Lobstah Sweater

Do you ever see things, and they are just not what you want them to be? That is how the Lobstah sweater was born. June 18, 2021 an adorable baby sweater showed up on my Instagram feed and I thought… I want to wear that!! A striped sweater with raglan sleeves, three shades of stripes and a fantastic lobster duplicate stitched on the center of the sweater does not have to be for a baby!!

In June of 2021, I wasn’t anywhere near the beach and wasn’t thinking about turning that adorable design into an adult garment. So I tucked that carrot away… relegating it to the dusty corners of my mind. Now fast forward to November 2022 and I am headed to New England to work. I spend the winter trying to get outside, walking on the beaches of Maine in the cold wind with my pup and I need that Lobstah sweater. And before I know it I am charting a Lobster for a stranded knitting style and knitting a yoke.

The three color stripes had been simplified to a traditional two color nautical Breton stripe. The look is a staple in my own wardrobe. The lobster had to be the “ Just Cooked” red. No variation in shade was going to do. Once the sample yoke was complete and I was mentally married to the Americana color scheme of Red White and Blue I ordered yarn and cast on for the real thing.

With every stitch I imagined myself walking on the beach enjoying the cool breeze off the Atlantic as the morning summer sun began warming the sand. Splashing in the waves and looking for sea glass all while wearing this cozy sweater. It was the dream of the perfect vacation morning. The Lobstah Sweater embodies that whimsical quality of the seaside in New England. A little kitch and a lot of tradition served with a side of drawn butter.

The Lobstah Sweater is designed for Sport or DK weight yarn and knit at a generous 20 sts over 4 inches gauge. I used Juniper Moon Farm Patagonia, an organic merino wool yarn with 382 yards in 100g skein. It’s widely available in LYS stores across the US and Europe. The sweater begins at the neck with a short rib collar and utilizes some short rows to keep the crew neck from being too loose. The Lobster chart is worked from the tail to the claw down the yoke to the underarm. Once the yoke is complete the sleeves are divided off and it is simple stripes from there on out. Top down construction lets the knitter add length in any area to get the shape and fit that is desired. The sleeves are designed with a smaller number of decreases and at a slightly longer length so that the cuff gives the sleeve a casual feel. The body is knit straight to fit like a favorite sweat shirt.

You can find the Lobstah Sweater Pattern here and there is always a chance you will see it being worn at Long Sands Beach in York, Maine any time the breeze is blowing.

Summer Part One

How are we already half way through the warm months??

While you won’t hear me complain about colder months, I do have to say I love the slower pace of hot summer months. It seems to be acceptable to step back and examine your daily practices and make necessary changes to be happier, healthier and fulfilled. In that slower pace it seems to leave room for creativity to bloom. Have you taken a vacation, staycation or even just a home town tour this summer as a little break?

Enjoying the slower pace is just what I did over the last three weeks, AFTER the industry trade show H+H in Chicago at the end of June.

The Japanese yarn brand NORO. A lush display of colorful and vibrant projects for Fall 2023.

H+H is a German run craft industry trade show, and as an account representative for Knitting Fever Inc. I had the pleasure of working the company booth at the show this year in Chicago. It was the busiest 4 days I have experience since the pandemic. It was an absolute pleasure to get to spend time reconnecting with colleagues, customers and friends as well as meeting new folks from my current region in New England. I came home exhausted and full of ideas. I think all the energy alone is what planted a seed for my recent creativity.

Do you see that Janine is tucked back in the corner as we set up the beautiful garment displays. Hi Janine!

Speaking of creativity, I am so excited to share the fruits of my creative streak with you later this month. If you are interested in learning more subscribed below for the latest details delivered directly to your inbox including exclusive content, patterns and upcoming event details.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.

As far as new designs go, those are starting to show up on Ravelry as well as on Instagram.

Here is a snap of us visiting York Beach and my latest published design – Lobstah Sweater – It’s such a special piece for me, It deserves a lobster centric post!!

Summer Travels and Unfinished Projects

HI- ya!

Summer has flown by. I spent a good amount of time enjoying my children and parents. They are all changing so quickly. It is such a blessing to be able to carve out a big chunk of time to be with them all together.

I was looking back today, on a July post on Instagram. It was a deep dive in my project bag. I still have so many summer sweaters on the needles. All those tempting summer cottons and lines and their deceptively loose gauges made me think that I could finish them over the summer and have some really cute new tops to wear… Well in typical fashion I overestimated! I have 5 summer tops on the needles right now.

Jakers – I’m going to finish this with short sleeves I think… but i may have enough yarn for long sleeves and I may really enjoy having this done in pink in the early spring. I probably wont wear it until I get a hankering for spring so maybe I should put this one in hibernation.

Convertible – Without the turtleneck and in a really amazing cotton. I kept thinking that a cotton oversized version would be great on the beach. If I make it to a beach from Central New Mexico… I will let you know.

Outline Tee – In my defense I don’t have to have this done until next years’ Arkansas Yarn Crawl. I had the best time visiting shops and making new friends during the 2022 crawl in July. If you find yourself enjoying the natural state during July of 2023, or any time for that matter please check out this super friendly group of shops.

Summer Light – I am working on a second in a sport weight linen and cotton blend and I didn’t knit a gauge swatch. As you can imagine… it needs to be ripped out and started again because gauge is important.

Dorel – Now this top I really want to finish. It’s a great blue that I think I will be able to work into my Fall transition wardrobe… does anyone else do that? Do you come up with a group of colors of clothing you want to wear? I seem to be drawn to a particular palette of colors, this season it seems to be Golds, Rusts and a range of Indigo tones. Accent that with a little dusty pink and you have the perfect Fall tones. More on that next time.

What have you been working on this summer?

Welcome Summer Light

It’s almost July and with the exception of the cool weather we are having in Albuquerque right now I think most of us in the Northern Hemisphere have been melting for months. Not to mention those places that have actually been on FIRE!!

Summer is a harder season for Knitters. It is hard to stay motivated to hold onto wool when your are already warm. Did you know that wool breaths better than most fibers. It stays dry to the touch and can hold up to 30% of its weight in water before it even feels damp? Those are much better stats than my favorite cotton tee!

So with the idea in mind that I want to be wearing the least amount of clothing, while still maintaining some level of modesty I designed Summer Light .

Made with The Fiber Seed Sprout Sock, this top is light and vaguely silky. It is delightful to wear next to the skin.( I styled it here over a very light tank top and with some turquoise jeans from Vineyard Vines.)

I selected three colors shown from top to bottom Shell factory, Sidewalk Chalk and Mermaid Tale. Lindsay, the dyer and color designed over at The Fiber Seed designed all three of these colors from classics from childhood summers. They all blend together like a beautifully cool soft serve ice cream, a delicious cocktail or those brilliant summer skies. I could not be more happy with the outcome.

This top was fast to knit too – the front and back are identical. Deigned with positive ease the top naturally wants to hang loosely from the body and that drape in the fabric creates the cap sleeve look. The repeating eyelet lace patterns are easy to memorize and make it east to match up the sides for seaming.

What are you looking for this summer to round out your wardrobe? I hope you will whip up a top for yourself. I am headed off to work on a single color version now.

Summer of Crochet: The UBE Shawl

No joke… Monday came roaring in. I have been meaning to tell you all about my favorite crochet project to date for the better part of a week. But here we are… fresh week and fresh discussion for Crochet!!

The UBE shawl is a pattern you can easily locate on Ravelry. Using chain stitch and double crochet this is a fantastic project to work while enjoying another activity. There is very little concentration needed once the pattern is established.

I chose Queensland Perth, an affordable and fun color changing wool bend sock yarn and my trusty G crochet hook. I have two versions to share with you :

The Grey version is a yet to be released colorway ( Ask for it in your LYS starting in August). I only had one skein to work with, but I wanted to see how far one skein would go. Honest truth: Pretty darn far!

I think the difference across the top edge is only 12”. For the second version ( which was actually the 4th one I made) I had two skeins of Perth in the color Rainbow Reef. I LOVE this shade of yarn. It was captivating to watch the colors work their way across the shawl with the warm rich tones developing.

Now so you can really see how different the shawls are here are two pictures to compare.

My photographer was only partly cooperating during this shoot. Since she is 10, I will let it slide.

The Grey version is smaller, and much closer to my neck. It is a lovely size and I envision tucking it into the neck of a vest or jacket on a hike. It does not lend itself to styling many ways, but it is fantastic. The single skein price on this yarn is $13-$15 dependent on the retailer. For the money, I think it is a great project.

You can see that with the Rainbow Reef two skein version I have much more shawl to drape around my neck. The tails of the triangle feel much more secure as they are longer and the fabric drapes more toward my shoulder. I am pretty busty, so this two skein version is more my size. I will be styling this with dresses and tops all Fall… but until the weather breaks and its not within 10 degrees of 100, I will be letting both of these projects enjoy the AC in my closet!!

Have you tried your hand at Crochet? I would love to hear about your favorite patterns. Feel free to share them in the comment section! I always appreciate a good recommendation.

Summer of Crochet: Buttons

Would you like to add some crochet to your crafty repertoire? Why not start small? Crochet stitches are pretty easy to learn, so if you are already a knitter or a novice crocheter this is a perfect place to start.

This button fixation all started when I was visiting Gauge in Austin Texas a few months ago, and was quite taken by a lovely sample sweater that had adorable matching buttons. Imagine my surprise when Melissa told me she had made them… with the yarn left over from the sweater.

WOW! If I can finish a project and have the perfectly matching buttons that are not only kid friendly but washable and essentially FREE… I am completely sold. I do love a good decorative button. I have a stash of them actually and I never ever seem to have the buttons that I need. Making buttons is the ideal answer for me.

I found this quick little YouTube video that gave me all the tips and instruction I needed to make a very basic button. Grab some scrap yarn and any crochet hook you have on hand to give it a try. I do suggest making a big button first, so it is easier to see the steps.

The only stitch you need to be familiar with at this point is a single crochet. It is the only stitch used in this button.

I used three different yarns shown below to make the same button.

You can change the thickness of the finished button based on the number of loops you use to form the base form as well as the number of layers of single crochet stitches you use to cover the base loops. The third way you can change the style of the button is adding a single crochet round to the outside edge of the button. This adds a little ruffle or petal element to the button. ( shown above on the dark and medium blue buttons to the right)

I suppose you could even add some chain stitches and make this into a little flower detail?!

Best of all, when you use the same yarn that constructs the button to stitch it down to your project, there are no visible stitches. All very elegant and well planned!! Give it a try, I would love to hear what you think.

Summer Of Crochet

Before I learned to knit, I learned to Crochet. I was a small kid, sitting in my mom’s bed while she was expecting my brother and I needed to keep busy and quiet. She taught me to crochet, starting with the simple chain and with some acrylic yarn. I crocheted chains for what seemed like a long time and long length… and when I lost interest that was exactly where I left it.

10 years later and a few less memorable lessons with my mom and Granny Jane, I had managed to learn to single and double crochet. I made a wrap and maybe crocheted a little blanket for a doll, but that was the end of my time crocheting.

Last Fall, I offered to crochet some swatches for Lindsay at The Fiber Seed and was quite bitten by the crochet bug. It was different and didn’t feel like work. Crochet seemed like a special something that I could do just for fun.

Now fast forward to April, and the kickoff of “Crochet-pril” hosted by my friends at Stix. Watching the Stix instagram feed and that lingering tickle that had persisted after crocheting swatches and I was ready to try my hand at creating a full something in crochet.

I was just getting back into traveling for work, and stopped to visit Carriage House in Kingsport, Tennessee. Terri shared some of the most achievable and approachable projects using fun and affordable yarns like Queensland Perth and Rainbow Beach. I was unbelievably motivated to try to make something that I could share with fellow yarn lovers who just don’t knit.

I dove into my sample yarns and dug through my notions bag to find the spare crochet hooks that hung out for seaming knit sweaters. I had a reasonable combination on hand, so I started on the UBE pattern from Ravelry. This free Double Crochet, half granny triangular shawl would show off the color changing summer yarn Brighton Beach, also from Queensland Collection exceedingly well. And after a few days… I had a brand new shawl. Not the normal week or more for working on a knit shawl. It. Was. Fast.

The crocheting has not slowed down since… spurred along by the glorious Kristy Glass and her “Crochet in May” … I have made 5 shawls, dozens of granny squares that will eventually be assembled into sweaters and even a few buttons. There is so much to share, but each project deserves its own post. So here we go, I declare this the Summer of Crochet. Interspersed with knitting and travel, I will be sharing all my crochet adventures and successes along with a heaping portion of tips and tricks that I have picked up along the way!

The Unexpected Sweater Round Up: Things I learned while knitting a FREE baby sweater.

First of all – everyone should know right away that I am not expecting a baby. I love babies, would gladly take one if God sent one my way. But at this point in my life and after specific worldly intervention it would 100% have to be a Devine Delivery.

Never the less, I cast on a newborn sized baby sweater to add to my work kit. I was inspired to pick a small garment by my friends Tracey and Cameron up at Stix in Bozeman, Montana. They have been using baby sweaters to teach sweater knitting skills. Novel idea! I know how to knit sweaters, and have designed some of my favorite that I wear … but the thought of finishing something cute and quick felt right.

I had this lovely yarn, Ciao by Jody Long that I adore, on hand and in need of attention. I have made a few hats in my Doodle pattern, but I felt like this washable 100% Extra fine merino wool yarn from Italy needed a sweet and simple little pattern that would entice knitters to try a new staple yarn and venture away from the OG stand ins for babies.

I picked the Gidday Baby sweater from Ravelry for two primary reasons. 1) FREE PATTERN 2) SUPER CUTE !!

Like I said earlier, I don’t have an actual baby that I am knitting for. I just wanted something small and sweet. I downloaded the pattern and cast on right away after assessing the color selection that I had on hand. In lue of choosing something creative like the magenta and mint I had my eye on I went with Latte and Navy – very similar to the model pictured in the pattern. The colors are gender neutral and classic. Perfect for a sample garment intended to sell yarn.

Since the two primary requirements were met for my sweater knitting, I cast on and went right to work with the prescribed needle. There is no fancy lace or shaping detail to this sweater, garter stitch yoke and stockinette body. The button band worked in line with the body of the sweater for minimal finishing. This would be the exact recipe for a quick and painless knit. But low and behold… I learned some pretty helpful tips along the way! I have broken them down for you as follows.

Lessons:

  1. Using one size smaller needle for the garter stitch yoke keeps the sweater from looking to bulky. The weight of the fabric looks nice with the stockinette.
  2. The yarn over (YO) increases make a lovely detail in the yoke of the sweater.
  3. Knitting front and back in the stitch just before and after the arm separation keeps those stitches from being pulled and becoming distorted.
  4. Slipping one stitch with yarn on the pubic side of the sweater before or just after the garter button band keeps the band balanced in the fabric. It prevents the band from feathering out or additionally looking distorted. This was a big one for me!!
  5. Picking up extra stitches at the underarm when beginning the sleeve will prevent those pesky holes that we end up stitching shut. Now, I do this on my own knitting… but have never seen it written into a pattern before!
  6. Crochet Buttons… I had so much fun with these that I have a whole post planned. Check back soon!!

This little spur of the moment cast on has been very fulfilling, illuminating and joyful. I had no idea that I would learn so much from such a quick little project. Have you ever been surprised by what you have learned in the process of making?

The yoke detail won my heart- I love garter stitch stripes!

You can’t really see the slipped stitches next to the garter button band, but they make all the difference in keeping the button band neat and tidy.

Places To Knit: Patio Edition

We recently moved back to Albuquerque, NM. I couldn’t be more excited to be back in the heart of the Southwest. The city is really lovely, full of blending cultures, tastes and sounds.The weather in Albuquerque is fantastic. There is so much sunshine, the winters are never overly harsh, and there are very few rainy days. Being able to enjoy the outdoors is one of the many things that drew our family back to the city. It fills my heart to call Albuquerque “Home!”

Despite the few stumbling blocks that we faces with moving trucks and new homes, the family is now settled. Our home has a great patio space off the living room and master bedroom. There is an ivy covered retaining wall, and some rock details. I knew that the patio would be important to us enjoying the outdoors. When we lived here over a year ago I was not able to make our outdoor space exactly what I wanted. Now with the pandemic, and with limited availability of products as well as the general cost of things increasing I was worried that having a cozy family friendly patio would not be an option this summer. I had watches prices on outdoor furniture and had saved over the early part of the year (after ski season, of course) to be able to invest in something for our home. I had a few requirements that were limiting too:

  1. NO PLASTIC!!!
  2. Comfortable for all our family, ranging from 4ft 9 year olds to 6ft tall dads.
  3. Exceedingly sturdy and classic looking
  4. Something that could be added to and recovered. (My parents have had the same outdoor furniture for 30 years and Mom just changes the cushions to keep it fresh and exciting)
  5. Perfect for knitting.

AH, yes. Knitting. I wanted to create a space outdoors where my creativity would be sparked, I could enjoy my biggest source of inspiration and still be with my family. I do have a spot in the house where I sit and knit. I love it too… but to be outside, sipping coffee in the morning and enjoying the first few rounds of a project is this side of Heaven in my mind.

I would not only need a comfy spot to sit , but would need some clever table to catch my skeins of yarn. I would need a really good coaster and lots of pillows for just the right elbow support. Here is what I came up with:

A sunny sofa spot for knitting.
My latest summer design on the needles, resting on the yarn corralling side table. I picked up these $1 tiles at Lowes to be over sized coasters too!

The side chair, perhaps my second favorite spot for knitting. These pieces of outdoor furniture solid wooden structure with rope details. Very sturdy… I hope I can get 30 years out of them just like Momo.

The side tables ( of which I picked up two) came from Home Goods.

We also love to dine and do computer work on the patio. So here is how I have repurposed a beloved IKEA table from the old New River Fiber CO. Days…

Lingering Hearts

February was always referred to as second January by one of my most favorite yarn friends. At the time the lingering sentiment was expressed I was in the throws of toddler domination at home and I never really noticed how the months ran together at the beginning of each new year. After 2020, the lingering nature of second January ( February ) seems to be more acute.

Despite being much more aware, I feel like I am much more welcoming of the lingering time. The holidays lasted a little longer. The family time was a little sweeter. The connections are richer because things are moving a little slower. Even though we had kicked off a new year, it makes me nostalgic. I reminisce and daydream of slower years gone by. I think about the additional detail that went into ever aspect of life history. Lace was lacier. Knit stitches were smaller. Paintings were more detailed. Homes had rich patterning and desserts were more involved.

I worked to capture that almost Victorian Dream quality in a modern project when designing Lingering Hearts. The two color and three color hat and cowl combo utilize dusty blush and berry tones to capture the sweetness of age. The injection of nectar – sweet peaches and grey grape tones remind me of fruit fillings in chocolate candies.

The lace inspired motif was drawn from paper doilies and pizzelle cookies. My hope is that while feeling romantic and lovely, they will also bring you the joy of a rich truffle chocolate and a delicious cup of tea. Take time to linger a little longer, and enjoy Lingering Hearts.