays on top of the covers and weighs them down in the middle.  Maybe she'll get used to covers with this blankie.


Friday, January 03, 2014

Brrrrrrrr, cold enough for ya?!


It is another cold day here in Minnesota with wind gusts that you'd swear blow right through you.  We had some light snow with our wind this afternoon and some freezing rain is possible later on.  I'm glad I did all the shopping earlier today so we are all stocked up and have no need to leave the house this weekend.  No need to leave the house...yet here we are standing in the yard taking pictures!


Since it was so cold today, I was wearing my sweater around the house and thought now is the time for a sweater action shot.  We put Lopi on the chain while we were taking pictures and she was so excited to be outside that she ran in circles like a crazy dog.  She almost pulled my feet out from under me several times!  Have I mentioned this sweater is WARM?  I just love it!


These will go to Melissa for her belated birthday gift.  They are fingerless mitts with little fuzzy knit butterflies sewn on the knuckles and in the palms so it looks like you have caught butterflies!  I have wanted this pattern ever since I saw it and finally got my hands on a copy of Woodland Knits.  I used up the remainder of my Spud and Chloe sock yarn leftover from a tunic I knit for my niece.  I had to double strand the yarn and use needles 4 times larger than called for to get the correct fit.  In the end I had about 5 or so yards left so it was a close call.  Stash busted!  I used my light blue mohair/silk lace weight yarn I bought in Russia to make the butterfly appliques.  I like how these little mock cables look like butterflies.  As I sit and type this, I can hear the freezing rain just starting to hit the window.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Minnesota Winter

 Last weekend our neighbors were out on the pond skating around and clearing an ice rink complete with goal nets.  I guess I had no idea it was that easy to skate and play on a pond.


We've seen them playing almost every day and now they have a bench, a fire grill and a little warming hut out there.  Yesterday there was a small boy who could barely walk but he was out there skating with a small hockey stick.

They even have lights for night play! 

Friday, December 13, 2013

Christmas Knitting

Once I finished that impulse scarf, I was able to get back on task with my Christmas knitting.  These are 2 pairs of beaded wrist warmers for my nieces I finished this week.  I had them pick out the yarn and beads when they were here visiting in October.  The yarn is Cascade fingering weight and the beads are Gutermann.  The way our family Christmas is looking, we might not get together until February to celebrate so I have much more time than I thought.  Somehow we can never find a weekend that works for everyone.  Oh well, more time to get gifts done!

These are a pair of gloves I knit for my mother in law.  The yarn is Patons Classic Wool and the pattern is from a Patons Next Steps booklet.  I knit a dark gray pair of these a few weeks ago for Dave because we don't know what happened to his gloves since we moved.  I'd never made gloves before and they really were quite simple and WARM.  This is a worsted weight yarn so there is a little bulk on your hands with these and the cuffs are nice and long and stick way down into your sleeves.  I'm going to quick knock out a brown pair for my father in law before Christmas next week and then I think I need to make myself a pair.  I've been knitting mittens forever and I like and appreciate mittens but I'm getting kind of spoiled by these gloves.  What a luxury being able to move your fingers individually while warm!  I love that they're worsted weight because I can use up all kinds of leftovers with a project like this.

Saturday, December 07, 2013

Christmas is coming...

 Christmas is marching ever closer and I have legitimate gifts that need to be knitted in a timely manner and yet I have been dinking around wasting time knitting a scarf for no one in particular.  I keep seeing this Jared Scarf all over the interweb and have wanted to make one for some time.

It calls for 2 balls of Noro Silk Garden which is a variegated yarn.  I took my parents out to lunch a couple weeks ago when they were here visiting and then we stopped into the yarn shop next door and I hurriedly picked two different colorways of Noro Kureyon.  The Kureyon worked just fine as far as gauge goes and is warm and comfortable next to the skin but I wonder if the Silk Garden would feel even better.  I will remember that for the next one because I have a feeling I'll be making another one of these.  The colors are kind of deceiving when they're wound up in the store and when I wound them for knitting I wasn't sure I wanted to combine them for the scarf.  They look quite dissonant as colors go.
Once I started knitting, I couldn't stop because the colors were randomly pairing up so nicely.  I don't think you could pick a bad color combination with this yarn if you tried because it just works it's own magic. 
The temperature is currently butt cold here and we got our first few inches of snow this week and I wore this scarf today.  Lopi and I were watching from the front window as Dave made his maiden voyage on the driveway with our new snow blower and I snapped this picture of her.  She is just so cute and she almost matches our woodwork.  That electric candelabra was my birthday present from Dave this year and I just LOVE it!

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

All done!!!

 I finished it yesterday, gave it a soak and it is currently blocking on the floor of my sewing room with a fan pointed at it.  I want to wear it on Thursday to my in-laws for Thanksgiving.  Technically this would have been done a week earlier because I finished the first sleeve and didn't like the fit so I ripped it out and started over.  This is a terrible photo but I was just so excited to post a finished picture.  I keep opening the door and just looking at it.  Maybe I'll put a little space heater in there to speed up the drying...
 I've had these buttons in mind for it all along.  These are fabulous juniper wood buttons I bought at the harbor market in Helsinki.  Note the small bag in the picture.  For some reason all over Europe, they put everything in these little paper bags.  Postcards.  Buns from the bakery.  Small shopping items.  I love them and I SAVE them.  These buttons have been in there since I bought them and the paper is actually stained from the oils in the wood and smells wonderful.  I can't wait to finish off the sweater by sewing on the buttons.
 My brother gave us a bunch of beef for our new freezer and I thawed and made these short ribs.  I'd never worked with short ribs before but I used this recipe and they were quite easy. 

 Here they are sauced before the oven.  I love how all the ingredients are things you already have in your cupboard and nothing special was needed.  I cooked them in my blue enameled cast iron braiser Dave gave me for Christmas last year.
Here they are 300 degrees and 3 hours later.  Num num.  We will be making these again.  And of course it is deceiving how little meat is actually there once it shrinks up and exposes the bone.  I thought about giving the bones to Lopi but I was afraid she'd choke on them or get marrow all over the carpet.
And speaking of Lopi, my little blond dog is slowly turning into a large dark dog.  We've noticed she is growing a darker coat of hair giving her a two layer effect.  In that sense, Lopi is an appropriate name for her because she has two layers of fiber like the Icelandic sheep! ;)

Here she is snuggling up to my heating pad.  Every time I get up to go to the bathroom or get another pop or for whatever reason, I come back to my knitting spot and she has stolen my spot.  Every.  Time.  What a brat, but she sure is cute!

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

So Close!

Here is my progress on my NaKniSweMo project.  I finished the collar this morning and just have one sleeve left.  I've tried it on and it is going to need some blocking.  I am going to have plenty of yarn left over which is good because I might want to re-do the sleeves.  The length is perfect but they are narrower than I'd like.  I want to get this done this weekend!

Drapery Frenzy


 My parents came for a visit last weekend.  It was nice to spend some quality time with them and cook a little for them.  My super industrious mother and I made curtains for all the windows in the house!
This curtain was already in place.  We did this one when they first came to visit us and see the house back in June.  I'd had this piece of twill/canvas in my stash for YEARS.  I'd wanted to make a bed skirt or a rondastakk bunad skirt out of it but it went to much better use as the curtain for the upstairs deck door.  It has stripes of tan, gray/teal and maroon.  My brother John helped us hang up the hardware and curtain rod. 

This valance was also already in place since June.  This is my kitchen window with its fabulous view.  The fabric has a powder blue grid design with different herbs.

This was the first new curtain from this weekend.  It is not a "new" curtain because technically it is a hand-me-down.  Mom had made these for one of her guest bedrooms and took them down when she changed the decor.  She'd given these to me 2 years ago when I moved to Minnesota but our apartment had vertical blinds throughout so they sat in a bag in a closet this whole time.  They are maroon with flowers but not frilly frou frou flowers.  The maroon coordinates with the maroon in the deck door curtain across the room.  We don't have furniture for this upstairs living room yet so we have boxes occupying the room.  Mom and I hung up my great Grandma Elnora's shelf and put nic nacs on it and were able to clear out a few boxes but I didn't take pictures of the shelf.

This is the curtain in the downstairs man cave.  This plaid was already in my stash and put to good use.
This is the other downstairs bedroom.  This panel was a scrap leftover from a blanket I made a few years ago.

This is the curtain in our upstairs spare bedroom.  We often refer to this as "John's Room" because he sleeps here once a month when he does his Navy drill weekend.  I had my heart set on making a pair of lounge wear pajama pants out of this fabric but it was put to good use as curtains.  I like how the light shines through and the fabric looks sheer with dots.

Here is a close up of the fabric.  It just looks like mens' 1950's pajamas.  I like that this way I get to see the fabric and the colors every day instead of putting them in a dresser if they were pajama pants.


Here is the window in my sewing room.  Note the fabulous view.  This valance was made with a funky fabric I'm pretty sure I got at the Cancer Garage Sale last year.  We also hung up these blinds.  I am so loving this room!  And I love that we used all this fabric from my stash.  And eventually if we have kids or decide we want something different, I can just make new curtains.

We did go and buy fabric for the rest and I have to say we did a great job in the purchasing department.  Joann Fabrics is one of my favorite stores because you can use their 40% off coupons on non-sale items.  They were already having a Veterans Day sale and all drapery fabric was 50% off.  It was $40/yard regular price so we would've paid $20/yard for everything.  We looked but nothing jumped out at me.

Then we took a field trip to SR Harris.  Dave drove us because it was rush hour by the time we headed out there.  They put monthly coupons in the paper or you can print them online.  All their drapery fabric was $20/yard on the tag and then everything is always 50% off the tag price so it was actually $10/yard.  The featured coupon this month was luckily all regular $20 drapery fabric for $8.49/yard instead of the $10 price.  We bought fabric for the downstairs living room window, the downstairs walkout sliding door and our bedroom.  All told we spent a total of $140.  I was pleased.

Here is the downstairs walkout door curtain.  It is linen with rayon vine/leaf embroidery and I got it for $8.49/yard.  It is beautiful fabric and for real linen, it was a steal!

Here is a close up of the fabric.

Here is the downstairs living room window.  This was a woodblock style print of cherry blossom flowers.  It is one of those magic colors that changes depending on the light.  The darker color is kind of a charcoal gray/dark purple and the flowers are taupe.  It was 60" wide so we just cut it in half vertically to make the panels and turned the edges under.  We traced the valance from the upstairs window curtains and made a new one out of this fabric and backed it with muslin.  The sheer is from the second set of red curtains Mom had already made.  These went up a real treat and I can't believe the difference they make in the room.
 Here is a close up of this fabric.  This was $10/yard and we got more than we thought we'd need so I'll make some pillow covers out of the remainder.  I thought a coordinating dog bed for Lopi would be nice but Mom said it was too nice of fabric for that.  It is a beautiful polished/burnished material that was nice to work with.  Luke helped us with this hardware back in June and until now, we'd had some aqua hand-me-down sheers from my sister hanging up.  I'm saving those for a rainy day. 


This is a terrible picture of our bedroom curtain.  We hung a blind and curtain rod up in this window and then made these batik panels.  Eventually I will get around to making a tie-back for these panels.  I have an experiment I want to try involving a knitted beaded I-cord.

Here is a close up of the fabric.  SR Harris has the largest selection of batiks I have ever seen in one place and I have a weakness for batiks.  The price can't be beat either: $15/yard but actually $7.50/yard with the 50% off sale price.  This print was blue/taupe with vines and pomegranate-y florals.  Love love love it.  I'm already wanting to go back to SR Harris to get more batiks and they also had some bee-YEW-tiful printed linen like we saw in Estonia.  Fabric bliss.