2024

Can’t decide which one/ones to leave behind so I just got all. Set me back more than β‚±2K, yup 😩. I’m never stepping inside a Fully Booked (a local bookstore) again…

Three book titles that I picked up from the bookstore

The WIP that’s been taking all my time after I cast it on this new year

Ever since we came back from Korea, I was determined to knit my husband a new sweater. He’s worn the first (and only) long-sleeved sweater I made for him so much and he consistently remarked he wished it had pockets. Well, far be it for me to disappoint, I’m doggedly making Tea with Bread and Jam by Heidi Kirrmaier while the temps here are not yet oven-levels. As you can probably imagine, the worsted weight sweater will be on my lap as it grows, and at 30 plus Celsius, that spells torture. Ah, the things I do in the name of love.

A brown and almost-black striped sweater knitting work in project

2023

The best part of freezing my behind off in arctic places is the chance to wear some of my handknit sweaters and accessories. These are just a few of them. Most of the time here in Seoul, I bury myself in them to make sure I don’t end up like an icicle. I’m grateful to be here though, especially when we are reunited with our daughter.

A collage of three sweaters and an accessory that I knitted for myself

I’m on a roll… I recently finished Nelson and Alex DeMilles' The Deserter (4.5 stars for me) so I grabbed another book from the pile.

Book cover of Harlan Coben's The Stranger

My husband watched this limited series on Netflix and DNF (Did Not Finish). He swore off any work by Harlan Coben since then, that’s how badly he received the first couple of episodes. I’ve read a few of Mr. Coben’s novels before hence I don’t understand Husband’s reaction. (Well, he didn’t like Where the Crawdads Sing film either which I read and totally enjoyed.) I prefer reading books to watching TV and movies so maybe my reception to the story will once again be the opposite of his.

I picked up this book during a recent trip to National Book Store. It’s my first Nelson DeMille work. Not bad…. It keeps me reading which keeps my hands from knitting. I need my hands off my knitting needles because I can feel some pain already at times. The writing style reminds me of James Patterson. I don’t know if that’s a good thing or not. πŸ“–πŸ“š

A softcover copy of the novel The Deserter by authors Nelson and (son) Alex DeMille

Hot Off The Needles and already I am planning to frog it. 🧢

I'm modeling my latest hand-knitted scarf. It is brown, it is 100% silk, it is super long. I am not comfortable wearing such a long scarf and I did my best to drape it around my neck in the most flattering way I know how.

This is the Little Lace Scarf by Lisa Hannes.

TBVH, I dislike the finished object. The pattern is great, the design is too, but I realized now that my yarn was not ideal for the project. I used Knitting for Olive Pure Silk, which is, as the name suggests, 100% silk. Which means, it is crazy soft and drapey. Not good for something that is long and narrow. I feel like I have draped a basahan (that’s our local word for cleaning rag) around my neck, huhuhu. I have yarn left over because I initially intended to make two tassels for it. Luckily, I still have not gotten around to cutting the yarn.

I’m really sorry I don’t love this scarf at all. I feel like I wasted a lot of time doing it. Maybe I would have been happier had I used a rounder, plumper yarn instead and it’s not as long. (I measured the finished scarf and it’s more than 2.5 meters long tip to tip. Oh, my goodness.)

Once I’m ready, I will frog it and make another Silke by Justyna Lorkowska. I think that design and this yarn should be a better match.

Once in a while I get it in my head that I want to knit socks. 🧢

(On a scale of 1 to 10, I am a 2 as a sock knitter. I just don’t enjoy it. Second Sock Syndrome? I practically invented it.)

Once in a while though I get rewarded with something nice and functional, like this pair.

Owing to the beauty of the self-striping nature of my sock yarn, I knitted myself something that I could wear with my flip flops. It’s basically all vanilla until I reach the toes. I followed the instructions from Sake Socks (a free pattern by Jackie Tabor www.ravelry.com/patterns/…).

Maybe it will take a long time before I knit myself socks again but for now, I will enjoy these and thank the sock gods for holding my hand along the way.

Aren’t they cute?

I knitted a vest for my husband.

A handknitted gray short-sleeved vest with my eyeglasses on it for visual interest

Admittedly, it has a feminine silhouette but he’s not complaining. Or dares not πŸ˜‚ . He reasons he’s wearing a jacket over it anyway so it’s hardly visible. The important thing is the wooly garment will keep him warm in winter. The family is going to Seoul this December so we’ll be needing a lot of cold-weather clothes on this trip.

Another look at the gray vest

The yarn I used was repurposed from a test knit I did two years ago.It used to be a woman’s open cardigan. Now it’s a man’s vest. Something tells me this might not be its final journey yet πŸ˜‰

It’s no secret that I am an avid knitter. I can be incorrigible as well for I insist on making garments that are not suitable for tropical Manila weather.

One of my favorite pastimes is pattern searching on Ravelry - a monster internet resource for all things knitting/crochet/weaving-related patterns. And this morning while I was watching a YouTube video podcast, the host featured a design that immediately caught my eye. Naturally, I jumped to Ravelry and checked it out.

A fluffy white handknit sweater with a turtleneck as worn by a model

This is the Soft Loop Sweater by Other Loops. The design can be seen and the pattern purchased here www.ravelry.com/patterns/…

I love the softness of the fabric as seen from the project photos. I love the way the turtleneck wraps around the model. I just don’t like the amount of positive ease (or how loose the garment is going to be), especially since it is boxy in silhouette. I’ve done a few of those boxy sweaters and know that it’s not for me; the deep armscye is a major turnoff for me personally. However, since I have a few years of experience in knitting, I am quite confident that I can work my way around that. Now all I need is to take a deep breath, push this thought aside in the meantime, focus on finishing some of my WIPs (works in progress), and then come look at it again in the future. If I still want it then Bob’s my uncle.

This hand-knit shirt project is my constant companion these days. It’s growing faster than I expected and I can’t be happier.

The little square thing on my knitting needle is called a stitch marker. It marks the place in my work where something different from the one before it is about to be done. I crafted that cute stitch marker myself. Sometimes, I feel inexplicably anxious and it helps when I can make something with my hands, however small.

A knitting work in progress on the needles with a square-shaped  handmade stitch marker sitting in between stitches

“If you’ve got the trunk for the junk, embrace the junk in your trunk. You do you.” - Tayler of the Wool Needles Hands YouTube podcast.

It’s the advice I didn’t know I needed.

Day 19 - EDGE

I pinned the edges of my handknit shawl to show off the picots.

A red handknit shawl that is pinned to a rubber board

I have a ton of yarns waiting to be transformed into wearable items. Among those are acrylic yarns that I amassed back when I was just starting to learn to knit by hand. I took a hard look at them and picked out Caron One Pound which is as big as a baby’s pillow. 100% acrylic. But who’s gonna know based on these pictures?

a handknit sweater in dark magenta modeled by myself

P.S. This color is the queen of pain when it’s time for official photos. I can never get it right.

another look at my handknit sweater

P.P.S. I may be an able knitter but I can’t sew to save my life.

Clothing label with the words handmade with love sewn on the collar of the sweater