Sunday 13 February 2011

Abi Bag





















This is my first attempt at creating my own pattern. I had some ribbon yarn called Gedifra Selena. This is a tartan ribbon with frayed edges, that kits up to a lovely thick hairy mat. I first visualised it as a flower pot shaped bag then thought it would be more practical with an oval bottom. In the end I decided to knit it top down with decreases at each end to give the shape you see in the photo. I closed the bottom with a 3 needle cast off.

I had the body complete for a while before deciding on the handles... I had been thinking of bamboo rings, or preferably U shaped handles but I couldn't find the right thing. In the end I tried a 5 stitch i-cord and in a flash of inspiration fed a circular needle through the cord. I was all set to sacrifice a couple of needles for the handles when I picked up some pvc tubing on ebay. The tubing is perfect, it gives the handle a pleasing shape - and stops the handle stretching! I'm no good with zips so I closed the bag with an i-cord loop and a toggle.

Yarn Gedifra Selena ribbon yarn 2 x 50g balls

Needles 6mm double pointed needles or a 6mm circular needle

Notions 1metre of pvc tubing, a wooden toggle, fabric for lining.

Tension - 20 stitches and 26 rows to 4 inches

method -
Bag Body
Cast on 90sts, join in round.
Place markers at the start and middle of the round.
Row 1 Knit
Row 2 Purl
Row 3 Knit
Row 4 Purl
Row 5 Decrease as follows: k5 k2tog k to 7 stitches before mid-point marker k2tog k10 k2tog k to 7 stitches before end marker, k2tog k5
Row 6 Purl
Row 7 Knit
Roe 8 Purl
Row 9 Decrease as before: k5 k2tog k to 7 stitches before mid-point marker k2tog k10 k2tog k to 7 stitches before end marker, k2tog k5
Continue in garter stitch, decreasing on every 4th row until 70 stitches remain.
Shape bottom k2tog k2tog k to 4 stitches before mid-point marker k2tog k2tog k2tog k2tog k to 4 stitches before end k2tog k2tog
Next row Purl
Close bottom of bag using 3 needle bind off. LINK

Handles:
Casting on 5 stitches, make 2 i-cords each 18 inches long.
Feed pvc tubing through the i-cords to give the handles firmness and strength.
Stitch handles to rim of bag


Closure:
Casting on 3 stitches, make an i-cord 6 inches long.
Create a loop and stitch to the middle of the back of the bag. Sew a toggle to the front of the bag.

Line bag if required.

Saturday 15 January 2011

Murder Most Foul

I have read about killing acrylic on knitting blogs - and like felting it is something I have done inadvertently often. Laundry is not my main skill :)

I have heard that pressing acrylic is a way of changing the nature of the knitted fabric to give it a silky draping quality and I was keen to give it a go.

I knitted up a 33 stitch swatch of acrylic double knitting on 6mm needles, the first couple of inches was a vintage bedjacket pattern with a 16 row repeat that finally defeated me after 10 rows, so I decided to carry on with a simple yo lace stitch then I tried a couple of variations on what one person called sloppy stocking stitch (yo every other stitch on the knit row, slip yos on the purl row) this looked remarkably like the old oddpins method from the 80s where you knitted on two differently sized needles. Then I repeated the sloppy and oddpins methods using garter stitch.

Despite the shape of the piece I assure you there were no increases in the piece - the shape comes from the varying tension of each stitch type.

This is the original piece:
It is 19 inches across and the texture is as you'd expect from double knitting.













After killing the yarn with a hot steam iron:
It is a good deal larger and flatter :)
It is now 23" across and much finer and has a drape and a sheen











The oranginess on the picture below is not because I burnt it, but the flash reflecting off the surface - not something that you normally see on an acrylic jumper!
















I'm going to try now and create a shrug/bedjacket loosely based on this pattern but with a bit of killing and holey bits thrown in :) Linda Shoup's Triple S Shrug