Mission Statement

It is the mission of the Bay Lakes Knitting Guild to give knitters of all skill levels the opportunity to get to know other knitters, to learn new techniques, and to share their ideas, resources, and talents with the community.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Knitting Tips from August, 2014 Meeting



We met inside on August 14th which turned out to be a good idea because nearly everyone at the meeting had at least one tip to share.  Vicki took good notes, I took some too, between us we hope we've got them all.  If not, remind me at the meeting next Thursday and I'll post them here.
  
Kris Kyles
1)    When making Top-Down socks, cast on over two needles, remove the extra needle, knit first row, then join into a circle.

2)  The Repeat Row Method. Make an index card with the number of rows in the repeat pattern on top of each other on the left-hand side.  For a 4-row pattern, for example, write the 1st 4 numbers from top to bottom on the card, then start a second column with the next 4 numbers, etc.  If you are on row 23, find 23 to the right of the 1,2,3, or 4 columns, and you will discover you should be knitting row 3 of the 4-row repeat pattern. My card looks something like this:

1 5  9  13  17  21  25
2 6 10 14 18  22  26
3 7 11 15 19  23  27
4 8 12 16 20  24  28

Nancy Snow
            Cast on over two needles if you find your cast on tends to be too tight.

Victoria Jicha
            Life line – inserted directly under the left needle, and several rows below the left needle.

Mitch Woesner
When knitting with two strands of yarn at the same time run them both through a drinking straw to keep them even and untangled.

? Thibaudeau
            Use a two compartment makeup bag for notions; keep sharp notions on one side.

Julie LaFavre
            I like to attend fiber shows. Before you go, have a pattern in mind that you would like to make, also the amount of yardage you need.  A lot of yarns can be specialty items and finding additional yardage is difficult.


Becky Moore
            Keep yarn skein clean by putting it in a zip lock baggie for road trips.

Sally Halstrom
When knitting with more than one ball, she keeps two strands in one bag to keep the yarn from tangling

Kathy Eisenshenk
            For clean edges, slip the first stitch as if to purl

Julie Deprey
            Do not knit mohair wearing black slacks

Pat Hickey
1)    To eliminate the hole when changing from K to P, wrap yarn in opposite direction then knit in the back of the stitch
2)    Repairing mistakes in lace – Block to the error, then the stitches will be easier to pick up…. And use a life line!

Andy Trotti
            No ruler?  A Dollar bill is 6” long.  Fold in half for 3”.  Fold in thirds for 2” and 4”

Cheryl Brocher
Elastic Bind Off (From Love of Knitting Magazine)

K1 *Reverse yarn over (wrap in opposite direction as usual) K1, pass YO over last knit st., then pass first st. over last knit st.  Repeat from * to end.  Cut yarn and pass through the last stitch.

Sewn Bind Off (From Cast On Bind Off) (Elastic edging for cuffs or neckline)

1. Measure a tail of yarn that is 3 times the width of the knitting to be bound off.  Thread this onto a blunt tapestry needle.  Work from right to left with the right side facing you.
2. Insert the needle PURLWISE through the first 2 stitches on the needle and pull the yarn through. Leave the stitches on the needle.
3. Insert the needle KNITWISE through the first stitch on the needle and drop this stitch off the needle.
Repeat steps 2 and 3.  You will end with 1 stitch left of the needle.  Insert the needle through this stitch PURLWISE, drop the stitch from the needle and weave the end in.

Laurie Brungraber
                      When making mittens, use a crochet hook to pull up stitches to close holes  
           in the first round of the thumb, then k2tog in the second round to decrease to the        number of stitches the pattern calls for in the second round.

Barbara Malcolm
            How to Remember Right- vs Left-Leaning Stitches (From fringeassociation.com)
A stitch will always lean in the direction the working needle is pointing when you work that stitch.  When you insert your working needle into the front of your stitch(es) as for K2tog or m1R—you insert it from left to right.  The working needle points to the right and the resulting stitch will lean to the right.  When you knit through the back of your stitch(es)—as with SSK or m1L—you insert the working needle from right to left.  The working needle points left and the resulting stitch will lean left.

            SSK 
I learned from the Yarn Harlot’s blog a few years ago that when the pattern calls for a ssk you can simply knit the stitches together through the back loops.  The decrease is the same (looks the same, leans the same) as if you had slipped them each to the right needle and then knitted them together.
 





Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Andy's Tips for Thursday's Meeting



 Are you ready to share a technique?  This should be fun.  Even if you are a beginner knitter, you may very well know something that the more seasoned knitters may have never learned (or perhaps they forgot it!).  There are multiple ways to do everything from skinning a cat to knitting techniques.  I did a quick search on cast on methods and with no effort, came up with eleven.  Eleven!  Imagine that!  I know  three different ones, that means there are at LEAST eight more I could and should learn.

I am planning on bringing (and you might want to do this too)
1)     a few different swatches on needle (to save time by not having to cast on)
2)     a couple different swatches already cast off (in case someone is going to show us some seaming tricks)
3)     some empty needles and yarn (maybe someone is going to teach some of those cast on methods)
4)     a notebook (because I KNOW I won’t remember every trick and technique and as one of my bosses once told me, “You are only as good as your notes.”)
5)     a couple techniques to share (if no one comes prepared to share, this is going to be a very boring meeting!).

I hope to see everyone in the park for another evening of knitting and sharing with friends!

 --Andy


Well, I never thought of those things.  Did you?  Those are some good ideas.  Guess I'll be swatching later.  See you Thursday, August 14!  

Remember, if it's raining we'll be back in our regular meeting room in the Ziemer Building, so don't stay home thinking you'll get wet.

Monday, August 4, 2014

Get Ready for the August Meeting

Last week (or maybe it was the week before, I forget... oh well) I got an email from Andy, our esteemed Program Chair, about this month's meeting and this morning I realized that this is something you all need at least a week to get ready for.  Now, don't be afraid or plan to be elsewhere on August 14, you can do this.  Here's Andy's email:


At the August meeting everyone is asked to Share A Technique!  It doesn’t matter if you think it's something everyone already knows, because the odds are that we will all learn at least two or three tricks.

Come join us in the park again for an evening of fun and sharing!  Bring a chair and a couple of tricks or techniques!

Remember that "a technique" doesn't have to be some obscure secret knitting magic, it can be your way of weaving in tails or the cast-on your Grandma used or some maneuver that saved you from having to frog most of a project or the stitch Aunt Fanny taught you one summer up at the lake.

Know how to keep your yarns from tangling if you're using two colors?  Bring it.  Have a simple (or different) way to tension your yarn?  I want to learn.  Know how to keep your knitting bag from looking like a rat's nest?  Or how to corral your needles or stitch markers?  We all want to know these things.

This does not have to be something you made up in your own little brain, the tip I'm bringing is a memory trick I learned from a blog I like about two days after I got Andy's email.  (Also "a couple" can mean one; I'm bringing one, one is all I got.)
 
Don't worry that you're a new-ish knitter and think everyone else will already know everything that you know; it's always good to be reminded of the basics.  Always.  Too much knowledge can be a dangerous thing--and cause a person to forget the simple things, especially in the "mental-pause" part of life (which is where I'm at).  Besides what could be better than spending a summer evening sitting in a pretty park talking with friends about knitting?

See you on August 14 in the park!

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Call For Baby Blankets

We got so involved in the program last week that Nancy Snow's announcement got forgotten.

~~~~~
First United Methodist Church (which provides us with a meeting room) is in need of small knitted or crocheted baby blankets.  A blanket is given to each baby baptized.  If you feel inclined to make a baby blanket for the church, please bring it to a Guild meeting.  Thanks.
~~~~~

I just checked on Ravelry.  They have 3,782 FREE baby blanket patterns listed today.  That's 1,921 knitted blankies and 1,831 crocheted blankies, 79 pages worth.  I didn't filter out any yarn sizes, needle sizes, or blanket sizes.  I suspect that even the pickiest needleperson could find one in that vast sea of choices.



I'm partial to the Happy Baby Blanket #829 (knit) from Lion Brand but then I'm a big yarn, big needles kind of girl.







I like this Chevron Baby Blanket from Purl Bee (more big yarn, big needles) too,





or there's the Around the Rosy baby blanket if you'd like to crochet one (sport weight yarn, so pretty and sweet).



So if you've got a few extra skeins of yarn and a little time on your hands maybe you can find a pattern that you like and make a blanket for a new baby's baptism. Every baby needs a warm and snuggly blanket to be wrapped up in, don't you think? 
 

Friday, July 11, 2014

Knitting in The Park with Wire and Beads

I knit with wire!  We all knit with wire!  Twenty-five people turned out for the BLKG meeting in St. James Park last night to learn how to knit a shawl pin with wire.  The knitting's pretty much the same as regular knitting but there were a few changes particular to the medium--like you can't tension the wire through your fingers like you do with yarn yarn--and you have to tug the knitting away from the needle every once in a while so that the stitches form and you can see what you're doing.  Andy had two choices of shawl pin kits--multicolored and pearls--it was hard to choose, both made pretty shawl pins.
 
We had varying degrees of traumatic wire tangling around the circle but Andy was a calming help with her trusty cardboard tube that she used to recoil the misbehaving wire and get the project back on track. Our kits even included a little dowel so that when we're done knitting we'll have a shawl pin ready to use.  Thanks, Andy, that was very thoughtful.

What a fun program!







Monday, July 7, 2014

Knit With Wire in Three More Days!!!

This coming Thursday, July 10 will be the July Knit-in-the-Park meeting of the Bay Lakes Knitting Guild.  Knit Doctor will be available at 6:30 PM if you're stuck on a project and the meeting begins at 7 PM.

The program on Thursday will be Andy teaching us how to Knit With Wire.  I hope you remembered to email her to sign up because you're going to want to play along.

Andy knitted her shawl pin Design-A-Thon entry with US 8 plastic needles but says you can use any type of straights--wood, metal, bamboo, plastic--maybe not your very favorite ones but she hasn't noticed any damage to the ones she used.  Do not go out and buy size 8 needles if you don't have any or can't find any, US 7 or US 9 will work just fine.  It's a shawl pin, not brain science!  I'm looking forward to it, aren't you?
 
Be sure to bring $2 cash to pay her for your kit.

(Remember Monroe Ave. is under construction so you need to access Jackson Square Park via Madison St., also they've removed the benches and picnic tables from the park so don't forget a chair.)