I am home again after a week in Oregon (family stuff). So, I can finally put up the VogueKnitting Live yarn photos — which have been sitting here in my computer all the time. (I have been out of town 4 of the last 5 weekends — and the weekend I was home was Easter — so I am pretty much behind in everything)
These are Sarah's yarns. The purple hemp is for a lace top (something like the red Vogue one I knit for her). The soft blue multi is for a baby sweater and hat — figuring next to blues it looks blue and next to pinks the pink accents pop! The pink/orange/yellow yarns will be knit up into a capelet for Gwen (she has outgrown her sparkly pink one, sadly). The orange yarn is for a shrug — she bought the pattern at the Hazel Knits booth.
These are also Sarah's yarns. They are going to be a nursing q'mitl! (a q'mitl is a poncho-like garment we love — so easy to wear and so flattering, made of 2 rectangles that can be knit up in just about any stitch pattern, or combination of stitch patterns, you can imagine)
These are my yarns! I have 2 store-bought garments I want to duplicate (I wear them all the time — they just work for me so well). One is a long straight vest — and these are the yarns I chose! Love the drama!
This linen/tencel blend is part of my plan to duplicate my soft linen jacket. The colors are actually darker than in this photo (my jacket is charcoal and I wanted to keep the same tone). I have been looking for theright yarn for this project for a couple of years! Had not seen a linen/tencel blend before.
These are my yarns too. I have been wanting to make a new q'mitl that is about the same size as my Butterfly Q'mitl, but in different colors. I danced around for awhile before settling on a forest theme — and got all excited over the possible leaf-like stitch patterns and maybe some hanging mossy, lichen-y bits! These are my forest yarns! Much running back & forth thru the Yarn Market to find them! Terrific fun!
I did not get these yarns at the Yarn Market, but I did get the idea for the project from a VogueKnitting Live class. I plan to make a lace doman top — based on traditional triangular lace shawl techniques. Thank you, Brooke Nico, for the inspiration!
Leave a comment