Pictured from top to bottom: Colinette Jitterbug sock yarn, Chuckanut Bay 10-Ply Aran, Cascade Eco-Wool. We thought the Chuckanut made enormous balls, but check out the size of that Eco-Wool. I plopped the Colinette on top for comparison purposes. Most of us know what a wound skein of sock yarn looks like, size-wise, so that ought to give you an idea of just how enormous the other two are. So enormous that my ball winder -- gimpy even on a good day -- nearly expired from the effort of holding it.
Now that the Kauni shawl is blocking, I turned my attention to what's next. "Next" meaning not just what's next to be cast on, but what's next to claim my knitting time.
I have these things on the needles:
- The blue Ishbel. I've finished the body and three of the six lace charts. This one could be completed within the next week or two.
- The Oskar Loves Ishbel socks. On the heel of the first. Nice to knit, but not compelling. I keep them on my nightstand for sleepless nights.
- The purple Smooshy socks. These are my carry-around knitting. I like to keep something portable and patternless in my purse, and these are it. I'm a bit more than halfway through the first cuff, and that's all the result of picking at these in stray moments.
- Fulmar. Stalled because my brain was needed for other things. It's not a difficult pattern, but it does require a certain amount of focus.
- The Afghan for Danger Boy. Stalled because it's crochet and my wrist has been swelling here and there.
- Catherine Parr. Probably will be frogged.
- St. Brigid. Stalled because I needed to wind the next ball of yarn.
On this list, the one that jumped out at me was St. Brigid. It's reason for being stalled is the most east to overcome. This would be fairly quick and easy to finish. The blue Ishbel will be done soon because I really want it off my knitting list, and there's little time involved. So after that, St. B.
Hence, the winder came out.
And you know how it is. Once you wind one ball, you want to wind the rest. But if I wind it, I might cast it on, and I want to finish some things before I start new things. So my compromise was to wind one ball of the Eco-wool for a Starsky (or possible for the Shirt-Tail Cardigan -- still debating which pattern I prefer), which will be the next sweater after the St. B is finished.
After Ishbel is finished, I might try to finish one of the pairs of socks before casting on another small project. I'm eyeing two other scarves for the summer -- light, small projects always being better for hot days. But I don't think I need to have a mountain of small projects on the go at one time just because the days are warmer. In a perfect world, I would keep my knitting list down to four projects at a time. But this isn't a perfect world, and I'm sure not a perfect knitter.
What are your summer knitting plans?
2 comments:
I'm getting startitis really bad right now... so much that your cake winding has me itching for another project!!
I just realised that I can't do a 'on my needles' list because I'm bound to leave a few out! I really need to frog something to remind myself to stay on track.
My summer knitting will be to finish a pink sleeveless top in stockinette, it'll be a sort of halterneck thing, I think. And another top, same yarn, colour bright green, which just needs an elastic thread put through the lacy neckband and I'm done! I can feel another stockinette project come on already!
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