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Lizards
I need to know about lizards. Odd info, anecdotes, personal appreciations, myths, stories. Please get in touch. No, I'm not going to keep them as 'pets'. Thanks.

Knitting Bookstore
to browse and drool

Anne's
s*t*a*s*h!
(blush)

52 or 79 things I have discovered about me, life and knitting. Or fewer. Or more.

What Anne does for a living

Work on needles
Patricia Roberts Pierrot
Heavily adapted but with the same zing as the original. Kittens have stormed the basket and untangling may take some time


Beaded top in hemp
Hemp yarn from House of Hemp in 'gosh', kingfisher blue / green. Very, very nearly there



Sleeveless top for Toz in duck-egg blue Rowan DK Soft.
Toria started it and has run out of steam.


Scarf in charcoal grey Rowan Polar
Very chunky and soft. Yarn was a presi from DH Mike.


Anne's finished projects 2004
Mike's cable sweater in marled grey Rowan wool - cotton.
Luscious in alpaca
Blue denim socks
Socks brooch
Beige denim socks
Rachel's tassel scarf
Meghan's croc scarf
Two moebius scarves
Jamtart's cat blanket
Bluey Opal sox for Mike
and...

Project Melanie's Baby
Baby togs and stuff


Finished projects 2002 - 2003
2003
2002

Online yarn stores and resources


SECRET
This box for secret items...

TOP SECRET
Nothing. Boring, huh?

January 1st 2005
Happy New Year!
Here's the alpaca baby sweater (unblocked) from Erika Knight's Baby Bloom:


And the kittens entwined on someone's lap:


December 29th
Sad days continue
This latest natural disaster is so sad, so desperately sad. So awful. And as the figures of confirmed and estimated dead roll in, I am reminded of how many more hundreds of thousands are wiped out when humans bomb their own kind.

Online donations are quick and easy. I donated here at the Disasters Emergency Committee but Oxfam are also taking donations, as are many other organisations like Medecins Sans Frontieres.

I'm in love with Erika Knight.
And I'm in a swoon over her book Baby Bloom. She's given us totally wearable contemporary designs for babies and pregnant women. I want to knit every single item and I am not a little miffed that this type of thing was not around when I was that shape. Even 17 years ago, the idea was that you covered up!!!!! Blow that. Now, I've said many times before that I do *not* want any of my own children producing for at least another 10 years. At least. Get a life! But I have plenty of friends who are pregnant now, and the baby things at least will be on the needles forthwith.

I'm going to go into more detail about this book, I love it so much. Erika's sheer understated class is imprinted on every page. For pregnant women there are seven items, ranging from ruff and tuff day wear to soirée silks. My favourite, a fantastic zip-up striped / fairisle cotton hoodie which unzips from both ends to make room for the bump. Suggested yarn is Rowan All Seasons Cotton - needle size 5mm, normally way, way, way too chunky for me, but I love it anyway. The hoodie is *shaped*, in at the waist, out again, so is totally wearable even when not pregnant. However, there are no schematics to show this, you have to read the pattern to glean those little details. I like reading patterns :)

For mindless knitting there's an incredibly useful, easy big soft unshaped wrap jacket, in rib, to stretch around the bump if required, and around a less than lean middle once baby is born. This in even chunkier Jaeger Chamonix.

This I really love: the wide round neck, set-in short sleeved T-shirt with side-splits and ties. In 4ply Jaeger Cashmina (swoon), but would work equally well in fine cotton or silk or wool. The front is slightly longer than the back and the side vents are in rib. She has it tied with suede ribbon. No schematics, but the pattern is well-written and tells all.

Two cardigans. This is British. We need, we like, we wear cardigans. In whisper-fine mohair (Kidsilk Haze), with round neck set-in sleeves, superbly shaped (read the pattern). The styling is immaculate, with no buttons but organza ties. This cardi won't stretch over a bump, but that means it can be worn afterwards as well. The other cardi is in a lacy, shiny cotton DK affair, deep V down to the ribbon tie around the waist (above the bump) and deep, deep ribbing. No buttons. It's all in the shaping again.

For evening wear make a superb three-quarter sleeves wrapover top in shiny 4ply (fine) cotton or merino wool, shaped with finesse and trimmed with beaded organza, or velvet, satin, or ruffles to change the look and feel of it. I would knit this with day-wear yarns and trims too. No buttons. And no schematics, but we're used to that by now.

The last design for women is the camisole, sleeveless and with a deep V-neck. The straps are wide enough to cover nursing bra straps. The shaping and detailing are superb again. The suggested yarn is Rowan Lurex Shimmer, but I can see it in any other kind of soft 4ply.

And what about the babies? Sizes are from 'early baby' to 9 - 12 months. In heavier yarns there's a chic chunky sweater, a chunky zip-up cardigan and a very chunky satin-edged shawl. Erika puts the same effort in styling into the tiny garments as well as the adults'. My favourites are an aran weight cardigan, fab pixie hat and a wonderful raglan sweater with buttons down the right front raglan seam. Embroidery optional - I think it would look best with its simple contrast trim.

The papoose, with or without pompons is infinitely variable in DK (Rowan Wool Cotton recommended), just right for tucking in the simple 'Night-time Teddy.

The lacy bonnet is desperately sweet in Rowan Wool Cotton (DK), and Erika has it styled with big satin bows. My offspring would have had those off within miliseconds, but it still looks gorgeous without. Matching bootees are de rigeur. For traditionalists there is the beautifully shaped matinee coat in 4ply (sizes from newborn up to 3 - 6 months) and the heirloom silk shawl, trimmed with ribbon through the eyelets and much easier and quicker than it looks. For special occasions there's a divine wrap sweater in silk or cotton, with picot edging and embroidered with the same yarn. So subtle and understated but very effective.

I've left the best bit of all to last: Erika's shaping is second to none, and when it comes to trousers and pants, she is queen. To go with the chunky sweater - but frankly, they would look amazing with any of the other garments - she's given another pattern for short pants. I love all her others, but this time they are worked in one piece with incredibly clever shaping. She has designed them in Jaeger Cashmina with stripes, but other fine 4 plies would give totally different effects. I can see silk with the matinee coat or wrapover and soft cotton with the raglan sweater.

Are there any drawbacks to this book? Well, what may be seen as drawbacks I may see as advantages, but here they are: this is a true drawback, but is not necessarily a problem: as I've already said, there are no schematics, so one has to read the pattern - and know what one is reading, to work out what the shape looks like. For those of us happy to tackle shaping, that's fine. There are just a few projects which are truly suitable for beginners - like the chunky and aran weight baby sweaters, the chunky shawl and the big soft mummy-wrap jacket. Oh, and maybe the aran weight cardi for babe. The rest require some experience at least. Good. A fair number of the designs are knit in fine DK or 4 ply (fingering). Excellent! Finished chest width on women's garments for largest size range from 96cm (most of them) to 99cm for the hoodie, 100cm for the wrapover top and 106cm for the big soft wrap. That's not exactly stick insect sizing, but one could always size up with bigger needles or thicker yarn. I would be wary of that, as these are not simple shapes.

I'm starting on the embroidered raglan sweater, which won't be embroidered, with the pants to match. How do I do that? I have some rather yummy alpaca 4 ply which, held double, knits up to a wopping 18 sts to 10cm for the sweater, and, held single, 28 sts for the pants. Perfect!

December 28th
Stash reorganisation
It's been wonderful having the time over the christmas break to catch up on projects which have fallen by the wayside in the pursuit of work. Reorganising my stash has been one of them. As part of my christmas goodies Mike DH gave me some more white, i.e. almost see-through storage boxes with lids. Lids are important. They are lids that snap on and cannot be easily removed by even the most insistent cat paws.

I digress. What I was saying is that my stash is now even better organised into boxes of colour. Just colour. Let me recommend this to anyone even slightly bewildered by the riot of colour, ply, fibre, texture and elasticity or otherwise of each lovingly selected scrap of yarn that contributes to the great kaleidescope of The Stash.

I now have a box of whites and creams (will be separated when I get some more boxes), boxes of blacks and greys (ditto), dusty lilacs, sharp lilacs and purples, sharp (yellow and blue) reds, soft yellow reds, soft blue reds, rusts and browns, beige / taupe / coffees, yellow-greens, strong blue-greens, soft grey aqua blue-greens (masses!) bright blues (hardly any), yellow / golds, soft grey-blues, pale pinks (how did I get those?), oranges and salmons, and a sort of deep teal, which I couldn't place anywhere. Are you still following? Was once the background for an heraldic jumper for James, DS2, from The Seaton Collection.

I am now going to ferret out all the embroidery threads I had when I was into cross-stitching (children were very little and I had not mastered the art of keeping most of the brain going for interesting things, and but a small dedicated part for the humanoid washing, cleaning, breeding routine. I nearly died of boredom, and cross-stitch kept me going, but that's another story). ... And, I'm going to sort them into colours too, to go in the same boxes, as I often use them in knitwear now. How organised is that?

Whilst we are on the housekeeping front, I have decided to order a skip. That's a big deal for us, as I usually take stuff to the nearest charity shop / jumble sale. Now, however, nothing I have left over could possibly ever be used by anyone else. I think I'm done with the 'oh that will do, we can make do, it's only us' fandango. Basta! Mike will be terrified, and I'm looking forward to that already. Poor lamb. He's survived change so far, you know.


Archives:
Knitting Archives 2004
Knitting Archives 2003
Knitting Archives 2002


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Send an email to Anne

Knitting books now:

Baby Bloom - Erika Knight

Knits for pregnancy and babies to 12 months. Totally recommended.

In the US it's called Knitting for Two


Knitting Bookstore

Medecins Sans Frontieres

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Read this month:
Don't Think of an Elephant: Know Your Values and Frame the Debate - The Essential Guide for Progressives. George Lakoff
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Money, religion, politics. Yes.


knitters and bloggers extraordinaire

French language
Balade -Marie
Fleur des Prairies - Val
Histoires d'aiguilles - Isabelle
Rouge Cerise - Sandra

German language
Das kleine Nadelspiel
Stricknadel und co
Sockhaus Strick-Tagebuch

Anglo/American language
Blue Blog - Alison
Brainy Lady - Alison
Creating Text(iles) - Anne
Creazativity - Libby
Crowing Ram - Matt
Emma and co
In a minute ago - Sharon
Indigirl - Amy
Keyboard Biologist-Theresa
KnitDad's Blog - Larry
Knitting Revolutionary - Mon
LoubyLoo's Knittin' - Linda
Mamacate - Cate
Mason-Dixon Knitting - Ann and Kay
Mossy cottage - Ryan
Rainbow Chills -Christy
Red Lipstick - Staceyjoy
Sandy's Knitting
Widowknits - Jacqueline
Witty Knitter - Mary-Helen
Work in Progress - Michelle
Yarn-A-Go-Go - Rachael
Yarnharlot - Stephanie

Odd stuff and commentary, usually knitting as well
Boston Globe
Hairball
Knitting Revolutionary
Science and Politics
Turning the Tide - Noam Chomsky
The Infinite Stitch - Dianna


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