Retreat List

 Back in November, I participated in an Altenew Cozy Comfort Retreat.  It was an all day zoom retreat - one of the retreats where you craft cards along with the teachers of the classes.  It was more expensive (by a lot) than any card retreat I've done.  I decidd to do it because I follow and appreciate all of the teachers - Jennifer McGuire, Kristina Warner, Therese  Calvird, Carisa Wiley, and Kelly Taylor.  

Registration for the class included a shipment of supplies, which was great.

I enjoyed the retreat, although at the end, I was worn out.  A few days later, I created a list in my bullet journal of Five Thoughts about the Retreat:

  • There was lots of homework - in fact, that is my biggest advice for you if you ever decide to do one of these.  Do the homework and be very organized in your set up.  I put the supplies for each class in a separate zip storage bag (the ones from Simon Says Stamp)
  • The teachers were great - the best part of the retreat
  • The Altenew rules were not my favorite - I really appreciate Hero Arts in this area.
  • I needed more breaks - I was worn out by the end of the day.  An hour for dinner would have been great as well as an hour for lunch.
  • I was lonely even though it was a zoom retreat with lots of people.  I missed my time with Steve for the day.
All that said, the cards were great!

Easter Cards

 Spellbinders has some great monthly kits.  Each month, I look at the kits avilable and choose one or two.  One of the ones I purchased in February was the Large Die of the Month called Floral Bunny Basket.

I had a great time working with it - I made six Easter cards.  Here are the die cuts for five of them:

Many Easter Card Parts

See the bunnies? Here are the bunny pieces:

Bunny cuts

All in all, each card had 52 different die cuts (not counting the sentiment which wasn't die cut).  That's 312 die cuts for six cards.  Whew!


I did a little bit of shading for the tulips, bunnies, and carrots.  The blue background is embossed with the one of the Altenew Sweater Pattern Builder stencils, just to give it some texture.

Happy Easter!

Postage Valentine's Day Cards

 I am really enjoying the Waffle Flower postage dies, stencils, and stamps.  They seem to be releasing different versions seasonally.

I used the Rose Stencil set and the Love stamps for several Valentines Day cards.







Currently

Current View

Current Bullet Journal Palette

Current knitting
Notice how the color is changing? Cool


Reflecting Pool Scarf

 


Another finished scarf.  This one was knit with Malabrigo Rios Yarn in the color Reflecting Pool.  I'm not sure where I bought it. It's very nice! I used about 1.5 skeins.

The needle size was US 7, and it is knit in the Yarn Harlot's one row pattern (cast on a multiple of four +2, knit two, knit one through back loop, purl and repeat until there are two stitches left - knit those.

I finished in January of 2024.  It was mainly knit in movies because it's an easy pattern to knit in the dark. I'm not sure when I started it, but it was after the Quince scarf, which was after the stacking, not stacking cowl.  

Here's the weird thing.  I have two more skeins of this yarn.  Did I buy it twice? I think I must have.  What will I do with the other two skeins?  I don't need another scarf made out of this yarn, as much as I like it.

Another post about this scarf

On my needles

 In this post, I talked about yarn I have that is "in the wings," waiting to be knitted.  This was one of them:


It's Roll the Dice yarn from Sin City  Yarns.  I'm knitting a cowl that the yarn store suggested (free pattern). You cast on 103 stitches on a 24 inch needle (size 7 for me), and then knit 4 and purl 4, repeatedly.  


I'm not sure if you can see it in the image, but the stitch pattern creates diagonal ridges of yarn that swirl around the cowl - cool.  Also, can you see in the first image that the yarn is lighter toward the middle and gets darker on the outside?  The cowl is following that color pattern.

It takes more concentration that I anticipated, but I do like it, and am enjoying the knitting.  I'm anxious to see it when it is finished.

Quince Scarf


How about another finished object.  This one was in a drawer, completely knitted, without the end woven in.  I mean, who does that?  Me, apparently.

This scarf is knit with this yarn.   It's Quince & Company's Osprey yarn.  It's a heavy (aran) weight wool, and the color is Aleutian.  I bought it at Kanawha City Yarn Company.

I knit the scarf with either US size 8 or 9 needles.  My notes say it is knit with the Yarn Harlot's one row "pattern," but it looks like farrow rib to me, so I'm not sure.  

How long did it take me to knit it?  Well, at the end of 2021, the yarn was still wound, and I hadn't started.  Even though I'm counting it as a finished object in 2024 since that is when I wove in the ends, I don't know when I finished the body of the knitting.

Really, I need to keep better notes.

It is soft and squishy, and I like it. 

Blue Striped Socks


I seem to be a finishing mood, picking up projects and completing them. At least one of them, so far. But I have more plans.

I finished a pair of socks this weekend. The yarn is Berroco Sox, color 1477. (Kingston). The color doesn't seem to be on the Berroco web page, and it's no wonder.  These have been on needles forever. Today I found a note about these socks that I made on February 1, 2014, so I've been knitting them since before then.

The socks are knit with the Yarn Harlot's vanilla sock yarn pattern from Knitting Rules.  I knit them with a pair of Signature Needle Arts double pointed needles, sized 1.  A side note - I'm not sure I've ever mentioned this, but I have two pairs of double pointed needled from this company (which is now closing).  They were very expensive, and feel wonderfully luxurious, but I don't like to knit with them.  I prefer my wooden needles.  

The yarn is self striping, and I find that very fun and amusing, as the stripes appear as I knit regular stockinette.  

I have no idea when I started these socks (other than it was before 2014).  I know I did a lot of work on the second sock in early 2020, because I posted pictures in my Instagram account.  Apparently, I can't knit socks during a pandemic, because I think they languished on the needles until I picked them up this weekend with on the toe (and a little of the foot) to knit. 

The problem is that I didn't make any notes about the numbers I used when knitting.  I ended up with not only fraternal socks (the stripes do not match up), but also socks of two different sizes.  I used two different numbers of stitches to start the socks.  By a lot. 


See the difference in width?  Oh, well.  They still work as socks, and are warm.  The toes are kind of pointy, though.  Poor things.