I got home from work yesterday and was slammed by something buggy … needless to say, I’m under the weather. I don’t even want to knit something.
Author Archives: Queen Bee Knits
Busy (Queen) Bee!
This weekend, I’m home alone. We live in this bee-utiful place and I feel so grateful to be here. The fiance flew off to Atlanta leaving me with the three dogs and “nothing” to do! So, I thought I’d take this opportunity to update you all (all one) of you on what I’ve been knitting. I have been quilting, too … rather, piecing quilt tops!
On the knitting side, I’m working on Christmas gifts and have finished two pairs of socks and a hat. If I showed you pictures, I’d let the cat out of the bag and ruin the surprise for a few of the people that I love most. So, suffice it to say that I am enjoying these projects and am happy to start some Christmas knitting this early! I have a third pair of socks planned and the yarn is purchased.
I have a pair of socks on the needles for me and a shawl, too.
The socks are Ann Budd’s Tyrolean Stockings. I was teaching a class a week or so ago and happened to look through one of the books populating the table and loved the cabled knee-length socks. I have a stash of wool and decided to use some to make these socks. They are so pretty that I may enter them in the knitting competition at some fairs this summer. The pattern can be found in Interweave Knits, Fall 2007 and on Ravelry. They are also in a compilation of sock patterns but I can’t tell you the title or the author. I’m sorry. The socks are knit top down and are a fun knit. I’m using a Patons Classic Wool yarn in the seafoam colorway. I love the color and I can’t wait to finish sock #2 and hope to wear them before the weather here in Maine gets too warm. The picture doesn’t, unfortunately show the great color … why do cameras do such a poor job sometimes of accurately displaying colors?
Crushed by Rachel Henry of Remily Knits is project number two on my needles. I have had this bee-utiful yarn gifted to me by my sister-in-love in my stash for a while now waiting for it’s perfect project and I think this is it! It’s a lovely lace shawl and I am excited to see the color change from black to yellow and all the colors in between! In case you didn’t figure it out, it’s a gradient yarn. Vice in the Loki colorway, 80/20 merino/nylon. I rewound it so that the shawl starts with black and ends with yellow. No pictures yet but I will update on this project as I get some color change!
I knit a Baby Surprise Jacket (Elizabeth Zimmerman) as a sample for the LYS that I’m working for. I used Little Birds yarn by Universal Yarns. I think it turned out super cute! The yarn is soft and I love the way the pattern works up. I have to admit that I was confused by the directions at first and had to google some hints as to how to get the increases right. But the wonders of the internet helped and I got over the hump. It was a super quick knit and would make an adorable baby gift!
One day on Facebook, I think, I saw a “Tablet Stand” that was knitted. I was intrigued and also needed something to help my charts “stand up” so that I can read them more easily.
This is the result of that … It won’t hold my tablet but I does hold my iPhone and the metal piece that support my patterns with charts. Sometimes I still knit the old fashioned way … with a paper pattern. The pattern is called “Reading Rest” by Frankie Brown and it can be found on Ravelry. The stitching up/assembly is quite fiddly but I did finally get it. I would stuff mine more aggressively if I was going to make a second one. I used beans and some fiber fill … rice might also work. It definitely needs to be heavy enough to support technology! I used some stashed Knit Pics yarn (DK or Sport weight, I’m not sure what it was and I don’t have the label.) I think it could also be knit in a worsted weight and made a bit larger than mine. I’d say mine is a moderate success, though!
I have also started sewing in the last year or so. My friend, Beverly, is a talented quilter and she got me started. I’ve been busy finishing sewing projects in the last couple of weeks. This is the biggest of the three that are now finished. It’s a Missouri Star Quilt Company’s “Orange Peel” quilt. The little orange peels are all little individual pieces of fabric cut to shape and then “stuck” on the dark gray squares and then they are appliquéd (stitched around).
I have also finished two other quilting projects and I am waiting to go learn how to use the longarm machine to quilt them myself. I sure do hope I enjoy it and do a good job because I have a lot of time invested in them!
My Quilting 101 Sampler Quilt is done. I really enjoyed taking this class at the Cotton Cupboard in Bangor, Maine. The staff there is very friendly and knowledgable. They helped me pick out my fabrics so that they match and the classes that I’ve taken have been great! Of course, this one is in my favorite (bee) colors!
The third quilt top is the flag quilt that I started in a class last spring. (Yes, I know, it has been a full year in my atelier waiting to be finished!) I am happy to have this one done and wish I had taken it more recently because I can see a lot of “issues” in this quilt top but I’m not “dedicated” enough to re-do it. It will serve as my first quilt with round parts sewn together. Not easy to piece! I really like the quilt and can’t wait to to hang it up in our house.
So, there you have it! I’ve been a busy bee and I’m making progress with my projects. I always feel particularly proud when I wrap up and new project and feel content with the work that I’ve done. I am learning that I am a very competent and capable woman and I am learning to be proud of myself. What a good feeling!
Gone knitting!
Jimmy Beans Wool 2016 Downton Abbey Mystery KAL
I’ve participated in a couple of the Downton Abbey Mystery Knit-a-longs. It was fun and the projects were lovely. I missed a couple, too. Each time, however, I had fun and came away with a very wearable garment.
This is the last season of Downton Abbey and I decided to participate at the last minute for one last time. (See my sad face?) Here’s my report about the final, last, final 2016 DAMKAL.
I am on another “yarn diet” and although I wanted to buy the Lorna’s Laces yarn for this knit-a-long, I used my Christmas yarn for it instead. It’s Knitting Fever’s Painted Desert. It’s a wool, fingering yarn and while I forgot to write down the colorway, it’s a deep burgundy with blues and almost-purple shades. I really like the colorway that I was gifted!
Clue 1.
I was totally clueless as to what this “garment” was going to be. Totally clueless. We used a circular cast on and knitted the rounds for this clue on DPNs. Ending with a “square”. Hmm.
Clue 2.
Continued knitting in the round for this clue; very similar to clue #1 … I’m still mystified. But it’s pretty!
Clues 3 & 4, 5 & 6.
And this is where I was totally wondering what this was going to be as many many stitches were put onto waste yarn and we continued knitting down one “side” of the original “box”. I actually discussed this with one of my classes and showed them the piece after knitting clue 3 … maybe a hat and scarf combination? maybe something for the home? Nobody really had a reasonable idea. So, I continued knitting.
When we got to clue 5 and started knitting down another “side” of the original “box” I believe I read that it was a “wing” and the light bulb went off. It’s a shawl! I had a bit of difficulty figuring out which “side” to start my stitches on for the second wing and did use the discussion thread on Ravelry. The discussion thread was very helpful and fun to read, too.
Clue 7 & 8.
The last two clues were just fun to knit now that the mystery was discovered. How was this lovely shawl going to be finished? Short and sweet despite being a lot (a LOT) of stitches on the needle.
I love the finished shawl and it’s on my guest room bed being blocked as I type this. I chose to pin every little picot stitch on the edge (the instructions gave an option to pin all picots or every other.) I am eager for it to be dry and be able to wear it. I’ll probably wear it to work next week. (I noticed that Kristen’s shawl looks quite a bit larger than mine … perhaps I will block it a bit more aggressively before it’s dry or I may not.)
Another great online MKAL! Thanks to Kristen and Jimmy Beans Wool!
Gone knitting!
“Yarn From Hell” Cardigan
Many (MANY) moons ago in a land far away … OK, I bought the yarn at the Maine Fiber Frolic several years ago and have made two sweaters with it that have been frogged.
One was the free cardigan pattern that came with the yarn. I got all of the pieces knitted and blocked and when I went to assemble the cardigan, the sleeves didn’t fit into the sweater. Neither I nor a couple of others that I consulted knew how to fix the problem. Sweater number 1 was frogged. The yarn went into my naughty yarn closet for a long time out.
I still liked the yarn. I selected three colors of Seacolors Yarn (dyed in Washington, Maine) a coral, a green and coral mix and a blue.This summer I decided it was time for the yarn to be given another chance and settled on a sweater that was a free pattern found on Revelry. When nearly finished, I realized was going be big enough for my whole family to wear at the same time. Huge. And I’m not a petite woman! Frogged again.
A month or so ago I bought a pattern at my LYS. (You get what you pay for, right?) The pattern, by Diane Soucy of Knitting Pure and Simple is Pattern #9725, Neck Down Cardigan for Women. A simple pattern knit in one piece. I thought this was the third time’s a charm … and, fortunately, today I finished the cards and it fits.
I had tried it on several times while I was working on it to keep checking on the fit. This is one reason that I love the top down construction of this cardigan. I did make a few adjustments (basically because I wasn’t paying attention all the time) … I used the larger needles to knit the bottom of the sleeves. I also knit the plackets before realizing that I hadn’t knit the collar. So the collar went on at the end. It looks fine and I will knit this pattern again.
I will wear it next week to work.
Gone knitting!
Crafting My Creative Space
In our new house, I knew that I needed some additional space to add the sewing machine, a cutting table and an ironing board for my new quilting “addiction”. My atelier in Florida was a 10 x10-foot bedroom and I was quite content with the way the space worked for me. BUT I didn’t sew there! Adding a quilting space was key to my creative space.
I have to be honest because that’s who I am … I hated the new space at first. I was unsettled and couldn’t figure out how to make it work. I should have known that it would take some time to get settled but I was impatient (and downright grumpy) about it.
And then today the lightbulb moment struck. I knew what I needed to do to make the space mine.
I unloaded the wonderful IKEA storage shelf of all the yarn and knitting books and we moved it to the other side of my atelier. And then I loaded it all up again. Now the knitting space is all in the front (lake side) of the house.
And this afternoon, N. and his wonderful saw cut a few inches off my desk so that it fits in the little “alcove” where a bed would go if it were, indeed, a bedroom.
This leaves space in front of the window and along the back (driveway side) of the house for my sewing table and cutting table. The ironing board is in front of the window … gone are the days when I have to walk 30 miles to make eight quilt squares! Now all of my sewing stuff is in the back room and I am a happy Queen Bee.
It feels good to have my knitting and sewing space shape up and this house is feeling more like home every day. I know we’re going to have a long, happy, healthy, full life in this house.
Next I will add some window treatments and shelves on the wall over my desk.
Gone knitting.
A Busy (Queen) Bee
I’ve had a few days of not working in the yarn shop and I’ve made very good use of my time, if I do say so. I am settling into my new atelier, my TV is working and it’s starting to feel like home.
I’ve managed to finish several projects that I’ve been toting around in my knitting bag for what seems like an eternity!
I’ve finished my Open Star test knit. Open Star is a cardigan designed by Lori Versaci of VersaciKnits. I made mine in Quince & Co’s Lark in the Lupine colorway. I loved the yarn. It’s soft and squishy and it knits up like a charm. I love the classic lines of the cardigan and, as with all of Lori’s designs, I love the way it all goes together. I have to admit to struggling with counting to four, however. The pattern is a very simple repeat and a wonderful rib pattern that is easy to follow until I start to chit-chat and that’s when I can’t count. Thank heaven knitting is forgiving and ripping/frogging is my friend. I made my sleeves a bit longer than was called for in the pattern because I have long arms. I could have shortened them a little bit but they are very acceptable. The most difficult part for me was picking buttons. I like the buttons I chose but I will keep looking for the perfect button. I wore the sweater yesterday for the first time and LOVE it! It’s so toasty warm despite the “open” pattern. Thanks to Lori for asking me to test knit!
AND I’ve finished the knitting part of the two little ponchos that I was knitting for my nieces for Christmas. It soon became evident that, with having taken on the test knit mentioned above, there was no way on this Earth that I was going to get them finished by Christmas. I know they’ll forgive me when the ponchos arrive in California … they are absolutely adorable. I will be adding fringe around the outside of the poncho today but they are blocked and ready for a fringe and the mail! This pattern is a Sirdar pattern, Cabled Poncho and Beret that I knit in the Sirdar Snuggly double knitting yarn in colorway #0440. My sister-in-law wanted blue for the girls and I didn’t want to do a true powder blue. This is a little bit brighter and I just loved the color. The pattern is really easy to follow and the cables are lovely. I think knitting cables brings out the Irish in me every time. When I start cable projects, I find myself longing to visit Ireland. I know it’s odd but that’s the honest truth. The Sirdar yarn is a great choice for knitting for children. It’s washable and dryable (although I think I’d still dry them flat.)
I’ve also blocked a shawl that I knit earlier and have been wearing unblocked. It’s the Shadow Shawl (it’s a free pattern!) that I wrote about earlier this summer in my blog knit in two shades (Horizon and Wildflowers) of Serena by Manos del Uruguay. Every time I’ve worn it in the shop, someone has bought the yarn. It’s just a simple triangle shawl but the yarn is so lovely and the colors are so soft … it’s a little bit of heaven! I chose to make the “neutral” Horizon my color #1 which becomes the purled “stripe” in the shawl. Making the Wildflowers the background color (color #2) of the shawl and I love it! Now that it’s blocked, I’m sure I’ll love it even more.
I can’t find a picture of this one either … but I had knitted a Penny Straker sweater, Child’s Johnny #C772, from stashed yarn awhile back and had forgotten it. I’d never blocked it or sewn on buttons. I’ve now added cute pewter heart-shaped buttons and blocked it. It will be going to California with the little ponchos. If my nieces can’t use it, they can forward it to my cousin in Southern California. Someone will love it, of that I’m sure. I first made this pattern for my own daughters. My mom made one and I made the other, both were in a wonderful shade of red and we found the cutest panda bear buttons made of clay. Every time I had to wash the sweaters, the buttons were cut off and then sewn back on. It was so worth it! The yarn is a worsted weight acrylic (and perhaps a blend of acrylic and wool) that is from my stash. My Ravelry project page says it was a Patons Decor. The periwinkle blue is a pretty shade. Not sure what I bought the yarn for originally, but it’s not in my stash any longer and the Penny Straker patterns are classic!
So, there you have it! Four projects completed! Yay, me! Knitting is my super power!
Gone fringing.
I am a Teacher
I love teaching knitting.
There, I said it. I love teaching knitting!
I’ve been teaching now for nearly ten years, formally. And for many more than that informally. My first class was held in Blue Ash, Ohio in my living room. Many of my friends had gone to the yarn shop nearby and bought this, what was then the most beautiful yarn I’d ever held in my hands. One hank of it made a lovely soft, silky, furry scarf. The yarn stayed furry and silky-soft for about a year before it got really gross. Anyway, the first class I taught was in my living room with several of my friends, all of whom wanted me to knit them a scarf. I was the mother of three little kids and there was no way I could have done that. So, I taught them to knit one themselves.
When I moved to Florida, I had some trouble finding a job and decided to take the time to finish my undergraduate degree. While in school, I became certified by the Craft Yarn Council … first, as a knitting instructor and then as a knitting teacher. The training was good although I thought the certification process was pretty easy and somewhat redundant because I had so much experience. But I needed it to teach for Michael’s Stores.
The gig at Michael’s was short-lived. Mostly because I could only teach the classes that they wanted and only with their projects. Most of which were not appropriate for the warm Florida climate. I spent a lot of time doing the paperwork and having no students. And when Michael’s was sold, it changed again and became even more restrictive. Not my idea of a creative process where the teacher is trusted to teach (hmmm, that sounds familiar!)
At some point during this time, I became friends with the owner of my LYS in Orlando. We met (at least formally) at a puppy training class. I happened to be wearing my yarn-patterned clogs and they turned out to be a great conversation starter! Shortly after that, I started teaching at the Black Sheep Shop. I had a blast! Finally, I could teach classes that were allowing me some creativity and that my warm weather students wanted to take. I loved the shop and the people there. We shared a love of fiber and teaching our art and a level of customer service that was top notch!
And then we moved to Maine. I think that the most difficult thing about moving is leaving my friends. It had taken me a lot of years (five, I think) to find friends who I really had something in common with. My Thursday night knitting group, my Knitting Guild, a few at work and Anne. If you’ve ever moved to entirely different place as an “older” person without having a job to jump in to, you’ll understand.
Fortunately, I have a bunch of summers of knitting at the Yardgoods Center. And when I was asked to pinch-hit during the summer in the shop and then to teach twice a week, I was thrilled. What I love most about teaching is when the lights go on! A student will struggle and struggle with something and then, all of a sudden, they get it. I can see the relief and pride wash over them at that point and the excitement is palpable. So far, I’ve had two beginner students who have “gotten it” in class and they’re doing so well. I love helping them to get to a place with their knitting where they are confident to try new things and they feel wonderful having accomplished a goal (or two!)
So, this knitting teacher is super happy to be able to teach. To share what I know. And I am also learning that I am a knowledgeable and competent knitter, too. It makes me feel more confident and more comfortable in my own skin every time I teach. If I can teach it, I must be good at it, right? I am learning too. To feel better about myself. To give myself credit where credit is due. To pat myself on the back for a job well done. I am a good knitter. And I am a good teacher.
Gone knitting.
Make Do and Mend
The love of my life loves his Christmas stocking. We aren’t sure WHO made it for him but he thinks it may have been his mother who was a knitter. Last year, or maybe the year before that if truth be told, I noticed that the wool was beginning to wear in a couple of places. When I filled it, a hole was born. Actually, two holes were born.
What’s a girl to do!?
I offered to make another stocking and he didn’t want a new one. I actually think that this would have been the easiest choice. But he loves his stocking. So, I took it to my local yarn shop here in Maine and found yarns that would match as closely as possible the original colors (50+ years later.)
I’ve not done a lot of mending but I was determined to finish mending it before Santa had to fill it this year on Christmas Eve. It took me the better part of an afternoon sitting in my chair and quite a few starts and stops but I managed to repair the holes and am really pleased with the results!
For the bigger hole, I picked up stitches below the hole and knitted a rectangular patch which I then grafted to the top and seamed into the sides. The green is a bit different but in the next 50 years, it’ll blend better!
Hole #2 was a little bit easier but also more difficult … the hole was smaller but the problem was more difficult. But I wove my doubled DK yarn in and out and around and I think it looks fairly well. Not perfect but not bad for a first mending effort!
The stocking had a ribbon tied in a knot that had been poked between the ribbing at the top of the cuff. I made a new hanger for the stocking, too … that was Ned’s favorite part. Go figure! But I’m glad he was happy to have his stocking on Christmas morning and not be afraid to handle it. Especially when it was full of stuff … wish I had taken a picture of the stuffed stocking!
I braided the three colors and still poked it through the ribbing but my hanger is at the seam at the back of the stocking. This is a much stronger place to have stress placed on the fabric. I hope it will last us fifty years or more!
Gone knitting!
Moving, Test Knitting and Christmas
I can’t figure out what drove me to say “yes” to a test knitting project this close to Christmas when I knew I had several knitting projects that had to be completed before Christmas! What was I thinking? Oh, yes. Maybe I was thinking that the last sweater I test knitted for Lori was a big hit and I loved it and this one would be great, too?
So, I have set aside all the other projects in favor of “Open Star” by VersaciKnits. Lori designs classic and timeless sweaters for adults and children. I love her designs. Open Star is a cardigan with a classic shape and a unique stitch pattern that leaves a “lacey” look without being a lace pattern. Knit in a worsted- or aran-weight yarn, it’s a relative quick-knit. (I’d have had it done long ago if I hadn’t had to move into a new home two weeks before it was due to be completed.) Needless to say, my test knit is late this time. But I have enjoyed it … most of the time.
To complete this sweater, one has to be able to count to four and three. Sometimes this is a challenge for me. This is where I have made mistakes and had to frog back several rows (time after time.) To be fair, it can be a bit confusing when you get to the shaping of the shoulder and neck. But not confusing enough for me to have made so many silly mistakes. I think my head and heart were unpacking boxes when my hands were knitting.
I love the yarn that I chose and that is Quince and Co’s Lark in the Lupine colorway. The yarn is smooth and squishy and feels wonderful in my hands. It’s got a wonderfully soft hand and isn’t splitty. I love the color, too.
I am looking forward to finishing the sleeves so that I can assemble and wear this lovely cardigan … especially since this “winter” in Maine has been so warm. This would be the perfect “jacket” to wear out Christmas shopping!
Gone knitting!
Home Building – the Struggle
I don’t know if I’ve shared that we are building a home in our new state of Maine. We are.
It all began with an innocent conversation a few years ago on the front porch of the old house. We loved being in Maine so much and we didn’t like having to leave to return to Florida when the summer was over. The seeds were planted. Tom, who had opened and closed the “camp” for 30 years was on board immediately to help us realize the dream.
A few years of research which included talking to someone who would lift the old camp and build a “foundation” underneath the existing house, lots of discussions about whether that was even feasible because of the age of the structure and nothing inside was up to the current code (and construction requires bringing the structure up to code) including the second floor floor joists, electric, plumbing, and the list went on.
Fast forward to April 2015 when we arrived in Maine with all of our belongings and a permit to replace the old house with a new house and a custom home, design that was very close to the design of the original house.
On May 20th the old house was demolished. On July 5th the slab for the new foundation was begun and the framing for the first floor was started on July 13th. Today marks almost three months and two weeks since the framing started and I’m getting impatient to be in the house for many reasons.
The guest cottage is getting smaller by the day – we live in roughly 200 square feet of uninsulated space with three dogs and a propane burner. It’s getting colder outside (in the lower 30s this morning). I want to move forward and I feel like we’re back to baby steps … (nobody is here today) and there is still a lot to be done.
We’ve also hit a few bumps in the road over the past week or two which may further delay our moving in.
Cabinets ordered through Home Depot were not the right size (their fault) and had to be returned. Some of the cabinets, despite not being what I had specifically said that we wanted, were already installed and can’t be returned or exchanged. They are supposed to be delivered next week. We have had to postpone the countertop template measuring because of the cabinet problem which will delay the countertops (since I am not sure whether I have faith in Home Depot’s promise to “make it right” since it was not our fault.)
We may not have a kitchen until after Thanksgiving.
The washer and dryer that Sears labeled as stackable stand 78 inches high. The dryer controls are on the top front of the dryer … I’m not sure how they call this stackable unless they’re for someone who is at least six feet tall. I am not. And, since I’m not getting younger – surely this experience is aging me prematurely! – I am not going to plan to use a step stool to get me to that height. Back they go. Leaving us with quite a challenge of finding a normal-sized washer and dryer that will fit in our tiny utility room … and praying that everything else that we need will fit in there with the washer and dryer. By code, the boiler and water holding tank and electric panel, etc. have to be certain distances from each other and vent to the outside. We will be close.
The electrician has been told to wrap it up by the end of this week. Today the generator came home (when the power guy asks if you’re going to have one you get one). We haven’t bought even one light and we are having difficulty agreeing on what we will buy. Neither of us loves anything at the local Lowe’s or Home Depot and there aren’t a lot of choices here in Central Maine.
We have no bathroom counters/cabinets to date. We wanted to use an old bureau that we had as a guest room bathroom cabinet but it turned out to have a veneer top which warped and will not work. We may have found its replacement at an antique store in Augusta. TBA. Our master bath is another thing entirely. Ned wanted to use the old beams from the old house as a counter … had them cut at a local lumberyard and they don’t line up properly. We don’t have the right tools to make them line up. Out they came. He and Tom are supposed to build something custom for the space. For now, there’s nothing there.
The front door handle/latch that was just installed is broken … if we close the door and latch it we can’t get in or out again. We bought three of the same from Home Depot … had them re-keyed so we only have one key. Now what?
Did I mention that nobody’s here today? It’s a source of frustration for me that we seem to have days when nothing gets done … and it’s getting cold. I am struggling with bouts of depression and anxiety. I long to be living a normal life again in a home with heat and our stuff around us. Moving is stressful. Starting a new life again is stressful. Building a house is stressful. And it was my expectation – because I was told – that we’d be in three months after the framing began … and it’s already two weeks past that. Then is was November 1 … but it seems that we’ll be passing that date, too. This adventure is getting less and less fun with every week that passes.
I know I’m lucky to be building a house that’s so beautiful and to be able to live here. Logically, I get it. Stuff happens. Delays happen. The struggle is in getting the last details finished and getting the construction team out here to wrap it up and finish things up so that we can get our life out of storage and out of this holding pattern and start our new life. I had hoped it would happen before our family arrives for Thanksgiving. It makes my heart ache to think that it may not happen.
Gone varnishing.






























