Sunday, May 11, 2008

Translating Footprint Bathmat from Crochet to Knitting


I talked about the Footprint Bathmat earlier. I made the crocheted version about 1969 from a 1940s pattern I found in Mom's stash. I made it from Aunt Lydia's cotton rug yarn as described in the instructions. The crochet pattern can be found at http://art-supplies-plus.com/0852c57h358/Croche_Patterns/FootprintBathMat.pdf (sorry. this isn't a link. You'll have to copy and paste it.)

The instructions say the crocheted mat would be 19"x 30". Mine seemed a lot larger than that. Folded in half, it came about the size of my blue mat.

When we moved into Mom's house in 2006, the 1969 bathmat was still in use. It had a six inch hole where something had come unraveled in nearly 40 yrs, but was still intact enough to use when folded in half.

I didn't want to keep the threadbare yellow mat, but I loved the Footprint Bathmat. The answer? Make another one, in the color I prefer -- blue. Only I didn't want to crochet it; I wanted to knit it. The other problem was the bathroom had been remodeled since I made the first mat. The long bathtub had been replaced by an enclosed shower. There amount of floor space to hold a bathmat had changed. The original mat was about two times too large now.

So -- I had my task. Reinvent the bathmat in knit. The new mat is 23" x 28" without fringe. The mat is 48 stitches wide and 80 rows high. I adapted the cross stitch footprints making them shorter. The cross stitches were made over the rows of knitting. The original feet were nearly 4 inches longer and equally wider than a human foot. The new footprint is about the same as a man's size 12 feet. I haven't scanned the footprint chart yet. If I do, I'll post it on the blog.

One more thing -- about yarn. Over nearly 40 yrs., things have changed a bit. My first bathmat wore so well because it was made of cotton rug yarn. The second, blue rug, was made of cotton craft yarn. This isn't as durable as rug yarn. It strings and mats every time I wash it.

I haven't found cotton rug yarn lately. Aunt Lydia's rug yarn is now an acrylic that doesn't have the "hand" that the older yarn had. I don't think there is as much in as skein as there used to be either, but that may be my memory going. If you make either version of this mat, please try to find COTTON RUG YARN. If cotton isn't a choice, try at least for rug yarn.

Friday, March 28, 2008

KIPing and Traveling Light in Minneapolis


I'm at the Public Library Association convention in Minneapolis, Minnesota this week. We're learning all sorts of things about serving our patrons. I've gotten several good ideas to take back to the librarians I serve in SE Kansas.

I see lots of knitters around the convention hall. Three of us traveled together from Kansas. One is working on a dishcloth, another a sweater and I'm doing socks. I've seen more large items being Knit in Public than I expected. My hat is off to the ladies who juggle bulky yarns and half finished sweaters along with their coats and conference materials.

I find my little ball of sock yarn and 2 sets of circular needles to be a challenge enough to keep untangled. A lady I met in Lyndon, Kansas, showed me how to knit socks two at a time from one ball of yarn. One sock is knit from the center-pull thread and the other sock is knit from the outer thread. When the yarn gets twisted, you just suspend it from the two threads and spin until it's straight again. I'm trying her technique on this trip and really like it. One ball of sock yarn and work in progress will stuff nicely into my jacket pocket. I can take it with me anywhere!

I do like to travel as light as possible. I've found my favorite convention attire to be slacks and a shirt and the man's suit jacket I found at Goodwill. It cost me a whole $8.00! What a find! Two big pockets and a chest pocket on the outside and two inside pockets. I carry my money, credit cards and electronic room key in a business card folder in one of those inside pockets and slip my Palm Treo cell phone into an outside pocket. The Treo is my calendar, memo pad, audiobook player, e-book reader, and connection to the Internet as well as my phone, so that's pretty compact, too. My winter coat is a fiber fill car coat. It got pretty hot yesterday wandering around the convention hall. I was pleased to find I could roll it up and stuff it into the bag one of the vendors gave me. The bag has pockets everywhere. One for my bottle of water; another for my sock yarn, and a big one for my convention guide and note pad.

I can convention-go will a lighter step thanks to one-ball of sock yarn, a jacket with lots of pockets and that wonderful bag.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Third Time's the Charm Hat Story


My maiden name is Hull. It's an English name, but Grandpa was the oldest of seven children raised by a proper German patriarch. (You can read that as Stubborn-Old-Man-Who-Knew-He-Was-Right.) Grandpa married a fine Irish girl who had her own brand of stubborness and it came down through the family. Hull stubbornness is legendary. We alternately lament it and take pride in it, and I am truly a Hull, even if I am now called Jones.

I am also an avid knitter, so the call for Hats for the State Librarian's Luncheon sent me to the yarn store. I was going to make a hat for the luncheon. I could see it -- a fine knitted fedora, sitting next to the Maltese Falcon that has resided in glory in the SEKLS office. I'd snap it's picture, just as if Sam Spade had tossed it there, then send the hat and the picture off to the luncheon.

The hat was finished two weeks ago. There was no way it would even begin to take the shape of a fedora. It had decided it was a nice warm stocking hat, and stocking hat it would be... and a rather plain, shapeless stocking hat at that. It wasn't anything I wanted to send to the luncheon.

Okay. I'd make something else. I'd make the chenille hood that I've always enjoyed wearing. Back to the yarn store, get more yarn, and I'm off and running. I carried the yarn with me to KLA Legislative Day and was spotted Knitting in Public in various places as I waited to speak to legislators. By the time I got home, I was on a roll. It was half finished. I was going to finish it before the weekend was out. I worked most of the day Saturday. It was really going good. I WAS going to have it finished before I went to bed. (Nothing quite like a goal driven stubborn Hull.) I finished it, too. At 4:00 AM. The next morning I tossed it in the washer to tidy it up. It would be ready to send off on Monday.

No. It wasn't. Something happened in the washer. Some stitches tightened up. Some hung out like Mick Jagger's tongue in a Rolling Stones logo. This was another terrible, ugly hat.

By this time, most folks would have quit knitting and bought a hat to send to the State Librarian's Luncheon. Not me. At 6:30 Sunday evening, I ripped out the hood, rewound the yarn and started over. This time it would be my classic crocheted Tam-o-Shanter. That pattern has never failed me. I finished it at 1:00 Monday morning. I'm NOT putting it in the washer to tidy up. I'm not photographing it next to the Maltese Falcon, but I am going to package it fast -- while it still looks like a Tam and send it to the State Librarian.

We Hulls are stubborn. Sometimes it pays off.

Friday, February 22, 2008

KIPping for KLA and State Librarian's Luncheon


The Kansas Library Conference is in April. Each year the State Librarian hosts a luncheon for attendees and asks for contributions to be door prizes and table decorations. Those contributions are often auctioned off with the proceeds being donated to a worthy cause. Last year's luncheon asked for purses. Hundreds of purses were donated to the Dress for Success program to help low income women. This year's request is for hats. They will be auctioned to benefit the Kansas Center for the Book. www.kcfb.info

Ah! That's a call I couldn't resist. I'm knitting the Lion Brand Chenille Hood from the pattern I discussed in an earlier post. I'm using a chocolate brown chenille that just begs to be fondled.

Yesterday was KLA Legislative Day in Topeka. Many librarians across the state braved icy weather to show up and discuss issues of importance to Kansas libraries with our legislators. I carried my yarn and hood-in-progress in my purse and worked on it whenever I found myself waiting for a legislator. What is more appropriate than Knitting in Public for a Kansas library event when you are promoting Kansas Libraries?

By the time I got home, the hood was half finished. If I have any knitting time in the coming week I should be able to get it mailed off soon and on to the socks for the March birthday kids.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Toe-up Socks on 2 Circular Needles -- Knit Two at a Time

Knitting socks two-at-a-time is the only way to go! Not only do you have both socks finished when you get to the end of the pattern, you have all of the changes -- toes, heels, patterns -- done simultaneously. There is no counting of rows to figure out where you did something on the first sock so you can make it happen at the same place on the second one.
I don't know about you, but I'm never certain that I've seen all the stitches and counted the rows correctly. In the end, all that counting becomes an educated guess. Most of the time, I get by with it. Other times, it's frogging time. Why set yourself up for that sort of stress when there is a better way?
I struggled to get started with two-at-a-time toe-up socks. Now I love them! I record here what I've learned in the hopes it helps your experience easier. As an FYI, the pink socks were knitted by this pattern with a k2,p2 ribbing used on the ankle section.

I've added a list of favorite sock books at the end of this post. They are great resources. I recommend them whole-heartedly. They would make a great foundation for any sock knitter's library.
Now -- on to the directions:
Needle size is determined by the size of your yarn. See ball band or chart below.
Suggested Gauge and Needle Size
From p. 9 Sensational Knitted Socks
Yarn Weight Stitch Gauge per Inch Needle Size
Fingering.......... 8 ½- 10 st. .......................... U.S. 0 (2.0 mm) or 1 (2.25 mm)
Sport ............. .. 7 ½- 9 st. ............ .......... U.S. 2 (2.5 mm)
DK.......... .......... 6 ½ to 8 st. .......... .......... U.S. 3 (3.5 mm)
Worsted .......... 6 to 7 st .......... .......... ....... U.S. 4 (3.5 mm)

Yarn: 2 balls of yarn (one for each sock). Total amount to be determined from chart below. Choose your fiber according to the person who will wear the socks. (Don’t give hand-wash only wool to a person who puts everything in the washer.)
Approximate Yards Needed For a Pair of Socks
From p. 9 Sensational Knitted Socks
Yarn .......... ....Child.......... Child .......... Women .......... Men
Weight.......... (Small) ...... (Medium)
Fingering.......... 275 ........ .....340 .......... .....430.......... ..... 525
Sport................ 215 .......... ...275.......... ..... 370.......... ..... 430
DK................... 200 .......... ...250.......... ..... 340 .......... .....400
Worsted.......... 185 .......... .....215 .......... .....310.......... ..... 370
Measure foot for the socks.
Sock should be approximately ½” narrower than the width of the foot. Finished sock should be ¾ to 1 inch shorter than the foot due to the stretch of the sock. Length to beginning of heel turn should be two inches shorter than total length of sock.
I make a basic woman’s sock (9 inch foot) 48-64 stitches around and 7-8” to the heel turn. I'm finding that a 64 stitch sock works better most of the time than 48 stitches. Use the smaller number with large yarn and larger needles (or for smaller feet.) If you are using sock yarn and size 0, 1, or 2 needles, use 64 stitches. [Over time, I've learned that the number of stitches around varies by the size of the needles and the yarn. I am using 72 to 96 stitches around these days. I am also experimenting with changing needle sizes to something larger about 3 inches after I turn the heel so there is more room in the calf. This is having varied success, but you can play with it.] I usually make the ankle section as long as the foot section. The amount of stitches cast on for the toe is a function of the number of stitches around. I cast on 8 st. for a 48 st. sock and 12 stitches for a 64 st. sock. [These days I start with no more than 1/2 the final stitch count around .]
Tools: Needles, Tape measure, Crochet hook of size to work with yarn, Small to Medium-sized stitch holders, Tapestry needles (for weaving in ends), Scrap yarn of contrasting color for Lifeline (opt.)
Toe-up Socks
Instructions are written for an 12 st. cast-on/ 64 stitch sock. Adapt as needed for the number of stitches you will have in the foot of your sock.
1. Cast on 12 stitches from first ball of yarn. Drop yarn. Cast on 12 stitches from 2nd ball.
2. Increase 1 in each stitch across for each sock.
3. Remove needle from each sock.
4. Reinsert needle into socks, putting every other stitch on 1st needle.
5. Using 2nd needle, put unclaimed stitches on needle. You now have 12 stitches of each sock on each needle.
6. Knit 12 stitches on first sock. Drop yarn. Pick up next yarn, knit 12 stitches on 2nd sock. Turn. Knit 12 stitches on 2nd sock. Drop yarn. Pick up first yarn. Knit 12 st. on first sock.
7. Increase 1 in first stitch of first sock. Knit to last stitch. Increase 1 in last stitch. 14 st. Drop yarn. Pick up 2nd yarn. Repeat for second sock. (14 st.) Repeat on 2nd needle for each sock. Total of 28 stitch on each sock at end of row.
8. Knit around for each sock.
9. Repeat 6 and 7 until 32 stitches on each side for each sock (total 64 stitches each sock).
10. Toe increases have been finished.
11. Knit around each sock until 2 inches from end of foot.
(NOTE: If you are making these socks for your own foot length, the "handy measure" is your own hand. The length from the heel of your hand to the tip of your longest finger is the length of your sock from toe to beginning of heel turn.)
12. Short row heel: Work across the two socks on the first needle as described in 13. Turn. Slip the remaining stitches of the first sock onto a stitch holder. Move to 2nd sock; place those stitches onto the 2nd stitch holder. You will only be working on the stitches from one needle, one sock as you turn the heel. Put each sock on a different circular needle after you have the front halves on stitch holders.
13. (Quoted from Toe-Up Techniques for Hand Knit Socks p. 18-19)
You are now working on only the heel stitches. Knit the stitches on needle #1 to the last 2 stitches, bring your yarn to the front of the work, slip one stitch from the left needle to the right needle. Return your yarn to the back of the work and slip the stitch back to the left needle. You didn’t knit the stitch, you just wrapped the yarn around it to eliminate holes. It’s slip the stitch to the right needle, wrap the yarn around the stitch, slip the stitch back to the left needle. You have two stitches that are not knit on needle #1 (the stitch you wrapped and the last stitch on the needle.)
Turn your work. You still have those two stitches unworked and now they are on the right needle that you will use to purl back across needle #1.
Purl back across needle # … until there are 2 stitches left… This time put the yarn to the back of the work, slip the next stitch onto your right hand needle, return the yarn to the front of the work, and slip the stitch back over to the left hand needle.
You now have four stitches not worked. The two you didn’t knit in row 1 and the two you didn’t purl in row 2.
Each time you knit or purl a row, you work one less stitch, slipping and wrapping that stitch, leaving it un-knit or un-purled until until you have only the center one third of the heel stitches [12 center stitches] that are actually knit and all the rest of the stitches on both sides of the center stitches have been slipped and wrapped (or put on hold).
14. (Quoted from Toe-Up Techniques for Hand Knit Socks p. 21)
Heel Increase Section: It’s the same process as you begin to re-knit or re-purl the slipped and wrapped stitches one by one on each row until you rework all the stitches from the heel section. Knit up to the closest slipped stitch, knit that stitch with the wrap together as one, slip and wrap the next stitch, turn the work. Purl back across to the closest slipped stitch, purl the stitch and wrap together as one, slip and wrap the next stitch, turn the work. As you re-work the stitches, you will again wrap the next stitch as you turn. So while returning the stitches into work, you will actually have two wraps per stitch.
You decrease down by not working the stitches and then increase back out by working into the stitches again one by one.
To hide the wraps when bringing the slipped stitches back up to work, you work the wrap and the stitch together.
15. After heel has been turned, continue in stockinette for about ¼ inch then pick up stitches from the stitch holders to get both socks back onto the circular needles.
16. Knit around each sock until within 1 inch of end. Switch to knit 2, purl 2 ribbing to finish sock.
17. Bind off loosely.
NOTE: Test sock for fit as you are making it. If ankle portion is snug, you may need to make the upper section (ribbing) larger to allow more stretch. Do this by changing to needles 2 sizes larger than the ones you have used for body of sock.
To adapt to for patterns: determine number of stitches needed for the pattern and calculate how that fits the number of stitches in your sock. If you want the pattern to cover the top of the foot, start pattern after toe increase and work it on the needle that carries the top of the sock. If you want the pattern to cover the ankle, start it after the toe increase when you return to knitting in the round.
Bibliography
Crazy toes & heels sock knitting book, Queen Kahuna Creations, http://www.queenkahuna-creations.com/
Favorite socks, 25 timeless designs from Interweave, Ann Budd and Anne Merrow, editors, Loveland, Co.: Interweave Press, c2006.
Sensational knitted socks by Charlene Schurch, Woodinville, Wa. : Martingale & Company, c2005.
Socks a la carte: pick and choose patterns to knit socks your way by Jonnelle Paffino, Katherine Cade, and the SWTC Staff, Cincinnati, Ohio: North Light Books, c 2008.  (First of a series of great sock pattern books. They have toe-up versions and two-at-a-time versions as well as standard sock patterns.)
Toe-up techniques for hand knit socks, by Janet Rehfeldt, (s.l.): Montat Publishing, c2003.
Vogue Knitting: the ultimate sock book: history, technique, design, by the editors of Vogue Knitting Magazine, New York : Sixth & Spring Books, c2007.

Monday, January 21, 2008

I hate being sick!


I don't even look THIS good. My best guess is that I have bronchitis. In about an hour I'll go to the PA and find out for sure. Glands are swollen; I ache everywhere; when I cough, I'm sure my toenails are coming up with the cough... you know the drill.

Yesterday Pat put me to bed and made me stay there all day. (Was he taking care of me or defending his right to watch 8 hrs of football uninterrupted?)

It was great -- except when I was awake. Most of the time I had the electric blanket on high and was talking about being cold. Even at that, Pat said I didn't have a fever. I managed to crawl out of bed today and soak in the shower for a while. The back side of the house is so cold that I'm baking a cake just to have an excuse to have the oven on. I have also closed off the south bedroom and my old bedroom. That way the heater doesn't have to warm those two rooms.

Hm... I checked Weatherbug. It's just above 34 degrees, so it isn't all that cold. Must be me.

At least, if I stay awake, I can knit. I have 3 projects in the works. The one closest to finished is a green scarf that matches the watch cap I made Pat. He found his blue doubleknit hat so I get to keep the green one. That's good. I have a couple of coats that don't have hoods. It will be nice to have a hat. And a scarf.

Then there is Sue's doubleknit hat. I'm worried there won't be enough of her primary color to complete the hat. I was about 3 inches into the hat and noticed the yarn was about half gone. So I ripped it out and started over with bigger needles. May be the same number of stitches, but they should cover more territory. (I hope.)

And -- I have started (again) Pat's Oregon vest. It's made with the Chunky Wool-Ease this time. It's working smoother and looks better that it did in Homespun. I will get this one finished.

2007 Knitting


magnify
It hasn't been a good year for knitting. I've had more to do at work, so less time to knit.

The picture is of the bath mat that I made. It's an adaption of a crocheted pattern that was in one of my Mom's 1940s crochet books. (Can't find the book anymore; got the pattern from the web. http://www.freevintagecrochet.com/rugs/star93-footprint-bath-mat ) I crocheted the original pattern when I was in college and threw the bath mat away 40 years later when we moved into this house. It had a couple of large holes in one corner, but was still standing up quite well for it's age.

I didn't want to crochet the new mat, plus the space I had for it was a lot smaller than the original pattern would fit, so I garter stitched the foundation and adapted the cross-stitched feet to the new size. They aren't nearly as big as the original feet. The new feet match Pat's size 12's, so I guess he's the one who left the foot prints.

My other finished projects for 2007:

4 pairs of socks
1 baby sweater
1 baby blanket
1 baby bib
3 baby hats (It was the year for babies at work )
2 1/2 double knit hats (Sue's is still in progress)
1 quicky watch cap from bulky yarn
3 warm scarves for Joe's roommates

The 2008 Knit Fearlessly challenge from Kansas Knits is to make 4 things that stretch our boundaries. Since I dislike making anything that requires more than 2 skeins of yarn, I'm going to make Pat's Oregon vest as my first Knit Fearlessly project. It is started and I'm enjoying it.

When we picked out yarn for the vest two-three years ago in Texas, Pat picked a Lion Brand Homespun Yarn. It wasn't working up well, so I switched to the bulkiest Lion Brand Wool-Ease yarn. That's the yarn the pattern called for and works up much better.

I'm not certain what else I'll do for my other challenge pieces. Maybe I'll do that long Homespun Sweater that I once tried to crochet. I couldn't get the pattern to work for the left side. If I try the knitted version of the sweater, I may have better luck. I could use a sweater-coat.