Tag Archives: Learning

Sock Knitting Victory (and What I Learned Along the Way)

25 Dec

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Most knitters, in my experience, practice learning the basic knit and purl stitches by making a scarf as their first project. One could knit only scarves and find an endless array of stitches, patterns, and yarns to use to make each one unique. But after a while, one tires of the back-and-forth rhythm a scarf provides and the knitter seeks out more challenging projects in order to make something different and also to learn new stitches and techniques for making shaped, fitted items (e.g., hats and gloves). I did just that about one year into my knitting practice. I wanted to learn how to knit socks.

After trying to decipher patterns and instructions for sock knitting I thought it best to take a class at my local yarn store. The class used the Magic Loop technique (knitting socks using a circular needle) and having one-on-one instruction and monitoring to get through the most challenging parts of the pattern were helpful. Then, I attempted to do this on my own.

Using small needles and sock yarn (which is, as you could imagine, thin as well), I quickly cast on my next pair after the first was completed and to my chagrin, without personal attention and coaching, I struggled. I struggled with two specific sections of the pattern – but two sections that are important parts of constructing the heel and moving towards the foot of the sock.

These early solo attempts ended in disaster. And it doesn’t help that when I make a mistake on a project that I typically stick it back in a plastic freezer bag until I am, eventually, inspired to rip it out or to attempt to fix the jumbled, tangled mess left in my wake.

As 2011 approached, I wrote a list, as I do each year, of things I want to accomplish, my goals for the year. These are not resolutions, but more an action plan. Knitting socks was on that list. So, recently, a friend told me about Staci Perry’s fantastic site, Very Pink, and there I found not only clear, well-written patterns, but also a series of links to tutorial videos on YouTube that walks the knitter through each step of the sock knitting process.

What I learned

There were a few things I realized as I completed – yes, I did it! – a pair of socks on my own.

First, instead of using Magic Loop (one point of my confusion was the reallocation of stitches and being clear about the direction in which I was knitting), I chose to use double pointed needles (DPNs). When you have to adjust stitch placement, it is very clear which is needle 1, 2, and 3, and you know exactly how many stitches are supposed to be on each needle at any given time. No cords or loops to try to reconfigure.

Second, before I took on knitting a regular pair of socks with small needles and thin sock yarn, I also loved Staci’s pattern because it’s purpose is more to help the knitter gain experience in the basic functions of sock knitting – using larger needles and worsted weight yarn. This allowed me to see the stitches clearly and the parts that once gave me so much trouble, while following along in the videos, were navigated with ease.

Finally, in this whole multi-year experience to really grasp the fundamentals of sock knitting, I learned it requires practice and perseverance. I finished my first pair (as you see above), and I’m working on my second pair (in which I’ve already made some adjustments to the pattern by using a contrast color for heel and toe accents). With each of the three socks I’ve done so far (I’m working on the mate of the grey/yellow one), the technique becomes more clear, and the sections that were once complex for me are now feeling more natural.

Putting it all together

It’s the kitschy phrase we hear as children that rings so true: “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.” There are some things that I know I have the physical ability to do, and there are things I really want to do. Sock knitting is one of them. I knew that in order to knit socks, I had to keep trying, and even have a good cry now and then when something went terribly wrong. (You don’t even want me to go into the sock knitting mistakes I have made, though I’ve written about a few of them on this site.) Had I not made those mistakes, I wouldn’t have continued to learn until I became comfortable and knowledgeable enough to make the first pair on my own, and then I went right in to my second pair to continue practicing.

You may have no personal interest in knitting a pair of socks, but you may want to knit hats or sweaters. Whatever the more challenging project to which you aspire, the reality is we all make mistakes. The great news is that we always have the choice to either walk away defeated, or to keep going and learn along the way.

May all your knitting goals be reached in the New Year!

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When Time Permits

9 Oct

When I tell people I work full-time and go to school three nights a week, they ask me how I do it.  I think about things I do to make it all work, and what I’ve realized is that there is no easy formula.  Having an internal compass that steers me toward my goals has helped, but in the process, certain things are pushed aside, if only temporarily.

Since I started my MFA program in August, I have not had the time I used to have to spend with needles and yarn.  I am sad to admit it, but my knitting has been ignored.  When I take a brief break before dinner, I may work up a few rows on a scarf in progress, one I’ve been working on for two months.

I am envious when friends show me their works in progress and talk about how they enjoyed an entire afternoon of knitting up a new project.  I do recall those days when a Saturday afternoon was full of nothing more than watching movies and knitting.  It was relaxing, and the sense of accomplishment as the project progressed was great.  I do recall those days, and I know they will return.

Now, my Saturday afternoons consist of reading and making notes for a book to be discussed in class the following week, the drafting of a short response paper or, in the case of yesterday afternoon, an 8-page paper that approached 2,000 words.  I’ve never really had so much creative content due on deadline, but that’s part of pursuing a Master of Fine Arts degree, isn’t it?  Learning how to harness creative energy and focus on a project under time constraints is a valuable skill, like a Project Literary (instead of Project Runway), though I dare say a 90-minute program of people sitting at a computer typing would not make for great television as the fashion design version does.

But I do miss those afternoons of knitting a project, thinking about how I want to package and present it to its eventual recipient, what the next project will be after the current one is complete.  I miss taking my time to scour my extensive yarn stash, looking for inspiration, finding a yarn that will work well with the pattern I’ve selected.  I may even find a yarn that inspires me to then change patterns because I want to work with that specific yarn.  I know now it was a gift to have time for that type of creative process.

But it is also a gift to me now, even in those brief moments between chapters of a book, during a break from staring a computer screen for an hour or two, knitting helps me regain focus, get centered, and prepares me to return to my literary pursuits with a clear head and new ideas.

Whether I do it for an entire afternoon or 15 minutes here or there, knitting is a gift – of relaxation, of creativity, of accomplishment .  I know it will continue to be so for the rest of my life in one form or another.

 

Review: “A Knitter’s Guide to Color with Laura Bryant”

13 Jun

“You don’t get WOW by doing the expected!”
- Laura Bryant

After returning home from a long weekend in the country, I was thrilled to discover my copy of Interweave’s DVD “A Knitter’s Guide to Color with Laura Bryant” waiting on my doorstep!  I’ve seen Laura appear on various segments of Knitting Daily TV, and have also personally knit with PRISM Yarns, those fantastic yarns made of luxurious fibers in the most brilliant and unexpected colorways I’ve ever seen.  So, having the opportunity to have my own private “workshop” with Laura herself was an exciting prospect.

This DVD transformed the way I look at color.

Laura takes the viewer on a journey of discovery, demonstrating the basics of sorting colors by visual weight, warm and cool, to create what she calls “a river of color.”  She then shows a technique for using said river to find colors (many of them, unexpected combinations) that will work together.

One entire chapter shows Laura sorting a mixed menagerie of fibers in myriad colors, solids and variegated, metallics to merino.  Watching the transformation of this mixed pile into a river of color, a magnificent palette, is fascinating – and then, when she shows how to actually use that sorting process to find unexpected combinations is really something to witness.

Mathematic metaphors, patterns occurring in nature bring items to life.

Laura discusses the Fibonacci number sequence, a way of using numerical formulas to create attractive patterns in multiple colors that are pleasing to the eye.  I am typically math-averse; however, her easy-to-follow explanation of the mathematic principle and its application to knitting is so clear, I wanted to knit something up right away using the concept.

Her style is warm and casual, she speaks to you as if you were chatting over a grande nonfat caramel macchiato at the local Starbucks.  Every concept she shares is supported by tangible samples, whether shaded color cards, or fully or partially knit samples demonstrating differences in color choices and how those impact the overall look and impact of an item.

Use color to tell a story.

Another unique element of how Laura presents the concept of color is through the elements of “the color story” and “the pattern story.”  She shows knitted samples that demonstrate what a color story is versus a pattern story, but goes further by showing how to tell one over the other, and the role that color changes play in those two scenarios.

This DVD not only has fundamental concepts of using color, it features a number of great, and fairly easy looking projects, that facilitate the experimentation with color Ms. Bryant has equipped the viewer to pursue.  The DVD, when placed into a computer, also contains a downloadable pdf of a beautiful shawl pattern (which she showcases in the DVD as well).

I thought I knew how to pick colors.

I thought I had a good gauge on color, but in the first 5 minutes of watching this video I quickly realized I sort to my favorites, which are often safe, and not particularly a WOW.  When Laura Bryant shared her primary axiom, “You don’t get WOW by doing the expected!” I realized that I didn’t know that much about color mixing and matching after all.

I’ve learned, by watching this program, that I have a huge opportunity to get more adventurous with my color choices, and by understanding the concepts clearly and wonderfully demonstrated in this video, I am excited to make new and different color choices when making yarn purchases, designing my knitting projects, or fashioning my own handspun yarn in the future.

For more information:

About Laura Bryant and PRISM Yarn

View a preview of the DVD

Order your copy of “A Knitter’s Guide to Color with Laura Bryant”

An afternoon with Chris French

24 Apr

We tried to meet once before last December, but his travel plans were canceled and our meeting postponed.  His wisdom, sense of humor, and advanced technical knowledge of knitting and spinning yarn by hand had been sources of inspiration for me via Twitter (where he is @vtknitboy).  We’ve been trading messages for at least a year and I am always excited to meet other knitters, particularly other men who knit and who are well respected as he is.  His name is Chris French and we finally had the opportunity to meet yesterday during his last-minute trip to Orlando, Florida, my city of residence.

His smile, laugh and ebullient nature lit up Infusion Tea in College Park, a suburb of Orlando, as he walked in the door, accompanied by his partner, Jeff.  While we waited for lunch to be served, Chris presented me with an amazing gift – a handspun skein of 20 percent bunny (one of his own bunnies!) and 80 percent alpaca, also hand-dyed in some of my favorite woodland hues.  Chris has a luxurious palate for fiber and he knits primarily with handspun or high-end yarns.  The picture here does not do his work justice, but having felt the wondrously soft skein myself, I can attest not only to the quality of his fibers, but also of his spinning and dyeing work as well.  I was particularly surprised when he shared he had only been dyeing yarn for about 6 months, for if you see the emerald and chestnut colors he blended into this particular skein, it appears like a more advanced artist had crafted such a colorway.  I was in awe not only of his kindness, but also the incredible technical talent Chris possesses and demonstrates in everything he does.

After some lovely luncheon conversation, Jeff took leave and left Chris and me on a sofa and oversized chair in the back corner of the tea house.  We had another mission – Chris had offered to help me learn how to do toe-up socks (because cuff-down socks have provided me with countless hours of both joy and frustration, specifically with the gusset pick-up).  As he taught me the fundamental techniques involved (e.g., Judy’s Magic Cast-On) he also infused general knitting tips (as well as admonishing me for my favor toward certain lines of commercially produced yarn).

With no offense intended to my female fellow knitters, because male knitters are a rare commodity where I live, there is a different energy, a rare comfort I feel in the company of other male knitters, a camaraderie that I don’t experience that often.  Because I don’t attend knitting evenings on a regular basis, I was reminded of the joy and wonder experienced when two knitters come together and not only create together, but learn from each other (though, in this particular case, it was truly me who was doing all the learning).

My only sadness was that our 4 hours together went by far too quickly and it only made me wish we lived closer in proximity so more frequent opportunities to partake of this knitterly brotherhood of sorts could be enjoyed.  Chris is a skilled instructor and an all around great guy who not only has vast knowledge of the fiber arts, but he also knows his tea like I’ve never seen with anyone before.  As we ordered a pot of green tea, Chris engaged the tea tender in dialogue about the temperature of the water, and insisted we allow the tea to cool slightly before enjoying its smoky jasmine flavor.

The true test of a good teacher is that a learned skill can be repeated after the teacher is gone and with my recollections of our afternoon, coupled with clear notes he drew in my notebook, I was able to begin a full-size sock in appropriate gauge for myself this afternoon using the techniques he shared with me.  The true test will be the heel but knowing it won’t require gusset pick-ups as cuff-down sock knitting does (and where I often and invariably make unnecessary errors), I know it will be much easier.

Chris (@vtknitboy) sells his beautiful yarn and knitted finished objects as well so if you want a treasure to knit up a family heirloom or something special for a dear friend or relative, his handiwork is something of high quality well worth every dollar paid.  Also, knowing your purchases are from a wonderful man with a kind spirit, you can be assured his good energy was spun into everything he creates!

The afternoon I spent with Chris yesterday was awesome, and I hope during his next visit to Orlando we have another opportunity to spend time chatting, enjoying a cup of tea, and flinging some fiber.

New Man on Campus

27 Mar

Last Wednesday, I had the opportunity to go to the University of Central Florida campus in Orlando to meet with my graduate advisor and seek out additional resources to answer some specific questions I had.  And, noting the degree of detail I applied to prepare for my meetings, you would’ve thought it was my first day of school.

Exiting one of the campus parking garages, I could immediately sense the energy – people going to and fro, some grabbing lunch on the run, others taking a break in the shade of a tall tree, some skateboarding or rollerblading to one destination or another.  I arrived well in advance of my appointment to ensure I had time for finding my way around and getting to Colbourn Hall on time.  Although I am noticeably older than most of the students in my view that day, I never felt like I don’t belong.

While waiting for my graduate advisor, Dr. Jocelyn Bartkevicius, a student walked by where I was sitting and asked if I knew the location of a particular office.  I said that I didn’t, but directed him to the office of another person with whom I had just talked with and who was very knowledgeable about the school’s geography and policies.  The young man’s response was, “Thank you, sir!”  That’s when the delusion of holding on to my own youth was diminished and when I knew that despite that, all was still well in my world.  I’ll categorize it as Southern charm, versus an assessment of relative age to the speaker.

If it wasn’t possible for me to be any more excited about school starting in August, I became even more so after my meeting with Dr. Bartkevicius.  Hearing about the various courses in the program and topics that are covered in them ignited my own imagination and began to make the act of going back to school much more tangible and real to me than what had emerged when I received the email in early March informing me of my being granted admission to the Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program.

As I left the campus that day, my mind still full of myriad thoughts from my meetings, I had gained a comfort, learning some additional information that helped me think about my first semester in graduate school.  I was successful in finding the offices where I needed to go, and reveled in the vibrant spirit present on campus that day.  As I walked to my car, I thought, “I want to be a part of this!”  Then, as I continued on, I realized that I am a part of it, and when classes begin in August, the reality will become even more visceral, the learning more palpable, and then journey of the experience will officially begin.

A Sock Knitter’s Quandary

27 Feb

If you follow me on Twitter (@BrianKnits), you might be aware I have recently revisited sock knitting.  I completed the first sock of my second pair ever a couple of weeks ago, and since then, I have been spending time working on the second sock of the pair.  But, I get ahead of myself.

Sock #1

The finished sock is actually the product of a do-over.  When I got to the Gusset Pick-Up (the point where smooth sailing turns to the Bermuda Triangle), it got messed up.  Then, trying to frog in a state of frustration, I ended up losing my place and in a fit of knitter’s rage I ended up pulling out over 9 inches of stockinette stitch and ribbed cuff to begin anew.

Sock #1 was finished and looks as it should – even without slight holes near the heel as is a typical defect newer sock knitters experience (from what I’ve been told).

Sock #2

I had a plan for this weekend.  I was going to finish sock #2 and be able to write about how I overcame my mental block on socks, how I successfully completed my second pair of socks and how excited I was to immediately jump into another pair using sock yarn I recently purchased in my state of elation upon finishing sock #1.  That was my plan.

However, on Friday night, something went terribly wrong.  I reached a point (again, during the Gusset Pick-Up) at which I became confused, lost in a maze of fingering yarn in stockinette stitch, Addi Turbo 2.5 mm. needles, cable holding my Magic Loop intact.  Using videos on YouTube that helped me navigate successfully through sock #1, I tried to determine where to align the round to the needles so I could carry on and begin my gusset decreases.

At this point I knew something was terribly wrong, that something was backward, switched around, fundamentally inappropriate.  However, ignoring my highly refined sense of intuition, I stayed calm and knit on.

A few rows later, on the right side of the fabric, a lovely raised PURL row appeared on my instep.

I will not include here certain favored expletives that emerged upon realizing what had transpired.  At this point, it was late, I was exhausted after a busy week, and had lost all semblance of patience to even begin to attempt to rip out my errors and start that section again.  It was not the time, nor the place.

What I Learned

I think it’s true for many knitters that, as you are very far into a project and you don’t get it right, it’s frustrating.  I know at that moment I realized something had gone terribly wrong, I berated myself for taking this critical point in the project on in a state of exhaustion.  I berated my needles and yarn for not doing what they should’ve been doing (at which point they look at me with silent expression, knowing full well they were only instruments of my misplaced direction).  I also used language of which I am not proud.

At the end of the day, however, I realized this is part of the learning process – which is one of the many great things about knitting.  Every time you take on a new project with more complexity or a new stitch or technique you are incorporating into it, you are learning.  In knitting a sock, by the time I get to the heel, I’ve already knit 9″ of cuff and leg – which gives me the illusion I’m good at it.  And, I would say I am good at 2×2 ribbing and stockinette stitch.  But then comes the heel experience and gusset extravaganza that, technically, is still something new to me.

What I know for sure as a result of this experience is:

  • I should not take on complex projects when I am tired, at the end of a busy week.
  • I should view videos repeatedly BEFORE picking up needles and yarn to ensure I have full comprehension of what I am about to embark upon.
  • If things don’t work out as planned, I should be kinder to myself – it is part of the creative process to make mistakes, take detours, and even sometimes have to simply rip it all out and start over again.
  • Keep going and keep creating!

I’m still not sure what happened, and yes, I may end up just ripping the whole thing out and starting over (because I am stubborn that way).  But ultimately, one of the many joys of knitting is that it is a continuous journey of learning.  Keeping that in perspective when these mistakes emerge, I must remember, keeps both hands and heart happy.

Learning to Knit: One Man’s Story

19 Jan

We all have our personal stories about how we came to knitting (or, how knitting came to us).  Here’s mine…

Learning to Knit

Whenever I stayed with my grandparents as a child, I always slept on a twin bed in Grandma’s sewing room.  There was an old Singer that was built in to a desk, and the room had a slight scent of machine oil and Chantilly powder.  Next to the desk was a chest of drawers, each drawer filled with countless pieces of fabric, some in long lengths with enough to make a dress, some only scraps from previous projects but ones Grandma would, no doubt, use in a future quilt.

Opening the closet doors would reveal large bags and storage tubs filled with rough, prickly acrylic yarn as she also crocheted and knitted.  In my mother’s house today hangs a small girl’s dress my grandmother crocheted for my mother, a masterpiece of handcrafted goodness.  I recall my visits with Grandma and Grandpa and how Grandma could sit in her armchair, The Andy Griffith Show or Leave It To Beaver re-runs playing on television, and without a pattern in sight, she would crochet incredibly intricate lace doilies and table runners with a tiny hook and yarn that looked more like thread.  She had done it much of her adult life, so it came naturally to her, an act of memory and reflex, not requiring notes or instructions.

Growing up in the Great Depression in the Ozark Mountains of Missouri, with three daughters and one on the way by 1946, Mildred had mastered many crafts not for art’s sake, but out of necessity.

Her house was a reflection of her crafting abilities.  Each sofa, chair or bed was covered with a crocheted afghan or sewn quilt patching pieces of blouses she had made for herself or shirts she had made for Grandpa.  These pieces, I realize now, I took for granted simply as a vehicle for warmth, never realizing the amount of work that went into creating something like that.

The quilts that were worn and a bit tattered on the edges were some of my favorites.  One in particular was very soft with time and use, a wedding band quilt that featured overlapping rings of mixed fabric pieces matched with white cotton to create a repeating pattern throughout the quilt.  It was soft and had a patina that shared the memories of cousins who had also used it when they stayed in this same house, slept in this same bed, as long as a decade before.  There was a comfort in that quilt that, when matched with an over-used feather pillow that weighed 20 pounds, I could sleep soundly well into the morning.  My slumber would, however, often break at sunrise as Grandma would be up baking a pie or cake for some social gathering we would be attending, or making bacon and eggs for Grandpa, a breakfast he enjoyed nearly every morning for as long as I can recall.  There is something about waking up to the smell of bacon in the morning and even today the scent transports me to a different time when I was just a boy.

I would not realize just how much work had gone in to those many knitted and crocheted artifacts until over twenty years later.  I realized this not because I watched her complete an entire project, nor even saw photos of her engaged in her art.  I gained this awareness by, myself, learning to knit.

In 2008, as my Grandmother passed her 90th birthday and entered into failing health and demeanor, and with her residing in northern California and I, in central Florida, I wanted a way to connect with her.  I already felt I did connect with both her and my mother when baking or cooking, as that is something that all the women on my Mom’s side of the family do well.  I thought about how Grandma never sat in her chair without some type of craft in hand – knitting, crocheting, embroidery, or other lesser known forms of fiber arts.  Knitting, I thought, is a classic art and I decided that would be my connection – I would teach myself how to knit.

I have rarely been conventional and have not allowed societal perceptions or the judgment of others to prevent me from pursuing exactly what I want. Knitting was no exception.  I could not recall any memories in my life and travels where I had observed a man knitting.  In fact, at that time, without additional research, I had not even seen a photograph of such a scenario.  This, ultimately, made me want to do it even more.

I began researching the needed supplies, made a list, and woke up early one Saturday in November of 2008, near the date of my Grandmother’s birthday, and drove to the nearest big-box craft store.

I am often overwhelmed in these stores, creativity and ideation being strengths of mine, my mind wanders from one shiny object to another, project idea after idea nearly launch my mind into overload.  But on this particular day, I arrived prepared, a man with a plan, and went directly to the fiber arts section.  Now, at that time I did not refer to it as fiber arts, nor had I even really considered it an art form.  I found the section, a few rows in depth, and began perusing the myriad yarns of all colors, textures and thicknesses, and settled on some basic worsted weight wool yarn in a warm brown tone.  I grabbed a set of metal needles (not factoring in any ergonomic concerns or how other knitters may view me at that time, later learning that wooden needles are in fact better for you and facilitate a stronger connection to the natural world) and checked-out post haste.

From there, I drove to a bookseller nearby, and browsed the knitting section, searching for a fundamental volume to serve as a reference on my knitting journey.  Knitting for Dummies was my selection for, after all, I was a dummy when it came to knitting.

Returning home I couldn’t wait to turn on my computer and go to a set of instructional videos I found on YouTube.  Susan Phillips Moscowicz, of Mrs. Moscowicz’s Knits, walked me step by step through the fundamentals of knitting, one at a time.

Casting on, the process to begin a project and get live stitches on the needles, was step 1.  I watched her hands, slightly aged and curled from arthritis, as they began to dance with grace and yarn, creating loops on the needle, forming a set of stitches to begin the project.  After my first attempt, I would be reminded of the childhood maxim, “Practice makes perfect.”  It would take a great deal of practice to get that first project of mine started.

I was learning enough to be dangerous, but did not know enough of the helpful details that make the experience of knitting something by hand an enjoyable and fruitful one.  I began knitting what is called garter stitch, basically the same singular stitch over and over again on each row, every row.  After about 20 rows of garter stitch I grew terribly bored, but felt like I was getting the hang of things.  My knitter’s feathers were arched and boastful in a peacock’s manner, finding a great sense of satisfaction out of simply knitting a small square of fabric.

In my haste to advance to more complex projects, I decided to quickly jump into knitting cables, those beautiful embossed elements often found on fishermen’s sweaters and scarves.  They involve adding a small hook into the equation, one that you are balancing with two knitting needles and yarn.  It too, is a dance, that got me as far as another 20 rows and I was growing frustrated with the slightest mistake (for any project I create should demonstrate a level of perfection), and not knowing how to fix mistakes mid-project, no matter how far into a project I would be I would tear it off the needle and begin ripping out row after row after hand-knitted row (an act termed as “frogging” because you rip it-rip it-rip it out) until there was nothing but a singular slip knot remaining on the needle.  It took a few times for the ritual of frogging to push me to, for a few months to follow, quietly stowing my knitting bag in a dark corner.

It is easy to suspect this would be the end of my knitting career.  It could have been that moment where I could acknowledge I met the goal – I learned how to knit, but that no notable project emerged from these pursuits other than a small cotton washcloth (which I would later learn is difficult to do for a beginning knitter as cotton does not have as much stretch as wool).  For a time, as 2009 approached, I did wonder if I would ever pick up knitting needles again.

As the spring emerged, I told myself there are millions of people in this world who can knit.  People have been knitting for centuries.  Although it may be a bit difficult at first, I continued, it can be done.  And so it was, with a spirit now elevated to not only connecting across the miles to my Grandma, but now I was reminded, too, of connections to Vikings and Edwardian ladies and pioneers of the West, as well as soldiers in World War I that knit socks for themselves and fellow army buddies.  (Nobody asked who made the socks and I doubt they told.)

Socks.  There was a novelty to me that people who knit have the ability to create hats, gloves and socks!  I began pushing my technical skills and knit up a ski cap in a bulky, chunky yarn of oatmeal hue.  With patience and perseverance (and a well-written pattern), I took my time and did just as the instructions directed.  I knitted that hat in a weekend, and it was only about two inches smaller than my own head!  It now serves as a wonderful reminder of my abilities to create something, despite its ability to properly fit.

But socks – those looked incredibly difficult to craft.  I remembered Grandma crocheting slippers, but I couldn’t recall her knitting socks.  This would be something new to me, because I could go to Macy’s and buy 3 pairs of wool socks for about $20 in about 10 minutes time.  Again, I reminded myself of that connection to the millions of people who have traversed the knitter’s path over the centuries and I affirmed that I could do this!

I could do this with some additional, professional help.  Though some may have thought psychiatry was the order of the day, I instead researched a local yarn store, The Black Sheep, that offered private lessons on the art of sock knitting.  I called, registered, and made the acquaintance of Julie, my knitting instructor.

It would be a series of three weeks, each week progressing past another main component of the sock, building and building upon the lesson of the prior week, from cuff to leg to gusset to toe, to see an actual foot shape emerge from my work.  It was very thin yarn being knit with very small needles, but I kept going and going, committed to completing the project.

At the completion of the third and final class, I successfully finished knitting one entire sock.  I was filled with exuberance and a bit of knitter’s pride as I laid it on the table and admired it – knitted to cling comfortably to the shape of my own foot – and its colors, the yarn creating on its own without any help from me, a faux Fair Isle print reminiscent of the multi-colored Norwegian sweaters now coming back in style.

Julie allowed me my five minutes of sock knitting fame as I paraded around the yarn store, showing my finished object to Anne, the storeowner, and other patrons, as if the sock were a Picasso or Rembrandt.  To me, it was.

After I returned to the project table and began packing up my supplies, Julie left me with one piece of insight that, honestly, took the wind out of my sails.  “Now that you have one sock completed,” she said, “you have to knit another one to have a pair!”

I would complete that pair a few weeks later.  I wanted the learning to stick, the tips she gave me (not just about knitting socks, but knitting in general) had clearly tightened up my technique and I didn’t want to lose the learning to stagnant behavior.

Scarves then began appearing in piles in our home.  I had mastered the fundamentals of knitting and with just two stitches I was able to create a variety of patterns.  Using medium-sized yarns (larger than the tiny sock yarn with which I had just worked) dyed in brilliant colors, some even handspun, I was completely inspired by what the yarn would evolve into with just a little manipulation on my needles.

There were basket weave patterns and ribbed patterns creating luxuriously thick scarves perfect for any winter adventure.  The original objective to learn to knit and become good at it was complete – now what?

My endless curiosity of my newfound passion would drive me to continue to create, to take string and craft from it something beautiful, something lasting, something that I could give to others that came from my own hands.  There was not only that connection to my Grandma now, to the many projects she had finished, amassed and given away to others as gifts, but to the many throughout history who may have initially, at some point, learned to knit out of necessity, needing to craft something warm to weather a harsh Colonial winter or prevent losing limbs to the chill of a World War battle in the French countryside.

As I knit, I was and continue to be connected to history, to people – both familiar and unknown – and, most importantly, to my Grandma.  Our connection now is a spiritual one with her passing in September of 2009.

Because I had not yet come out of the knitting closet to my mother who, with her three sisters, was charged with cleaning out my Grandma’s house after her death, had sent bags and bags of yarn, fabric and notions to charity.  How I would have cherished even one set of her knitting needles!

It is of no consequence now, for with each project I knit today, I reflect not only on the yarn, the technique, the process, the animal who gave its fur to create the yarn, I also reflect on the person for whom I am making the item, my hope that it will bring them joy, and lastly, with the final stitch of each project, I think about Grandma, her endearing hearty spirit and her endless passion and commitment to create beautiful things – one stitch at a time.

The Creative Process: Experimentation

21 Dec

I always get excited each time I begin a new knitting project.  I look through my stash (or the latest arrivals at local yarn stores) and find yarn that speaks to me in the moment.  I may have something in mind for someone specific, or I may simply be inspired by a colorway or fiber.

This weekend I started one such new project.  I have been on a scarf roll recently, and wanted to do one with a pattern that created not only some visual interest, but was a bit more complex in construction.  I selected some beautiful hand-dyed yarn I purchased while on holiday in Alaska this past autumn in autumnal colorways of orange, brown and deep red.

At first, I thought I would go simple.  Garter stitch was the first day.

After about 20 rows, I was already bored and was also not particularly fond of how the colorway was knitting up in that simplistic knit-every-stitch-on-every-row pattern.

Next, I took to Ravelry in search of a pattern that may be a bit more complex while not an instrument of torture.  I found what appeared to be a simple 4-row pattern from a woman in Finland.  I started at it and, although I liked the pattern and how the colorway was evolving, as I got about 4 inches into the effort, I noticed the sides beginning to curl in.  I wasn’t knitting in stockinette stitch, though I may as well have been.  And the Finnish Pattern was the second day.

Finally, after another cursory review of available free patterns on Ravelry I found one that is really interesting, knits up fairly quick as there are a multitude of slip stitches, and it creates a very unique pattern.  No curling.  No odd behavior otherwise.  A beautiful square edge.  And the Prismatic Scarf was the third day.  I’m sold on it.

What I was reminded of over the past few days is that, as with any artistic pursuit, there are stops and starts.  There is trying a different color, a different medium.  For fiber artists, it can be a variation of color, of fiber, of needle size, of pattern – and all of those variables behave in different ways when combined together.  Our role as fiber artists is to experiment, to not be afraid to make mistakes, and to make a few false starts until we find the pattern that really works well with the yarn we are using and finding the right needle size to create the gauge that is appropriate for what we are trying to accomplish.

Some may fear making mistakes, some may pick up a pattern and knit it to the end come hell or high water.  I say – try it until it is what you want it to be, and do what you need to do to evolve a design or pattern until it is something uniquely your own.

A pattern may suggest a particular type of yarn – use a different one.  The pattern may suggest a smaller needle – use a larger one.  The worst that could happen is that it doesn’t evolve as you hoped it would and you can pull it out and start over again (the yarn does not have to go to waste).

I hope this holiday season, and in the year ahead, in your fiber arts as well as life in general, you give yourself permission to make mistakes, to try new things, experiment with new materials and methods – doing all of this until the right combination emerges.  And that combination will ultimately become your artistic legacy.

Do men and women knit differently?

11 Sep

I was reflecting on some of my early days as a knitter and some of the groups or knit nights I would attend.  I remember going to these groups, or to classes, and making some observations about how me and the other guy in the group were approaching our craft versus how the women in the group were approaching it.

Before I share my observations, I do want to make it clear that these are based on my personal perspective and what I saw play out in the groups and classes I’ve attended.  I am also using more general language so as not to imply that “all men” or “all women” take a particular approach.

Men tend toward focusing on the task at hand.  Women tend toward focusing on relating to each other, while enjoying the act of knitting.

At knit nights, I typically find a chair, often in the corner or on the edge of the action (being an introvert by nature, I often prefer to avoid sitting near the center of attention).  I remember my general focus in these groups to be on my knitting project.  After all, it is Knit Night.  We are there to knit, aren’t we?

I would also find great entertainment in the dialogue that would emerge in the room as, primarily the women, would share insights into their days, their families and their lives.  They spoke of milestones – births, deaths, anniversaries – and of trials – illness, broken relationships, and even violence.  I was impressed with their candor and there was this sense, to me, that what happened at knit night stayed at knit night.

Now, as the knitting began and the conversation ramped up, I would also notice periodic exclamations such as, “Damn, I lost my place!”  ”I knit an entire row of 330 stitches I should have purled!”  ”I hate lace – is that new sock yarn you’re using?” and I wondered if the focus of relating to others served not only to build relationships, but to create distractions to one’s craft.  Even at times I found myself caught up and captivated as a participant in the dialogue, only to realize I, too, had fallen off-pattern.

I don’t know that there is a “right way,” as I believe we each have our own way that works for us.  What I do know is that, for me, I inherently focus on the project and conversation is simply the icing on the Knit Night experience’s cake.

Men tend toward a “project management” approach to completing the project.  Women yield beautiful things (but also experience frustration of being distracted, going off pattern, and spending time fixing more mistakes).

In some of my earlier projects where I knew just enough to be dangerous but not enough to really know what I was doing (and to avoid some of the common pitfalls of which most other knitters were aware), I would lose my place, forget to count a row and throw the pattern off, among other knitterly indiscretions.  Then I got smart – or obsessive compulsive.  You decide.

I’m now at a point where I take patterns and re-type them in the form of a checklist that I can physically check off each row that I complete to make sure that I know exactly where I am in the pattern beyond a reasonable doubt, and I minimize any possible chance of overlooking a pattern element or simply losing my place.  Does it still happen?  Absolutely.  But it does occur with much less frequency than it would if I weren’t using such stringent project management processes.

I am always amazed, in contrast, to the women who I’ve encountered at knit nights – they are caught up in the conversation, contribute fully and wholeheartedly to the animated dialogue – and they still yield lace shawls, complex sock patterns among many other beautiful finished objects!  Now, as mentioned earlier in this post, I do hear more acknowledgements and exclamations of errors that require fixing, but at some point, it appears effortless – that a meaty conversation can be held at the same time that a complex 40 row pattern is being flawlessly executed.  That is a gift I’m confident I did not receive.

Men appear to learn in a more structured, linear path.  Women appear to learn in a more circuitous, non-linear way.

I am a linear thinker.  I don’t know if that’s a “man thing” or just the way Brian was made.  Especially when I am learning something, I think in process terms – what is step 1?  Step 2?  Step 3?  I found in the classes that I have attended in the past, I become very task-focused (after all, I am there to learn), and prefer to go step by step on the technique which I am learning.

In my experience however, the women I have encountered are able to somehow acquire a new skill in pieces, ebbing and flowing from “This is how you do a Make-One leaning to the right” to “My son is graduating on Thursday and his girlfriend just told him she’s pregnant,”  right back to, “Don’t you love this cashmere?” Meanwhile, BrianKnits is still trying to practice the Make-One Right from five minutes ago.

In all of these circumstances the bottom line, for me, is that we have to experiment to find the outlets, communities and places that allow us to explore our fiber arts in a way that is pleasing and enjoyable to us. And as long the output is what you want it to be, the process by which you get there really doesn’t matter.  It’s more important to have fun and enjoy the act of creating, of knitting or crocheting, and to have a love affair with yarn.

What do you think about these observations?  Have you seen similar situations?  Are these off-base and have you had experiences that demonstrate the contrary?  Please share your thoughts – I’d love to hear from you!

Attack of the Granny Square

2 Aug

I started my fiber arts journey as a knitter.  I dallied in crochet momentarily a year or so ago, as I hearkened back to my childhood visits with grandparents and Grandma teaching me how to make really long chains.  I didn’t take it much beyond that.  Then, earlier this year, I learned how to spin my own yarn, but there was still this voice that had just enough crochet ability to be dangerous that wanted to learn one of the most basic of crochet projects – the Granny Square.

One night while folding laundry I popped in a crochet DVD that a friend gave me and found step-by-step instructions on how to crochet a simple granny square.  Laundry folded, I grabbed a hook and yarn and I got half way through one square and ripped it out. Then, I got all the way through. Granny Square #1 complete.

Somehow, though, over the past week and a half or so, I have become consumed by crochet and thoroughly engrossed by the Granny Square.

First, I made a bunch in Lion Brand Jiffy in Denim Spray. First there were a couple for practice, and then I crocheted 2 and 1/2 skeins into Granny Squares.  Last night I watched some videos on YouTube to learn how to whipstitch squares together and, voila – a crocheted Granny Square scarf was mine by bedtime!

The edges aren’t perfect. The tension varied a bit from square to square. But, much like when I completed my first knitted scarf that could be considered a “double wide,” I had a great sense of satisfaction. I learned a new skill. I practiced it. I finished something.

Now, I know there are some hardcore knitters out there who wouldn’t touch a crochet hook if their lives depended on it. There are also some crocheters out there who wouldn’t dare take their grip off their shiny hooks for anything.

To all that I say: Knowing various skills gives me more flexibility as an artist. I can have more techniques in my wheel house to draw from when making something and gives me infinitely more possibilities when it comes to deciding what to do with the yarn I buy or spin myself.

Now, simultaneously, before I took the time to weave in ends and whipstitch the scarf together last night, I also unearthed 15+ skeins of Lion Brand’s Vanna’s Choice in 3 different beautiful earth tone shades and began working those up in, you guessed it, Granny Squares! I had originally purchased the yarn with the intent of knitting an afghan (and even mentioned making an afghan in my list of 40 things I wanted to this year, the year I turned 40). I had a few false starts in knitting the squares and I just wasn’t feeling the project.

Then, I pulled some of the yarn out last week and tested it with the Granny Square pattern and I was very pleased with how it was knitting up. Then I tried the second color, and then the third. As I put the squares together, the brown, green and sienna all began blending nicely together, and the stack began to grow and grow.

With all of the squares I’ve made in the past week or so, I can now do one in about 20 minutes without looking at the pattern. This from someone who wasn’t really crocheting much at all even a couple of weeks ago.

I don’t share this to brag (and those who know me, hopefully know that I’m not the type to do that). I share this with the intent to inspire others.

It IS possible, with a bit of perseverance and practice, to learn a new skill or technique.

It is also perfectly okay to cross over into another element of the fiber arts and spend some time experimenting there.

Am I turning my back on knitting? Absolutely not – it’s my first fiber love! But what I appreciate now is that I can go from knitting something to hand spinning some yarn to crocheting a project with a completely different look from my knitting projects.  It gives me versatility and really ignites my creativity!

When you find yourself getting a bit bored, watch some videos online to learn a new technique.  Don’t be afraid to take on a more complex pattern and project in your technique of choice. Step out even further and learn a new technique - jump the line from knitting to crochet and see where it takes you (or vice versa). You may fall back to your first love, too, but it never hurts to try, and your adventure could only end up bringing you immeasurable joy and inspiration to take your fiber arts projects in exciting directions and to new heights!

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