Knitting Bits
Ooh, this is going to be a bit all-over-the-place, but there are so many little projects needing updating here that I figured I'd just cram them all in. Between baby knitting and de-stress knitting, The Piles (you know what I'm talking about) have been growing growing growing.
First, I finished my Shetland mittens and due to all this schizophrenic weather we've been having, they've gotten a lot of play in the last couple of weeks. I think they may now be officially retired for the warmer months, but hey, we could wake up (again) to hail tomorrow and biting winds. You never know these days.
![Shetland Mittens](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_s2KHff3rqy9L2IDotHnbfMpYryo3hM66goYi-3-7hdkTvOajJaIgk4P9ye1KEiXkVWhfNVyptYR9y57-N_I6uIHTvH9-HevTNh_8bwZzKtEdA3W6No3FlvQLUsXRxBRNk=s0-d)
I have yet to give them a proper photoshoot or a more appropriate blog-post of their own, but they were so quietly sitting in the sunlight this morning that I figured they warranted a little show-and-tell time.
And speaking of finished projects yet-to-be-photographed-or-written-about, I've finished a few more little baby knits. (As an update for those who have been asking, I'm going to be an official uncle (not a father) and I'm VERY excited about it!) Below is a charming little vintage-style baby bonnet - a free pattern from Larissa at Stitch Marker - that is sweet sweet sweet. I knit this with a linen/wool blend (stashbustin') and loved the crispness of the wavy ridges and soft-yet-sturdy quality of the fabric. The eyelets around the neck are for ribbon but I worked up a nice sturdy I-Cord instead.
![More for baby](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_vfS7qx1IcMPohD3EEk_4pNUFvkDU1xlN5tuOvIbVFBqFcKlnMpR3QLoG1jQi-ANdFrkmq8ZicUrGT9nkinU1KoURwsyARmYFTeaU5bsnj1q-j_Y1miVtBPq8zvEB1QZg=s0-d)
I blocked this using pins and a blocking wire (pictured) to open up the fabric. I could go on and on about how much I love blocking wires. I find I use them for all sorts of things and they just give finished garments that extra OCD punch.
The stashbusting continues in the baby knitting arena: I had one skein of super-silky SWTC Bamboo - this stuff has great yardage (the skein feels a bit like a hockey puck - so weighty and satisfying) and I thought I'd challenge the skein to a duel. Is a one skein baby sweater possible? I believe so! I'm done with the yoke and body and just have the sleeves left - according to the weight of the remaining yarn (40g!), we should be golden for a newborn-sized EZ classic.
![Bamboozled](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_veET4yM6VvbE6oOQcM4YIEeqZGwf4SXjSLOXHsQ0eyJi6e_7-1pY4CzCANyDQjLfjY3szjKIyi1nqeMt3mv4LMyP70ecb6U3KkY0x9SqW8gfvo44gtoAfADmo50saCoJg=s0-d)
The pattern is the ever-popular and always-charming February Baby Sweater from EZ's Knitter's Almanac (I made one a couple years back in green).
Lastly: Remember my 'Reward Cone' of School Products Cashmere Merino? Well I couldn't wait until proper reward-time came around and felt a mindless stockinette pullover was in desperate need of conjuring. So I started. And it's making for some gooooood tactile gratification.
![I Couldn't Resist](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_uukvqOF5hX8kSY_WzfBEx0HiuaLoLtpurHhAq2_P9ncVEk8Yk2lDwYe48Oa-zsCJF2_F9KUQFFyJAIT0kjKGOBKRhDlzHeOtLTfP4tYfXCTVHqNOGR8wKqcAJ9z55nHw=s0-d)
More details on many of these soon - apologies again for the random project purge session!