Monday, September 26, 2016

All the Zombie Vixens!

It's been a while since I updated, so I figure it's about time I poke my nose in here and talk about my knitting.  I haven't been doing as much as I would like, so that's been frustrating, but I got seriously distracted with other things.  Of course, part of that has to do with working on the same project so exclusively.  This is why I've decided I really need to have a couple of projects on the needles.

The first news, the Zombie ViXen gloves look amazing.  The colors are perfectly fall, and as I was told, they almost have a camouflage feel to them, even though they're not that at all.  I originally picked this yarn for the worn denim feel I like of expected, but it certainly didn't turn out that way at all.  It was unexpected and I wasn't sure I liked it at first, but it's really started to grow on me.

This project was a bit frustrating at start.  I had to size the needles down because it was absolutely huge on my wrist.  After a while, though, the pattern became so intuitive that I was able to do all the way to the thumb increases without having to look at the pattern so much as once on the second glove.  That's always a good sign to me.  Unless the pattern is ever changing, it's kind of nice to be able to pluck it from my brain and run with it.  It makes me feel like I don't need to be tied down to the pattern and instead can really enjoy the process of knitting.  It becomes comfortable enough that I can knit while watching television without feeling like I have to watch something I don't have to pay much attention to or I'll get lost in my knitting.

Overall the pattern was pretty simple to follow.  I don't think it would be too challenging of a knit, and I recommended it to a friend of mine that's a pretty new knitter.  It's really not all that complicated of a pattern, but it comes out incredibly well.  It also works well with a yarn that's got a little more play to it.  I tend to prefer yarn that's simple and flat, not too much variation to it.  Single color yarns and kettle dyes allow the pattern to really shine and it doesn't seem to get lost in the splashes of color.  That means it's good for more complicated knits.  I tend to stick to simpler patterns with variegated yarns and hand painted yarns.  This pattern really worked in spite of the frequent color cycles.

I have to admit, I did modify this pattern.  The ribbing at the edge of the glove didn't seem to match across the gloves.  It's unbalanced to one side through the ribbing.  For the second hand I just reversed the ribbing so that it matched in complete reverse.  I also swapped the direction of the cross of the single cables.  I know stitches, when you're talking the medical kind, are done the same way, regardless of what side they're on, but I thought this was just a more appealing look.

And in case you thought one was enough, knowing I don't tend to knit repeat patterns terribly often, I decided I have to knit another pair.  Chesh saw them and immediately said he'd love a pair.  He said he wanted something more of a blue black color.  I already made him a pair of red fingerless gloves, so having an alternate color would really be good.  Wouldn't it figure that I had just such a ball sitting with no purpose in my yarn stash?  I pulled it out and he said it would be perfect.  Then he followed it up with saying he didn't want to take the yarn I'd bought for me.  I loved that yarn, but somehow it just felt like it was right for him.  I had no idea what I was going to knit out of it for me.

Just like the first pair, these are out of Happy Feet by Plymouth Yarns.  The last set of gloves I made were out of the same thing too.  I love this yarn, and I've especially loved that you could get it in a 50g skein, though it looks like they've stopped making those.  For making socks it makes more sense to offer larger sums, but the small skeins were perfect for making a pair of fingerless gloves.  I couldn't have asked for a better choice.  Now I think I'm going to have to figure out another use for the extra yarn.  Maybe I can find some patterns that are enough for a pair of socks and a pair of gloves.

The gloves are turning out absolutely great.  I've gotten everything done on them but the thumbs at this point.  They've been put into a temporary hibernation for a while because I just haven't felt like working on the thumbs all over again.  I've been yearning for another project to get started.  I'm undoubtedly going to have them finished by the next update I post.  I'm trying to keep moving on everything, keep things going and coming off the needles.  These ones are so close to done that it seems a shame to let them sit for so long.  It just means I have to get back to them soon.

The weather's also starting to get cooler, and with Chesh walking back and forth to school, I know he would appreciate having them done.  The red ones I made for him last year are getting almost daily use, and so that's a really good sign.  I'm pretty sure he'll wear these ones all the time too.  The other ones were made of a microfiber, so these being wool should be a lot warmer.  They also come up a little longer over the fingers and thumb, making them all around a warmer glove.  I'm excited to have these done for him!

In the mean time I've decided to take a little bit of a break from working on the Zombie Vixen gloves.  This time I wanted to work on socks.  I'm really upset that a few of my hand knit socks have been missing, and Sable got me this wonderful Malabrigo Sock yarn.  It's a beautiful nutty color that seemed perfect for fall.  It needed to be something that honored that color.  Also, after working with the Happy Feet, I was quite surprised at how incredibly thin this yarn was.  I checked twice to make sure it was actually sock yarn and not a lace weight, but sure enough, it's sock.

The color was what really inspired me when I picked this yarn out.  It's got such a beautiful, rich, earthy texture.  At first I thought of it as reminding me of fall with the deep reds and earthy browns, but the more I look at it, the more I think that it reminds me of chestnuts, acorns, and walnuts in the shell.  That's one of the things I always loved about fall, finding the chestnuts that had fallen from somewhere.  I was convinced they couldn't have fallen from the trees because I never saw them in any trees.

The natural choice for socks in this yarn was a little pattern called Nutkin.  Everyone seems to be making them, or at least it seems that way.  They remind me of Squirrel Nutkin from Beatrix Potter.  That made so much sense for the yarn and how it reminded me so much of nuts.

The pattern was a pleasant surprise.  The cuff is a long tail cast on that's turned under and knit into the pattern again in the most interesting of ways.  It was an unexpected challenge, though not nearly as bad as I thought it would be.  I did have to go back three times to redo it in a more smooth way.  It looks amazing and I love the thickness of it.  I can't wait to see how it wears.  From there the pattern was simple enough to be easy to remember, but it's fancy enough to catch my attention.  It works well with the play of colors in the yarn.  I absolutely love the sweeping shapes each pattern creates.  It almost strikes me as leaves, but the bottom half of one leaf is the top to the next.  The heel is a simple enough short row and the toe seems pretty standard, so I think I might just knit this pair up according to the pattern.  (Yes, you may all gasp at the fact that this is my second pair of socks that I haven't modified in any way this year.)