Category: magazines

  • Schulana Fall 2010

    Schulana One of the joys of knitting magazines is not just the patterns, nor the articles about knitting tips and techniques.  I simply enjoy looking at all the ads.

     

    Inspired by ads by Schulana in both the Interweave and Vogue Knitting magazines, I ordered the fall book.  I am very happy I did so as there are several things that appeal to me.

     

    Schulana1A No long wordy posts this time though as I seem to be somewhat sleep deprived of late and I also decided to celebrate this labor day weekend by laboring in the kitchen and the garden, thereby elevating my general level of exhaustion.

     

    Luckily dream knitting is not confined by the restraints of reality. 

  • Vogue Knitting Fall 2010

    Picture 5 The new Vogue Knitting arrived over the weekend.  I had already looked at the preview online, something I occasionally avoid, as I tend to want everything to be new when I open the magazine.  But I also avoid the previews because if there is something I really really like, I get all antsy waiting for the magazine to arrive.

     

    This time I didn't mind looking and I still enjoyed the magazine; I've been looking at it ever since it arrived.   In fact I think it is a fabulous issue and I can imagine knitting most of the sweaters in it at one time or another.  So instead of showing you my favorites, I am going to do something different this time.  

     

    Picture 3 First of all there are two sections that do not appeal to me at all.  The section titled "Home on the Prarie" is a miss in my book, although the idea is good, and the idea itself is not something that I would avoid, I like the motifs and the ideas, but the sweaters leave me cold.  Perhaps I am just suffering from a "been there, done that" moment, because all these sweaters look like things I have knit and worn at previous times in my life.  

     

    Picture 2
    The other pretty much solid "thumbs down" section is the one by Irina Shabayeva and I really wanted to like these sweaters. In fact, when I saw the sweaters on the preview I was quite interested, and I do rather like the oversized coat with the large shawl collar, but I think I have other bulky yarn coat and jacket patterns I like even better than this one.  The detailed intarsia sweaters are interesting, they would be fun to knit, and in many ways they fit with my style, but the truth is that I just don't like the bird's wing/feather pattern.  If it was leopard or pretty much any other animal pattern it wouldn't bother me but somehow feathers are not my thing, and they actually leave me feeling uncomfortable.  I didn't know that about myself before.

     

    So you've seen the sweaters I don't like (except for two in the Prairie section which I just didn't bother copying).  You can safely assume I like everything else to some extent or another.  But will I knit them?  Will I knit any of them this season?  Those are really good questions.

     

    Cable vest The truth is that I am really focused on yarns that are in my stash right now, and I have several projects that I want to knit and wear now, as well as several for the winter and for the most part these patterns don't fit into the existing stash/yarns I want to use paradigm, with one exception.  

     

    I really like this vest and I have two skeins of Cascade Eco+ which I traded for some old Katia Ceilan.  The gauges are slightly different, the original yarn is more bulky than the Eco+, but I think I can work it out. Maybe not.  As we get a little closer to actual fall temperatures, you might see me at least swatching for this project.

     

    Clown princess The other sweater that has plastered itself into my brain cells is the multicolored intarsia sweater by Deborah Newton.  I really like the original version, as shown in the magazine; it is bright and cheerful and certainly attention getting.  It is not the same old boring sweater.  But although I do love color,and even rainbow colors, I am not a rainbow person.  I am not comfortable wearing that much color at once and those particular colors are not my colors, much as I love the pattern.  

     

    Still I am obsessed.  I may have to spend an afternoon with color cards and crayons and figure out if there is a happy meeting of my sense of color and this design.  I realize that the spirit of the sweater would be entirely different; it would not have that bright happy, circus-like, appeal, but can it be something else?  I don't know.  I may have to find out.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Vogue Knitting Autumn 2010

    VK2010  I was cleaning up my desktop and I found a bunch of pictures from the autumn Vogue Knitting.  At first I started to drag them to the trash, and then I realized I had only written that post in my head.  I don't really know what happened; I started the month with ideas and plans and it is as if they have been sucked right out of me by the great heat-wave.  I didn't even buy anything at my LYS when they were having a sale — a sure sign of a slump if there ever was one.

    But back to the fall Vogues:

    Vk01  I adore this long cardigan (pattern #1) by Lutz and Patmos in Tahki's wool yarn Montana.  I am a little cautious about the super-bulky yarn because I have several warm bulky cardigans and not enough thinner ones, and because my life is unsettled enough right now and I am feeling a bit cautious.  We have talked about moving south and even though we have no plans to move for at least a couple of years, and I am frankly not eager to live in a warmer climate, life is unsettled enough that I inclined to be more cautious about what I actually knit.   Of course, all  I need is a cold winter to change my mind so there is no telling what relief from the summer heat-wave will do to my knitting mojo and projects.  At least this sweater is bulky wool, not alpaca.  I am really getting tired of bulky alpaca.

    VK02  And while I am on the subject of alpaca.  The second sweater in this magazine is knit in, you guessed it, Blue Sky Alpaca Bulky, a yarn I actually do like and have used.   At least it is cropped and short sleeved, both necessities for personal comfort when wearing bulky alpaca sweaters.

    But wait.  I already have alpaca boleros, and short cropped alpaca sweaters, all of which I wear.  Do I need another?  No, but I do really like the pattern.  I'm wondering if I can knit it using Karabella Supercashmere even though it is a finer gauge.  I am about to unravel a cardigan I knit a couple of years ago which is now huge on me.  I will have somewhere in the vicinity of 19 skeins worth of supercashmere, enough to probably knit two sweaters.  Of course there are other bulky wools on the market too, so it is not like I am without possibilities.

    I am wondering, now that I am thinking about unraveling sweaters (again) how many of those bulky sweaters that were large but not too large last winter, are going to be too large this winter, and if, in fact, I may actually need more sweaters, not fewer.

    VK16  But on to finer things (gauge-wise at least).  Sweater  number 16, designed by Fiona Ellis is knit in Lorna's Laces Shepherd sock.  Certainly nothing bulky here, and a sweater that could be worn almost anywhere.  The fact that it will take me three times as long to knit it is more than justified when I consider that it will also prove to be far more versatile and will probably get more than three times more wear.

    Vk17  The next cardigan, number 17, designed by Renee Lorion is in worsted weight wool.  It is a lovely seater and I love the pattern stitch, but I am second-guessing myself already.  Sweaters wrapped and tied at the waist don't look that good on me.  I could change it for buttons or hooks, or do something else, but I am wondering if it is worth it.  Again, I think I have plenty of options in this genre of sweater.  Still I will save the pattern just in case the need arises.

    And then there are the more frivolous things:

    Vk25  Sweater number 25, which is also the cover sweater, is knit in kidsilk haze, one of the most truly yummy-scrumptious yarns I know.   This sweater looks like nothing so much as a bed-jacket to me, but I love it anyway.  In fact, I don't see myself wearing it out and rather like the way the editors at Vogue have styled these sweaters as lounge-wear.  In fact I love this sweater because of its very bed-jacket associations.  The yarn is delicious.  I want to wear it in the evening with a nightgown.  My daytime style may be more sporty, but in the evening I love nothing more than nightgowns, silk, and lace and this little jacket fits right into that theme. 

    Vk29  And so my last choice, number 29,  appeals to that same softer, more feminine, private, side of my nature.  

  • Interweave Summer

    My evenings  (and days) have been occupied with other tasks lately and there has been little knitting time.  I did get a fair amount done on Thursday, while I was at knitting night, and I managed to squeeze in an hour yesterday as well.  No go today.  I had hoped to knit, or better yet, to knit and spend some time sewing up a sweater but got behind on my list of things to do and spent the evening  processing a large batch of ancho chile puree and using some of it to make a batch of chorizo as well.  

    Summer-2010-290  While I was waiting for things to simmer and cool however, I did finally get around to looking at the new Interweave Knits, which arrived over a week ago and had basically been ignored until today.

    It is an interesting enough issue, and there are several sweaters that are nice, but which are not quite catching my fancy.  I put them in the "lovely, but" category. At the moment I am not interested in them.  I am willing to admit however that if I see a fabulous version of one or another of them on Ravelry, I may change my mind.

    Essential_cardi  But what do I love?  Only two patterns speak to me.

    The essential cardigan is classic and lovely and I like it all the more because of the off-center buttons.  The DK weight is nice.  I would have to lengthen it slightly, but that is not unusual, and otherwise I would probably do little to change this.  Of course I may change my mind about that completely when I actually get around to knitting it.

    Lace_saddle_tee  The other sweater that caught my attention was the lace-saddle-tee but it is really hard for me to make up my mind about this because the photos don't really show the sweater and the way it fits the model very well.  There are great photos of the lovely lace detail on the sleeve, and the diagram looks promising, although the sleeve looks too short.   So it seems that this one too, is a lovely sweater, but not one that is calling me to drop everything else and begin knitting it right away.

    After I looked at the diagram for this tee however, I also looked at the instructions to several patterns, some of which look much more intriguing in the instructions than they do in the photographs.   I'm not quite sure what I think about that, but I do think that I need to give this issue some more thought.

  • Winter Interweave

     Three seems to be the magic number for sweaters in new knitting publications this past month.  There are three sweaters I like in the Winter 2009 Interweave Knits, and just as in my last post, two are textured and one is colorwork.

    Nora's Sweater1  I adore this jacket. I loved it when I saw the first picture.  The second picture, of the back (below) sealed the deal.  I'm not sure I want it in alpaca, but that is not really an issue.  I want to start it now, tonight, yesterday even.  But I seem to say that about every project I see and I do have projects in the queue that I definitely want to wear soon, projects that are higher in priority than this.

    Nora's Sweater 2  

    But still, it is really lovely isn't it?

    Braided Riding Jacket  

    I also like this lovely Braided Riding Jacket.  I love the texture and the combination of patterns.  I  think it would be really fun to knit.

    The pattern is written fro Tahki's Tweedy Alpaca yarn, but I think it would also work beautifully with some Tahki Donegal Tweed, some of which I have in my stash, and some of which is currently existing in the form of Rogue, which is getting a good bit too large and will probably be frogged and repurposed at the end of this winter if not before.

    Miss Michele's Jacket  And I mentioned that there was one color-work sweater I liked as well.  I was referring to Miss Michele's Jacket which is stranded color work at almost 9 stitches to the inch.  Not a fast project, but oh so lovely.

    There are a couple of other projects that I think are pretty, but they are not for me, and there is a hat I like as well.  There seem to be a lot of hats I like floating around  and one of these days I might decide to knit myself one, but I haven't reached that stage yet.  There are a lot of higher priorities in my life.

  • Fall Knitting Magazines: St-Denis

    Some time ago, having hit the wall in terms of storage space, I started scanning my assorted loose knitting patterns and storing them as PDF files.  I always intended to make a database of the files as I went along, but life kept getting in the way, I switched from an IBM-type computer to a MAC and my old Microsoft Access was no longer supported.  I toyed with delving into Filemaker or looking up other alternatives, but never got around to it.

    Then I saw Patty's pattern database on her Ipod and I knew the time had come.    It did not take me long to put my existing PDF patterns into the database. And I also started a database of sewing patterns as well since I save all the pictures and line drawings from the pattern websites when I buy the patterns.  This will save me many notebooks worth of space on my already burdened shelves.

    Now I just create PDF versions of the patterns I want to keep, put the photo in the database, and ditch or sell the pattern magazine.  I am a little behind right now because a stack of fall things have come in during the last couple of weeks and I haven't quite kept up.

    Prarie Spring Tunic Today I scanned in the patterns from Véronik Avery's new St-Denis magazine.  I used to put up pictures of things I liked in the knitting books partly so I could find my favorite patterns after the fact, but I don't need to do that anymore.

    I thought I would share a few pictures with you though, just because I am so enamored of a few of the patterns.   This child's sweater by Franklin Habit is adorable, and I wish grandson Owen lived further north so that I could knit it for him.  I am inclined to ask if he might use it, although I am perfectly aware that no one is going to hand-wash his sweaters.  The doll is adorable too.

    HUnter Jacket

    The cardigan called Hunter Jacket is classic; just the kind of thing I would pull on again and again.  I am sure I have yarn in my stash for this and probably even a need for a basic short cardigan in this style.  In fact one of my favorite short cardigans is in line to be ripped and it may well be reknit into this style. 

    Gothic Snowfall But the sweater I am really mad for, the one that prompted me to buy the book in the first place, is Gothic Snowfall.  In fact, if I didn't have a couple of other color-work sweaters either on the needles or waiting on the sides, sweaters I am also mad to finish, I would be jumping right into this project.  

    In the past I have seen a project, fallen in love, put it aside and it has been lost in the piles and blog posts, temporarily forgotten.

    This pattern will not be forgotten (although I am aware I have said that before).  At the moment it is my "goal sweater" the one I will knit when I finish a few Rowan and Anny Blatt projects that are in line ahead of it. There is also a new Dale of Norway sweater I want to knit.  It would be foolish to think I will get to it this fall, but if I am determined, I should be able to have it for next fall.  

    There are a lot of other lovely patterns in this book.  A vest, a couple more cardigans, some lovely gloves, an extremely handsome sweater for a man.   The patterns are designed by good people whose patterns I love.  I highly recommend it. 

    I'll end with a question.  Since I no longer need to post pictures of what I like here to help myself remember I am not sure if I should continue.  Do you like these posts of favorite things from the different books and magazines.  Should there be more? Fewer?  Only books that seem special? Or should I skip them altogether?

  • Fall Knitting Magazines: Vogue and Interweave

    Scoop pullover The fall Vogue Knitting and Interweave Knits arrived a while ago and I have been taking my time looking at them and making up my mind.  Both magazines had designs that intrigued me at first glance, but which didn't measure up the more I looked at them.

    The scoop pullover, shown here, was the first thing that caught my eye in the Interweave knits and it is still my favorite design from this issue.  It is quite likely that I have a suitable worsted wool in my stash.  I can get the Blue Sky Alpaca yarn easily, but as I said, I am confident there is something here that will work well, and I am not convinced that I really want this sweater in an alpaca blend.  It seems that there is a lot of alpaca yarn running round right now and I seem to have ended up with quite a few alpaca blend sweaters, soft and light yes, but sometimes too warm, even as my system is cooling down again.

    Slanting gretel tee I also like this little top, called the Slanting Gretel Tee.  Wool shells have always been one of those things that I tell myself I should knit more of, because I actually do wear them in the winter, under jackets, and sometimes layered, as shown here with turtlenecks.  This looks like a good versatile piece and a fun knit as well.

    There are other interesting patterns here, some socks, a cute hat or two, but nothing that really speaks to me.  Well, the socks perhaps, but really I am so content with simple self-striping socks. When I knit my first pair of socks I probably said I never wear socks and although that may have been true at the time it has not held up as I do find myself wearing socks now, just as I find myself living in jeans although a few years ago I didn't own a single pair.

    Never say never, I suppose.

    Rib&Cable

    As for the Vogue Knitting.  It too has two patterns I am interested in knitting.

    This fabulous cable cardigan is classic but with just enough interest due to the horizontal cables at the wrist and hip.  This should be fun to knit and wear.  Since the original is knit in one of my favorite yarns, Filatura di Crosa's Zara, I will probably even use the recommended yarn for this.  Hmm, I have some Zara.  I wonder what I originally planned on doing with it.

    CutOutPullover The other sweater that caught my eye is this sweater with the open work pattern at the neckline, creating a jewelry effect that is quite lovely.  The sweater itself is quite simple and I would think it would look best in a yarn with a nice drape, which is perfect as the original is knit in bamboo.  I haven't used that particular yarn, but I've knit with enough bamboo to think this simple shape would be perfect in that fiber.

  • Interweave Knits and an Interruption in plans

    The new Interweave Knits arrived on Friday and I have been happily looking at the patterns.  I had taken a brief flip-through at Knitting group Thursday night, but was good this time, and didn't pore over the borrowed copy so that I could anticipate curling up with my own copy.

    Zick Zack
    There are three sweaters I love.

    As is often the case with me, the first sweater I loved, is also a sweater about which I had to overcome a long internal dialog.  I don't know why I argue with myself so much about my choices because usually my first instinct is the correct one, and if I follow that muse I am very rarely disappointed.  This is not so much the case when I let my rational mind lead the way; sweaters chosen by the "you should wear this because it will x, y, or z" method are usually abysmal failures.  Knitting (shopping, sewing) from the heart, always seems to work.

    I had to scan the entire page for this sweater because I couldn't decide which view is best.  As usual, the picture can be enlarged by clicking on it.  My doubts about this sweater were the long fitted hips with the faux button placket and wondering if this sweater was a good or thing given my long torso and pear-shaped tendencies.  But in the end that is unimportant.  I actually wear a fair number of similar garments, and the truth of the matter is that I am far less plagued by what I "should" wear, or what other people think than I was younger.  Middle age does have its advantages.

    Anyway, I could immediately see the usefulness of this sweater with jeans and a turtleneck underneath for all those not warm but not cool either Spring and Fall days.  I know, there I go with my turtlenecks again.  It is true.  I could probably be perfectly happy in a climate where I could wear a turtleneck almost every day.

    I am still a little on the fence about whether I will wear this sweater without the turtleneck.  I can see it with a little tank and soft linen pants and espadrilles on cooler summer days.  It is not a sweater for the hot humid days of a New York August, but then, very few sweaters are suited to heat and humidity.  So this one is a go.  The yarn is very fine, fingering or lace-weight.  I might have enough of something in my stash, but probably only a hand-dyed multicolor yarn, and I am not sure this is the look I am going for.  I will need the longest length or perhaps  a little extra so I don't want to skimp too closely.  It is unlikely that I have enough of a suitable yarn in the stash.

    Parker Cardigan
    On the opposite page from Zick Zack is the Parker Cardigan.  This is a much more classic style, more fitted and structured, and I have always had a weakness for structure and tailoring.

    Even though it really shares nothing, style-wise, in common with the first sweater, it is still very much me, and I can easily incorporate this into my wardrobe.  I also love the deep v-neckline.  I do much better with a deeper neckline than is found in many v-neck sweaters and this will be quite good for me.

    The third sweater is actually the only sweater I noticed in that first look-through on Thursday night.  It is a very sweet, pretty wrap sweater with lovely lovely flower-bud like motifs at the cuffs and yoke.  The sweater is by Connie Chinchio and is called Silk Cocoon Cardigan.
    Silk cocoon cardigan
    Now I said I noticed it Thursday night, but didn't really think further about it.  Again this was a problem of my first impression (like this) battling with the mental aspect (too sweet, I'm not sweet).  But then, I'm not really a tough girl either and I love the softness of this sweater and the wrap as well which gives the illusion of a waist.  Here again is a sweater style that works for me, but I was letting myself be distracted by the styling of the sweater in the magazine layout, not the way the sweater would actually work in my wardrobe, on me.

    Hmm, it seems that there is always much to learn and even though I had hoped to have achieved wisdom and maturity by now, I still have a long way to go.

    Anyway, I love the sweater.  I would wear it now if it should suddenly materialize in my closet, but we know that it just isn't going to happen.  But I had a plan.

    Anneliese, Gina, and I were planning on going up to Fabulous Yarns on Sunday, and I noticed from their website that they sell Blue Sky Alpacas' Alpaca Silk.  Now I know I love the yarn, and the opportunity to see the yarn in person before buying, to fondle its softness and see the actual colors rather than making an educated guess seemed like a real treat.  So I planned on buying yarn for this sweater, and indeed I found it, a beautiful deep rosy red with a hint of pink in it called Ruby.  Unfortunately they did not have enough for my size so I was not able to come home with it.  This might be good because I might have abandoned by beautiful blue mohair, which I do also love, and plunged right into yummy silk and alpaca goodness.  It will happen, as they ordered the yarn for me and the store is only a short trip up the road, just north of Bard College.

    IMG_0266
    But, as usually happens in a yarn shop I also fell in love with something else.  And this is exactly why the queue gets longer and longer and I find myself, despite all the best intentions, so easily seduced.

    It was the color that caught my eye, a soft grayed-lilac, more gray than it appears in this photo.  The photo at the Fabulous Yarn website is a much truer depiction of the color (Jasmine #1213) and I am in love.  Then of course I had to decide what I might make and how much to buy.  So there I was flipping through magazines and pattern books.

    Wrenna
    Anneliese was looking at French Girl Knits, and I thought it would be perfect for the cardigan called Wrenna, and of course it would be lovely.  So after a bit of quick calculation I picked up the yarn and continued to look around. 

    During the course of our visit we were talking about the Twinkle Soft Chunky yarn and how the colors didn't do anything for any of us, they were all lovely but just a little off what the three of us would wear.  As an aside I am a Summer and my companions probably veer more to the Fall or Spring side of the palette, so we cover a wide choice of yarn colors.

    But then, as I was waiting to check out I noticed a perfectly lovely color of the Twinkle yarn, in a color that I would call dusty rose, which in an odd turn, was actually its name.  It is a soft color, one that I associate for some reason more with a Japanese color sense than with modern American colors and I adore it.  They only had one skein.  And it suddenly occurred to me that the Wrenna cardigan would look lovely in that yarn, and it was written for that yarn.  But I was buying the lilac.  As our conversation meandered on, I learned that the Blue Sky Alpaca Bulky was actually hard to reorder because of a popularity surge after appearing on the cover of the newest Vogue Knitting.  And that made me think that there was perhaps something I wanted to knit from the new Vogue Knitting.  

    Cropped Cabled Turtleneck
    And there it was.

    This sweater wasn't on my list either.  But now I could see it in the soft gray-lilac.  It would go so well over so many things in my closet.  The color and the style were chanting "Make Me! Make Me!" and I went back to see if there was more yarn.  There is barely enough, not quite enough really, I am about half a skein short, but I convinced myself to buy the extra yarn and give it a try.  

    I am still cautious, it might not work. And if it doesn't I can make Wrenna.  Or I can find something else to make.

    But it might work.  I can leave the bobbles off the bottom ribbing if necessary.  I don't want the sleeves quite as long as they are shown and perhaps not quite as wide.  Regardless it might work just because of gauge issues.  My row gauge is almost always off.  I knit long tall stitches and 90 percent of the time I get fewer rows per inch than any pattern calls for.  Fewer rows per inch translates to less yarn.  As I said it might just work.

    I finished the front of the mohair sweater last night.  I want to start the sleeves.  And I want to start knitting the lilac alpaca.
  • New! New! New!

    Today's mail was rich with goodies.  I got three sets of fabric samples, only one expected.  They were fun to look through but nothing caught my eye except the expected fabric which was exactly as I imagined.

    IMG_0226
    And I got spring knitting patterns.  That warranted a sit-down with cat and coffee.  Sam did the honors today.  Tori is queen of the cutting table.

    On the far left is the Tahki spring book.  I actually don't always get this book, but I really like the little cap sleeved sweater on the cover with the cabled neckline and cables at the sleeve hems.  4 1/2 stitches/inch in garter stitch in cotton may be a little heavy for true summertime wear, but this might also prove useful as a Spring/Fall vest.

    IMG_0227
    Otherwise the patterns were okay, but little caught my attention.  I do really like this little cardigan and it is loosely enough knit to be comfortable.   There is also a nice little tank top (shown below).  
    IMG_0228

    Both of these patterns appeal but aren't really screaming to be made.  Perhaps my attitude will change when Spring makes a more permanent entrance.

    IMG_0231
    The Stacy Charles Collezione book (middle in the top photo) was purchased soley because I knew it had the pattern for the little wrapped vest, shown here.

    I love this sweater.  I really want to make it.  I don't know anything about the specified yarn, Nepal, except that it is cotton. It does not seem to be up on Ravelry.   But I need to make this little sweater.  I am imagining it in charcoal but I hope that is not because it shown here in charcoal.  I can already imagine it with specific garments that already exist in my wardrobe and also that exist in my mind's wardrobe,  that wardrobe that I am determined to start making soon.

    IMG_0233

    Lucky me, there is also one other pattern I really like in this book.  This cardigan is knitted in Siam, a worsted weight, wool, rayon and silk blend.  This is not a new yarn so I have more information at hand.  I would suppose the yarn will be drapey with a bit of sheen and a little bit of recovery from the wool.  I know I don't want this sweater in gray, so I will have to see what I have in the stash that may be appropriate or what is available.  This sweater is second to the little wrap vest though on my list.

    I purchased  the third book, the Filatura di Crosa book, for the sweater on the cover even though it is a simple knitted tee.  Filatura's shaping used to be excellent even though their instructions were rudimentary at best.  That was when I got the Italian magazine.  Since Tahki is the US distributor the patterns and shaping have been different.  Filatura used to publish a separate Italian edition but I don't know if that is still the case or not.

    IMG_0230
    There are two other sweaters in this book that appeal to me right now. and a few others which are lovely, but aren't demanding as much of my attention.

    I love this little cardigan with its tie at the waist and the way the neckline dips in a bit of a u showing just a bit of the collarbones.  

    I have some Brilla in the stash which might be perfect for this sweater or the other Brilla sweater in this book, shown below, which I am just dying to make this spring.

    IMG_0229
    This boat neck sweater, along with the little wrapped vest above, are the first sweaters that really have me thinking spring knitting.  Otherwise my knitting is still definitely leaning to warm and fuzzy things to wear on cold and windy days. 

    If the in-house Brilla works for either of these sweaters (and I can find appropriate trim yarn for the jacket) one of these sweaters might be appearing on my needles very soon.

    But in the meantime, back to my mohair. 
  • New Rowan

    Mag-45-cover_L
    Rowan 45 arrived over a week ago and I have been slowly absorbing its contents.  When I looked at the preview photos, I was not really taken with anything, and yet I ordered it anyway.  Rowan, along with Vogue Knitting, are most buys for me and I am happy to have a collection of them.  I find that I come back to these patterns over and again and even when something doesn't speak to me immediately, I always end up making several things from each issue.

    I suspect this issue will be one that grows slowly on my affections and worms its way into my wardrobe little bits and pieces at a time.  It is not that the sweaters aren't lovely.  There are some that are classically beautiful and some that I just adore, but not perhaps for me.  

    Loumarin_L
    At the moment only one is speaking to me of near-term knitting.  Loumarin captures my fancy and the mood of my wardrobe of late and it may well be added to my spring list, whenever I start that spring list.

    The spring patterns are coming out and are all very tempting.   But it snowed yet again today and I haven't seen the actual ground for over six weeks.  

    I am not yet ready to start dreaming of spring knitting.  There looks to be a good bit of winter left.  I think I need to knit something warm and cozy before I start thinking about lightweight little summer knitting fluff.