Showing posts with label lace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lace. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

Moments of lace (Moments in red)


Another of Shui Kuen Kozinski amazing designs - the Moonlight Sonata shawl with picot edging. Breathtakingly beautiful as always.
Made in less than 3 days.


Pattern: Moonlight Sonata 2  by SK Kozinski (another variation of the pattern - Moonlight Sonata shawl) - both patterns are available for free, i don't know what you're waiting for :)

Materials used:


Yarn: 3 skeins of Unitas Hana, 100% ecco cotton, 4ply (fingering)
Colourway: red lipstick
Metereage/yardage: 373m (408 yards)
Needles: 4mm (US 6)
Size: shawlette (finished measurements: 161cm x 65cm / 63.4" x 25.6" relaxed after blocking)
Blocking: iron blocked



It was a very windy day
Yes, the sea is a bit tilted, I don't know what happened to it, it used to be normal






Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Flowers, leaves and acorns

I may have been quiet lately but that doesn't mean that I haven't been knitting! Quite the contrary! As always, my most frequently chosen projects were shawls.
Two of my favourite shawls made in the 2011. are designed by Shui Kuen Kozinski which probably doesn't come as a surprise- I've been a long time fan of her work.

And, although I could hardly pick my favourite pattern among her designs, when I made my first Fleur-the-lis shawl, I instantly knew that it was a love that would last for a long, long time. And so it was! What blew me away was the simplicity of the pattern capable of resulting in such a rich and breathtakingly complex texture. Moreover, the final shape of this shawl is so long lasting that even after months of wearing it you will still have firmly shaped peaky edges and an intact texture of the lace.
In addition to all this- it is an extremely fun knit and here I might want to add that I am a very impatient knitter. But, it appears that, no matter how many repeats you decide to make or how many lace panel you decide to include in your project, your whole (knitter's ) world suddenly starts spinning around the row in which you will finally make 9 out of 3 stitches and start making a new flower. Quite amazing!

Anyway, the story has it that, once upon a time, a (young and beautiful) knitter (whos blog you are reading this very moment)  decided to made herself a lovely winter Fleur-de-lis shawl in ice gray. When the shawl was finished, she realised that it was a pure miracle- the most amazing thing she had ever see. Everyone else was blown away by its beauty as well.. People from her kingdom would instantly fall in love with it (the shawl, not the knitter!) and would ask her :"Can you make something like that for me too?" but the knitter would briefly reply: "Who am I, your grandmother? Make it yourself!" And so the beautiful young knitter continued enjoying her moment of glory the whole next winter.
One day, the knitter woke up and felt that the temperature had drastically changed overnight! It was spring! And, since the knitter lived on the Mediterranean, she knew quite well that she would soon melt like a snowman if she continued wearing her shawl. Her other option was to put her shawl into a closet along with the rest of her winter wardrobe but she knew more than well that, then, she would lose all her magical powers. So, she sat down and started thinking! And, after a few days of thinking, she came up with a solution to her problems  - she would make herself a new shawl out of a much lighter yarn that could be worn in April and May! That way she would  keep her powers forever (or at least until German tourists come to town and start making fun of the insane knitter in a bathing suit, swimming with a shawl around her neck!)  And, so, she made herself a new shawl! And she lived happily ever after!

I have to say that, unlike many other times, this time I was really lucky when it came to picking the right yarn for the project- my first choice was the best choice (and I think that the lady in the yarn shop, used to my constant replacements and "better ideas", meditated on  the idea of framing my picture and putting it on a wall for a long time after that! She must have thought it was candid camera!).

The yarn I used is a very strange tweedy cotton/cashmere/wool blend! Very hard to work with, actually, as the thread easily breaks during knitting but extremely firm when knit into fabric. It is also very blockable which is great for a shawl project! The predominant colour is natural beige (or sand, if you like) and, at first sight, it gives the impression of a hemp yarn but, in reality,  it is extremely soft to touch (cashmere can do that!).

I do have to mention that some of the pictures were taken at least 6 months after blocking and, as you can see, she shape is still perfect!







The pattern for Fleur-de-lis shawl is obtainable from Ravelry  here > Fleur-de-lis shawl pattern by Shui Kuen Kozinski .

The second Shui Kuen's design that I made this winter (don't worry, I won't be telling another story about a beautiful knitter and her magic powers!) is Leaf and Acorn Shawl, this time, in green. What a change after all the projects in earth shades!

I love it, I hearth it, I love wearing it but my dear friend is so desperately in love with it that i decided to give it to her! But she still doesn't know that so, in case you see her, don't tell her anything about this!

Here it is:






You can download Leaf and Acorn shawl pattern for free from both Ravelry ( HERE) and Elann.com (HERE).

Happy knitting! I'm going to bed! It's 3 AM and I think I'm losing my magical powers as we speak!

Friday, 12 March 2010

Lilies and hearts

Updates!

My blog started hibernating when I was still working on my "Fleur-de-lis" shawl and I never posted any pictures of the finished project. And, it is not the only shawl that I made during this "internet wintersleep".

My Fleur-de -lis turned out beautiful (how humble of me!) ! I love it and I'm sure I'll be making another one very, very soon. As soon as I pick a new colour .



I swear I'm not mad! I just look mad. It is very important to point that out in my case: I'm barely ever mad but I always look that way!
Another KAL, another project designed by ShuiKen Kozinski and another beautiful lace shawl around my neck:


"My Valentine" shawl.



I went for the same winning combination of materials that i used for my Luna Moth shawl- mohair and glass beads.
Finally, the contenct of one swap package that I received last summer from my German swap pal turned into another triangular shawl.



I love the colours and I love how the shawl turned out. I improvised and now I'm trying to decipher my own notes; in case I succeed, I should have the pattern written down by the end of this spring. Or next spring! :D

Again- not mad!
(I should definitelly find a pro model for my projects! :)))))

Wednesday, 7 October 2009

Voyager

"The young women emigrants of more than a century ago stepped on a ship and began their voyage to a new home in Canada. They brought with them their skills as knitters and spinners and the willingness to use those skills to clothe their families. Despite the need for utility items of clothing, they incorporated creativity, skill and beauty into the garments needed for warmth in the cold Canadian winters. "
(From the description of the Voyager scarf/stole Shui Kuen Kozinski and Benne Ferrell, at Elann.com)


It's a lovely story to think about while knitting. And it is even lovelier to have a scarf with a story around your neck! Remember my lace from the last post? Well, the scarf is now finished - it is one amazing piece of lace!



Since the end of May, I've been thinking of making myself a nice lacy shawl or scarf in neutral colour, possibly with cotton yarn and with rich and decorative edging. But, each time I'd started making a design, I'd end up with an idea of a lovely edging and nothing else. All this time I've had the beginning and the end of my dream scarf in my head- but not the body of the scarf!




Then I checked Shui Kuen's designer's page on Ravelry again- she has proved to be my saviour in such situations. :)

Of course I found just the right thing there! :) Voyager lace shawl/stole design by her and Benne Ferrell, another dear and interesting lady!


And that was it; before you know it- it was on my needles! Apparently- the force was with me this time and I was able to find the best possible yarn the very same day!

I only "had" to make one small adjustment - to add that only thing that I was able to come up with myself- my lacy edging! :) (The original version is actually extremely cute but- you'll understand me- I had to do it for purely pathological reasons! :))))

It was done in less than 4 days! I really enjoyed working on this pattern - and it was so exciting to watch how this beauty grows under my fingers!




I used 150g/370m of (20 wpi) fingering pure cotton Unitas- Hana yarn and worked with 4mm circular needles. I made the bottom edging and the body of the scarf in one piece and then I made the top edging separately and grafted the two pieced together. I am more than happy with how it turned out!

I can only advise you to make it some day as well and say a huge "Thank you" to Shui Kuen and Benne for designing this beauty!

For those of you who are Ravelry members, the pattern page can be found HERE,

or,

you can simply open the Elann.com patterns page - HERE.








See something strange in the upper right corner of this picture? It's a fish! It jumped out of the sea while I was taking this photo (probably to make sure that it was not a fishing net). A fish! I was lucky! The last time the animals decided to (unexpectedly) show up in my pictures was when I was taking photos of a canyon near my hometown. Then I ended up with a dozen pictures of the canyon with two bugs mating in the bottom right corner (I could have sworn that there was only one!!!!).


I'm not lying!!!!


Saturday, 7 March 2009

Mohair on my skin


See this? (Not the minneolas and bananas!!!) It's 150 grams! It only takes that much to make me a very happy person! And for who knows how long!

ZOOM out!



Yes, I'm still talking about my Luna Moth mohair shawl! I'm deeply in love with it! Now I know why I wanted it so badly! Only I don't know why I didn't make it a least one century ago!




I can understand silk addicts now! I touch it before I go to bed and touch it again when I wake up and dream of it touching my neck in the meantime. It's not a sweater, or a dress... I can always have it with me. In my lap, under my arm, around my neck....

I really have no talent for "girlish advices" but this, ladies, this something you MUST own. It is the best gift a woman's neck can get! And, if you're a man and reading this, you'll know what you need to do (buy your wife/girlfriend a pair of needles and 2 skeins of yarn and ask your grandma to teach her how to knit :))) She'll love it!!! ).

It's so light and delicate...And beautiful.


And than the glass beads! They're transparent and constantly hiding. Just like I wanted. They're only visible when the sun reflects into them. That's when they start sparkling. One by one. Sometimes a few at the same time... I added them randomly and you can never know which one is going to make friends with the sunshine and turn into a dew drop.



If there's no light- they're invisible and no one knows they're there. Except for me. When I feel the touch of a cold miniature glass bead on my neck or hand... A secret beauty; not visible to everyone, only to those who can chase sun beams. Like a hidden tattoo. (Oooops! See? That's what this shawl can do to you!)

Please, do yourself a favour and make a nice mohair shawl!
I've got at least a dozen great reasons why you should do it in my sleeve.

150g? remember? It's only 100g of yarn. I used 50g pckg of beads.

Mohair blends are very cheap in Europe. You could have one of the finest things in your closet at the price of a bottle of (not so precious) wine. (But then buy that bottle to celebrate!).
There are beautiful Italian mohair/cashmere blends at very affordable prices. After all- it's only 2 skeins. That way- you won't be sorry for not buying pure cashmere. Who could be angry with Mohair? On the other hand- you won't regret not having a pure mohair shawl- cashmere is something you don't say "no" to!

You can easily find silk/mohair blends that come in 25g balls but, hey- the yardage is more or less the same as in an average 50g ball of mohair/acrylic blend. A 50g shawl!!!!




Everyone will notice it, believe me! They won't care you're wearing a pair of old jeans. You won't care either.

Your evening dresses will not be "too simple" any more!

Are you too skinny? Skinny is called SLIM when warepped in a mohair lace shawl!

Too fat (god forbid!!! :D )? Really? Haven't noticed! Probably because of that that beautiful shawl you're wearing.

Got nothing to wear? What about that beautiful lacy shawl??? hmmm...hmmmmmmm...:))

It sheds?????? OHHHH, come on, as if you have never deliberately stopped breathing for 5 houres just so that you could survive through a dinner dressed in your "drop dead sexy but 3 sizes too small" gown?! What's a hair or two compared to that?! It won't turn into a goat (for a while!) :)))

People love these old fashioned yet new things. Old symbols of feminity. But, it doesn't need to be white! Use apple green! Or red! Or orange.... It looks beautiful in other colours. Check the pattern page on Ravelry!
And having said that, I believe one of these skeins just winked at me. :)))




Two skeins????A pair of needles??? How hard can it be?

Patterns??? It doesn't have to be Luna Moth! Find yourself another one (this one is mine :D). There are plenty more patterns for lacy triangular shawls and stoles designed by Shui Kuen Kozinski out there! And beautiful ones too (and by this I mean BEAUTIFUL!!! she is my Nr. 1) For free! !!!


Just look at this Coin lace stole... Shining Bird's Eyes....Sun Ray Shawl...Gold Nugget Shawl...Forget Me Not Shawl...Moonlight Sonata Shoulder Shawl...or you could make Heartland or Swallowtail lace shawls designed by Evelyn Clark... Or make your own design....



Y.O.U. W.A.N.T T.O. O.W.N. A M.O.H.A.I.R. S.H.A.W.L. !!!!




Monday, 2 March 2009

Taming mohair

Every February I experience a severe creativity breakdown. From January 31st to March 1st - Collapse! Nothing! The ideas keep on popping out but I find it absolutely impossible to «teleport» them into real projects. No change this year! Zero!
Only this February was kind to me! It gave me no fruitful ideas but it did give me something else – something I've wanted for quite a long time!
A nice mohair shawl. I've got more than 2kg of mohair yarn at home and not a single mohair shawl? Why? I don't think I have a good answer to that question! Orenburg shawl, which I promised to myself at least a year ,is obviously such a sacred project that I'm almost scared to even start working on it. For now, I choose to continue dreaming about it and making thousands of sketches and swatches.
A nice triangular shawl was always the second option. I wanted to own one and to make one. Making it is a great opportunity to grasp the system of top-down triangular knitting; it's only one step away from designing my own shawl which is yet another thing I've wanted for quite a long time. But they need to be severely blocked and mohair can not be successfully blocked! Can it? Well, they say it does not respond well to blocking!
Only, I'm soon to find out it is only one half of the truth. The half that is, actually, not at all important for my project!
Here's the thing- knitters often use blocking method to adjust the size of their (finished) projects; when exposed to steam or water, some fibre types stretch (and keep the shape after the process is finished) and increase the overall size of the project. The results are not always the same of course . How much the work will actually stretch will depend on the inherent stretchiness or elongation of the thread treated which is generally determined by the fibre type. And, scientifically, this is where mohair says :”No knitter ain’t going to stretch mi thread!”. :)))Mohair blends with 30% + other natural fibres are more promising but with my yarn being 65% mohair and 25% acrylic the situation looked pretty hopeless. Well, at least as far as the first half of the truth is concerned! But that is only one half!
The second and newly discovered half says that - while the thread itself can not be stretched (I don’t need it to stretch after all), the work will stretch all right! Now, that I do need! I need it to present itself in its original size! If you have ever worked with mohair yarn than you have probably noticed that it looks somewhat wrinkled and shrunken when finished! It can be hard to determine its real size. And, if you have ever seen a triangular scarf :)))) than you have probably noticed that - it is flat! Like a pancake! Well, blocking can mend that! It is now official!

I opened the elann.com just to take another look at Luna Moth shawl designed by Shui Kuen Kozinski. I’ve been in love with this shawl ever since I fist saw it! It is absolutely gorgeous! But, accidentally, I clicked on the “wrong” link and, instead of that lovely “Luna Moth” in grass green I expected to see - the pattern page for Mohair version of “Luna Moth” opened! There it was! Snow white, all hairy and soft, lovely mohair triangular shawl in all its glory. And it looked VERY much blocked! The yarn used- mohair/nylon blend! So, than it works. But to start a project like this one without being sure you will actually get the result you’re hoping for would be a very stupid idea! Finally, HOW should I block it to make it look like the one from the picture!? There was only one person to ask- Shui Kuen.. So, I dropped her a note and in no time, her answer made me a very happy knitter/future owner of a triangular MOHAIR Luna moth shawl (and all that in February). It was wet blocked! And successfully too! She also gave me some great suggestions on how to shape it. Quote: “A well-proportioned shawl should have a ratio of 2:1 (width: height). The angle of the tip is 90 degrees (right angle). If the angle is less than 90 degrees, it will look long at the back but not wide enough.“ – keep that in mind, will you?! :) I don’t think I’d pay any attention to that if it weren’t for her inputs!

Lovely, so,


DAY 1

I CO my first stitches.



Following the instructions written by someone else came as a huge relief. I only had to adjust decreases to my Eastern knitting style - it took me about a second to do that! :D No additional calculations, no thinking, no need to try it on, no thinking, no modifying, no thinking... I even decided I'd follow the written instructions and use slide markers(doing things I have never done before!:) )...I looked like a real school girl. Oh, but, no thinking also means lots and lots of tinking! :( Having someone else do all that math and chart drawing for you can really send your brain cells on a long vacation, can't it?! Which is not at all a problem if you like frogging mohair, frogging lace, frogging mohair lace, tinking 200-300 sts long lace mohair rows (all at once). I don't!
DAY 2
I had a huge fight with Mr.Row 49. I said some very bad things, too! But we're O.K. now! :)
That was it, my brain cells had been sunbathing for too long- I switched to the charted instructions and started controlling my work as I knit along, always checking the previous row. That's the only way to knit lace and avoid making (too many) mistakes.
DAY3
A top-down triangular shawl is one TRICKY species! IT NEVER STOPS GROWING!!!! Three repeats in one day and then one repeat in 3 days! My brain cells say: "Add some beads." Almost invisible ones! Done!
DAY 4
Only one row! But a long one too! The rows are 300+ sts long at this point.
DAYS 5 and 6
Walk on the beach...coffee by the see...a very hansome waiter makes a picture of a palm tree in my macchiato foam...watering plants...finding out that some mimosas have already started blooming...(washing the floor, doing loundry, cooking and sleeping)...
No knitting! :)))
DAY 7
Late at night! Finished! O.K. now I'm REALLY excited!

I only had to attach the thread from a new skein twice but there are 7 knots on the WS of the work. Beads!!! Though it was an optimal combination of the thickness of the string and the size of the bead hole, sliding the beads up and down the thread many times causes it to break easily. While sliding along the string, the beads collect mohair hairs and form small tangled hairy clouds- the knots are the result of several unsuccessful attempts to untagle those.
I'll just have to weave them in!

But, like expected, it is all wrinkled!

It's bath time!


It looks so small! (And blurry! :) )
It's swimming!


Has it been 20 min? I think it has!!!


I rinsed it and than hanged it to check if all the excess water had come out. Still soaked!


So I spread it over a huge terry towel again and covered it with another, smaller one. Then I rolled them into a pancake. The European one, of course! With mohair shawl filling! :)))
Now it's cool and ready for blocking!




ALL STABBED with pins!
(Is it normal for a person to enjoy stabbing at a garment like I do?! I REALLY ENJOY doing it! I want to do it every day! I especially liked the sound of a pin going through the nylon layer inserted under the towel.)
DEAR SHAWL, PLEASE GET BLOCKED SOON! AND FORM SOME NICE SCALLOPS ON THE EDGE. OTHERWISE, I'LL HAVE A LETUCCE EDGING WHICH I GENERALLY WOULDN'T MIND ONLY THIS TIME I REALLY WANT A NICE SCALLOPING EDGE!

MORNING AFTER :)))


I unpinned one corner! It's working!!!!!!!!!! But than I put the pin back to where it was- still not ready for this! :))))

TWO MORNINGS AFTER!!!

My dream has come true! It's a stretched triangular mohair Luna moth shawl. With a scallop edge! A wearable one! And, oh, SO SOFT !


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