Ruffle Sleeve Vest
Labels: Vests
Musings of a Red Hat Knitter about her knitting passion and her life.
Labels: Vests

Labels: Lace
When you walk in the front door, you enter the front parlor with the carved stairway and nympth light.
Through the parlor is the dining room and the beautiful yard shows through the window. Note the elegance of the table setting.
This is the formal dining room.
This time we stayed in Catherine's room. Through the door you can see the area with DVD's, coffee, tea, and water always available.
Every room has a mouse house in the baseboard.Labels: Family
Such a cute baby sweater and fun and easy to knit. The hood is knit first, stitches picked up and the body and sleeves made in one piece from the neck down. The only finishing is a little hole under the arms, tails to be sewn in and button sewn on. The hood can be made in garter stitch-like mine-or stockinette stitch.Labels: Baby, Cottage Creation
Made a quick trip to Shepherd's Harvest on a cold, drizzly day. I was hoping to get another piece of pottery by Jenny the Potter www.jennythepotter.com , but she didn't have any pieces I didn't already have. So, I felt sorry for myself and bought 4 skeins of yarn. The green is a 100% merina superwash from a local artist- www.cloudnet.com/~jkberg . The pink is 80% merino, 20% cashmere fingering weight called Voodoo by Silk Roak North Woods in St Paul, MN. By the same artist is the turquoise 70% alpaca, 20% silk, 10% cashmere, also fingering weight-so soft and cuddly. The one that looks yellow and green is Kauni, a Danish yarn 100% wool. But look inside the ball... all the fun colors!
Over 10 years ago I made this beautiful shawl out of linen yarn. I don't remember the pattern, only that I think it was in an Anna magazine. The pattern was for a round tablecloth and in the last few inches of the pattern all of a sudden there were decreases. Questioning why, I still continued and finished. The beauty of linen yarn is shows after it is washed and dried. Here's where the problem revealed itself. The decreases were made so the tablecloth would hang over the edge of the table with no ruffling. To use it as a shawl, it had to be severely blocked. It didn't soften up and the edges didn't really flatten out.
It has been in my closet ever since-never used. Twice in the last week the subject of this shawl/tablecloth came up in conversation, so I thought it was time to do what I've thought of doing many times over the last 10 years. Yes, I frogged it. Now to think of something beautiful to do with the yarn again.
Labels: Lace