Saturday 26 December 2020

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas everyone!

 I do hope you managed to celebrate together, either in person or virtually. 

We had a quiet day at home, which was actually quite nice. 

We had had the bad news from the government that we would be entering 'Tier 4' on the south coast today, so I made my Hope Springs Hat free for Christmas  - well it had been free during the first lockdown, so it felt like the right thing to do. 

It proved very popular again and I was delighted to see this today  - 

Tina’s Allsorts Designs, Hope Springs Hat


Woo Hoo! I had seen it gradually climbing up during Christmas day but at some point during the night it got to the top! It isn't there anymore but it got there and I managed to grab a screenshot!!

If you would like a free copy too, click the link in the sidebar to pop across to Ravelry and use the code Hope at checkout. 

Be quick though, it's only valid until midnight tonight, UK time. 

And please consider linking a project of your version so we can all see it 👀 . If you would prefer to buy a ready made hat, there's also a link to my Folksy Shop in the sidebar too - there's a pink version of Hope Springs Hat still available. 😊🎅

Tina’s Allsorts Designs, Hope Springs Hat


Tina’s Allsorts Designs, Hope Springs Hat



Here's to a MUCH BETTER 2021! Stay safe everyone ❤❤❤

Tuesday 1 December 2020

New Folksy listings!

 I have finally taken the time to list some of the hats I have made on Folksy - I was delighted when two of them sold the same day! 

I still have some more to list, and naturally, I'm knitting another! So you might want to take a look regularly 😉. 


Hope you find something you like! 

Tina’s Allsorts Designs, Folksy Shop

Tina’s Allsorts Designs, Folksy Shop

Tina’s Allsorts Designs, Folksy Shop


Monday 16 November 2020

New Design - Finding Balance Hat

 I have just published a new hat design!!! Really happy with this design at last, although it was a long time in the making...

I started out wanting to make another fairisle style hat with several colours but kept getting stuck with my colour choices... I wanted to use Shetland Sprindthrift again but with only online ordering available, some of the colours I chose didn't go together as well as I had hoped... There was a lot of re-jigging and eventually I gave up!

I decided to concentrate on getting the balance of the motifs right first, working with just two colours - and then re-introduce more colours. But once I had the motifs just right I really liked the look with just two colours. Really really liked it! So I wrote the pattern with just two colours and called it 'Finding Balance', as the name seemed to fit not only with stripping it back to the basics to 'find the balance' between the motifs but also trying to find a way to balance all the crap this year is throwing at me and everyone else... I'm sure crafting helps us all find a way to find balance.

I made my first sample using Drops Nord, a gorgeously soft and squishy alpaca/wool/polyamide mix. A 50g ball in each of two highly contrasting colours is enough to make two hats.

It's available on Ravelry here - Finding Balance Hat 

Finding Balance by Tina's Allsorts Designs

Finding Balance by Tina's Allsorts Designs

Finding Balance by Tina's Allsorts Designs

It's available on Ravelry here - Finding Balance Hat 

I have decided to support the Shetland MRI Scanner Appeal, so until the end of 2020, I will be donating 20% of my sales of the pattern to them.

Although they have raised enough to buy the MRI Scanner, they still need a building for it, train the staff and all the associated running costs. It's a massive project for a small community.

 UPDATE:   Finding Balance proved to be quite popular and I sold a few of my first hat design Hope Springs as well. I was able to make a donation of £51 to the Appeal. 
If YOU  bought the pattern, then THANK YOU!  

Please pop across to Ravelry and take a look -  Finding Balance Hat 

Happy knitting!!!!  Tina xXx


Saturday 19 September 2020

The Allsorts Blanket is PUBLISHED !!!!!!

 After a lot of time and effort - plus some fabulous tech editing and testing - 

The Allsorts Blanket

 is finally published today!!!! (That's a clickable link too, or click the photo below!)

The Allsorts Blanket by Tina's Allsorts Designs


It's only on Ravelry so far, although I will probably add it to Lovecrafts as well when I have time.

This is the fully written and updated version of the Tooty Stripey Blanket, with computer generated charts and plenty of photos to help you along the way.
You can make it any size you like, in any thickness yarn and in as many or as few colours as your heart desires!!
For the new sample, I used 7 pastel rainbow shades, plus cream but it would also look good in a host of vibrant colours. Or go minimal with just 3 shades perhaps??

I designed and wrote the pattern with the relatively new crocheter in mind. An opportunity to learn one or two new techniques and stitches; practise calculating your stitch count from a tension square; play with your colours to get a satisfactory repeat; straighten wonky edges with steam blocking; add a simple border, or even a fancy one.

And if you are unfamiliar with charts and how to read them, then have the written instructions and the chart side by side as you work. Read the instructions and then look at the charts - can you see the same stitches there, in the places where you will work them?? With just a little practise, the chart will begin to make sense.
One of my testers did just that and this is what she said - 



Best compliment EVER!!!

This design has been on quite a journey over the years. It started with 'Emma's Blanket' way back in early 2013. Inspired by Little Woollie who was making a mixed stripey blanket and writing up the pattern on her blog as she went - I needed it finished in a hurry though and couldn't wait for her, so very (Very!) quickly went completely freestyle and designed my own blanket. 

Years later, in 2017, I made another blanket on a similar theme but this time it had lots more texture and was also designed to be reversible. Due to the colours I used it came to be called The Tooty Stripey Blanket. (It has it's own page dedicated to it if you'd like to read more? It's up at the top of the page there.)

The Tooty Stripey was only a hand drawn chart when I published the pattern. I always meant to go back and write up the written instructions but never found the time. Not until lockdown came along that is!! I have an office job so was able to work from home for the whole of lockdown but without wasting time commuting every day, I managed to make a start and keep going back and adding and tweaking and re-writing.... until finally it was ready to show to someone else!

I got in touch with some ladies on instagram and they did a wonderful job of finding every single typo, missed space, missed stitch - just everything!! Fellow crafters are the best!!

Finally, last night, I made the last amendment - and was then up early this morning for a final check over before publishing!!!

Woo Hoo!!!!


You know, it only dawned on me last night that I haven't taken any full length photos of the blanket, only close-ups - my favourite being the flat lay at the top of the screen. Want to see some more close-ups?... Although I may have shared these before....

The Allsorts Blanket by Tina's Allsorts Designs

The Allsorts Blanket by Tina's Allsorts Designs

The Allsorts Blanket by Tina's Allsorts Designs


The Allsorts Blanket by Tina's Allsorts Designs

I warn you though, when you make your own blanket, be ready to stitch in all the ends!
There are lots and lots (and lots!) of ends....

Click the link at the top of this page, or click HERE, to hop across to Ravelry to buy your copy. There's no need to be a member as your pattern will be emailed to you. And please do share some photos of it as you make it and once finished and add the hastag #theallsortsblanket so I can see it too!!! I LOVE to see what others have made from my designs!! I still get a thrill knowing someone used my pattern and I don't think that feeling will ever wear out!


HAPPY HOOKING!!  TINA xXx


Sunday 6 September 2020

Special offer for September

 Thank you to everyone who bought Looks Like Rain Scarf during last month's offer! 

The end of August was considerably cooler than the start and I even wore my scarf indoors a couple of times! 🤪 I didn't go as far as wearing a hat - but I did look at my hats.... 

So I figured maybe it would be nice to have an offer on my Hope Springs Hat. So for the rest of September, you can save 20% on Ravelry, with code Autumn. 


Click HERE to pop across to the pattern page. Don't forget to use the code Autumn at checkout,  and share your version with #hopespringshat . 

And if you've been popping in regularly to check on the launch of The Allsorts Blanket - the fully written version of the Tooty Stripey Blanket, then I'm pleased to say it's nearly ready and I hope to publish by the end of the month! 

Woo hoo!

Thursday 6 August 2020

Special offer for August!

Hello everyone! 
Just popping by to say my Looks Like Rain Scarf pattern is now 20% off for the rest of August! No code needed either, the discount is made at checkout. 

This is only available on Ravelry I'm afraid as I have never been able to find a discount option on Lovecrafts....

Click  HERE,  or on the picture in the sidebar to hop across to Ravelry. 
What colour will you make? 

Tina’s Allsorts Designs, Looks like Rain Scarf

Thursday 16 July 2020

Coming along nicely

I'm not rushing with writing  up the pattern for  my Allsorts Blanket- it's taken me 3 years to properly start, so I might as well take my time and get it right! 

The centre panel was finished and  then I started trying out different borders. Nothing too flashy this time  - it's a busy blanket and I don't want the border to detract from it. My original version had a multicolored border but I realise now it was probably a bit much. But it was as much to do with not having enough yarn in one colour and I didn't want to buy another ball.

So I've gone for a very simple border  that's similar to  the original. Along the  way  though, I've been trialling some different edgings too and taking pics of each. After all,  you might not want a simple border. 
Would you like to see? 



This first one is rows of trebles, topped with the flower pattern from the blanket  - but strictly speaking, it isn't reversible as an edging. 

Tina's Allsorts Designs,  The Allsorts Blanket

Then I tried same treble rows topped with moss stitch. You may need to go up a hook size for the moss stitch though  - at least I do!

Tina's Allsorts Designs,  The Allsorts Blanket

Try trebles followed by a row of dc+ch 1 in every stitch -

Tina's Allsorts Designs,  The Allsorts Blanket

Or how about post stitches? This is pink posts on one side and cream on the other. 

Tina's Allsorts Designs,  The Allsorts Blanket

You could even add pompoms! 

Tina's Allsorts Designs,  The Allsorts Blanket

This next one is made from two rows of dtr 'bobbles' worked in the same colour, so you get bobbles on both sides. 

Tina's Allsorts Designs,  The Allsorts Blanket

As mentioned though, my pattern sample, has been finished much like the original, with rows of granny stitches and a contrast edging but this time with one colour and a contrast edge. 

Tina's Allsorts Designs,  The Allsorts Blanket



The finished pattern is a little way off yet. I need to take some photos to go with the instructions  - then go back to drawing the chart.... then join all the different sections together into a cohesive pattern...

So watch this space. Still...

Thursday 2 July 2020

The Tooty Stripey Blanket finally gets written up!!!

There is now a fully written pattern of this blanket, with full charts, plenty of photos and loads of information, called 
- available on Ravelry.


Who recognises this photo?? This is the stripey blanket I made for a friend's little girl when I was still learning how to crochet, way back in Dec'12 - Jan'13. 
I had a (birthday) deadline, so it was made very quickly, with no notes written - why would I  need notes??

Tina's Allsorts Designs, Emma's Stripey Blanket

 I created a project page on Ravelry and shared pics on Pinterest, including this one 
(I used to spend a lot of time on Pinterest back then). I haven't checked recently but I know at one point it had been re-pinned nearly 50,000 times!!

A blanket that was that popular deserved a written pattern surely? So in 2017, when the craft shop I used to have a part time job in, started selling yarn I decided to buy a selection of baby colours and make a new version of Emma's Blanket. And by that time not only had I learned some more stitches - I and discovered TEXTURE!
I set to making a new blanket, designing as I went, trying to write notes along the way but quickly gave that up as the blanket grew just too fast to keep up! Once it was finished, I painstakingly drew a chart detailing every row and so a new blanket was born - the Tooty Stripey Blanket! 

I published the chart on Ravelry in July 2017 and watched it quickly take flight - this  assisted by several free pattern sites that picked it up, and kindly advertised it for me for free!!

It doesn't seem possible that 3 years have passed since that design stage. I've now made several versions myself in different sizes and colours and it has become my signature blanket. And the free chart has been downloaded from Ravelry 17,500 times!!!

Back in mid-April and after much soul searching, I decided to add a very small fee to the pattern (I described it as a 'buy me a coffee' fee), along with a coupon code so customers could sill have it for free if they preferred. 
Several people over those years have said I should have charged for it from the start but it was my first pattern - and just a hand drawn chart at that - but you know I just didn't think it was good enough (or had the confidence!) to charge a fee. 

But then I released my Hope Springs Hat during lockdown. I had already decided to offer it for free during lockdown with a coupon code but I found a very small number of people were paying for it. I thought at first that I hadn't set the coupon code up properly but then a couple of  those people got in touch to say thank you for the freebie but they could afford to buy the pattern and wanted to support my design efforts by paying for it. Hence the soul searching with my blanket. 

Maybe some of those 17,500 people would have been prepared to pay a little for it... So I added a price that meant after all the fees from Paypal & Ravelry are deducted, I would be left with an average of £1 per copy. And I made it as clear as I could that it could still be downloaded for free with a coupon code.
And you know what, a few people have chosen to pay for it - if you're one of them, THANK YOU!!!

Those few sales have spurred me on to write up the pattern in full, pulling together all the other detail from it's blog page, re-writing, occasionally correcting and adding all the extra info I can think of. Hopefully, there will be photos of different stages and if I can manage it, a new computer generated chart, rather than hand drawn (eek!!).

Writing a pattern means testing it as I go by making  a new blanket but there was a problem. Lockdown had not been lifted and the wool shops were not open. I know I could have ordered all the yarn I wanted online but it's just not the same as choosing colours in person. So I kept writing and refining, a bit of testing with some scrap yarn but I felt desperate to buy a nice collection of colours and get cracking with it!!!!!!

Tina's Allsorts DesignsFinally, in mid-June I heard Hobbycraft was opening! I went mid-afternoon, hoping the long queue would have happened first thing and I would only have to wait 10 minutes. But no, I waited for an hour and a half!!! Yes, a full HOUR & a HALF. This was entirely due to someone's decision to only allow 19 customers in store at a time. It's a huge warehouse but just 19 people at a time?... But I was desperate, so I waited patiently. And once I was in I wasn't leaving without a big bag of yarn, so I really took my time choosing colours!!!

Now they don't have the best range - they're not a yarn shop after all. So I came home with a big bag of 12 balls of wool - which received admiring glances from those still in the queue.!!
I took a photo of said bag, posed on the very first Tooty Stripey Blanket I had made, which used colours that reminded me of the Tooty Fruity Sweets that inspired the (ridiculous) name. And guess what??
I'd chosen new colours that looked just like the originals!! I had even bought a variegated ball!! That was definitely NOT my intention as I had hoped for a nice balance of summery colours. But I suppose you have to go with what you can get...
 
Tina's Allsorts, The Allsorts Blanket
After getting over my initial annoyance, I made a start on planning a colour repeat. I made some little bobbins of each colour, with 2 each of the paler colours and just one of each bright colour - a total of twenty for my colour repeat.
I ummed and aahed for quite some time, moving them around and taking lots of pics. I added a golden yellow from my stash and a magenta. Still I wasn't quite happy though.
Finally, I decided to toss out the brighter colours you can see in this pic  and went with just the eight pastel rainbow colours that remained. 
Pity they didn't have any lilac ...

Tina's Allsorts, The Allsorts BlanketThat would make the new blanket sample look even closer to the original but by then I had decided it was actually quite fitting to completely revisit the original. 

And don't worry about the colours I tossed out - I already have a project in mind for them!!

During the weeks without fresh yarn, as I said,  I had been refining and tweaking the original design, adding some extra texture rows so that they really do hop from side to side at regular intervals and taking out a couple of bits I wasn't so keen on.

Once I had yarn and started hooking, things progressed reasonable smoothly. However, there were some hiccups along the way... 
I knew I should trust my own pattern, having spent so much time and effort getting it just right. But I just couldn't help trying to tweak-as-i-go... although most of those attempts ended up with a whole lot of ripping back and doing what the pattern said - including one section that had 13 rows!!!
 
Once the main body of the blanket was completed, I  started stitching in all the ends, ready to start on the border. I considered stitching in as I went but as this was my working sample - and I kept tweaking then ripping out - I thought it wise to leave them all until the end. Once they were all done it had a little photo-shoot and will get a light blocking to properly straighten the edges, before adding the border.

But it's going well so far. Very well actually. I have a BIG smile as I look at this photo -

Tina's Allsorts, The Allsorts Blanket

I've also thought long and hard about what name to give this new, fresh version of the #tootystripeyblanket . As It will be a paid pattern on Ravelry, it can't have the same name as another pattern I sell. I also want to distinguish between the chart only version and the fully written. So a new name was needed and it dawned on me that there really was only one name that would fit. 
May I introduce my signature blanket, The Allsorts Blanket!!
Shame I didn't think of it 3 years ago when I settled on tooty stripey...

Tina's Allsorts, The Allsorts Blanket


There's still quite a way to go before I can publish the pattern, not the least of which will be drawing the new chart... But it will be announced here, as well as over on Instagram. And probably fb too....

Watch this space, as they say!!  Bye for now, T xx



Tuesday 5 May 2020

Foray into Fairisle, parts IV, V, VI, VII ..... etc etc.... And a Ta - Dah!!

Well, we've now been under lockdown due to coronavirus for over 6 weeks...
Such a  scary time to be living in for so many people. I really appreciate being in a country where the government is doing everything it can to support everyone.
I've been working from home which is not the simplest thing when much of what you do is paper based!! Many of my colleagues are also working from home but actually gardening and sunbathing... I'd like to be knitting more and working less but there you go.

It almost seems pointless now talking about my next step in my Foray into Fairisle, as I have progressed so much since my last post that this needs to probably be part 10!!

Having made the grey and gold affair, I then hunted out the 4 ply I had safely tucked away for the day when I was ready to knit with it myself. I had asked a friend to make me a pair of mittens several years ago and there was a lot of yarn left over. I took the precaution of buying an extra ball of the background colour so that one day, far into the future, I could use it myself.
Well, the day had come and I got it out, bought the hat pattern that matched those mittens and tentatively got started!! On what felt like very tiny needles...
It turned out to be easier than I thought and grew surprisingly quickly. Although, I will admit that I had made the first pattern repeat of the little flowers before I decided maybe I should have gone back and re-read that tutorial I mentioned weeks ago by Julie of Little Cotton Rabbits. It was at that point that I realised I'd been doing it wrong all these weeks with all my Baa-ble Hats! I'd been holding the dominant yarn in the wrong position... So if you're just starting your own #forayintofairisle , then please, go and read this tutorial first.

Anyway, I corrected the way I was holding the yarn (no, I didn't unpick...) and finished that hat and was absolutely GOBSMACKED that it looked just liked the photos in the pattern!! Remarkable! I couldn't quite believe it had come from MY HANDS! Here it is, along with the mittens my friend made  -

Tina's Allsorts Designs

 I then started looking for more gorgeous hats I could make.
There are quite a lot of lovelies on Ravelry when you look.... The first one I chose was called Sea Pinks and was made in pure Shetland 4 ply, which I ordered from Jamiesons of Shetland. Yes, actually in Shetland, yet it arrived very quickly. I thought it might make a slightly rough feeling hat but once washed it has this trick of 'blooming' and becoming beautifully soft and slightly fuzzy. It also blocks very well and as I have quite a tight tension, I was pleased to find I could stretch it a bit too!!!
(I decided to try and redesign the centre of the crown, so what you see below differs a little from the pattern.)

Tina's Allsorts Designs, Sea Pinks Hat

Tina's Allsorts Designs, Sea Pinks Hat

Then I looked for the next pattern and chose Harriet's Hat, a gorgeous pattern designed especially to raise funds for an MRI scanner for the Shetland islands. Currently, they have to travel to the mainland.

I only had the colours I had used for the Sea Pinks hat and again, I had taken the precaution of buying an extra ball of the background colour. This one progressed a little slower as I was having to decide on what colours to use together as I went along, rather than simply follow the pattern but it worked out just fine and I was very pleased with it. And her crown design is to die for!

Tina's Allsorts Designs, Harriets Hat


Tina's Allsorts Designs, Harriets Hat


Then I wondered whether a hat made with merino would work just as well. I hunted out some leftovers of merino 4 ply in ivory for the background and a beautiful hand dyed yarn called 'Rose Gold'. I had another hunt for the perfect pattern and found a lovely one called Cadha. Again, I had to make some minor adjustments to the design as I wasn't convinced there was enough contrast between my yarns but all was well in the end. I'll make another like this one day - one yarn for the background and a single variegated yarn for all the colourwork.

Tina's Allsorts Designs


Tina's Allsorts Designs

Then I decided I was ready to DESIGN MY OWN!!!!!!! I had quickly realised that all the 4 ply beanie style hats I had made had the same number of stitches (144) and pretty much the same number of rows (about 70).

I ordered a really good book full of  different motifs and borders and set to work putting them together. I also spent a ridiculous amount of time choosing new colours online to make it with...

The number of stitches truly is a magical number. 144 can be divided by 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12, 18, 24, plus an awful lot of others. I opted to stick with patterns that would all fit into a 24 stitch repeat to make the charts work better together.

The possibilities are endless but eventually I settled on a large motif for the main body with a narrow border below and above, then a fancy crown.
Crown's are quite tricky to design though!! You really need to be able to visualise what's going to happen with the decreases in 3D - you can create starts, arrows, flowers and allsorts!! I just need to find a really good book that explains the principles clearly, or a website. Not found one yet apart from this one by Kate Davies Designs but that only explains how to work the decreases and draw the chart shape.

It took me quite a long time to draw it all out, although that process was speeded up ENORMOUSLY by using Stitch Fiddle. If you've never used it to help design your own, go take a look now!! It's a free site but you can pay a small fee to gain access to extra tools, on a monthly basis if you want to, or like I now have, get 50% off by paying for a full year.

After a lot of faffing, I had my design ready and started knitting it using the new colours that I had ordered, including some lovely blues.
It didn't all go smoothly though... I kept putting progress pics on instagram and everyone said they loved it, including the crown. But I wasn't completely happy with it myself. There was something about it that really jarred with me...

Tina's Allsorts esigns, Hope Springs Hat

Tina's Allsorts Designs, Hope Springs


I couldn't quite put my finger in it but there was something about it that was just wrong. Then someone very kind left a comment saying the pattern for the body was fine and the pattern for the crown was fine - but they were different styles. That was it!!! The body was very floral in style and the crown was geometric!
So I got the scissors out and cut it off! (I made a video of it as I don't plan on repeating it!)


( ** I'll com back and add tha little video later! **)


I must admit, regardless of how carefully I did it, I really enjoyed cutting it off!! (I have kept that crown and one day I might design a geometric body and graft them together.) And no, I wasn't worried about everything unravelling before I got it back on the needles. Remember I said it was a fuzzy yarn?? Well, I was confident that all those fuzzy bits would 'hold hands' throughut the cutting process and all would be well. And it was! Up until Fluffy came throught the ct flap while I was mid cut... I think I must have flinched slightly as I knew he would jump straight up on the table, which he did, so I cut the stitch on the row below by mistake. I had to then unpick that row but never mind. Still quicker than starting again!!

Tina's Allsorts Designs, Hope Springs crown


I set to work designing a new crown and finished the hat a second time. Now I was very happy with it, it was just perfect!!
I asked everyone on instagram what I should call it and the most popular suggestions were 'Hope' and 'Spring' - hope for a better future after lockdown and looking forward to the spring. So I joined them together and Hope Springs was born!

Ta - dah!!!!!!!

Tina's Allsorts Designs, Hope Springs Hat


Then I had to sit and write up the pattern to go with it, work on the charts to get them just right and create the Ravelry listing. I had already decided to make it free during lockdown using a coupon code, with a small fee thereafter.

I published it just after lunch on Good Friday - and someone saw it and downloaded it within 5 minutes!! Then there was another and another, and another.... and lots of people were leaving comments saying thank you - I mean LOTS!
Then someone put it on facebook and everything got quite silly.... at one point it was being downloaded ten times a minute! And I got an email for every one...
By the end of the Easter holiday, it had been downloaded over 5,000 times but it just kept going. I've lost track of it now...

I'm really hoping some of those people come back and link their project in Ravelry so I can see what they made. One lady had made hers by Easter Monday and shared some pics! She chose very similar colours to mine -


I was so CHUFFED!! Someone actually made my design  - and straight away!!


Then another lady uploaded her pics! She used colours in her stash and must have very loose tension, compared to my tight tension, as she said she gave it to her husband. She'snow made it again, using the colours given in the pattern.

I can't descibe just how lovely it is to see other people using something I designed! 

I've been designing (and re-designing over an over...) my next hat but it hasn't been going so well... I chose some more colours and ordered them, knowing they might take a while to arrive but foolishly, whilst designing, I didn't use the new colours but the old ones.... when the new colours did arrive and I started changing the charts I'd been preparing, it just wasn't working. Plus I hadn't ordered enough different colours, they were slightly different on screen etc... I finally settled on something I thought would work and cast on - only to see someone else publish their new hat that day with an almost identical main motif!! Clearly we are using the same stitch dictionery....

Anyway, I decided to knit it up anyway and I'm nearly up to the crown but there are lots of things that just aren't doing it for me - serves me right for not swatching! I hate swatching... So I've decided it will be frogged and I'll start all over again. Frustrating... needs to be right though.
But another book arrived in the post yesterday, so I might try some borders from that one instead!!

I'm adding a photo as a reminder to muself of the one that didn't quite work.....

Tina's Allsorts, The one that didn't work...


Well, that's all for now (it's taken nearly 3 weeks to write this...) but if you like the look of my first design, just follow the link above, or the one in the sidebar, or the one on the Shop tab - and don't forge to use the coupon code Free, or you wil be charged... As I discovered, I now have to pay fees to issue a refund, so won't be doing so without good reason anymore unfortunately.)
And if you download for free but then really like it and think it's worth buying, it would be really lovely if you went back and did just that! It would help pay for the yarn in other colours I should have bought!

Until next time, take care, T    x X x



Sunday 1 March 2020

Foray into Fairisle Part III Cont'd...

So, what did I do with that hat?? Well, in the end, nothing!
I bought a ball of silver grey and started another hat with the rest of the mustard, knowing that at some point I would run out and would then unpick the first hat to re-use the yarn.
I made the rib and got half way up the snowflake but wasn't convinced it looked better. The mustard certainly looked a lot brighter. A lot!! But not better with the silvergrey... There just wasn't enough contrast I think.
I had posted this pic on instgram, asking what people thought -

Tina's Allsorts

Someone suggested taking a photo in b&w as the contrast would show up clearly.

Tina's Allsorts

The difference is remarkable isn't it?? I would never have thought of doing that.
So yes, the mustard looked much brighter but just didn't work with the silver grey...

Tina's Allsorts

Back to the shop I went and bought a ball of cerise pink instead to use with the silvergrey. And I made sure I took a pic in b&w in the shop to check the contrast!!
I also decided to make another Baa-ble Hat, rather than the snowflake.

Tina's Allsorts

Much better!!!! Just wait til you see what I did next though!

Friday 21 February 2020

Foray into Fairisle part III

If you've already seen my Foray into Fairisle parts I & II, you won't be surprised to hear that my 3rd project was a) another hat and b) featured the snowflake that featured on the cowl.
The snowflake had a 24 stitch pattern repeat, which would fit perfectly into the 120 stitches required for a DK hat. I also happened to have a ball of mustard yellow merino yarn that I had been itching to use. (I was hoping for a bright golden mustard when I ordered it online but it's actually more f an english mustard.)
I teamed it with a mid grey for the ribbing, although it might have worked better with a silver grey.

The pattern worked well as a hat but I now know that I held the dominant colour in the wrong position so it could have been better.... So I'm considering unpicking it either back to the rib and just reworking the snowflake (and adding 3 or 4 rows of plain grey before the snowflake starts), or I might unpick the whole thing and start again with silver grey! And I'm considering a long turn up brim too.

Tina's Allsorts, Snowflake Hat

I haven't quite decided what to do - but I'm very tempted to completely unpick it and start again with the ball of silver grey that I have now bought! Decisions decisions!




Thursday 20 February 2020

Foray into Fairise part II

Following on from my last post, my next fairisle project was a bit bigger than a hat!
While  was still making the second Baa-ble Hat, I saw a pic of a gorgeous cowl decrated with snoowflakes, that moved from white on blue at the bottom, to blue on white at the top. Very clever and very effective! But I don't wear cowls... so I showed it to my friend and she said ooooooh!!! So I bought the pattern to make it for her!
This what I saw, the Midwinter Neckwarmer -


Isn't it absolutely STUNNING?!!!  Here's the link to the pattern -


It was made in 4 ply but I reckoned I could leave out a pattern repeat or two and work it in double knit. Wihout delay I went through my stash to see what I had and came up with some cranberry red alpaca (unpicked from a pair of crochet mittens that I never wore) and the silver grey merino I usedin the second Baa-ble Hat (it was a bit on the thin side and I thought it would work well with the alpaca).

I (foolishly) measured the tension on the Baab-ble hat and came up with an approximation of what my finished cowl might measure. I went for 5 pattern repeats instead of 7 and merrily knitted away, in what I still thought was the correct technique. But you know what? It wasn't quite the right technique...

Remember that link to Little Cotton Rabbits I shared last time?? Well, I should have gone back and re-read it myself before starting the hats...
I knew she had said you had to always hold the dominant colour in a certain postion to make those stitches stand out - but my memory of what she said switched them around... I held the dominant colour in the background position. But at least I did it all the way through! 
It also came out a bit on the small side... that's what comes from measuring tension on something that isn't reall'propeeer' fairisle - and is so small it doesn't really lay flat!
Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

 If you look at the photo above - and you know what to look for, which I didn't... the second row of motifs looks like a red cross doesn't it? But the red should sit in the background...  See what I mean? But I didn't know that at the time, I thought I was doing it right and so merrily knitted on as I was quite enjoying the process.

Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

This photo shows the main snowflake which changes from one colour to the other in the middle.  It also shows the row I was on is wrong, as it's almost all red stitches when it should have been grey stitches.... (And please excuse the feet! I should have cropped the photo!)

Anyway, I happily carried on, after unpicking that red row.

Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

It's very clever, the way the pattern changes isn't it??

Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

I knew by this point that I had made it too nrrow... and too long! But it was a 24 stitch repeat and an extra repeat would have added up to 4 inches. I thought I might as well finish so carried on and worked the final ribbed edge but didn't do the fancy cast off the pattern suggested as therewas a chance I might rip out a few rows to shorten it.
Here's the (initial) finished version -

Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl
 And the inside -
Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl


But as I've already said, it was too small... I could just get it on but it felt like a very close fit. For a cowl that could almost become 'clostraphobic'. I showed it to my friend and whilst she really liked the design, agreed it was too narrow and too long.
And I really didn't like my cast off top edge at all! So I ripped back all the rib and th top row of snowflakes. That would bring the width and length back into proportion at least and I hoped that some blocking would stretch it a bit.

But how to finish that top edge??? I decided to go for a simple reverse stocking stitch rolled edge, as there was a chance I would unpick it again and tackle the fancy ribbed cast off later.
And this is what I got -
Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

A rolled edge that rolled - outwards!! Not just the edge rolled though but the top few rows as well... What to do? I decided that as I'd come this far, I might as well wash and block and see what that did.
With the blocking, I found a book that was the right finished width I was aiming for, popped it in a plastic bag to protect it, then stretched the cowl over it and left it to dry.

And it sort of worked!! There was definitely some stretch in the width, so it didn't feel quite so constrictive - but there was still that rolled edge that still rolled outwards...

Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

I tried it on and realised, if I wore it upside down, the rolled edge would actually sit neatly against my collar bone, leaving the neater, cast on edge at the top.

Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

I decided to leave it as it was and show my friend and see what she thought. And she was perfectly happy with it! (Thank goodness!)

Tina's Allsorts, Fairisle Cowl

So the moral of all this is, CHECK YOUR TENSION PROPERLY. If you guesstimate, you may guess wrong! And check which yarn sits at the top as you work. It isn't the dominant colour!
I have since read that because the yarn held underneath doesn't have as far to travel before it reaches the nect stitch, that a tiny fraction more yarn goes into the stitch itself, making it a fraction bigger than the background stitch, which helps it stand out. The background yarn has to cross over the dominant yarn before it reaches the next stitch, leaving a fraction less yarn to go into the stitch. Obvious when you know.

On the whole, I am happy with it and might even make another one day. Maybe even in 4 ply!!! 

But my Foray into 4 ply Fairisle is a whole different adventure!!! That is for another day.

Should you be thinking of trying fairisle yourself, I really would recommend reading Julie's tutorial first. I really wishI had re-read it raher than relying on a memory from several years ago! (She gives great tips on other aspects of knitting too - especially stitching things together.) And of course, there is a whole wealth of videos avaiilable online as well.

'Til next time!