Having knit for oh, about 7 years now, I've accumulated lots of knitting material. Admittedly more magazines than books, really, because I'm looking for a certain style that is *me*. I pick my books and magazines the way I used to pick CDs, back before iTunes came into our lives: there had to be 3 great songs in a CD before I put down my money. So, in terms of knitting I've got about a dozen books and probably 4 times that many magazines. Only about a fifth of them are American; the rest are foreign language. So a few days ago when I was lazily looking through my stacks (I did a purge; some knitter at Goodwill is *really* happy right now) I decided that 2011 would be my year of international knitting.
Yes, you poor, long-ignored Phildars, Dale of Norways, Rebeccas, and Japanese magazines, you will have your turn in the sun! Even you, Rowan! No, the Queen's English is technically not a foreign language but you're British and I need an excuse to include you here! I will pick up (stash) yarn and needles and I will doggedly read through all manner of instructions and the garment I will create will be beautiful! Yes, Norwegian and Japanese are not exactly easy languages to translate, but there are online resources that can help! I will not be alone!
Speaking of biting off more than I can chew... I was hasty in my reading Twist Collective's Finish Fest. I had misread "Finish for February" as "Finish *in* February", thinking I had a complete 4 weeks to do a few projects. Easy, yeah?
Easy, no. January 31 is fast approaching! Antalya 5's grafting will take up an hour, I can do that anytime. It was my cardi I needed to take care of. In a rush, I picked up my languishing Girl Friday, placed it back on a circular needle, and knit about 4 rows before I discovered, I don't know what needles I used. I don't know my gauge. Where are my notes? Were they inserted between some pages of a random magazine?? Did I toss them in the same bag as the Goodwill donations??? Suffice it to say that yesterday evening I frogged a considerable amount of yarn, reknit a gauge swatch and didn't get gauge, revised the pattern for my gauge and needle size, found sufficient yarn to make it with, and started knitting (Continental, mind you). And look! I have 8 inches of knitting! Ignore the uneven ribbing, be proud of me!
That's the state of my knitting to date. Beyond that, I've started to process my Amsterdam pictures. When I think of Amsterdam I think of bicycles! And so, dear reader, I have bicycles for you. Have a good Thursday!
ETA: Wtf, FaceBook?
Some weeks ago, Holly of Knitted Thoughts gave me a Stylish Blog Award. Thank you, Holly! Yummy Yarn, stylish? Who'd've thought?
One of the prerequisites to this award is sharing seven things about myself, and to make this more specific, I made it seven stylistic things:
On to knitting. Here's my current project at 5, then 9 repeats of pattern. It's calming knitting, something to help wind the day down. This past week was quite busy!
It also helps that I know Antalya like the back of my hand. Every stitch, every short row turn, every loop picked up, all executed from memory. All that remains is grafting, and I'll probably wait until Shannon has finished the knitting part on hers; then we can have ourselves a little grafting par-tay!
I also signed up for Twist Collective's February Finish Fest, because I do need a little prodding with my knits. While I have an endless list of projects lined up in the coming months, a bit of reminding and egging on by the group should help, hopefully, with finishing the ones already on my needles. Care to join?
Below are just two reasons why I've been busy lately. I had two patterns published in Winter 2010 issue! Yippee!
Unusual construction is something I've been fascinated by in the last few years, and these two are the results of countless sketches, charts, directions, and many, many (mercifully unblogged) knitted attempts. Cables are a great texture, a natural stitch configuration to turn to for winter projects, and oh so flexible, their willingness to twist and bend and separate to fit the projects. I experimented with quite a few cable combinations but ultimately the simplest ones worked. I try very hard to please.

Samsara ::: Photo by Jane Heller ::: Flickr

Antalya ::: Photo by Twist Collective ::: Flickr
Another post is in the works with more details on the projects.