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Bo Peep Edition Three

20 Mar

Thanks to a new piece of errata pointed out to me today by Jen, I’ve edited Bo Peep Edition Two to be Bo Peep Edition Three with the new findings!

I really hope that I have managed to include all of the previous errata in this version but I’m also aware that we make errors all the time and possibly have not caught everything.

I also want to take the opportunity to thank everyone who has knit this pattern using the previous two editions as you are obviously a complete genius!!

Me and Emmms write our patterns on the side of living our normal lives and jobs and don’t have a pattern editor so from time to time we get emails from amazing knitters pointing out things we’ve missed or typed wrong, we are very grateful for you doing so!!

For anyone who still wants to work off the previous two editions:  ERRATA FOR BO PEEP 18/10/11 AND BEFORE

 

little elephant apron

15 Mar

I wanted to make my niece something practical for her birthday this year so decided on an apron as both her and her parents love to bake!

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I had the awesome elephant print linen fabric from Knitting and Stitching Show at Ally Pally last year from the great and wonderful Eternal Maker so decided to use that with some pink polka dots cotton left over from another project and green polka dot light flannel for the ties!

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It’s so cute and she loved it!!!!!

giant red patchwork ball

15 Feb

Wow it’s 15th February already???

I thought at one point that January would never end. It seemed to go so slow but now, looking back, it went so quick!!

Ive been so busy with multiple projects and time just runs away a lot these days!

My main January project was my nieces first birthday present.
I can’t believe it has been over a year since my niece was born and I was posting about meeting her for the first time!

I went to visit her for her first birthday at the end of Jan with her homemade gift (my sister wanted us to make our presents as she was so spoilt at Xmas!)

I’m really into patchwork at the moment (see Emmms future post on the hand washing bag I made her for Xmas) so I decided to hand sew a patchwork ball for my niece to play with.
However instead of normal sized I did a giant red ball with patchwork numbers sewn into each section and stuffed with teddy bear stuffing!

Giant Patchwork Ball

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To make the ball, I set about cutting the 12 individual pentagons, using red felt, with each side measuring 7 inches.
I then cut smaller pieces, 6 inches, out of a sturdy interfacing fabric.

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I pinned the two pieces together by folding the larger sides over the smaller sides

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I then measured and cut out my numbers using scrap fabrics I had lying around.

I tried to use different textures, colours and prints to give it variety.

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And I attached the numbers to the pentagons using different hand sewing methods

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a cross stitch,

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whip stitch

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and a back stitch

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Once I had all of my pieces, I joined them together.

I split the pentagons into two lots of 6 then using one pentagon as the centre, joined another five by placing the wrong sides together and using a whip stitch over the top to secure.

These two giant pentagons were now joined together in the same way and stuffed with teddy stuffing.

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She absolutely loved it!!

Bo Peep revival and new pattern edition

18 Oct

It turns out that there is a bit of a revival of our Loumms Year of Socks pattern, Bo Peep!!

This pattern was originally released in April 2009 as a special part of our Year of Socks and there are now quite a few Bo Peeps floating around Ravelry.

In the past few weeks we have been contacted by many people showing an interest in these lacy gloves so I thought Id take the opportunity to edit the pattern properly to make life easier for everyone!

      

All the links have now been updated to the new PDF copy but just in case I missed one I’ve noted on the pattern that it is a 2nd edition.

Hopefully all of the errata has been included and brand new ‘Bo Peeps’ will be popping up everywhere with minimal fuss!!! I might even knit myself my third pair!

                   

             

So you can now download the new edition of Bo Peep here and also on Ravelry soon.

 (pictures taken from Ravelry)

a lesson learnt

6 Oct

Anyone who regularly reads loumms or has paid any attention to the blog in the past knows that I love designing knitted stuff.

I love it with a passion I hold for nothing else.
When I come up with a new design, for socks, gloves, jumper, lampshade or anything for that matter I get such a rush of blood to the head I cant even consider doing anything else.

If I’m at work when this happens, I’ve been told a glaze comes across my eyes and I’m in a world of my own.

The design is immediately written down (I have quite often been caught at the empty poker table with a pen and paper and a make shift chart/drawing of my thoughts), swatches are made the second I get my hands on some yarn and needles and the new design obsession begins.

I have been known to ruin a ‘cosy weekend in’ by obsessively knitting or researching patterns for a new design instead of spending (very limited) quality time with my love.

I really can’t help it though, I lose all control over normal thought!

Most of my design ideas come from what I’d like to knit but can’t find a pattern for but a lot of the time

I see an image

future design inspiration

or some colours together

‘robot explosion’

or take inspiration from a song

‘only music survives’

or movie

‘the red shoes’

and try and put it into a design.

This often proves a lot harder to put together than I originally think and a lot of the time it goes wrong.

When me and Emma decided to do Loumms Year of Socks, it was set as a personal challenge. We both loved designing so much that we wanted to give ourselves a reason to design loads of socks.
We never imagined that the interest in the resulting patterns would be so high!

We were both so pleased with the way it turned out, but most importantly for me it brought out a desire to create patterns for others to knit, this in turn brought up a huge heap of problems I have in design and pattern writing.

Which takes me to my first lesson learnt.

Lesson 1: from desire to design

I’m not the best knitter in the world,

I don’t have years of experience,

I’m inpatient a lot of the time,

very often I try to do things that either don’t work at all

fisher price’

(the idea was to have an alphabet of cables ie. One cable for each letter, work their way up the socks. This didnt happen and they became my biggest design disaster. I still like the initial idea so will fix them at some point),

or work visually but not practically,

‘sinusoida’

(the slipped stitch pattern waving its way around the sock looks exactly the way I wanted it too but there is such little give in the resulting fabric that it doesn’t really work for a sock. Houghmary on Ravelry has came up with a great alternative for this which still keeps the initial design idea intact but gives the sock a lot more wearability)

A lot of these problems stemmed from the fact that we gave ourselves so little time during LYOS (a month a sock) that I never really got time to perfect what I wanted to create, but most were down to me.

I need to give myself a lot more time to get the design right, admit where the design may need to be changed to make it wearable, work on my structure and develop my knowledge.

Due to the fact that I seem to enjoy making things difficult for myself I fight with the problem of design instead of trying to keep it simple and quite often, even though my design appears totally unknittable, I manage to create something that I have great difficulty putting down on paper.

Lesson 2: from design to pattern 

This begins to cause a problem when I come to creating a pattern.
At the best of times I’m not a great writer, errors everywhere, broken sentences, spelling mistakes, so most of my initial pattern notes are jotted down with no structure (as I imagine most designers notes are) however mine seem to make their way into the actual pattern in the same form.

I keep my pattern notes jotted on paper, on notes on my phone, as images and documents on the computer and in a design book but nothing is really organised.

I begin writing a pattern on one thing and finish it on something else, which means a lot of the time the middle part is on a piece of paper in a bag somewhere never to be found again.

This becomes a problem when I start writing the pattern up and miss out a huge section only to find out when the person knitting the item PM’s me. Very embarrassing!

I really need to become more organised if I want to take pattern writing seriously.

I started to make sure I put all of my notes for one pattern in the same place, even if it was the same bag, and stared naming my computer files correctly so I could go back to them at any time and know what they were for! I think I will find this very helpful when addressing errata questions from test knitters!

All of the original patterns we did during the LYOS were free and many of them still are. As we had limited time we knew we couldnt get anything test knit or edited before we released them and as they were only intended to be for our own enjoyment we really did not want to charge for them.

Since then we have had loads of support and loads of people knit up the socks, letting us know along the way any errors or problems they have found in the patterns. ( mine more than Emmms)

Lesson 3: What? Can’t you read my mind?

This really made it clear to me that I write my patterns the way I knit them!
People could not seem to understand a lot of what I was asking them to do in the pattern.

To be honest I am really surprised that anyone was actually successful in knitting a sock at all from some of the instructions I gave, I’m sure it’s all down to the fact that the knitters who took on my patterns were very talented people!

When ever me and Emmms did a joint pattern during LYOS I would receive emails in their dozens from Emmms asking “What on earth do you mean by this?” “Why have you written that there?” “Should that round not be 6 stitches longer?” “Why isnt the chart right”
And every email I replied with “What? Can’t you read my mind?”

This is a big problem for me.
I seem to think that the knitter following my pattern has direct access to my brain at all times and that things I see as obvious are definitely not obvious to everyone else!

I have recently had this problem with a test knitter on my current designs and finally have decided to face up to the fact that I really do need to put a lot more time effort and thought into the patterns I write.
I need to make sure my gauge is accurate to begin with (sorry Katherine!) I need to be more constant with my abbreviations, include my abbreviations!  take care with a chart and key, explain in detail any difficult, tricky or just out of the norm sections, and finally write the pattern as if I was knitting it for the first time!!

I’ve been learning this lesson slowly over the past year and have worked on a few original patterns from LYOS.
Both Singing in the Rain and Raspberry Ripple have been re-written, edited and test knit and I am actually very happy in the way they have turned out.

They are both now back for sale!

It does show when you do something properly it gives you more satisfaction so all of my patterns from LYOS will eventually receive this level of attention as since LYOS I’ve been working on so many new patterns, learning more and more as I go along.

Lesson 4: some things are better left unsaid

I’ve also learnt that not everything I design I can turn into a pattern for others to follow.

Take my lampshades.

I don’t think I will ever have enough skill to put my lamp designs into workable patterns! I am going to keep them for myself and give away/sell as finished items!

I have patterns that are written up and designs ready that will never see the light of day due to my lack of confidence in them!

Also I’ve been working on a sweater for over a year, in stages.

At the moment I’m not very far along with it but already am coming across things I know now will cause me massive problems if I ever attempted to write it up!

But I do have at least 25 designs I’m working  on that will become patterns and the more I work on the more lessons I learn and the better my design and pattern writing becomes.

‘labyrinth hat’

’1926′ socks

’70′s style summer vest’

‘starry night’ beret

‘fiery flowers’ fingerless gloves

So hopefully, with these lessons learnt, I will begin to create patterns and designs that people are able to knit!!! That is my main aim in life anyway so I better get it right!!

yarn problems and solutions

27 Sep

In my last post I mentioned having a few problems with the yarn I’m using for my new Labyrinth patterns.

The base yarn is a 4ply, 10% cashmere, 10% baby alpaca, 40% angora, 40% lambswool blend and it is gorgeously dyed in cochineal natural dye, so soft and squishy with a beautiful tone.

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It was a bit frustrating at first as I really really liked the yarn, however I pretty much immediately encountered quite un knittable issues.

Despite the problems, the yarn had all the qualities we like in our yarn, UK sourced, UK based, natural on all accounts so I was torn with what to do.

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So I contacted the company and was met with the nicest, most helpful customer service from the yarn dyer.

Almost immediately she apologised, explained they have had a few problems with the particular yarn and offered to send me the equivalent of what I originally purchased from a different batch.

Turns out this batch is pretty perfect!!

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Looks like they got over the little hitch and I’m so happy as I really wanted to use them not only for the recommended yarn choice for the project but for others in the future.

winter woolies

20 Sep

I’ve been working on this set of cosy mitts, funky hat and toasty leg warmers for a while now. Still can’t come up with a name for them so winter woolies has to do for now!

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It has certainly felt strange knitting winter woolies when I’m still trying to believe it is summer however it really has got me in the mood for a cosy winter!

I’m being a bit premature there I guess as we still have a lovely London autumn to look forward too!

Anyway, the new patterns originated from a cable chart I modified a few months back which I’m obsessed with!
It looks like a logical cable from afar but up close you see that things don’t follow the pattern you believe they would. A few twists and turns takes the cables into a great labyrinth!

Agh that’s their name!!! Labyrinth! Knew it would come to me!!!

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So yep, ‘Labyrinth’ started as a design for a thigh high sock however after a few problems with the yarn (see future post) I couldn’t face knitting the entire sock with it. After one repeat of the chart I gave up, joined the two sides together and made a hat!
The rest is history!!
To go with the hat I’ve done mitts using the same chart and to complete the set is a pair of very high leg warmers and all with the option of adding buttons!!!!

Perfect for the winter months!

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I’m still working on the leg warmers but will be getting the whole set test knit ASAP!!

test knitter found!!

6 Aug

Thanks for all the responses for a test knitter!!

I’ve found someone who can knit up my ’19-7-1926′ however I have so many more men’s patterns in mind so I will keep everyone in mind for the future!!

Thanks again!

I really didn’t expect so many replies!

request for a test knitter

5 Aug

I am looking for a test knitter to knit up one of (or both of) my new mens sock pattern ’19-07-1926′.

The pattern is a subtle but classy men’s sock comprising of moss stitch with a slip stitch lattice, ribs and a simple cable.

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I would prefer a UK knitter, only because of ease with posting/returning yarn and sock so sorry the rest of the world!!!

If anyone is interested please leave a message at the bottom of this post.

I am able to provide yarn (Beloved, by Sweet Clement) and PDF/word.doc pattern ASAP.

Thanks!!!!

the sweetness of sweet clement

4 Aug

I’ve just finished knitting a sample of Raspberry Ripple for Pippa at Sweet Clement and had to post immediately about how utterly scrumptious her yarn is!!

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This particular sample is knit in her Beloved, 4ply, superwash BFL sock yarn in Cerise and it couldn’t be more lush!

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The colour is so deep it draws you right in, changing subtly from a dark pink to almost red.

The yarn itself is soft and squishy but creates a perfect stitch definition.

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I am also knitting up a new mens pattern ’1926′ also in Beloved, colourway Forest, which was also meant to be a sample for Pip but I love it so much I can’t bear to part with it!!

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The individual strands of the ply hold so many different tones that come together to create the perfect semi solid green.

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I think I’ll have to get to her online shop ASAP as if Knit Nation was anything to go by she will be selling out pretty soon!

I also have my eye on her Adore, an Alpaca/Silk blend in Sportweight, which will be perfect for the Blackberry cardi from A Stitch in Time.
(I say perfect, I would have to alter to get my gauge but I need an excuse to own some!!!!)

Check out the rest of Pippa’s yarn at her etsy shop as her colourways and base yarns are just glorious as is her un-deniable talent for dying!!!

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