Two Sleeves in Two Days

Now that my Dad has opened his Christmas present (my parents are going away this year), I can safely reveal that it has taken three weeks to knit a single glove for him. It was ribbed, it was fiddly, and it was in DK, which is the thinnest yarn I have ever used.

Now that I don’t need to have the second glove finished until he comes back from his travels (oops…), I decided to give my fingers a bit of a break, and go back to the Nicky Epstein Cardigan with Cabled Points. I knew that knitting with chunky wool on 7½mm needles would be much faster than ribbing in DK, but I wasn’t expecting to complete both of the sleeves in just two days!

I’d completely lost track of where I was up to on the first sleeve, so I decided to bite the bullet, unravel what I’d done, and start again. I’m really not having very much luck with this pattern.

This time the mistake genuinely wasn’t mine, but a printing error. The row numbers for the sleeve had been printed wrongly, and before I knew it I had three fewer stitches than I needed. I made an executive decision not to undo the sleeve again, but instead to make some cunningly disguised increases on the next row. Thankfully, this worked really well.

I also made an executive decision to change the increases on the sleeves. As you may have noticed on my previous encounter with this cardigan, my maths really isn’t up to much, and I couldn’t cope with cabling on every sixth row and increasing on every eighth. My decision was to make the increases on the same rows as the cables, which made for less counting, which is fine by me!

As it happened, by the time I’d finished the correct number of increases the sleeve was already at the exact length I was supposed to keep knitting to, so if I’d been increasing every eight rows instead of every six, it would actually have been several inches too long!

Cardigan with cabled points - sleeves

Cardigan with cabled points - sleeves

If you click through to the larger picture of the single sleeve, you can get a much better indication of how this will look once it’s finished. You can really see the bright flecks of blue, and the occasional spot of red, scattered across the sleeve.

Bags of space…

…pun intended.

Today I have been mostly making cushion covers and Christmas presents. This means that I can’t show you most of what I’ve been making, but I’m fairly certain that the recipient of this little bag won’t be reading my blog and spoiling her surprise – she’s only five!

Holly's Bag Holly's Bag

This is a regular magazine-sized tote bag, made from a recycled duvet cover.

The handles are a bit narrower than usual, to accommodate little hands.

Don’t forget that you can order tote bags in the shop, in any of the fabrics shown here.

The Story of Stuff.

“From its extraction through sale, use and disposal, all the stuff in our lives affects communities at home and abroad, yet most of this is hidden from view. The Story of Stuff is a 20-minute, fast-paced, fact-filled look at the underside of our production and consumption patterns. The Story of Stuff exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It’ll teach you something, it’ll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.”

This is why I do what I do.

Please watch the video, and pass on the link.

Thank you.

The Story of Stuff

Have you heard of the Handmade Pledge?

At handmade.org, you can sign a pledge to buy handmade gifts this Holiday season. Why limit it to the holidays, I say? A handmade gift is for Life, not just for Christmas!

The idea is that even if you can’t give a gift that you made with your own hands, then why not buy an item which another craftsperson has made? That way you are supporting independent businesses, and bringing down the mass-produced madness of the holidays, one little gift at a time.

I must confess that I have bought quite a number of non-handmade gifts for my friends and family this Christmas. Why? Because that’s what they wanted. I don’t see the point in giving somebody a handknitted lacy poncho, when what they really wanted was the DVD box set of their favourite tv show or the latest blockbuster novel. Books, music and films will always be good gifts, for those that enjoy them. However, a number of my friends are also craftspeople, and they will be receiving not only handmade gifts, but also items which will enable them to go on and make more handmade items of their own.

If you don’t know what your friends-and-relations would like as a gift, then handmade.org gives you plenty of resources for places to look for ideas. There are online hubs such as Etsy, and there are local craft markets springing up all over the place at this time of year.

Don’t want to give the person who owns everything even more clutter to add to their lives? Buy them something which can be eaten, or used up. What about fudge, or soap? How about a ticket to an event, or some seeds for the garden? A “voucher” for a day of your time? A gift certificate towards something they really want, but can’t afford?

If you’re giving a gift to the person who really does have everything, then how about giving a gift on their behalf, to people who have nothing? Charities such as Oxfam Unwrapped and Christian Aid have amazing gift catalogues, where you can buy all sorts of items from seeds and goats to school equipment, condoms to help prevent the spread of HIV and AIDS, and even a whole toilet!

Whether you buy handmade or mass-produced, whether you give a gift to your family or to charity, please take a moment to think about that person, and what they might like.

I’ve spent a lot of Christmasses working in retail establishments, and there’s nothing more soul-destroying than the last-minute purchase of utter rubbish, clearly thrown together solely for the purpose of giving desperate shoppers something to buy on Christmas Eve. Except perhaps for the Boxing Day crowds, coming back to sheepishly return all of their unwanted gifts. If people didn’t buy musical santas and light-up reindeer, eventually companies would get the point, and stop manufacturing such nonsense!

Don’t give in to the madness! Shop early, shop thoughtfully, and please buy handmade if it’s what’s right for you.