I Just Cleaned up After “Breakfast”!

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Things are looking up here on the health front! Finally! I had a shower today, made my own “breakfast” and then emptied the dishwasher and cleaned up the kitchen. This is the first such activity in about two weeks! Yay! My body is reminding me that I’ve been sick and I need to maintain a slower than usual pace, but I am happy to oblige because I finally feel like I’m getting better. The flu is not fun this year, folks. I hope you’re vaccinated and washing your hands a lot!!!

The last two weeks have afforded me a lot of knitting time and for the most part I’ve taken full advantage of it. Although, there have been hours of time spent just sitting and watching stupid stuff on TV. Yesterday I spent most of my knitting time working on the Gansey Afghan. I really am enjoying this project and more than I thought I would. I have made it past the forty inch mark and the final size is designed to be forty-eight inches. I think mine may be more because I’m going to try to use up all of the two balls of yarn I bought for the project. As I discovered, I have a ton of bits and bobs of left-over yarn and I haven’t used them for much. (More on this story later in this post.)

The Gansey Afghan is knitted with worsted weight yarn. I chose two balls of this dark sage-y green that was on sale at the LYS where I work. It’s Hayfield Aran with Wool and comes in 919 yard, 400 gram balls. That’s a lot of yarn. Mine was on sale so it’s was less than $60 to make the blanket. And the blanket is going to be a really good size. The pattern is several “stripes” of textured stitches divided by a 2-row reverse stockinette stitch pattern (the pattern is really more than just the two rows of reverse stockinette). It’s fun to watch the repeats turn out and it keeps the knitting interesting. I have mis-read the pattern in a couple of spots but I just kept on keeping on and have balanced the errors so they don’t stick out. I challenge you to try to figure out where the errors are. I think I’d like to make another one for my atelier next fall/winter in orange. I am loving orange these days. It would also look great in our bedroom or in our living room. We’ll see where it ends up or if it gets knitted at all. LOL. I have just finished the third repeat of the pattern and will knit one more which should use up almost all of the yarn. Fingers crossed.

I’ve not touched my husbands Christmas socks this week and I’ve only worked a little bit on my Ranunculcus sweater but I’ve already written about that. I have procured another beautiful yarn, however. I pre-ordered two hanks of Lola Bean Yarn Co’s DK weight yarn on the soy bean base. (100% merino). The colorway is “Good Trouble” and it’s a nod to the civil rights leader, John Lewis. Sales of this yarn benefitted a non-profit organization supporting civil rights but I don’t remember now which one it was. My yarn arrived this week and it’s gorgeous!!!

Lola Bean Yarn Co., DK weight Soy Bean base, colorway: Good Trouble

I’ve been texting back and forth with one of my Friday afternoon knitting students who also bought the yarn and I think we’re both going to attempt (and see how we like it) the Le Bandana pattern by Aimee Gille of La Bien Aimee. It’s a simple one-skein triangle shaped shawlette. I have a bit more yarn and will plan to make mine a bit bigger so that I use up all the yarn in the one project. (Do you see a theme here?) If I can’t return a full hank of leftover yarn, I want to use it all up!!!

Here’s the story I promised: This weekend one of my co-worker friends sent our triumvirate group the link to a pattern for the most adorable little stuffed rabbit. She’s wearing a dress, a cardigan and a headband and comes with a kitten. And she’s a free pattern. Did I say that she was adorable? See for yourself!

Well, I didn’t want to go buy more yarn if I have some that I can use so I pulled down my two bins of sport/dk weight yarn to have a look. TWO bins of leftover sport/dk yarns. This is what I pulled out of those two bins that I may want to use for the project. The bins are now back in their shelves but still mostly full … some with a sweater’s worth of yarn!) I may have a problem.

The good news is that I did find a wrapper-less gray yarn (at the front) that I hope will work for the bunny and plenty of other balls of yarn to make the garments, accessories and kitten out of. I also have enough to share with Carol if she needs it. I hope we will cast on this week. And I hope the bunny doesn’t hang out unclothed for years like my Dolores did. (I still have clothes to knit for Dolores.)

So, there you have it. I have so much knitting to do that I will leave you here and head off to my comfy chair and my knitting. The question is … do I wind up my Good Trouble and knit my shawlette or continue with the afghan in hopes of getting something finished? Stay tuned for my choice …

Gone knitting.

Gnoming

A Gnumber of Gnomes

I’m up to five gnomes in my gnitted gnome collection. I have several more to gnit and I will get them done. They’re so much fun! And they’re really cute.

All of my gnomes are patterns written by Imagined Landscapes’ Sarah Schira. Her patterns are often offered in MKAL format which offers you the opportunity to knit a gnome over a short period of time (and print the pattern on lots of paper.) I have also purchased some of Sarah’s “gnormal” gnome patterns (not MKALs) that I want to knit. I enjoy the KALs and I think I’ll also enjoy the simple pleasure of knitting a gnome at my own pace.

Left to right (above) are my current gnomes:

Most recent FO is Gnot just another Gnome, Gnathan. I knitted my gnome in worsted weight yarn rather than the proscribed fingering weight. I love my giant gnome. I used DPNs smaller than the yarn wrapper indicated and checked the fabric to make sure that it was tight enough that the stuffing wouldn’t show through once the gnome was finished. I used US 5 DPNs throughout. My Gnathan has gnarly arms (they look a bit too thin) so in the future I’d add a stitch or two to the i-cord numbers to make them more proportional. But he’s acceptable just the way he is … he will have to do more pull-ups to build his arm muscles! LOL! Gnathat has some wonderful cables on his hat and on the side of his body. The cables on the sides run from the base to the tip of the hat. It must be my Irish heritage, I love cables.

“Gnathan”, Gnot Just Another Gnome

Second from the left is Gnome is Where You Hang Your Hat. This one was really fun because it was a stranded knitting design from the start and this gnome (gnamed Gnemo) got a hand-knit sweater! This little guy is knit in fingering weight yarn and US 1 1/2 needles. I’d love to make this guy again in a sport-weight yarn so he’s a little bit bigger. I didn’t weight this gnome … probably because I was lazy and didn’t have anything in my studio at my fingertips. That’s a bummer because he does tip over. I’d also like to make one of these with the hat pointing up. It’s a lovely piece of knitting!

Gnome is Where You Hang Your Hat, “Gnemo”

Gnutmeg is the next one in the lineup, pattern name is the ADVENTure Gnome. This one was knitted in early December 2020 thus it’s name. I used all leftover yarn bits and bobs. I actually love this guy, too. This was a MKAL knitting project. I love love love his boots! This would be fun to make in a heavier weight needle, too. This one is in sort-of-holiday colors … I was in a sort-of-holiday mood, apparently. I’d rather the gnomes not be too holiday-ish because they stay out all year. Until now, they’ve lived on a bookshelf in my atelier. They may move downstairs in the wintertime. This pattern came with a pattern for a Christmas ball, knitted of course, and two recipes.

ADVENTURE Gnome, “Gnutmeg”

The first gnome project I embarked on, and the last two in the lineup, was Oh, Gnome, You Didn’t! I may have un-gnowmingly knitted the first Gnellie with the wrong size needle and so I decided to knit a second Gnellie (appropriately named Gnellie 2.) Again, I used leftover scraps of fingering weight yarns from my bins (and bins and bins) of little bits of sock yarns. I braided Gnellie’s hat but left Gnellie 2’s hat alone with its three points. I love the Gnellies’ pockets!

Oh, Gnome, You Didn’t!

These guys would be fun to make more of. It’s probably good that Sarah keeps adding MKALs because the likelihood of me having time to make duplicates at any time soon is unlikely. I have already bought four more of Sarah’s patterns and I absolutely will knit them all … as I type this I am printing out the pattern for Gnome de Plume (Gnatalie to be) … I may have to knit two; one with braids and one without!

Gone knitting.