Your greatness is not what you have, it's what you give.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

A tableful of knitters

We had almost a full house of 9 Chicks today. Somehow we started reminiscing about schooldays and mean nuns in Catholic school and the teachers who were on the verge of nervous breakdowns because the kids in the class who were undiagnosed with ADHD would drive them bonkers. I began to name the "trouble makers" in my fourth grade class who would push poor, old Mrs. Kelly to her breaking point and Dorah was impressed I knew their names from 1958! Just don't ask me what I ate for breakfast! 😉 
Speaking of eating, Barbara B made sourdough chocolate-chocolate chip brownies for today's treat.
I was so busy knitting, I forgot to eat one so when the house was quiet, I poured myself a glass of eggnog and savored a yummy brownie. Soooo Good!!!

 Last week Dorah mentioned that one of her cowls she made a few years ago was coming apart, would I be able to fix it for her. This is The Shift which was a very popular Andrea Mowry pattern from 2018. For some unknown reason it had come apart right where the back seam is sewn. Some of the stitches were unraveling and we needed to catch it before it was completely ruined. Luckily, Dorah left a long tail from the end of a row which, after I caught the stitches with a crochet hook, I was able to anchor and knot using that strand of yarn. Saved just in the nick of time!
Dorah is working her second sock using the Knitting Pure and Simple pattern for a basic, vanilla sock. It is a well written pattern and makes a nice sturdy sock.

                                         

Nancy wore her Floatini today. The designer is very creative with her short row designs and Nancy loves knitting patterns which include short rows. Beautiful!
She is currently working on the Moss Hill Beanie which starts with a long cuff that folds up to make a warm, double thick brim. 
This hat is another pattern from our favorite hat designer, Benjamin Matthews.
Tina is working on a scarf using the honeycomb stitch. I didn't get a photo of the ball of yarn from which she is working but I have a hunch she could knit scarves for a small village and still have yarn left over.😂
Barbara B is making a DK weight, single stripe helix hat using the technique for jogless stripes from Grace O'Neill on YouTube. She is using another technique for the provisional cast on which uses a barber cord so she can fold the fabric to the inside and knit the provisional stitches together with the live stitches on the needle to create a double thick cuff.
Jan is working on the Be Simple Variations Shawl
She saw puffins on vacation and brought back souvenir yarn dyed the colors of the birds. 
It's going to be so pretty!
Maureen is working the ear flaps and cuff of the 1898 Hat and is planning on making stripes for the crown portion of the hat.
Do you remember the fingerless mitts with caps that Margaret was knitting last week? She was afraid she would run out of yarn before she could finish the second mitt so I suggested she stop knitting the first one and knit the second mitt to the same point as the first so she would have an idea of how far she could knit with each color. You can see on the right mitt that she has picked up stitches to knit the removable top.
She is working on a hat which requires less attention paid to it. Some projects lend themselves more to social knitting than others.
Carole has the last of the James C. Brett Marble yarn and is making a Mistake Stitch Scarf.
She has a neck lamp with an integrated magnifying glass to make knitting easier on her eyes. We all have noticed that we require better lighting when we knit than we used to. 
I found some bright red yarn in the stash with no label and started the Fifi Cowl for a donation project. The pattern is very easily memorized and works up quickly. The white yarn on the edge is my provisional cast on because I was too lazy to use the barber cord. LOL!
Now that the sun is setting, my hands and feet are feeling cold so I'm going to make a cup of tea and start cooking dinner. Have a great week and keep those needles clicking!

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