Friday, January 31, 2014

Plan ahead!

Today I opened the shop for the first time in 2014. I have to say, starting back at work in the middle of a heatwave is not a brilliant plan - however, it has given me a lot of time for planning other (more important) things, such as what I am going to knit this year!

Most of my subscribers are based in Oz, and therefore don't need to be told that Aussie summers are absolutely vicious. If anyone from overseas is reading this post - please take my word for it, Aussie summers are absolutely vicious. February is basically a series of heatwaves, with temperatures in the high 30s/low 40s (celsius, not farenheit!), tacked together with the odd cool day here and there. To get a better idea of how bad that can be, compare the fatalities from the latest Victorian heat wave to the road toll for the same period... (heat waves vs cars).

Plymouth, from Rowan Magazine 52 (c) Rowan Designs
This is not good knitting weather. However, if you have a good air-conditioner and/or a small project, you don't have to put down your needles altogether. My summer project is a tea cosy for a friend, which I promised her last winter as a birthday gift (ooops!). It is a nice small project, with a bit of colourwork to keep me motivated. That should tide me through the worst of the heat.

Coming into autumn, I need to start knitting a jumper. Again, it's a promised birthday present, and it's roughly six months overdue. In fact, it's for the husband of the friend who was promised the tea cosy... this may become socially awkward if I don't knit reasonably quickly! Luckily, I'm doing a show this autumn, so will have lots of opportunities to knit while waiting at cold bus stops and in drafty dressing rooms. He's going to get either a Plymouth or a Fastnet... As part of my planning day, I am looking through the patterns, trying to work out which will be easiest to knit in transit!

Fastnet, from Rowan Magazine 52 (c) Rowan Designs


At the same time, I'm still working on the Snug Fall Cosy. The Cosy was a learning project - I wanted to practise beading, grafting stitches, and knitting and unravelling fringes. I've finished the waist band and done the graft, which was interesting - I found it fiddlier than I'd expected and wasn't all that confident that I'd stitched the ends of the band together securely. It has held together well though, and I'm looking forward to having another two goes at the technique: the neck band has another end-to-start graft, and the top of the body is grafted onto the neck band as a top-to-side graft. So I should have the technique completely under control by the time I finish the garment! The unravelled fringe looks pretty cool too :)

I'm also working on my Lady Eleanor Entrelac Stole. I'm completely confident now working the two tiers of rectangles, but might need to do another couple of projects to get my hands around the base and final tiers of triangles. I have the Tweedy Garterlac Scarf class project to help me master those, so no worries there.

By the time I've moved these through my queue, it will be winter. I'll have to decide whether or not to knit a jumper and hope to get it finished with a few more cold days to go, or to skip straight to knitting a summer top. I've got the yarn to knit a Lead in grey, crimson and jade green - I've also got some Cotton Rope, which I bought several years ago when I needed.... slightly less yarn.... to make a jumper. I won't get a jumper out of it now, but maybe a sleeveless top is feasible. Certainly better than leaving it sitting in the wardrobe!!

Lead, from Rowan Magazine 52 (c) Rowan Designs

Time for me to wind up this planning session and close the shop... Stay safe in the heat, and hopefully, we'll see you for a planning session soon!