WIP Wednesday

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Sunrise this morning was pretty spectacular. I woke myself up at 5am coughing … my sinuses continue to take away my sleep. Ugh. BUT what a view to wake up to! We installed insulated curtains in our living room where there is a wall of glass looking at the lake. It feels cold when the sun goes down now and we were hoping to warm it up a bit. We’ve been talking about it for a year or more. Anyway, we finally made it happen with curtain wires from IKEA and linen-look draperies from Amazon and we do feel like it’s warmed up the downstairs. Mission accomplished.

Yesterday the “girls” I work with went to visit a new yarn shop in Maine. New to us, anyway. Seems it’s been open since May. Olde School Fiber and Craft is in Gorham, Maine. It is described as “A curated fiber craft supply shop + community: encouraging a slower lifestyle that embraces time for making.” We all agreed that this was perfectly described. There is a curated collection of yarns that are thoughtfully displayed in a clean, orderly, quite beautiful way. We all ooohed and aaaahed over the knitting needle cabinet that held needles out of sight and neatly organized. There is also a lovely collection of needlework and sewing kits and materials that would delight any maker. I found the perfect little “sewing” kit for my granddaughter that’s similar to the lacing kits I’ve seen elsewhere and I think it’s going to be a perfect Christmas gift to work on with Yaya.

We also ventured to Mother of Purl in Freeport, Maine. Mostly because it was right where we met our coastal buddy at the park and ride and we couldn’t go home without going in, right? The shop has changed ownership since I’ve been in and it was, as it has been, a lovely visit with the most beautiful samples all around the store. I think they may win the beautiful sample contest in the state of Maine. (There is no such contest but maybe there should be?) Anyway, I behaved well and bought only one little ball of pompom yarn in almost neon colors and I’ll be making a hat for Sylvie, once again. It was a sample they had right inside the front (darn!) door

They carry Knitting for Olive yarns and others. Not a lot of yarn but lots of interesting brands that you don’t see everywhere else. I bought a pre-made kit for a pair of fingerless mitts – it was beautifully packaged with the yarn and pattern included. I’m excited to cast them on … but I’m requiring that I finish a couple of little sweaters first. Three to be exact.

The first one is in my last post and hasn’t changed one bit since I wrote about it. It’s been terrorizing me from my desk as I sit in my knitting chair working. I’ll get to it this weekend and finish it up. This one is my granddaughter’s Christmas sweater for 2025 and is a “Frozen” themed pullover. I sure hope she loves it.

The next two are gifts for the grands. Sylvie is getting a Jamberry Cardigan. Her mother reports that she loves the purple cardigan that I made for her over the summer and she thinks she likes it because she can put it on and take it off herself. And she picked the buttons. So, for Christmas, when I saw the Jamberry cardigan at the Cashmere Goat in Camden, Maine, I had to buy the yarn to make it for her – she loves the book! And for our grandson, Mac, a Wee Lima by Taiga Hilliard. I’m using washable yarns for both sweaters. Jamberry is in Berroco Vintage DK in three colors and there is some duplicate stitching to be done on the yoke when the knitting is finished. I found five buttons in what I believe to be the perfect purple yesterday at Olde School. Wee Lima I’m making in Cascade 220 Superwash Merino to “match” the Billie Pants I made in the same yarn. It’s perfect for wearing against the skin of a baby. I have no idea how it will wear considering that it’s Merino (short staple fiber, susceptible to pilling) but we’ll see. He’s a baby, he’ll grow out of it before it’s too “worn” right? The photo above is from last night before I went to bed. I’m making the 3-6 month size so it’s quick to knit – got that much done in an evening. I’m working down the body today and hope to get started on a sleeve tonight.

Rowan Felted Tweed in Zinnia – brighter than my “normal” pallet but wow!

I have another WIP to report on. I had bought, ages ago, some Rowan Felted Tweed in the Zinnia colorway. It’s a pretty bright orange for me but I have a pair of orange boots that I love and thought it’d be fun to have a poncho thing to match them. So, when I saw the orange Felted Tweed I bought it to make a vest or poncho and I’ve been admiring the Churchmouse Yarn Easy Folded Poncho pattern, for ages, too. SO guess who’s knitting the Easy Folded Poncho by Churchmouse Yarn in orange Felted Tweed? You’re right, this girl. I’ve got a little less than 50 inches of stockinette stitch to knit. Yes, you heard me right – 50 inches of stockinette stitch. I found right away that I had trouble remembering to slip the first stitch at the start of every row so I have put a marker in both ends to remind me and that seems to be working well. It’s perfect knitting for watching TV or driving in the car or for working on when I’m teaching class. I hope it won’t take me forever because I have so many sweaters that I want to knit. I’ve cast on the Poet sweater but haven’t gotten very far with it and I think I may have to knit the green vest that I bought the yarn for next. After the Christmas knitting is done.

I “finished” the red onion socks for Sylvie but one sock is slightly longer than the other. I just need to measure them both and figure out which one is closer to her size and adjust the other one. No worries with that. I’d love to get them finished and sent off with the crazy little hat I made as a sample for the store that’s for her … I’ll send both in a bit, maybe next week. Even the “experts” make mistakes. LOL

We are having some beautiful fall/winter weather here. Yesterday and last night we had some fun snow flurries. We woke up to a thin coat of snow on the grass but it was gone by the time I left for Bangor this morning. Soon enough it’ll be a winter wonderland here at home. I spent the day on Sunday in my atelier getting it cleaned up and a little bit of organizing. My yarn shelves have all been cleared off, cleaned, lavender refreshed, yarn re-stacked and some has been photographed for my stash and so I remember why I bought it. Some I’ve already forgotten but suffice it to say that I have several sweaters worth of yarn tucked away. I should be good in case there’s another pandemic – God forbid.

Gone knitting.

What a Day .. and a half

We had our first “plowable” snow Friday night and yesterday. We are thinking we got about 8 inches … maybe 9. It’s absolutely beautiful! The only drawback, if you can call it that, is that we lost power on Saturday at around 2:30pm. The short story is that we got power back this afternoon around 3pm. BUT for a household with two generators, we were mighty cool over that 24 plus hours and I’m really grateful that I have a husband who is creative and can figure out how to minimize our discomfort.

So, how is it that we have two generators and neither one works? Well, suffice it to say that we’re in between generators. Our old one is a portable model that we drag out of the garage and across the yard to plug in and it ran the whole house. But my husband needs a new hip and we thought we’d bite the bullet and get a new, automatic generator hooked up before the winter kicks into high gear. We had our neighbor install (except for the propane) a new automatic generator. We may be able to leave the house in the winter after all. BUT we were told by our propane company that we only had to dig a ditch from the house to the generator and they’d come hook it up … and then they needed a deposit … and they didn’t come. So my husband called them about it and they hadn’t scheduled us. And now it’ll be January 6th before they can come. Meanwhile, obviously, there was a nor’Easter … and several inches of heavy snow … and 24+ hours of powerlessness. Literally.

I’ve knitted through the hours that were difficult and growing cold. Neither of us slept particularly well last night. We were both up at 3am for a few hours … reading with our headlamps, drinking a cup of tea. I was lucky and was able to go back to sleep. This morning the sun came out and we are fortunate to get some serious passive solar heat. The living room was 66 even after almost 24 hours of no heat. Husband got a long extension cord, passed it through the kitchen window and plugged into the fridge so we didn’t lose our food. He also realized that he could plug into a power strip and then we could also charge our phones. And a space heater. And a shop light.

The knitting helped me cope with the lack of comfort. I take the luxury of heat and electricity for granted every single day. The expectation is that we will always have it – and we even flick the switches when we know that power is off. A rude awakening but a reminder, too, about how lucky we are to live here. In the home that we built on the lake that we love in the state that we chose as our home together. In a special country where we are afforded so many freedoms and luxuries. Our “suffering” and “discomfort” was minimal at best but we were among the lucky ones.

I’ve finished the socks for my daughter that I started on the way to Massachusetts for Thanksgiving. I love the yarn. They’re happy socks!

They’re plain vanilla socks, my favorite Yankee Knitter pattern. I’ve bought the pattern several times and keep going back for more. I’ve now bought the pattern electronically and I hope I don’t shred that pattern, too.

I realized that I had some beautiful cashmere yarn in my stash that are the perfect colors for a hat for my sweet granddaughter. I have been wanting to knit a hat for her that is a bit larger than the newborn hats that she has because she’s bound to keep growing. I combined two patterns to make the bow hat in a DK weight yarn. I’ll block the pieces tomorrow and put them all together. I hope I love it as much as I think I will. Despite the ladders and some funky color change mess.

Aaand, last but not least is the little cardigan that I’m knitting for Sylvie. She’s getting big enough that the newborn sweater and the Christmas sweater that I made her may not fit. I’ve shipped the Christmas sweater and am close to finishing the cardigan … one sleeve almost finished and one more to go. Add some ribbing around the opening and some buttons and it’ll be ready to go. I love the shade of blue that is an On the Round sock colorway that I’ve had in my stash. I’m knitting a Knitting Pure and Simple pattern. (Have a look at my Ravelry project page for all the details.)

So, in addition to finishing the sweater and blocking and assembling the hat, I’ve been trying to decide what project to knit next. It’s difficult to believe that I haven’t got more projects on the needles. BUT it’s time for something new. I just saw a sweater (cardigan) pattern called the Ramona Cardigan by Elizabeth Smith. It’s an Aran weight wool in a grey colorway. I happen to have a sweater’s worth of a heavy worsted gray yarn by Brown Sheep. I think I may be heading down the Ramona path later on this week. I don’t have a dark grey sweater and this will match a lot of things that I wear on the regular. And it’s not complicated. My head is a swimming with responsibilities and I can’t deal with a knitting pattern that requires a lot of my attention.

I also need to knit a pair of Christmas socks for my hubby. He surely deserves them for taking such good care of me.

Gone knitting.