It seems there are many posts with today's date. Actually I decided, erroneously or not I cannot tell, to put all the knitting related from my regular blog, Restingmotion, here as well. This is mostly so that I can link projects to them on revelry. If I link to the new blog, I lose all the posts from the old blog. If I want to keep linking, then apparently there will have to be double posting.
I wrote a blog post this morning that caught up with sewing and knitting, but I just clipped the knitting-related portion to add here. I suppose I will be double posting for a while. Perhaps eventually there will be some differentiation between the two, perhaps someday I will work out a way to link between blogs. That has always been in the back of my brain, but I am not there yet.
Anyway, there has been some knitting, but no finished projects since Ausma. The sock I was knitting in my last post was abandoned because I DID NOT like the colors and hated knitting it. So there.
Here's where I stand on my ongoing projects:
I am still working on the ribbon cardigan. As much as I love both knitting and ironing, I find that this project tests my patience. I may like to iron but ironing yards upon yards of rayon ribbon flat is tedious at best. I have just finished ironing the third 100-yard skein of ribbon. I need to wind it on a spindle, after which I can knit another section of the sweater. The knitting itself is also slow, fun, but slow. There have been evenings in the past month where one row of the twisted basketweave stitch is all I can accomplish of an evening. Of course, the body of this cardigan is being knit in one piece, so the rows are not short. Sometimes self-justification is all that keeps us going. I know that I will love this cardigan. I love the fabric that I am creating. But it will be a long time before I take on another ribbon sweater. I will be happy if I have finished this by fall, which is, realistically, as soon as I would wear this sweater anyway.
Greater progress has been made with "Murder of Crows". I finished the body of the sweater and have picked up the first sleeve. This too will be a fall sweater, although there are still early mornings in the garden which would be cool enough to wear this sweater, were it finished. I really like the way this sweater is turning out and knitting it has reminded me that, as much as I love complicated texture and color work, patterns that require thought, it is also very good to have a simple mindless project on the needles. Pardon the dark photo -- an unblocked sweater on a dark background, taken on a deeply cloudy day.