carleton97: (Default)
carleton97 ([personal profile] carleton97) wrote2006-10-15 10:31 pm

things

1. I do not have the emotional fortitude to instruct an entire fandom on the difference between alternate universe and alternate history. Therefore, unnamed fandom, SHUT UP with your intense discussions of same. You are giving me a headache.

2. I have a pile of UFOs on my desk. Unfinished objects, that is. Christmas presents for Jane and Mrs. Jane's Mom, a baby shower present for Bryn, a scarf, and a pair of socks. Also a ball of roving attached to to my spinning wheel.

3. Question for MN hiatus!con folk. It's the 27th - 29th, right?

[identity profile] bbennett.livejournal.com 2006-10-16 04:41 pm (UTC)(link)
My kickstart was a weekend in Maine, knitting in front of the fire at my friend's house, which was built in 1774. I figured if that wasn't inspiration, nothing was.

I keep thinking about getting a drop spindle, but remind myself "NO. YOU DO NOT NEED YET ANOTHER INTEREST THAT REQUIRES BOTH TIME AND SKILL DEVELOPMENT". But still - how cool would spinning have been in front of that fire?

[identity profile] carleton97.livejournal.com 2006-10-16 04:44 pm (UTC)(link)
That would have been amazingly cool.

Spinning is your friend. You want to spin. Spinning is your friend...

[identity profile] bbennett.livejournal.com 2006-10-18 11:27 am (UTC)(link)
OK, off topic, but it's fetching related, so not really. :) I actually just posted this on Knitty's board, then remembered we'd just discussed the pattern. Any thoughts?

/cut and paste

I'm on the first glove of my second pair, and while I love the pattern, I'm having the same issue that I did with my first pair - when I pick up the two stitches on either side of the thumb to form the thumb tube, I end up with gaping holes.

On the first pair, I closed the holes by weaving in yarn ends through them, thinking maybe it was a gauge issue (the pair ended up a bit looser than I wanted). For the second pair, I both tightened my knitting and went down a needle size, but while the glove itself turned out well, I still have the holes where I picked up the stitches (which I did by picking up the outside loop of each of the two stitches closest to the thumb). Pulling tightly almost seemed to make the holes worse.

I can certainly 'fix' the holes as I did on the first pair, but I'd obviously like to figure out the proper way to knit them. My LYS owner suggested twisting the stitches, but is that what others do to avoid the problem? Am I incorrect in assuming I should only pick up one side (the outside loop) of the stitch?

[identity profile] carleton97.livejournal.com 2006-10-18 03:00 pm (UTC)(link)
You've just hit on my main problem with making gloves of any kind. No matter *what* I do I end up with the holes. I think I'm just a sucky knitter.