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sock notes

5/22/2019

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I don't know where Salem the demon cat is so I'm going to take this opportunity to write up some notes about the socks I just finished.  Since this is a new blog and I'm basically talking to no one, this is more notes to myself - but maybe some day someone else in cyberspace will see it!
Anyway, here's the issue:  I have a severe case of second-sockitis.  Historically, even if I did make a second sock it was usually so much later that either I forgot the pattern or my gauge changed so much they didn't match at all.  I'm not talking about the slight gauge difference like I noted earlier - I'm talking about socks that were an inch or two different in length!  Not good.  For years I just assumed I would never be a sock knitter, but then I started feeling left out.  Anyone remember Sock Summit in Portland?  I dared to go once and fell in love with the socks.  (Alas, that turned out to be the last Sock Summit.)
So, to solve my problem I decided I had to knit both socks at the same time.  Not on the same needles - that just created a tangled up mess.  No, I knit both socks at the same time on two sets of needles, magic loop style.  I have matched sets of my favorite sock size needles and knit a few rows of Sock A, then a few of Sock B until I have a complete pair.  This leaves me with two reasonably matching socks completed at roughly the same time.  Cool.
But for some odd reason, when I made the last two pairs I did them one at a time.  This was largely due to laziness since I would need to wind the single ball of yarn into two balls, which would require figuring out where I left my ball winder.  So I dared to try one at a time and tempt fate.  But I am also no good at taking notes or counting rows so I needed a way to easily make the socks the same length.  Solution - knit a code into the first sock that I could follow to make the second one.
You can't see it well in the pictures I posted earlier, but the first set has a bit of a zigzag of purl bumps in it.  What I did was purl one stitch per row in an otherwise stockinette stitch sock, moving the stitch over one each row.  This way, when I knit the second sock I knew to start the heel when the zigzag was in the same place where it was in the first sock.  No counting, no notes.  I changed the zigzag a little in the leg just for fun and again used it as a guide to know when to start the ribbing.  That left me just needing to know how many rows were in the ribbing, but counting 10 or 12 rows is easier than counting 76 or whatever.
Since I don't like knitting the same thing twice (thus the second-sockitis) I decided to do something different in the second pair.  I opted for a ribbing pattern that I made up as I went.  Every two rows and/or two stitches something changed from knit to purl.  It's not terribly visible in the socks, except where it switches from horizontal to vertical ribbing, but it served the same purpose in the construction.
Now I'm going to have to figure out other ways to code my socks.  Or just go back to the safety of knitting them both at the same time!
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Socks Done!

5/20/2019

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I managed to complete my latest pair of socks last night, no thanks to the four footed ones who thought I should be doing something else.  Here they are:
Picture
The black floof is Salem, demon cat. I'm trying to type with one hand now thanks to him.  He doesn't need socks.
You may notice the side effect of knitting these months apart - the tension isn't the same.  The first one, on the right, was started when I was visiting my family and the narrower stripes show it was knit tighter in the foot.  (These are  toe up.)  Then I did the leg in the comfort of my own home and the tension loosened up.  Yes, that says something about my family...
Then I started the second one while relaxed and wanting to finish.  Roughly about the heel I realized they didn't match so I tightened up.  The stripes and swirls tell a story, don't they?

Picture
Since I'm showing off socks I thought I'd show the pair I finished on that family visit.  They have been sitting here since February waiting for me to weave in the ends.  I've been known to leave socks waiting for a year or so waiting for the ends to be tucked in.  I think I'm going to start a new fashion of socks with tails hanging out.
I have more of a story to tell about these socks, but Salem has other ideas so that will have to wait.

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Hello!

5/19/2019

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Well, hello world! Welcome to my first blog.  What am I doing here?  I don't really know yet.  Probably babble on about knitting, mostly.  But I've hardly met a craft involving yarn or fabric that I haven't tried.  In fact, I have so many hobbies I have to cycle through them.  Sometimes with a very long cycle - after decades I recently starting crochet and needlepoint again.  Guess my hands need a break from knitting every once and a while.
So what am I working on now? Do you mean actively working on or have unfinished somewhere in the house?  'Cause if I gave a complete list of UFO's I'd be here all night listing them...
OK - let's just stick with current projects:
  • A pair of socks, almost done.  I'm allergic to wool so my socks tend to wear out too soon.  After exploring a variety of different yarns, I have found that acrylic sock yarns hold up best, despite my sincere dislike of synthetic yarns.  So now that I have too many socks with holes I'm trying to crank out some new ones.
  • A poncho.  This one has a convoluted story I'll tell later.  It started as knit, now it is crochet, and I wouldn't be surprised if it ends up as something else before it is done.
  • Tying off the ends of a crochet blanket I made for a friend.  I hear there are actually people out there that enjoy tying off ends.  I am not one of them.
  • A needlepoint picture of my old dog.  I started it last fall shortly after he passed and am about half done.  It only has about 60,000 stitches and 50 or so different colors.  That's how much I miss him.  I'll have to get some pictures of it in progress.
  • Curtains.  Wool, knit curtains.  Am I crazy?  Yes.  I have less money than sense, and need curtains.  Most of my fabric is still in storage and my sewing machine needs to be tuned.  But I have more yarn than places to store them, and knitting machines in working order.   So I came up with this crazy idea to machine knit wool fabric from some old, partially moth eaten yarn, that I have left over from art school.  My plan is to felt it slightly to add structure and insulation.  It would be a quick and easy project, except for that moth eaten issue.  My solution?  Tie bits of the yarn together in random sequence and wind into balls.  This takes about 10 times as long as knitting on a machine.  I had hoped to have them ready for the winter, but now here it is May and I'm no where near done.  I'm thinking of moving to Plan D.  (Yes, I have already moved through Plans A and B.)
  • Other things that I have probably forgotten.  Like the Pi shawl I keep handy to work on during road trips.  Unfortunately, I can't knit and drive.  At least not safely.
At some point I will have to figure out technology well enough to add pictures, and maybe even videos.  But my technology comfort level is still with pointy sticks and string so I'll have to work on that.  Now back to those socks.

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    Yarn fanatic. Cat lover. Dirt digger.

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