Today I left my down coat in the closet and went out in Elsie , unzipped, just like this.
Oh happy spring – at last.
Today I left my down coat in the closet and went out in Elsie , unzipped, just like this.
Oh happy spring – at last.
I regret blog silence for the past several weeks, January's been a busy knitting month. Submissions to hoped for publications, and my routine monthly self-published piece have taken all attention. And as I await word about the former, for now a word about the latter – Emily, my January offering.
Dear Emily has certainly taken many forms along the way. The fact of her being a vest is the only vestige (smile) of her original self. She started as an idea for garter stitch, in the manner of Mary and Elsie. I am smitten with the silent shaping that this stitch allows. I made garter swatches in Quince's owl, then chickadee, and finally settled on lark as my desired thickness for this chilly weather piece. Then, with deadlines looming, she took a back seat to submission planning that had me scouring my idea stash. By the time I returned to her, rib stitches had seduced me and she was transformed. I do like when this happens, when one thought leads to another. My husband Peter re-collages his artwork, my writer pal Bev erases, cuts and pastes, and I reknit. Emily got shorter, a bit slimmer, and shaping stitches were reconsidered. And although I thought about making her work as she was, I knew I was on the right track when the decision to start over with new-found knowledge was a relief rather than a burden.
I'm wrapping up pattern writing now, checking my math, and will be taking pictures over the weekend. (Thank you Pete for this preview!) With luck my January offering will launch by February 3rd. Close enough :).
I decided to set my own design work aside for these last few weeks in December, needing some last minute and thoughtful gifts. Hats – quick – seemed just right.
I know nothing about hats. I don't wear them and therefore don't understand their fit and form – a perfect opportunity to try out the patterns of another designer whose work I follow, Amy Christoffers of Savory Knitting.
It's nice to let someone else do the thinking for a change and I think I'll defer to Amy for all things hats from this day forward. I've been having a grand time with Lazy Jacks Hat (2 finished above) and Cider Press Set (currently on the needles), all worked in Madelinetosh Vintage wool – another first for me. I'll finish all 4 in plenty of time for our gift giving dinner.
Happy holidays!
Yesterday I launched this lovely, leafy, wrap – spawned unexpectedly from some swatching experiments and sparked further by Shibui Knits rich merino alpaca wool. I'll definitely use that again.
I named this piece for my first friend, Corinne, who was lovely too. You'll find the pattern here.
Well, maybe I'm not rockin', but if you ask me, Elsie the sweater sure does!
I finally got this moto design out of my head and onto my needles. The resulting knit is quick – aran weight wool, the fabric dense and weighty – all garter stitch, and the zippers substantial and prominent – adding a bit of sparkle. Yum.
Pattern writing is wrapping up now and I plan to launch tomorrow. Just couldn't resist posting this peek – I'm loving this moto!
The 30 Days of Indy Project has been organized by In The Loop yarn shop of Plainville Mass to celebrate independent knitwear designers. On each of the 30 days of November, proprietor Cheryl blogs about a selected designer – and happily, my day is tomorrow, November 16th.
To coincide with the event, on my day, I'll offer my Alice pattern for sale through ravelry at 50% off its regular price (use discount code 30dayproject). I'm pleased to participate, and hope you'll visit!
Named for my best pal's mum, I launched Charlotte yesterday – a sweet and simple wrap, perfect for tv knitting and, once done, perhaps wearing on romantic evenings. I can imagine that.
It's a little hug. The same little hug I'm sending to my pal and her family, on their first holiday season without her.
I'm working 2 designs at once these days. One on the needles, and the other, at this moment, on paper. Not something I usually do.
The over-sized cowl/wrap (on the needles) is taking very little attention – perfect for tv knitting at the end of the day – while the other, a zippered cardigan, is taking a whole lot, as I'm working the math and drawing. All together an ideal pairing I'd say, much like my partner Douglas and me.
or technically crocus – #115 of Quince's color wheel.
Olive Clough begot Olive Ziegler – aunt and cousin of my grandmother Mildred, who later married Harold – brother of Olive Welch. Olive must have been a popular name back then.
Olive is also a double-breasted cardigan in chunky wool, worn so well by Juliet.
Alice, what a beautiful name. I was pleased to find her among my ancestors in our family tree – Alice May Welch, sister of my grandfather Harold, and of Marjorie. I do love to bring my family members, to life again in this way.
I've had this color-block design in the wings for a few months – since it was graciously declined by the publication to which I had submitted. By that time I had already worked up the prototype to ensure that, if accepted, any related deadlines would be less stressful, and her styling would be just as I imagined. Recently with autumn in the air (at least in my locale) she came to mind and yesterday I posted the pattern to ravelry. I'm so happy to see my ravelry friends giving her thumbs up. Things have a way of working out... as they should? Yes, I think so.
In addition to ravelry, you'll find my Alice pattern for sale on craftsy, also linked from my website, here. Enjoy!
It's August and time to focus on my paper toys and Hoss family Christmas gift giving assignments. Ellie and Mark celebrated their 55th(!) wedding anniversary this summer, and as soon as I opened the party invitation I knew I'd found the theme for this year's Christmas Pick announcement.
A walk through Bloomingdales a few weeks ago spawned lots of ideas for a knitted gift. I picked one and am running with it – will be posting about it by next week for sure.
I've got my July design nicely underway, named Lena for my great grandfather's cousin. (It's this family line – the brother of my great, great, grandfather who traveled with him from Switzerland in the late 1800's – that eventually marries into my husband's family long before I do, but that's a story for a future knitted piece that I'll get to pretty soon. Sadly I am running out of family names and will eventually resort to assigning design namesakes to those of us who are still living, though this may well please my pals. Family tree research sure has been fun!)
The design for Lena was spawned initially from my search for a lace. I ran across the Double Wing pattern in one of Barbara Walker's books. It's easily memorized (a requirement) with short repeats and I loved that there was both an open version
and a closed one.
Initially I thought they might look cool paired, but after swatching I found the open version more appealing so I stuck with it.
At this writing, Lena's bodice will be shaped, as per my usual, and with a wide scoop neck. Her sleeves will be slightly longer than those for recently published Marjorie. I like this silhouette, and lately like playing with raglan sleeves so I stuck with these design elements too. I'm working the sample with Quince chickadee, also my usual, but in the new-to-me petal color that I've found to be unexpectedly fantastic –
at first glance almost colorless in its pale-ness, but while working it has become nicely saturated. It feels quite rich to me by now, and a favorite.
Also note, I'm tweeting!, turned on to twitter by Juliet who found, to my delight, that fellow tweeters were mentioning my designs. For those of you who tweet too, you'll find me there as @DebHossKnits. I hope you'll follow me as I post regular updates about my knitting progress, and maybe a bit more.
I can never forecast which design will be popular and which will not. I hold my breath, hit publish, and see what comes. And though I love them all, some clearly do better than others.
Happily, it's now apparent that my June offering – Marjorie – launched yesterday, is a hit with my fellow knitters on ravelry! What a thrill. I'm not even trying to wipe the smile off of my face. Thank you knit pals!
You'll find the pattern for marvelous Marjorie on ravelry and now on craftsy too, with additional information available here.
Last month I was delightfully surprised to find my Mary design included in the Patternfish Newsletter. The resulting increase in blog traffic and pattern sales following that post was dizzying! and made me realize the value of this outreach. And so it's been with renewed motivation that I've spent the month of May designing and preparing submissions to online and print publications in the hopes of making an appearance one day in their pages.
I have no illusions about the likelihood of acceptance. I understand that it's a bit of a lottery driven by many factors I can't predict or control. Its risks are few – some weeks of invisibility maybe as I put my self-publishing aside, and the potential of a bruised ego if/when my submissions are rejected – while its ultimate benefit, if designs are accepted, is great. What I didn't anticipate however, were the benefits of the process.
I'm on the mailing lists of Interweave Knits and Twist Collective and receive notice when submissions for future issues are being accepted.
Mood boards are included highlighting required styling themes. As luck would have it, notices for winter 2013 and spring 2014 issues came in at the same time of my Patternfish epiphany, so I was more than willing to see how I could fit.
One of the themes for Knitscene spring 2014 (a production of Interweave Knits) was Black and White. I'd been working with color blocks lately so it seemed a go. My favorite yarn supplier, Quince&Co, didn't have a white that was white enough, so I went on an online search and discovered a bright white in a wool I'd not used before, Cascade 220 sport, in my favored gauge. (Canadian readers will find Cascade 220 sport here.) I found a supplier in a local store, Gather Here, that I had been meaning to visit for a while. It turned out to be quite a treat and I've been back a few times since. I suggested this same bright white for my Twist Collective winter 2013 submission, a match to its icy winter photo collage style sheet.
Candy Box was one of the requested themes for Interweave Knits spring 2014, aiming at feminine colors and lace. I felt that this too would work for me. In a whitknit.com blog interview I'd come across recently, Pam Allen mentioned Susanna Lewis’s Knitting Lace as a book every knitter should own, and now I do. It's this book I mined for my candy box lace, along with the previously untried Quince color of Dogwood, a luminous pink I now swoon for, and that is now on my needles for my next project as well.
So with all submissions made by their respective deadlines I'm back to my own design stream, armed with new wool, new colors, new lace, a new store, and 3 new fleshed out designs that I'll publish myself if the responses come in as "thank you, but no." It's all good. I'm going with the flow.
Great aunt Ruth married pastor Albert, my grandmother's brother. Word is that pastor Albert enjoyed watching his rascal bride Ruth vacuum au naturel. Makes me wonder how that word ever got out (hee hee!) – but oh how my mum enjoyed this story. I like to think that with her house finally cleaned Ruth might have slipped on this rascally tee to go out on the town.
Thinking of you dear Ruth – with a loving grin.
My Ruth is a cap-sleeved tee covered in scroll lace with back waistband ribbing to accentuate the curves.
You'll find this pattern now published and available from my ravelry shop, and also linked from here.
Oh I love my work – my play? Absolutely.
Ruth.
Pattern writing is underway.
Great aunt Hilda's birth certificate shows her name as Lillian Hildagard, though no one ever called her that. I'm not sure why.
She was a lovely lady, hiding her lovely, lyrical name from the world – but not for long.
Here's Juliet modeling Lillian – a shapely, color-block, garter trimmed pullover, with bracelet length sleeves and a circular shawl collar.
For a closer look, you'll find this published pattern available from my ravelry shop, and also linked from here.
March 7th and true to form in Boston where it's snowing a blizzard, March marches in like a lion.
But that's okay. This weather gives me a few more weeks to wear Elizabeth – my latest cozy knitted piece.
Published pattern is now available from my ravelry shop, and also linked from here. Next up, thinking spring.
During our last design brainstorm session Juliet suggested using my Grand Loop Jane Cowl as a collar – same wool, color, texture, dimensions – but attached instead. hmmm..
So I did.
And I'm glad. Turned out fun, huh? Pattern writing is eagerly underway. Elizabeth will be published and available soon, on Ravelry.