Bothering Knit Picks

To: KP Suggestions
Subject: New Yarn Suggestion

I was yarn shopping on ebay a while back and ran across someone who was selling undyed alpaca. It came in the most astonishing range of colorschocolate, tan, camel, gray, black, white, cream, charcoal…if you’ve never considered a natural alpaca yarn in varying colors, I would beg you to do so. It looked wonderful.

Plus, if you didn’t have to dye it, it could be cheaper, right? Right?

Thanks for reading,
Melissa

To: Melissa Mall
Subject: Re: New Yarn Suggestion

Dear Melissa,

Thank you for the suggestion. We will take it into consideration.

Sincerely,
Jasmine
Knit Picks Customer Service
1-800-574-1323

If you care to lend your voice to my petition – or you have a suggestion of your own! – you can contact Knit Picks and let them know at suggestions@knitpicks.com. Answering these emails has got to be a fun job.

The Weekend Update

Wow, I really did a lot of things over the weekend; this is going to be long (but illustrated)! First: pray for mercy from –

PUSS

Puss in Boots

– in boots. 😀 I’m absolutely thrilled with the way that this came out. The directions were really specific – she even told you where and how to embroider the face, and how many stitches to leave between the eyes. I am even more impressed with the pattern than I was last week. At the same time, I can’t foresee ever having the desire to make this particular pattern again, just because it was so much work. I think that’s totally fine, though. Why would I need another one? If I ever want to do that much work again, I’ll make a different toy.

Anyway, while I was slogging through the feathers (harder than they look) I decided to give my poor, tired fingers a break and work on Hedera. My goodness, what a change! The Gloss is a pleasure to work with under normal circumstances, and having just come from an unusually scratchy color of Red Heart worked at a gauge much tighter than Red Heart should ever be forced to go, the silk and merino was a delicious treat. I’ve finished the gusset decreases and am now knitting along through the foot. It’s while doing this that I had an epiphany about so-called “TV knitting.” I’ve heard some socks referred to before as perfect TV knitting, and I always thought that meant something so plain and boring that you could do it without looking at it. As it turns out, what it really means is ‘something just complicated enough that you have to give it half your attention, but repetitive enough that it quickly ceases to be entertaining enough to keep all of it.’ That’s the real secret, and now I think I know what to do to get my socks done. Er, at least one of them.

I was distracted from Hedera, however, because I got a package from Knit Picks!

Knit Picks!

I got the Options set of interchangeable needles, Volume Two of the Vogue Knitting Stitchionary (it’s cables!), and a set of wooden cable needles. I haven’t cabled anything in a long while; I’d say it’s about time, wouldn’t you? Unfortunately I don’t have anything cabled slated to begin in the near future, but with me, you never know! Especially since I am now all set to knit cables in any size I like…

This weekend also represented a blogging first: I was recognized. At church on Sunday I was chasing Charlie through the halls (as per usual) when I got stopped by a friendly looking woman carrying a squirming toddler of her own.

“Is your name Melissa?” she asked.

“Uh, yes,” I answered. (This is not really unusual at church, since I spend most of my time in the hall. I think that if you asked half of the women if they knew who Melissa Mall was, they would say, “Who?” and the other half would say, “You know, that quiet young woman who spends all of Sunday school chasing her baby through the halls.” To which they would reply, “Oh. Wait, which one?” It’s like the park out there.)

“I read your blog!” she said, erupting into a big grin. “I just left you a comment the other day, about the BDU pants?” It was none other than regular commenter Gabbi! (Sorry, I know you have a blog, but I can’t find the link to it. If you want me to put it in here, just send it to me!)

She was really nice, and we had fun chatting for a while before we each got dragged off by our respective child. It was a strange experience: I met someone for the first time that I already ‘knew’ (at least a little). That’s one of the greatest possibilities of the internet. I’m hoping that Ravelry will open up before we move to Japan, because once it’s open to everyone there will be a lot of people on there, and maybe I can make some new fiber-friends before we even get there!

Speaking of Ravelry…another thing that it’s good for is reminding you of the projects you’ve already started. Every time I went to my projects page, there it was – staring at me balefully, the incomplete, multi-colored acrylic monstrosity that haunts me. Yes, I am referring to the Infernal Sheepghan. I don’t like it (to put it mildly). I’m pleased with the result I’m getting, but the process is so fraught with difficulty, and errors, and snarls of five or so different strands of yarn that I never, ever, want to try it again.

Last night I pulled it out of the box where I stuffed it a few weeks ago to assess the damages. After unsnarling my yarn, I ripped out three rows of work, unsnarled the resulting kinky mess, and took it downstairs to be worked on. With excruciatingly close attention to where the color changes go, progress is being made –

 

The Infernal Sheepghan

but that doesn’t mean I enjoy it. I committed to make these baby afghans, I’m shamefully behind, and now I’m just trying to finish the darn thing so I can whip out something easier.

 

Good Morning!

No pictures today, but lots to talk about. Things are going very well with Puss in Boots. The actual knitting is very simple (broken in places by difficult or laborious – but not complex – sections. Last night, for instance, I knit the brim of his hat. To do this you use a double strand of yarn on the same little needles. It certainly produces a stiff piece of work, but at the cost of sore fingers and a stiff hand next morning.) and with each piece I add Puss becomes utterly more charming. There are all of these little, simple details that really just make the design, and demonstrate even more clearly Jean Greenhowe’s creative genius. I appreciate how hard it can be as a designer to create something that is both visually appealing and simple for others to reproduce, but she has absolutely done it.

My only complaint (what, aside from sore fingers?) is that the entire thing is knit flat and then seamed! I understand that to be a traditional method, but you’d think that someone who makes so many toys would have adopted tricks to make her job easier. Who knows. Maybe she gets a kick out of seaming. It would not be any trouble at all to convert the majority to the round, but I decided to follow the pattern, as written, in order to assimilate the technique. If I make another of her designs – a distinct possibility, cast into doubt only by my tendency to dash off and design everything I make on the fly – I will be carefully converting to the round to save myself a lot of work as well as a lot of purling.

For those of you who’ve expressed an interest, the pattern is written for DK yarn on size 2 needles. Since I have neither DK nor size 2s (er, that’s not quite true. I do have two balls of this, and a set of size 2 Knit Picks dpns. But stay with me, here.) I used worsted and size 3s, of which I had both a set of straights and a recently purchased set of dpns. It seems to be working well.

I watched The Princess Bride last night with the boys, and Charlie kept turning off the television. He’s got a thing these days for pushing buttons – he especially likes to turn off the computer monitor, but only if someone is using it. Anyway, near the end I stopped turning it back on and just listened while I knit. It was really enjoyable. Since I was home alone for a while after the boys went to bed, so I decided to see if I could dig up an audiobook to keep me company. I went over to Librivox.org, a site I’d bookmarked a while back but never used, to see what I could find. It’s really an amazing website; volunteers read books that are in the public domain, and you can access the recordings for free online. Rather like Project Gutenberg, but audio. Anyway, I stumbled across recordings of The Blue Fairy Book by Andrew Lang. I’d never heard of the book before, but now I’m in love with it – it’s a collection of fairy tales (some familiar, some new to me) that makes fantastic listening. I’m going to buy the book, and probably some of his others – I do love fairy tales.