Showing posts with label Mr. Loopy's socks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mr. Loopy's socks. Show all posts

Saturday, May 5, 2007

The Horror


That is a photo of the terrifying damage done to Mr. Loopy's Sweet Georgia socks, after the third wearing. His feet, combined with his work boots ate them. I don't think these are fixable.


But they're not being thrown away. The other sock isn't quite as bad as this. It only has a tiny hole.


See the fuzz on the heels - that's not the camera not focusing properly. That is superwash wool fulling/felting. To me, this is just... unbelievable. Has anyone else seen superwash wool full before?

Mom's Christmas 2006 socks are coming along okay. I'm done the heel on the first sock and starting to just cruise along the foot. Here's a photo of the finished pair of (too small) socks.


And here's a photo of the sock in progress.

Most of my socks are knit using the two circular needle method, however, because I'm itching to start a second pair of socks, I'm thinking about starting a pair on my birch dpns, with either Trekking, my handspun or a marled rainbow yarn I got from Have A Yarn in Mahone Bay last fall.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Mr. Loopy's (dead) socks & sock redesign

I finished the Sweet Georgia socks for Mr. Loopy a couple of weeks ago. However, he wore them three times and put holes in the heels. Not tiny, fixable holes. We're talking holes that have obliterated the majority of the sock. I don't have pictures yet, as I have been feeling under the weather and when the sun has been shining, I've been at work. Soon though. I can't believe the damage.

I'm working on replacement socks for Mom's 2006 Christmas socks - making them bigger so they'll actually fit. I'm using the Clementine's Baltic Socks pattern, and have added an extra 14 stitches to the stockingette side panels. I've measured and measured again, so I'm pretty sure they'll fit this time. It was my own fault I wasn't paying attention to the size. I'm lucky that I may not have to rip back the first pair - I think I have enough of the original yarn to make a second pair, but if I have to cannibalize the first pair of socks, so be it. :)

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Not much new...

There's not much new on the knitting front. Still slogging away at Mr. Loopy's socks on the bus (why did I have to fall for a guy with size 13 feet???) and working on Sarah's second mitten. I need to start Mom's present soon for it to be done for Mother's Day. Maybe I'll paint her something at the Clay Cafe instead. I don't know.

I haven't done much of anything this week - busy and tired and feeling yucky. It's allergy season and I've been full of them. Argh.

Monday, April 9, 2007

SSSS = Sorta Second Sock Syndrome

This always happens - after the heel of the second sock, I always get bored and start itching to cast on a new, more complicated sock. This only really happens with plain socks - ribbed, stockingette, anything where I don't have to think really. Mr. Loopy has big feet. And it feels like miles and miles of boring knitting and I want to knit something more complicated. I'm torn between taking his socks off the needles and casting on for some lace socks for Mom (her Christmas gift) or continuing. I just don't know.

Saturday, April 7, 2007

RIP Daisy Scarf


So I made the executive decision to frog the daisy scarf I have been knitting over the past year for my mother. I don't know if it's me (I've done simple lace before) where I can't knit lace or if it's the needles or the yarn weight (Misti Alpaca lace.) I had frogged this project so many times, that I decided this was its final frogging. Above is the sad, sad ball of yarn, that may be looking for a new home at the next Stash Swap. It may have a yellow sister that wants to go with it too.



I've got a back up idea for Mother's Day, but I can't talk about it yet. As my mother may visit this blog. :)

I finished a skein of yarn two weeks ago that I can't wait to knit into socks. I haven't taken its WPI yet, but it looks to be an average of sport weight with a light worsted. It's an Aurelia Top Knot. There's more in those little balls than you think there is!





Below is what' I've been working on the past couple of days.



This is the Eric's Glovelets pattern from Green Mountain Spinnery, turned into Sarah's Mittens. It needs a mate (started) and a thumb. Knitted from Handmaiden Cashmere in black. They look thin, but it's a baby cable rib, so they'll stretch. Next time I convert these into mittens, I'll knit the reverse stockingette all the way up the palm, instead of going back to the cabled rib.



Mr. Loopy's Black Orchid Sweet Georgia sock. It's almost finished, I just need to do the toe chimney (a la Lucy Neatby) and graft the toe and sew the ends in. I've just started the heel on the second sock for the second time. I was almost finished and realized it was a lot smaller than the heel on the first so it got frogged and re-started. Once you've picked up tiny sock stitches, picking up worsted ones seems like child's play.

A close of up of the garter stitch heel:



Hopefully I'll get one of these projects finished this weekend. I'm aching to get a new pair of socks on the needles. :)