crocheting and knitting
Aug. 16th, 2021 10:24 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I have had this draft for a while and I guess I should post it??
Knitting:
-So, um, yeah, knitting. It's... really fun! I can see why everyone loves it. Now that I've actually got the rhythm of it (which I never did when I tried fifteen years back) I find it extremely soothing. Unfortunately it is really tough on my hands, rather more so than crochet -- I think partially because the motions tend to be a little smaller than crochet? but probably also because I am probably doing something weird with my posture when knitting that I need to fix. So anyway unless/until I can fix that, I have to keep knitting at a minimum.
-ugh it's such a pain to fix (or rip back) knitting mistakes! This is a bad combination with my short attention span, both in terms of making a ton of mistakes in general and in terms of wanting to play with learning to do new things with knitting which I then promptly mess up. In principle I know that I should be putting in lifelines everywhere. In practice, being a careless sort of person, I think maybe I just won't make anything right now where mistakes matter that much :P
Crocheting:
-I've got 15 out of 19 of the hexagons I was crocheting last time I talked about crocheting, and I have, err, 21 out of 100 squares done of the hue shift blanket I'm making for A. (Two of which were done during my parents' visit.) The hexagons will definitely get done because I love working on it so much; the hue shift blanket will take forever because it's much less fun -- partially because it's almost entirely single crochet back loop, which I have decided I'm not fond of, but mostly because for some reason I keep ending up with one too many or one too few stitches, so I have to count every single row until near the end of the square (ugh) and even with counting I still end up wrong and I've had to rip back substantial work in most of the squares at this point. (why so hard?? idk why I can't do it right!) For a while I was seriously thinking it might actually be quicker to knit the whole thing, except for that annoying bit about it being harder on my hands. But every time I finish a square I'm pleased by how it's coming along, so there's that.
-But I took a substantial break from both of those to work on baby blankets -- two of my friends are having babies. One of them it was going to be really convenient if I could finish by the time school starts, so I was focusing mostly on that. (The other mother isn't due until Christmas, so I feel like I have more time for that one :) )
random thoughts on blankets and yarn:
-...Mostly this whole baby-blanket thing is convincing me that
thistleingrey is right that it's a good idea to gift hats rather than blankets. :P Blankets take a long time and I haven't got the hang of what I need to think about when selecting a pattern and yarn, so the one blanket ended up kind of small and the other one will be super duper heavy, whoops.
-One of the blankets (the small one I just finished) I made with some gradient cotton-acrylic yarn (fingering-weight) I bought on a whim because it was so pretty -- this is the first time I've crocheted with even partial cotton and, as thistleingrey warned me, it is quite hard on my hands. I made it to the end of the blanket, but I guess it's good to know I should not be getting a whole lot of this yarn in the future :P (it's so pretty though!)

-My late mother-in-law knitted blankets (fairly large blankets, too! significantly larger than either of my baby blankets are going to be) for each of her grandkids when they were born, and while I knew it was a labor of love before, I have a whole new appreciation for it now that I know how to knit <3 I wish I could tell her that! A. and I call his a "blanket hug."
-as
mildred_of_midgard warned, so it has come to pass: I've started looking around and getting more interested in more expensive fancier yarn :P But, perhaps fortunately for my pocketbook, I can't buy any of it yet because I have all these other projects to do first! (And while I am totally up for starting another new project -- see also very short attention span -- we don't have any more room for yarn until I use some of this up :P
unless I throw out some of the kids toys
which honestly probably needs to be done anyway)
(but, like, if you have recs for yarn that's, oh, I'm mostly looking in the $10-$15/100g region, but let's say below $25/100g, especially fingering-weight, I'm not saying I wouldn'tmaybe sneak out some toys and buy some anyway be interested)
Knitting:
-So, um, yeah, knitting. It's... really fun! I can see why everyone loves it. Now that I've actually got the rhythm of it (which I never did when I tried fifteen years back) I find it extremely soothing. Unfortunately it is really tough on my hands, rather more so than crochet -- I think partially because the motions tend to be a little smaller than crochet? but probably also because I am probably doing something weird with my posture when knitting that I need to fix. So anyway unless/until I can fix that, I have to keep knitting at a minimum.
-ugh it's such a pain to fix (or rip back) knitting mistakes! This is a bad combination with my short attention span, both in terms of making a ton of mistakes in general and in terms of wanting to play with learning to do new things with knitting which I then promptly mess up. In principle I know that I should be putting in lifelines everywhere. In practice, being a careless sort of person, I think maybe I just won't make anything right now where mistakes matter that much :P
Crocheting:
-I've got 15 out of 19 of the hexagons I was crocheting last time I talked about crocheting, and I have, err, 21 out of 100 squares done of the hue shift blanket I'm making for A. (Two of which were done during my parents' visit.) The hexagons will definitely get done because I love working on it so much; the hue shift blanket will take forever because it's much less fun -- partially because it's almost entirely single crochet back loop, which I have decided I'm not fond of, but mostly because for some reason I keep ending up with one too many or one too few stitches, so I have to count every single row until near the end of the square (ugh) and even with counting I still end up wrong and I've had to rip back substantial work in most of the squares at this point. (why so hard?? idk why I can't do it right!) For a while I was seriously thinking it might actually be quicker to knit the whole thing, except for that annoying bit about it being harder on my hands. But every time I finish a square I'm pleased by how it's coming along, so there's that.
-But I took a substantial break from both of those to work on baby blankets -- two of my friends are having babies. One of them it was going to be really convenient if I could finish by the time school starts, so I was focusing mostly on that. (The other mother isn't due until Christmas, so I feel like I have more time for that one :) )
random thoughts on blankets and yarn:
-...Mostly this whole baby-blanket thing is convincing me that
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
-One of the blankets (the small one I just finished) I made with some gradient cotton-acrylic yarn (fingering-weight) I bought on a whim because it was so pretty -- this is the first time I've crocheted with even partial cotton and, as thistleingrey warned me, it is quite hard on my hands. I made it to the end of the blanket, but I guess it's good to know I should not be getting a whole lot of this yarn in the future :P (it's so pretty though!)

-My late mother-in-law knitted blankets (fairly large blankets, too! significantly larger than either of my baby blankets are going to be) for each of her grandkids when they were born, and while I knew it was a labor of love before, I have a whole new appreciation for it now that I know how to knit <3 I wish I could tell her that! A. and I call his a "blanket hug."
-as
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(but, like, if you have recs for yarn that's, oh, I'm mostly looking in the $10-$15/100g region, but let's say below $25/100g, especially fingering-weight, I'm not saying I wouldn't
no subject
Date: 2021-08-18 12:04 am (UTC)1. What kind of fiber? Wool? Cotton? Acrylic? Other?
2. What kind of pattern? Solid, variegated, gradient?
And then she can rec you things.
She says her favorite yarn, if you want merino, is Malabrigo. It's very light, so sock weight is very light fingering weight, and if you want regular fingering weight, buy the sport weight. She says the texture is the softest wool ever. It's not cheap, but it's not outrageous, approximately in your price range.
But for more specific recs, she needs more data. ;)
-ugh it's such a pain to fix (or rip back) knitting mistakes!
Hahaha I hear this ALL the time!
Anyway, I've been wondering how your yarn crafts were going, and I'm glad for the update. :)
no subject
Date: 2021-08-19 04:48 am (UTC)1. Not cotton (which tears up my hands) and not pure acrylic (which I have enough of already), unless you know of a nice fingering-weight gradient acrylic that has a reasonably long color change and doesn't have a sparkly polyester bit that runs through it? (I've been using Hobbii's Moonlight/Universe and I really like it, and the color changes are just right in length, but it is a bit sparkly even for me.)
So, I think that leaves... wool, merino wool, alpaca?? maybe like bamboo or tencel, idk?? (I'm okay with blends with acrylic or whatever... for now ;) )
Also, I have a fairly large preference for things that can be washed in a washing machine :P I am willing to get stuff that is hand-wash only, but it will restrict what I can make from it -- I am not making socks from non-superwash wool because I will 100% forget and put them in the washing machine. But a shawl or blanket, maybe...
2. Gradients forever!! But I also love the kind — I think it’s called tonal — where it's a solid color but it sort of varies around that color, if you know what I mean? And variegated too! Uniform solid colors are the least interesting to me -- but I do have some patterns that need something along those lines. So, all of the above :D
3. I have seen references to Malabrigo online! It looks really pretty. It's good to know you like it and it is going up on my list (...there's a shawl I've been eyeing that would look really pretty in Malabrigo, hmmm). Thank you for the info about the weight!
no subject
Date: 2021-08-20 01:39 pm (UTC)So, there's Whirl, by Scheepjes, which is a fingering weight cotton/acrylic blend with super long colour changes, no sparkles (and slides more easily than cotton bc of the acrylic, so may be easier on your hands) It costs about 28-30 dollars, but comes in a 1000 m ball, which is enough to make a good sized shawl or even a top, depending on the size. They also have a wool version, but other than that i don't know of many yarns that are fingering+gradient.
https://www.scheepjes.com/en/whirl-817/
In case you really don't want cotton, there's this one https://www.scheepjes.com/en/our-tribe-2545/ (some are semi-solid or tonal, some gradient, some solid, click on each colour to see how it works up). I would browse around the Scheepjes website bc their yarns are pretty good and most are cheap, and they also have lots of free crochet patterns etc
As an alternative to acrylic you can use an acrylic/nylon blend. It's about the same price and much softer:
https://www.woolwarehouse.co.uk/yarn/sirdar-snuggly-4-ply-50g-all-colours
https://www.woolwarehouse.co.uk/yarn/sirdar-snuggly-baby-crofter-4-ply-all-colours
Fyberspates has a superwash line and their semi-solid colours are really nice. Slightly more expensive than Malabrigo, but it's actually a fingering weight rather than light fingering, and maybe sturdier (4 ply = fingering in the UK):
https://www.woolwarehouse.co.uk/yarn/fyberspates-vivacious-4-ply-sunshine-604-100
I don't use bamboo or alpaca, so I don't really know, sorry.
Other resources:
ravelry.com (lots of resources, free patterns etc)
https://yarnsub.com/
woolwarehouse.co.uk (prices are good even w/ shipping from the UK, great selection)
Good prices, lots of choices (but read the reviews for each yarn):
https://www.knitpicks.com/
no subject
Date: 2021-08-21 04:42 am (UTC)I did not know acrylic/nylon was softer than just acrylic! I am ALL ABOUT soft :D
Also some of that knitpicks yarn is really pretty, though I see what you mean about reading the reviews :P
Thank you so much!! This will keep me busy for a while :DDDD
no subject
Date: 2021-08-21 04:19 pm (UTC)And I said, "Can you write all that down? Cause that went whooosh! through my brain."
And she wrote it on the white board on the fridge, and I will take a picture and email it to you because that's easier than typing it all up. ;)