Saturday, December 15, 2007

The penguins came to party

SweetGirl asked for a penguin-themed party. So... the Penguins came to party!

Vanilla cake, strawberry buttercream, marshmallow fondant covered with white frosting for the "snow". The penguins were made out of sculpy and baked. The trees? Frosting piped onto the candles. The igloo was formed out of rice krispie treat and covered in white fondant.

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Most of the penguins were kind and only wished Aiko well.

This one carved a special message on the ice...
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This one went fishing to catch a good gift...
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One of these penguins brought a present but couldn't get inside the igloo because his hat was too big ;)
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and one, well one was up to no good.
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Friday, November 2, 2007

The Wildflower Sweater continues...

So many flowers, so little time.

The intarsia is getting easier with time (don't get me started with weaving in the ends) and the chart reading is not too terrible. The book's chart is just about as microscopic as it gets and required a bit of enlarging on the printer, but now it is large enough to read easily and is symmetrical, which means that I can go the wrong way on the chart and not have to get angry and frog. Yay for considerate charting!

I admit that I attempted the Russian Join in an effort to avoid weaving in the ends (which is why I had to frog the first attempt), but it just did not work out for me (it was more trouble setting it up than it was worth). It might be that there were too many spools to start and this yarn is too skinny to attempt it. I imagine that with a thicker yarn and less spools to incorporate it would have gone better. Some other project, perhaps...

Thursday, November 1, 2007


The back of the Dougie Dog Sweater... not bad for train work. The cable pattern is really easy, no separate cable needle required! It looks giant. I hope it fits him, I had to scale back the pattern from a 1 YR down to 6-9 months because LittleMan is only 17.5 pounds or so. He is tiny so his sweater needs to be tiny.

Monday, October 29, 2007

The Beginnings of a Sweater, Part Two


The beginning of SweetGirl's Wildflower sweater. I will readily admit that the intarsia is KICKING MY BEHIND. I can't knit it on the train because it is too complex (too many bits of yarn to keep track of) and there are just not enough free hours in a day to keep it going at a good pace at home.

I'm probably sour about this project because I got to just about this point once already and had to frog the whole thing because it just wasn't working (was not getting the hang of the intarsia) but this time around it is going much faster and looking far better. Hopefully it is a sign of good things to come with this sweater.

In other knitting news, I'm almost done with the back of LittleMan's sweater - the cabling is simple and fast (which is why that project is my train project).

Knitting on the train has always been pretty interesting. Before the days of iPods, I used to get really distracted by all of the people on the train and their *sometimes* loudly rude conversations. Other times people figured it was a good time to ask about knitting, and for someone who is easily distracted and frogs a lot, it was just not helpful for someone to start asking about "what you knitting?" or "how long have you been knitting?". Admittedly, it's nice that people take an interest but I'm also a little selfish (since having 2 little ones at home leaves very little time to knit and those hours on the train are a nice stretch of time to accomplish things). Now, I just plop my earbuds in and ignore the rest of the world. It makes me seem antisocial, but really I am trying to maximize my time by catching up on my PotterCast and making a dent in my knitting :)

Speaking of dents. Wildflowers call. I need to turn my attitude around on this sweater because otherwise it is nevah going to get done!

Sunday, October 14, 2007

The beginnings of a sweater

The Beginning of LittleMan's Dougie Dog Sweater. The cabling is very simple and much easier than I thought, I've been working on it on the train since SweetGirl's sweater is too complex to attempt on Metra. The intarsia is kicking my rear at the moment. Anyway, this progress on both of the sweaters is good, considering the main project of late has been SweetGirl's Halloween Costume (which deserves a kraft korner post of its own).

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

The Cobbler's Children

Or in our case, the Knitter's Children. Aside from a super-quick blanket I made for SweetGirl just before her second holiday, my kids do not have a single item of knitted goodness. (I started a LittleMan blanket well before he was born but the project was abandoned and the yarn repurposed for other projects.)

This is the year that changes! I have committed myself to making 2 sweaters for the kids for their holiday pictures (yes, it's October but the Holidays come fast for a knitter pressed for time) and a blanket each for part of their Christmas gift. Not just any sweater knitted on giant needles and thick yarn - sweaters made of fingering weight and sport weight yarn. With Intarsia. And cable. I say I have committed myself but perhaps I need to have myself committed. It's ambitious but it is time the kids actually received a knitted item from their mother, instead of watching knitted things come off the needles and into boxes that travel to other places in the country.

All of this came about because in a fit of weakness (cannot resist a good knitting book. just can't) I purchased Lucinda Guys' Handknits for Kids and found myself face to face with some of the cutest kid items that are sophisticated at the same time. Of course now that I have ordered the yarn for all 4 projects I really am committed to finishing everything. Because otherwise I will have spent a lot of cash to enhance my ever-growing stash (OtherHalf's eyebrows will not shoot off his forehead when this box arrives because he TOLD me to buy the yarn. so HA!)

Keeping in mind though, that kid sweaters are a much faster item to finish than, say, an adult sweater, it should not be an impossible task. I am, however, going to force myself to finish SweetGirl's Halloween costume for this year before the yarn arrives (thank goodness this particular carrier is slow to ship, won't receive yarn until late this week or even early next week) and sew the backing for the last blind to be hung. And now that I have told you all my ambitious plans I will be motivated to entertain you all with photos and updates of the projects (and you can all yell at me randomly: "You are posting and commenting too much. That means you are on the internet and not knitting. Back away from the computer and get back to knitting.")

And you know my sisters are a pair of enablers (this is a good thing) ... I'm still working a sweater from yarn my sister sent me in May and then my other sister sent me deliciously tweedy yarn with JUST ENOUGH yardage for my very own Weasley sweater (literally the exact yardage required by the pattern). I tell OtherHalf that my stash is not entirely my fault. Nor is my pattern book collection (because along with the yarn came a cute pattern book with children's sweater patterns that I now must decide which to make!) But I can't resist yarn! And patterns! And! And! I'm going to have to go work part time at a LYS to curb my addiction (or fund it). Don't get me started about the queue of ladies having babies in the next several months!! If I perhaps gave up sleep I could knit to my hearts content without interruption. Then the Knitter's children would have plenty of handknit items to wear.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Birthday kake

So. After months of drooling over other people's talented creations, I decided to get myself into a Wilton class to learn how to do it. I'm on the very last of the courses (4 total) and will be very happy when it is done. It has been loads of fun and a good learning experience but the amount of time/effort it takes to get ready for each class has been taxing (not to mention all that cake to make!) This weekend I tried out some of those skills on my niece's birthday cake...

Designed around her theme, "Birthday Diva"



The "smash cake" which was covered in fondant
and not as messy as a traditional smash cake.
It was supposed to look like the Birthday Girl's hat.


Because I'm critical of myself, there are things about the cake I wish I could have done better. The fondant creased around the bottom of the cake in parts because I wasn't as patient as I should have been when covering. The fuzz on the hat could have used some more work. The letters from the letter form weren't exactly the same font as the decor but for the most part they turned out ok (aside from some jagged edges).

There are things I liked. The colors worked out well, the leopard print also turned out better than I had thought in my head. I just took the dark pink fondant, rolled it out to double the finished thickness, took little balls of the light fondant and placed it on the pink fondant and rolled out the fondant the rest of the way. Then the shapes were cut out with leaf shapes and pieces were trimmed to make them less uniform.

The cake itself was a vanilla cake with strawberry buttercream frosting.

All in all, a good go at making a full sized birthday cake. Even made the 5p.m. deadline!

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Not really exercise


this is probably not the intended use of the machine

Edited to add: That is, for people who do not knit/crochet, a hank of purty yarn that needed to be made into a center-pull ball to knit with. Although, (and this note is for the knitters/crochet folk) I suck at making center-pull balls and wind up just taking the yarn from the outside, thus defeating the purpose of a center pull ball. Anyway. That hank is held by our lovely elliptical machine that I have no energy to use.

Apparently it is time for me to invest in a Swift and Winder to properly take care of these issues.

Or, as Alton says, those things are "unitaskers" and I should stick to multitasking my elliptical machine!!

Thursday, May 24, 2007

A Buckeye Vest


Buckeye Battle Cry
In old Ohio there's a team
That's known thru-out the land;
Eleven warriors, brave and bold,
Whose fame will ever stand.
And when the ball goes over,
Our cheers will reach the sky,
Ohio field will hear again
The Buckeye Battle Cry-

Drive! Drive on down the field,
Men of the scarlet and gray;
Don't let them thru that line,
We have to win this game today,
Come on, Ohio!
Smash through to victory.
We cheer you as you go:
Our honor defend
So we'll fight to the end for O-hi-o.

Amazingly enough, I managed to finish the Gigi Vest before his birthday (tomorrow):
Based off of Knitty's Petrol, knit in Plymouth Encore (I know, part acrylic but washability was a must in this project)!


Please excuse the fuzziness, my hand is not as steady as one would hope...