WIP Wednesday

Many moons ago, Wednesdays were always the day that we posted about our WIPs on our blogs.  I thought I’d revive the tradition and post about what’s been under the sewing machine or on the knitting needles this week.

Quilt Blocks that are in progress:  the double nine patch is a sample for a class on Saturday.

blocks WIP Wednesday

Knitting detail:  you can sort of see the definition of the ribbing starting to show just above the needle.  The yarn is so yummy, it is one of the heathers and has some flecks of other colors in it:

knit detail WIP Wednesday

Customer quilting:

quilt detail WIP Wednesday

So what Works In Progress have you been working on this week?

Suzanne

Warm hands

About a month ago I was complaining about how cold my hands were (already).  Things warmed up a bit, and I guess I got used to the cooler temps, because my hands hadn’t been quite so chilled.  Until this week.

Brrr.

But now!  Look at what was waiting for me when I got to the shop this morning!!!

mitts Warm hands

The knitting fairy (aka Mom) has been leaving me things a lot lately.  These wool fingerless mittens are purely awesome.  I’m wearing them as I type!  And can’t wait to show them off to everyone who comes into the shop today!

edited to add:  if you are on Ravelry, the pattern is available as a free download, it’s called Cascade 220 Fingerless Mitts.

The other front

Apologies to non-knitters.  But I have to share.

As a quilter, I have done my share of unsewing.  Reverse sewing.  Frogging.  Whatever you want to call it.  Tedious?  Absolutely.

However.  I did not know the meaning of tedious until I had to rip out some rows of my sweater yesterday.

When you are ripping out quilting stitches, you get to use a nice sharp seam ripper and whack the thread to bits and get rid of it all.

When you are ripping out knitting stitches, you have to preserve the stitches from the previous row, so not only are you taking out mistakes, you are freaking out that you are going to drop a stitch.

I managed to get back to where I had made my mistake without tearing too much hair out (and without dropping any stitches, thankyouverymuch.  I ended up getting some scrap yarn involved and threading that through the stitches I wanted to preserve, and just had a fun old time yanking out the stuff that had to go away).

I was so proud of myself.  I kept knitting for qiute awhile last night, even though there are a million other things I probably ought to be doing.

If I’d been doing one of them, I wouldn’t now have to rip out several more rows.

I read the instructions for the M1 increase as “insert the left needle from the back to the front.”  I read it several times.  Turns out what it actually says is “insert the left needle from the front to the back.

About 1.5 hours of knitting, down the drain.

Does this make me a real knitter???

pixel The other front