Pembroke vest!

This one’s just been waiting for buttons and a good blocking for the last three and a half weeks.

This was a simple project that turned into a much longer one. I’d originally started knitting the six month size, then realized in December after finishing the back that it would be way too small. So I cast on, in the round this time, for the 12 month size. The yarn (Dream in Color Classy, color is Go Go Grassy, exactly as in the pattern sample) is so smooshy and fun to work with. I was expecting the color to be slightly more saturated, but now that my eyes have adjusted I’m a huge fan of the result. I was also expecting to find buttons in the brown/red/orange/wood family, but ended up going for ones that just blended in – subtler was better. The yarn color is funny – I really debated because I loved the sample but thought that part of what made those photos work was having a baby with that red-gold hair color. I did not think our baby would fall in that type, so would the green work? Ordered it anyway, and lo and behold, his hair is reddish blond. 🙂

Here it is on, front:

And back:

A great knit!

And now something basic

After finishing the cabled vest (which I still need to block and take photos of!), I was in the mood for something stockinette from the stash. Since pants have been the weak link for us recently, I found a pattern on ravelry for long-legged soakers that also worked as pants. The yarn is Plymouth Encore left over from a hat that I made for Kevin years ago.

The rounds are long, but between the short rows every 7 rows and the stripes every 15, there’s enough to keep it interesting. I had to stop and measure them to make sure they’ll fit – they seemed enormous, but the tape measure says they’re perfect.

Bear Hat

I’ve been trying all week to get a halfway decent photo of the bear hat and it just cannot be done.

The light’s always weird, or he’s making a face, or it doesn’t contrast well against the background, or the camera’s on the wrong setting. Hopefully I’ll get a better shot of it in action at some point.

I was so excited about the pattern, and after finishing and seeing it on, it falls far short of expectations. The biggest problem is just that there’s one proper direction for it to face, and it almost never manages that in reality, so it always looks a bit haphazard. Bummer. (It has gotten a series of compliments when we’ve been out, though, so I may just be overcritical.) The pattern was a bit crummy too, so I improvised and I think I would have been happier if I’d been able to follow the directions and they just worked.

All of that said, it’s a cute hat in cute yarn and if it wasn’t following on the heels of the adorable pumpkin hat I’d probably like it a lot more.

Another sweater that fits!

The peapod sweater that I worked on during our Whistler trip and finished on the beach in Costa Rica fits!! It’s still on the loose side, but barely, so I’m glad I at least caught this one before it was too small.

Poor cranky baby wasn’t entirely in the mood for a photoshoot, as you can see from the blurry limbs and sad face. I love those orange buttons.

The back is cute, too, and he was much happier on his tummy:

Nick of Time

On a whim, I thought I’d put H in a sweater that I knew would still be too big, only to find that it was nearly too small and the buttons barely close!

I guess we know what he’ll be wearing for the next week straight. 🙂 This was the Baby Surprise Jacket that I knit last spring – the last project before we found out that he was a boy. It’s very cute on and I particularly like the buttons. The hat is still a bit floppy and yet too short – another inch would have been better.

One more bonus photo from the back:

Quick knitting update

The bootees were quick to knit and then I ran out of time to buy buttons. Oops. Had to resort to plan B, which was sewing the straps to the shoes instead of buttoning them. They were adorable and perfect for the wedding, but I still intend to find buttons soonish and sew them on properly.

I’ve been knitting and knitting away on the Pembroke vest, and finally finished the back.


It was a relief to be done, since I realized that I only have one set of #7 needles and I thought I needed them for H’s bear hat. Of course, after swatching it became apparent that #5s were a better size, but it was still nice to have made progress. I love the cables, have completely come around to the color, and am enjoying the pattern, but (and this is a huge “but”) it looks like the back will fit for another few moments, tops. I’ve been sitting and mulling whether it makes sense to frog, without actually having held the vest back up to the baby yet… Sometimes it’s better not to have definitive proof.

Meanwhile, the bear hat is zooming along and incredibly satisfying. I’ve never knit with this texture yarn before – the nubblyness is slightly tiringfor my hands but it’s attractive and different, and I’m enjoying the mindless rounds of knit stitch after a lot of recent lace and cables and counting.

A lot going on

For the last year or so, I’ve been living an organized existence where I generally only have one thing on the needles at a time. I have a good 70+ items in my ravelry queue, but I’ve been pretty much finishing one thing completely before starting the next. And then after the pumpkin hat, I lost my knitting vibe and moved on to sewing projects for a bit.

So I don’t know exactly what hit me in the last week or two, but suddenly my knitting looks like this:

Those projects are:

  • (green) A cabled Pembroke vest, size 6 months, for the kiddo. I’m on row 15 of the chart — about a fifth of the way through the back. Initially I was thinking this would be a good Thanksgiving outfit, but I would have to get so little sleep for that to happen that I’ve let go of that goal.
  • (blue) The Yarn Harlot cowl — actual knitting for me!! I’m on row 13 of 61.
  • (brown) Some Saartje bootees. We’re going to a wedding over Thanksgiving, and it seemed to me that it would be nice if H had little shoes to match his outfit. The yarn is Koigu (my first time knitting with it ever! A purchase from our rainy excursion to Bainbridge last weekend), and it’s lovely. Even at 7 st/inch, these are fast, fast. I’m even knitting them in the round so the finishing will be almost nonexistent. The only pity is that I need buttons and don’t have any on hand, so I’ll have to motivate out to the button store at some point this weekend. I’m on row 2 of the second bootee, still need to crochet the loops and weave in two ends on the first guy.
  • (still-skeined yarn) This will be a replacement for the pumpkin hat, which will only be seasonally appropriate for two more weeks (sad). I found a teddy bear hat on Ravelry which isn’t QUITE as cute but comes close. I’m saving this one for our thanksgiving trip back east, since it’s mindless 1×1 ribbing followed by mindless stockinette and everything else I’m working on is lace, cables or row-by-row. But I’ll swatch before we leave so that I can bring the proper needles.

Pembroke vest

Little cabled vests are so appealing, and I loved the Pembroke pattern that came out this summer. The yarn specified in the pattern seemed ideal down to the colorway, so I’ve been vaguely trying to track down a skein for the last few months. Finally found one (and even on sale!) and it arrived in the mail yesterday! Such fun. I cast on in the evening, then thanks to an unusually constant-nursing, no-sleep night managed to make it through fifteen rows of the chart last night.

The yarn is slightly more pastel than I anticipated, but so springy and lovely to work with. I briefly entertained hopes of trying to finish this for our family gathering at Thanksgiving, but I suspect that’s overly ambitious.

Cute in the handknits

The sweaters I knit are starting to fit, even if the shoulders are still way too big and make him look like a little linebacker.


We joked that he looks like an old man in it – all he needs is a pipe and an armchair by the fire. Also too cute from the back:


That collar is something of a mixed blessing. When we have him in the moby, it folds up and keeps his neck warm. But when he’s hungry, it’s practically cruel to have something that tantalizingly close to his cheek.