Catching Up: The First Half of 2022

Knitting

All of the Lights

I LOVE this cardigan. It was fairly complex knit and had a lot of pieces I hadn’t done before (mostly pockets!), but I wore this very often after I finished it and now that it’s getting colder, I’m excited to start wearing it again.

 
I am standing on my porch wearing a speckled, cabled cardigan that hits at my hips.
 

Epernay

Another “I LOVE THIS” make — I snagged some Corrie Confetti from La Bien Aimée (grey + rainbow = everything I ever wanted), saw this sweater when it launched, and immediately knew that the two needed to go together. I didn’t get to wear this one as often before it got too warm, but again, I’m glad we’re getting closer to sweater weather.

 
I am standing on my porch wearing a grey cabled sweater that has neon tweed accents.
 

The Pandemic Shawl

Back in March 2020, I started this shawl using lace weight yarn on teeny tiny needles because I tried tons of variations and this was my favorite. Well, two years later, I finally finished it! It came out exactly the way I wanted it to, and is absolutely worth the time spent — but boy am I never going to knit something this big on needles this small ever again.

I am holding a striped rainbow shawl up to show off the size and the stripes.
I am standing on my porch wearing a shawl that has rainbow and greyscale stripes.

Yet Another Musselburgh

…this time in Valkyrie Fibers’ self-striping in Imladris, which is just the best combination of colors.

 
A stockinette hat in purple, green, brown, yellow, and grey stripes.
 

Larinda

This yarn+project combo had been on my mind for a while, and I finally got around to making it. I loved the original color of Larinda when Jen at Webster Street Knittery launched the pattern, and I may have one or two two-skein sets of toffee-colored yarn, so the hardest decision was choosing which toffee-colored yarn I should use. This perfect gingerbread color from Little Skein won, and like I already said, it’s perfect.

 
I am standing in my hallway wearing a gingerbread/toffee colored textured scarf.
 

Brioche Tiles

Continuing my “Let’s knit with Little Skein yarn that I already have a project in mind for”, I pulled out another yarn combo I’d been saving and knit this brioche beauty. It’s exactly the low-contrast that I wanted.

I'm standing on my porch wearing a dark blue and dark grey brioche triangular shawl.
I am standing on my porch holding up a dark blue and dark grey striped brioche shawl.

My Brother’s Forth

Ysolda’s swatchless hats are pretty much my go-to when I need a hat, and I finally branched out with a not-Musselburgh for my brother, out of handspun from fiber he bought me with a note that said “make me something out of this”.

 
A purple hat knit with handspun sitting on a table.
 

Spinning

I spun a LOT the first six months of the year, folks, so these will probably be a bit brief.

Iris

As discussed above, this was a request from my brother — some Polwarth from Created by Elsie B.

 
A skein of purple handspun yarn.
 

Koomasee OOAK Falkland

Every time I start a spin with fiber from Koomasee, I think “I will like this an ordinary amount” and every single time, I am enamored with it the entire time.

 
A skein of colorful handspun yarn.
 

Koomasee Dusty Rose

Another Koomasee, also Falkland, also a joy to spin.

 
A skein of dusty pink handspun yarn.
 

Moody Three-Ply

Something different! This is fiber from Caroline Dick Designs, and it was my first attempt at a three-ply, which I think succeeded admirably. The third ply makes it even moodier than I think a two-ply would have, which I really like.

 
A skein of pink, brown, and green handspun yarn.
 

A Frabjous Spin

This is an older braid I had, some BFL from Frabjous Fibers.

 
A skein of colorful handspun yarn.
 

Lavanda

Merino from Malabrigo, that I spun up to eventually pair with the leftover Iris to make a shawl…someday.

 
A skein of purple handspun yarn.
 

Green-Grey Masham

Another braid from Caroline Dick, although I’m not sure I like spinning with Masham that much.

 
A skein of green handspun yarn.
 

Blue Polwarth/Silk

This was a braid I got about a year ago when a friend and I took a trip to Port Gamble and I stopped by the Artful Ewe. As always, Polwarth is one of my favorite fibers to spin.

 
A skein of blue handspun yarn.
 

Alpaca/Silk

The first of a batch I got from Fiber Fusion NW - this is from Alexandra the Art of Yarn and turned out soooo soft. Definitely making something that sits close to the skin with this.

 
A skein of grey handspun yarn.
 

Mixed BFL

Another from Fiber Fusion NW, but this time from Island Fibers. I love the way the singles spun up marled and the extra-marled they got when plying.

 
A skein of brown and white handspun yarn.
 

Stitching

Summer Birb

I’ve got all four of these kits from Junebug and Darlin and stitched up this Summer Birb at the beginning of summer (which reminds me I should stitch up the fall version now that it’s officially Fall!)

 
A small cross stitch with a brightly colored spring bird sitting in a wreath.
 

Rainbow Linen Outfit

I haven’t sewn in a while, but I did make this matching outfit out of rainbow linen that I bought at JoAnn two years ago. The top is a Wiksten Shift Top, and the skirt is the Gypsum skirt, both patterns I’ve made before. I love how this turned out and I love wearing them both together and separately.

 
I am standing outside wearing a striped linen shirt skirt. The shirt is striped horizontally and the skirt is striped vertically. I am laughing at someone off-camera.
 

Catching Up: The Rest of 2021

Oh, hey there. It’s only been a month or so, right? Definitely still 2021. September…2021. That’s definitely right. Right? Anyway. Here are some things I’ve been working on for the last few months.


Knitting

‘Onipa’a by Leila Raven

I made this using yarn from Ocean By the Sea and it’s so soft and glowing and feels like I’m wrapped in a cocoon.

 
 

Truly Textural by Lesley Anne Robinson

Another project with my own handspun! This is handspun from Hipstrings via my brother, and I paired it with this great toffee color from La Bien Aimée x Mondim.

 
 

Hats for Friends

I have knit many Musselburghs, and two of them are for friends of mine who moved to Vermont. The first (left) uses self-striping from Valkyrie Fibers in Appa, and the second (right) is Mongolian Cashmere from ULA + LIA.

 
 

Classic Cozy Raglan (Light) by Jessie Maed Designs

This was a knitalong that a friend hosted while very kindly discussing fit adjustments and math with a bunch of us, and I’m so happy with how it turned out. This is the most delightful mermaid colorway from Serendipitous Wool.

 
 

Baby Cardigans

A childhood friend of mine had twins, and you know I love (almost) any excuse to knit small things, so of course I had to find some scraps and knit her two baby cardigans.

Left: Petit Peridot by Tricot Design MCL, right: Pinson by Nadia Crétin-Léchenne

Nourish

This is another from Little Skein Anne’s Beatrix Box (pattern by Dawn Landix), and I fell in love with this colorway and this pattern.

 
 

Spinning

Woodland Owls Like Toffee

This was a “Giant Spin” (aka 200g) using one braid of Woodland Owls by Elsie B and one braid of Toffee, both Rambouillet. I still haven’t decided what to make with it, but I really love the way the colors came together.

 
 

Blue Raspberry

Another Elsie B braid, this time Falkland Merino & Rose, and it was super soft and dreamy to spin up.

 
 

Color Wheel

It’s an Elsie B bonanza for 2021, I suppose, since this is another one of hers! (or: I ordered them all at the same time and then just pulled from the top of the pile, which happens a lot). I didn’t have a color-plan for this one — I just split it into halves and halves again and halves again, so I’m curious to see how it knits up vs. how it looks in the skein.

 
 

Stitching

Wildflower Bouquet

This was a Crafter’s Box collaboration with Junebug and Darlin and I, as usual, love all of Zoe’s patterns so of course I had to get this one too. Before this, I was a little intimidated by backstitching and considered it a necessary evil (like weaving in ends), but this backstitching was really enjoyable.

 
 

Read Romance

A smaller project (also Junebug and Darlin, obviously) that I will definitely need to make multiples of in different colors.

 
 

Stockings

I moved into a bigger place and decided to make myself a stocking to hang by the fireplace I now have. While I was at it, I made a couple of stockings for my friend and her cat, and even tried my hand at quilting names! They turned out legible, which was pretty much my only goal.

 
 
 
 

Aaaand that’s it for 2021, folks! I’ll be back, later, with some projects from 2022.

April, May, June...

Time is no longer real, and now the year is half over and I haven’t kept track of anything here in three months!

I’ve been working from home since the end of February, and I’m extremely privileged to be able to do so. It’s been a quiet few months because I haven’t been going anywhere, but it’s also been an intense few months because of everything that’s been going on. I didn’t get that boost of productivity that some of the internet seemed to get at the beginning of the quarantine, but I have been plugging away at a few projects.

A caveat: I am still linking to Ravelry projects and users, though I’m aware of the accessibility issues with Ravelry’s new interface. If you have trouble with the new site, please be careful when clicking these links. Until a suitable replacement is made, I will still be using Ravelry for some things, though I’m transitioning other bits away. Stay turned for a deeper dive into what I’m working on for that.

April

I’ve kept up knitting one pair of socks per month from my Farmer’s Daughter Fibers Sock Squad yarn. April’s was a delightful bright yellow that I’ve been wearing when I need cheering up, or when the mornings are chilly.

A close-up of a pair of yellow socks with diamond patterns running up the top.

I finished my Lizzie Shawl by Susanne Sommer and love, love, love the way the colors work together. I used a kit from TréLiz in colors Sealskin and Careless Whisper.

A woman holds up an extremely bright pink and blue brioche shawl.

I started working on the teeniest tiniest project I have ever made (and probably will ever make): a shawl using laceweight yarn on size 00 (1.75 mm) needles. I swatched many different things before finally settling on a heavily modified Peach Tree Shawl by Sylvia McFadden — heavily modified because Sylvia’s pattern uses DK yarn! It may take me an entire year to finish, but in the end I think it’s going to work out really well.

A close up of a giant hand holding teeny tiny needles with speckled rainbow yarn.

I didn’t sew much in April — I made a couple of masks, but everything else felt like too much.

May

I got a little bit of my sewing mojo back in May — I pieced together some Ace & Jig scraps that I had lying around the house. I’d like to make a quilt and once I pieced together what I had, I did some quick math and figured out that I needed a few more scraps to make something lap-sized, so now I have a lot of half-square triangles waiting for more A&J scraps to turn into a larger quilt.

It was #MeMadeMay and I had a very low-key celebration of occasionally wearing clothes I made, and mostly continuing to wear comfortable lounge clothes.

I finished another Junebug and Darlin cross stitch, and despite my best intentions it’s still sitting on the TV table waiting for me to soak it and stretch it out.

A circular embroidery hoop with a floral cross-stitched design that spells out BE BOLD in negative space.

My May Sock Squad socks were this lovely tweedy purple, and I picked this pattern (Astrantia by Helen Stewart) because it had enough interest at the beginning but then turned into plain vanilla once you got past the heel.

A close-up of a lace V pattern running down the outside calf of a pair of socks.

I kept working on my teeny tiny Peach Trees shawl — so much so that when I switched back to sock needles (a very small US 1.5 / 2.5 mm) I was shocked by how big they felt in my hands.

And I also bought an Electric Eel Wheel Nano, a small portable spinning wheel. I noticed a few people post about it on Instagram, and it was at a size- and price-point that I was comfortable with, and friends — I love it. I spun up the rest of my practice roving, immediately ordered more from a local farm, and then quickly ordered even more fiber, this time from Neighborhood Fiber Co. Now I just have to balance my spinning with my yarn stash, which keeps growing even though I tell myself I have enough yarn.

June

I spun up this braid of Polwarth from Neighborhood Fiber Co. and then plied it, and I am in love with the colors it made. The Nano wheel has small bobbins, so I wound up with several small skeins (40g or less), which is fine for a beginner (that’s me), but I can also see myself wanting to be able to spin more on a bigger bobbin. But the whole point of buying the Nano was to try a small electric spinning wheel, and by that criteria, I’ve been extremely successful.

June’s Sock Squad socks were the Lyne socks by Dawn Henderson, who writes such gorgeous patterns. I love these shortie socks and may just make lots of shortie socks for the rest of the year, but we’ll see where the wind takes me on that front.

A pair of ankle-length red socks with a scalloped top edge and twisted ribbing on the top.

I kept knitting my teeny tiny Peach Trees, and I also started a test knit for Transmutation Knits using this soft and shiny purple Linen-Alpaca blend.

A top-down view of a grey-purple lace shawl that is in-progress.

Phew! Are you tired? Because I’m tired. And I haven’t even talked about the important stuff like the momentum in the Black Lives Matter movement and how the pandemic has laid bare the hideousness of capitalism and the way I see crafting as inextricably linked to our liberation. I’m not as good at writing about that stuff anymore, but I’m working on it.

March Roundup

Well, what a weird month March has been, huh? I have been working remotely the entire month — first because I caught a cold from my mom during my visit to Colorado, and then because the whole country has been slowly shutting down to contain COVID-19, starting with Seattle. Somehow the month has whizzed by as I’ve adjusted to sleeping in later (!), getting into a work-from-home groove, and trying to decide if upping my coffee intake has been a good idea or a great idea.

In terms of projects: I hemmed and put buttons on my black wool Estuary skirt and wore it exactly one time before social distancing kicked in. I finished my Brontë Sister Shawl, I knit my March Sock Squad Socks, and I (finally) started my Lizzie Shawl, which I may or may not finish later today.

A white woman wears a three-color scarf with lace patterns and ribbing.

I love the way my Brontë Sister Shawl by Lindsey Fowler turned out. I used three of Junkyarn’s Little Women colors: Marmee, Beth, and Louisa.

A pair of two-color brioche socks with accent heels and toes.

March Socks: Brioche Toe-Up Socks by Lavanya Patricella. As I said on Instagram, I’m really glad I didn’t have to knit these on the bus, because two-at-a-time two-color brioche socks are not for the faint of heart. Luckily I just knit these on my couch, where I could untangle the yarn after each row to my heart’s content.

I’m very close to being done with my Lizzie Shawl by Susanne Sommer, using a kit I preordered from TréLiz in October. I have one pattern repeat left and then the giant icord bind-off, so if I don’t finish it tonight I’m betting I’ll get to it tomorrow. I am so in love with the way these two colors knit up together, and this yarn is a dream.

A drop spindle with some white handspun yarn wound around it.

I’ve also been learning how to spin! I bought a drop spindle and some roving and am slowly getting used to the way fiber feels and how it spins up. It’ll definitely take me a while to improve, but I have to keep reminding myself that this is how learning something new works.

A white woman wearing a handmade black skirt with pockets and a grey linen top.

Outfits: I’m going to be honest here, there were about three days this month where I put on “real” clothes, although one of them was the day I wore my new Estuary Skirt.

Up next: I need to pick a pattern for my April socks. I might start on my Indira using Ocean By The Sea’s yarn, I might (slowly) pick back up where I left off on my Seven Wonders sweater, or I might finally knit the Ursa Sweater I’ve been planning with a delightful colorway from Earl Grey Fiber Company.

2020 Plans

I know right now that I’m not going to get everything done in 2020 that I want to make, but I want to collect it all here so that I can keep track of it somewhere. In 2020, I want to sew/knit down my stash, because I acquired a lot of stuff in 2019. There are definitely things I’m going to buy — I want to make a Clare Coat and my parents bought me some lovely wool melton for Christmas, but I still need to buy the lining — but I want the majority of my projects to use materials I already have.

Sewing

  • Clare Coat

    • Like I said, I have some wool melton from my parents (although they only had 2 yards in stock when they ordered), and I just need to pick a lining, order more wool (and cross my fingers), and get started.

  • Wiksten Shift tops:

    • I have fabric that Arounna from Bookhou designed

    • My parents got me this lovely linen/wool doublegauze that I want to try piecing a top out of, to get the most of the double-sided-ness

    • I have some octopus print fabric that will likely turn into this top too

  • Wiksten Shift Dress

    • I have fabric with metallic gold skulls on it that will, eventually, become a dress. I also have leftover mustard twill that may also turn into a Wiksten dress

  • Kelly Anorak

    • Yes, this has been in my queue for at least a year, maybe two. I think I’ve finally decided that I want to line this, so I’m going to get the lining expansion and some lining, and then I’ll actually make it.

  • Wool Estuary Skirt

    • I have some mystery wool from my grandmother that I think should be enough to make this. This should be higher on my list because I’d like to make it while I can still wear it this winter, so that means soon.

  • Rainbow Estuary Skirt

    • I bought some delightful rainbow linen over the summer but haven’t made anything yet, and how fortuitous for me that I got distracted, because it will make the most amazing Estuary skirt.

  • Several varieties of Sew Liberated’s new Lichen Duster

    • Obviously I need this in a super-luxurious silk or velvet to lounge around the house in, and I’d love to make this out of a twill or similar to wear out and about.

Knitting

Weaving

Oh, I weave? Have I had the same project on my rigid heddle loom for approximately 1.5 years? Yes, and yes. I’d like to finish that project, because I have at least two plans for more woven scarves, perhaps even using something other than plain weave — but we’ll see about that part. I have two skeins of silk/merino from Sweet Georgia that I got at Knit City, and two skeins of yak/bamboo from Bijou Basin Ranch that I got at last year’s Taos Wool and Fiber Festival.

What Else Could I Possibly Have Ideas About?

I’m so glad you asked. I have a few damaged Ace & Jig pieces that I’d like to piece into a variety of things — pants into a top, a dress into a half-square-triangle block, lots of scraps that I can make scrappy things out of. I also have some indigo scraps that I’d like to piece together to make something. I still have my hand-dyed quilt top that I dyed a backing for but have not yet quilted together, because I want to hand quilt it and that still feels intimidating. I want to keep cross-stitching. I want to keep dyeing yarn and fabric. And we all know I’ll probably find another new hobby in 2020 that I won’t be able to resist.

2019: The Final Quarter

I’m in about the same #2019MakeNine place as I was when I last posted, except I finished my Courage Shawl. The Kelly Anorak is still waiting for me, I still haven’t brought myself to make an FBA for the Farrow Dress, I haven’t even thought about the Lou Box Dress, and I still have no further ideas for which blazer/jacket I want to make, although I have decided that I want it to be with two-sided fabric. But all that non-progress on my official Make Nine doesn’t mean I didn’t make anything in the last few months!

So, what else did I make from September — December?

Other things that happened this quarter: I got a new job, I started teaching an online class, and I took my final online class for the post-Master’s Knowledge Management certificate I’ve been working on — so it’s safe to say this was a really busy semester for me, and my making-plans went a little sideways.

I also started having trouble with my wrist, so even though I started a Seven Wonders sweater in the most amazing Farmer’s Daughter Fibers tweed that I’m super pumped about, I had to put it aside for a while because it was too much stress on my wrist. I’m still not entirely sure I can pick it back up again regularly, but I think if I take it slow I’ll be okay. So, instead of knitting the last three or so months, I’ve been sewing more and starting another new hobby — cross stitch.

A circular embroidery hoop with a cross-stitch poinsettia pattern.

Junebug and Darlin makes amazing cross stitch kits, and I picked up three of them when she was up at Urban Craft Uprising in December. This poinsettia wreath was a perfect starter and an equally perfect gift for my mom, who loves poinsettias. I’m already working on my second — Be Bold.

A white woman wearing a very cozy quilted jacket.

This fabric is absolutely amazing, and even though it frayed like anything it was really fun to work with and I love how cozy my third Wiksten Haori is. This time I made the mid-length, and I lined it with a nice toffee colored tencel. I even have a bit left over that I think I can make a top out of!

A white woman wears a spruce-colored skirt with side pockets and a brown hand-knitted sweater.

This is the only picture of my Gypsum Skirt — I’ve been trying to find ‘good’ places to take outfit photos at work, and this spot usually has a reasonable amount of natural light, though you can see I still have some work to do on angles. I pushed this up my to-make list when I found this amazing spruce-colored silk noil. I’ve been layering it with leggings and sweaters (especially my hand-knit sweaters), and it’s been perfect for our Seattle winter so far. Plus, it has extra large pockets for yarn and snacks.

I’ve been thinking about my plans for 2020, and I’ll post about those soon.

My #2019MakeNine: Round 1

The List

It’s September, which means that the year is more than half over, and I’m almost (but not quite) halfway through this list. That doesn’t mean I haven’t been making things — I have 10 knitting projects finished so far out of my challenge of 15, I made another Dress #2 (always), I went through a tank-top-making phase in the early summer, and I made Sew Liberated’s newly released Estuary Skirt out of this amazing clay-colored linen. My main goal with this project (as with many new things lately) was to be more intentional about the things I’m making - am I contributing to a cohesive and multipurpose wardrobe, or am I continuing to add a mishmash of things to my closet? (I think the answer so far this year is both, really.) So, you’ll notice that I made some updates to the list, but I think I’ve held true to the underlying goal for each make.

✓ Rose Cardigan
☐ Farrow Dress
✓ Palisade Pants
☐ Kelly Anorak
✓ Wiksten Haori
Some Other Pants Estuary Skirt
Teroldego Shawl Courage Shawl
☐ Lou Box Dress
☐ Some Sort of Blazer/Jacket

The Makes

I’ve blogged about the Rose Cardigan and my second Wiksten Haori before, so I’m going to skip those. The maker of the Palisade Pants is unfortunately problematic, so this is probably the last time I’ll talk about this pattern by name.

My new Estuary Skirt, on the other hand, is one of my new favorite makes, and I already have a second and third planned. I still have plans to make more pants, but as my #memademay adventure showed, I don’t have a lot of bottoms, so I think swapping this out on my official list doesn’t change the intent that much.

I’ve been waiting for this pattern ever since I saw one of Meg’s Instagram posts with her wearing one — and I knew exactly what I was going to use to make it. I bought this linen with the original goal of making a tank top and shorts fake-jumpsuit combo, but that all changed as soon as this skirt came around. I sewed this while visiting a friend in Santa Fe (where I also helped her make some pants!), and the color-material-pattern combo was perfect for a late-July sewing project.

A white woman wears a red skirt with pockets and a black t-shirt with a monster outline on it.

The Plans

My Courage Shawl is in progress, and I changed this one because the underlying goal here was to make something large that I could wrap around myself — which is definitely true of the Courage Shawl.

Farrow Dress: I’m still saving the perfect grey fabric for this, and during my insert-a-bust-dart adventure I figured out what was holding me back - it’s that this pattern doesn’t have bust darts, and in order for this to work as a sleeveless dress, I’d need to go an FBA. Now that I’m more comfortable with doing an FBA, I just have to actually alter the pattern to make this work.

Kelly Anorak: Still have the material, still don’t have the finishing kit, still planning on making it — eventually.

Lou Box Dress: This one has just been on the back burner for a while, but I know I’ll get around to it.

Blazer/Jacket: I think I’m leaning toward a Berlin Jacket with some as-yet-unpurchased boiled wool, but I’m also letting the hint of fall that I’m starting to feel lead me on this one.

#MeMadeMay 2019 Roundup

The Wears

I made some basic rules for myself — I didn’t want this to be stressful, so I gave myself weekends off to wear whatever caught my fancy. There were a couple times that I worked from home and didn’t get out of my PJs, so in those cases I usually made up for it on the weekends. I also challenged myself to wear something unique every day — I could repeat things, but only if I also wore something I hadn’t yet worn that month. That made it easier to think up outfits that complemented each other and combined pieces I like, and I didn’t have to worry so much about “repeating” myself.

Overall impressions: I have a lot of me-mades! Also, May is a tricky month: as the weather warms up, I have fewer me-mades to wear since the majority of mine are sweaters and scarves. For instance, I didn’t get to wear my Dreyma cardigan because it never got cold enough, I didn’t really get to wear any of my sweaters (only one day was cold enough!), and I really only wore 5 different scarves (out of 17).

In general, Me-Made May made me think differently about how and when I wear my me-mades. I do usually try to wear something I’ve made every day, but I don’t often thinking about not repeating myself over the course of an entire month (as opposed to a week or two weeks). I also found myself wearing fewer RTW tops that I really like because I don’t have a whole lot of me-made bottoms to wear them with.

The Makes

I didn’t go in to May planning on making anything specific, but I did find myself inspired throughout the month. First, I finally found an amazing lining for my second Wiksten Haori jacket to go with the chambray I found in January, so I made that.

A white woman wearing a blue jacket shows the inside lining made up of faces and ferns.

Second, one major thing I noticed about my wardrobe is that I don’t have a lot of warm weather clothes like t-shirts or tank tops. On a whim, I went to JoAnn and bought a tank top pattern from Butterick. Little did I know that Butterick patterns hail from the 1800s for their sizing, but luckily with a bit of fussing I made it work (including adding bust darts where there were none!). I’ve made a couple more adjustments in the ones I’ve made since, and I think I’ve finally found a winner. I may or may not be planning on making about 20 more…

Overall, I think my first #MeMadeMay was a success!

My #2019MakeNine

I’ve never participated in one of these before, though I’ve definitely made nine things in a year (last year I knit 15 projects, and that doesn’t count all the sewing!). But I like the idea of planning out a year and really considering what kinds of clothes and accessories I want to make. Turns out most of these have been on my list for a while anyway, and it feels nice to write down some actual plans, instead of playing by ear!

(If you’re not sure what the “Make Nine” challenge is you can check out the original post from a few years ago and the official instagram.)

Rose Cardigan

I’ve already made a start on this one — in a previous post I talked about being unable to resist a black heart fade kit from House of A La Mode. Not only am I in love with Heather’s colors and the way they fade together, the Rose Cardigan is also the most interestingly constructed garment I’ve ever knitted, so it’s been really fun to knit.

Farrow Dress

I’ve had this one in my plans for a while and still haven’t gotten around to making it, so I’m hoping that writing it on this list will actually get it done! I’ve already made one Farrow Dress and I love it. My plan for this one is to make a sleeveless version with this lovely grey wool-silk blend that I found in a bargain bin at the fabric store. It’s technically not wide enough for the pattern, so I’m hoping that I can play pattern-tetris successfully.

Palisade Pants

I bought some lovely yarn-dyed linen for this pattern, which is my baby-step in to sewing pants (gulp!)

Kelly Anorak

I’ve wanted to make one of these for a while, and bought some amazing twill from La Mercerie. My goal is actually to make two - this one is going to be charcoal and will have naturally dyed & pieced accent pockets, and the other will be something toffee colored with a lining. But before I tackle a lined coat, I’m going to make the unlined version out of the fabric I already have!

(Another) Wiksten Haori

The same day I bought that yarn-dyed linen, I also found a lovely chambray that I just couldn’t leave at the store. I don’t have the exact plans or a lining fabric yet, but I’m thinking a short version of the Wiksten Haori.

Some Other Pants

Assuming that my Palisade Pants are successful, I’d like to try and sew another pair of pants, as yet undetermined. Ginger Jeans? Not-yet-released Philippa Pants? Lander Pants? We’ll find out!

Teroldego Shawl

I actually started this shawl with some yarn that I dyed up, but stopped after a couple inches because I didn’t like the way the colors all went together. So, while this is still on my list it’s awaiting some more thought and color work before it turns into a real thing.

Lou Box Dress

I spied someone wearing this at my LYS and fell in love with it — I have no fabric ideas for it, but definitely want to make one.

Some Sort of Blazer/Jacket

There are so many good blazer/jacket ideas out there! I’m in love with the Berlin Jacket, the Sapporo Coat, the Tory Wrap Coat, and the Fulton Sweater Blazer. And I’m willing to bet that I find even more as the year goes on.

The Coziest Wiksten Kimono Jacket + Knitting for Days

This month has been busy, but I finally got a chance to make my Wiksten Kimono jacket from a spontaneous fabric purchase (I only wanted the pattern and I got carried away!) — I love that my weekends are primarily full of knitting or sewing projects, especially now that it’s been raining nonstop for days.

I’ve worn it almost every day since I made it, and I keep forgetting to take proper pictures of it, but here’s one I took for my new Wardrobe Airtable (more on that later):

A black jacket with light grey polka-dot lining is on a hanger.

I used a very drapey black twill for the outer and cotton for the liner, and split the collar in half — the under-collar is the lining, and I love when it peeks out a little bit. I also couldn’t decide between a Medium and a Large, so I split the difference and made myself a M/L, which I’m ridiculously happy with — the fit is exactly what I wanted. It’s the coziest thing I’ve ever made and I am just going to keep living in it until it gets too cold for that.

I already have plans to make about three more of these, but I think next up on my outerwear list is the Kelly Anorak.

I also started knitting my Zweig Sweater this week - it’s been on my list for a while, and I finally found the perfect color combination. A couple weeks ago I drove over to Tolt Yarn and Wool for their Farmers Daughter Fibers trunk show, and picked up this gorgeous skein of Foxy Lady with pink, white, and grey. On the drive home I decided I would use it as the contrast color for Zweig, and would find a nice grey somewhere for the main color. A couple weeks later, I was going through my stash to find an easy travel project came across these three skeins of Fidalgo Artisan Yarns back in February at Madrona, and would you believe the colors matched perfectly?!

Four balls of yarn - three brown, one white and pink variegated, in a diamond pattern.

I’m halfway through the lace part and love the way they’re knitting up together. It’s funny, when I knit fingering weight sweaters I always bounce back and forth between “wow, this is going so quickly!” and “I’ve been knitting this one row FOR EVER”. Is that how everyone else feels?

Slow Fashion October

Over at Fringe Association, Karen Templer is heading up Slow Fashion October, a chance to examine our wardrobes, where we buy from, and how we take care of our clothes. It comes at a good time, because I’ve been thinking for a while that I want to re-examine what kinds of clothes I have, how they work for me, and what I want my wardrobe to actually look like.

Our week 1 exercise is figuring out our look, which I am still figuring out (unless jeans/leggings and plain shirts is a look). Part of why I don’t think I have a “look” is because I’m often uncomfortable in my body, and shopping makes me anxious - so I tend to buy the first thing that looks halfway decent and then deal with it, even though 85% of the time it’s not perfect for me. And then I wear it, and I keep wearing it, because it’s in my closet. What I should do is get rid of the pieces that don’t work for me, so they won’t even be available for my weak morning-brain.

I’ve been making things my entire life, but I haven’t always been making them with intentionality, making them to complement other pieces in my closet, making them to last years. In high school and college, I would pick a pattern, find some leftover fabric in my mother’s stash, and make something that I’d wear for a couple months and then forget about. In grad school, I didn’t sew much but I picked up knitting, which for the first five years or so included only things that didn’t need sizing (mostly scarves and shawls).

The other part of it is that I’m scared - what if the sweater I’m knitting doesn’t fit right? What if I misjudged the dress size I’m making? What happens when I mess up a dart and the whole thing is ruined? But that’s also part of the excitement, and I’m getting better at leaning into that - learning how to adjust on the fly, making test muslins and swatches (swatching! my least favorite thing!), and always, always, trying it on as I go.

The other part that’s scary (for me, at least) is then wearing the things I’ve made. Am I confident enough to pull it off? Will people think it’s strange that I make my own clothes? Will I have to talk about it all day at work? What happens if I ruin the piece, and all my hard work is wasted? Again, this is something I’m still figuring out how to lean into. I made this thing, dammit, and I should wear it!

On Thursday I leave for a trip that’s half-fun and half-work, and I’ve spent the last two weeks trying to figure out what I should take with me. How many outfits do I need? What will I be comfortable in? But maybe most importantly, what do I want my look to be?

I was going to start October off with a bang by attempting to make a Wiksten Kimono in one evening. But then I got derailed by a giant box of free pomegranates at work and misplacing my sewing scissors (don’t worry, I remembered where I put them at midnight while I was trying to sleep!). So I’m going to wait until I get back from my trip, and focus on taking the time to make a versatile piece and enjoy the process. And then, I’m going to figure out how to wear more of the pieces in my closet that I love.