11.08.29 Cast-onitis

ugh...not feeling well....have Castonitis (aka startitis).
Kent - Twist Collective

It started when the Irene Hurricane hype was in full tilt.  I was sitting in my living room and it hit me. I felt the wave.  That feeling we all know - where we can't do anything but run for the stashroom and hold our heads over the yarn basket.   I need a new project to ride out the storm.  I tried pills, looking on ravMD to remind me of my last case of castonitis and asked husband to hold my hand, but it didn't help.

The resulting rash looks like this:

One of these (Kent) in Cascade 220 Dark Heathered Brown - Back is done and Left front is cast on.  Lovely pattern/yarn combo so far.  Have had this yarn for a while - never found a pattern worthy of its dark rich velvety color.

Acadia - Wool People
Kathmandu Cowl
Then I saw this garter yumminess and remembered I wanted a sweater in a nice golden color for fall.  I had some Bartlett yarn in my favorite color - Willow, but it too stiff for the drape I want.   I have chosen color # 4010 in Cascade Eco+ and will knit on 9s and block hard for drape. (*sign* not from stash)







Then I saw this cowl - I have two lonely balls of Blackstone Tweed (green and tan) I bought for a hat for my daughter who informed me that I had already made her a hat in the same two colors...So looks like a great cowl for me now!




So far these three "treatments" seem to have cured me, but we shall see....it is Fall.  Relapses are more prevalent this time of year.

11.08.22 Project "Progress" underway

It feels good to have a plan.  I find myself more at peace and inspired to work on my WIPs.  I have continued to study my "45" and have soft plans forming in my mind.

Before froggin'

After (proof shot)
The frog pile:

In my last post, I discussed 4 projects with the lowest scores and were voted off the island.  The best part of frogging is regaining the needles and cables.  The worst part was the colorwork sweater.  Ugh...sticky wool/silk yarn combined with crossing colorwork made for slow progress.  If I didn't like the yarn so much, I would have cut and run.  Some of the yarn will be part of an upcoming swap and some will be released back into the wild (of my stash). one project will be given away (mittens)       can't bear to frog it.
                                                                            5 Done!




The project continues 
The Winner Pile:
Next I looked at the top group  - the highest scores.  By definition/theory these should be my best candidates for finishing.



THE 45 - first to be finished

Chevron Lace Alpaca Shawl
History:  This was a group project/KAL inspired by a trip to Vogue Knitting Live in January 2011.  My friends and I saw this pattern in the marketplace and after a trip to Lion Brand Studio we were all set with our yarn choice. Only a few inches from the finishing, I did not have enough yarn and put this down to consider my options.  Since some of us used the same colors but in different combinations, my friend Susan B would have some leftovers in the color I needed and generously offered to gave to me.    Waiting for her to finish, I moved on.  She gave the extra months ago, I forgot about it, then yarn and project got separated.

Status:   Finished


Also finished this weekend from Active WIPs:


Amiga Cardigan Project details here
Yarn: Brooks Farm Ellie (From Maryland Sheep and Wool)
















Kindle Case Project details here
Yarn: Ultra Alpaca by Berroco (leftovers in stash)

Grapevines Beret Project details here
Yarn: Madelinetosh Tosh Sport








11.08.16 Going "Cold WIP"?

The #1 question I have been asked since starting this quest is....

Are you only working on hibernating WIPS?  Not casting on anything else until "the 45" are addressed? 

NO way!  Like a good diet program, I am trying to do all in moderation and work on small changes to my habits for now.  I am continuing on my current/active WIPS (see progress bars on the right) and finishing them.  I finished three this weekend.  At the same time, I cast on a hat and have two other accessories in my queue.   My plan is to only cast on smaller projects for a while until I have "the 45" worked out.  But can't guarantee some great sweater pattern is published and I HAVE to cast on.

Finished this weekend:

 Bailey Cardigan by Amy Christoffers



Yarn - Moorland by Classic Elite













 



Yarn - Madelinetosh Tosh Merino Light


 





 



Flamboyan by Stephen West

Woolbu by Blue Moon Fiber Arts


11.08.12 Decisions made easy...

The process:
Recently I was involved in a very complex future planning session for my company.  They hired a nationally known strategist and facilitator to guide the 10 top leaders of our company through a planning system that has proven time and again to be successful. Since each of us represented different divisions of the company, we all had different priorities. This process helped us filter down hundreds of ideas,  hopes and dreams of ten very different disciplines to a dozen priority items.  By using this scoring system, we had no choice but agree that they were the right "finalists".  So impressed with its complex simplicity, I decided to use the last part of the process, scoring, for my WIP wrangling project.

The idea is to create 4 scoring characteristics that affect the final desired outcome. The scoring (1-10) has to result with the best ideas/projects/items having the highest score.  For example, my characteristic Effort needed the highest score to reflect the least amount of effort to finish the project.  If you use this method, pay attention to the score model you use. For my WIP evaluation, I decided on:

example scoring
Project characteristics:  all scored 0-10
  Product - Do I/will I like the finished product when done?   0 - not at all to 10 - can't wait to wear it
  Process - Am I having a good time knitting/crocheting this?  Am I looking forward to starting back up again?  0 - hate this project to 10 - this is so much fun
  Effort - How much effort will it take to finish this - time and attention  0- will take a long time and lots of attention to 10 - only have a few things to do/could finish quickly.
  Motivation - How motivated am I to finish?  0 - not at all to 10 - can't wait to pick this back up
  Avg  Score - used Excel to average the score of the four characteristics above


Using Excel's custom sorting capability, I sorted by this column from high to score.The highest score was a 7.8 (eight projects scored in the 7s) and lowest - 2.0 (five projects in the 2's).  Using just the scoring method, I can plainly see which projects are the best candidates for completion and frogging.  It's the middle group that will be the hardest to determine their fate.

Decisions, decisions - Let's start with the bottom of the pile

Candidates for frogging? 
Not surprisingly, 4 for the projects were easy candidates for frogging.  Why didn't I just do it along time ago?  I have not touched most of these projects is more than a year.
Birdcage mittens:  This one stings.  I knit these last winter and then lost interested in the second mitten. Truth is - it was fun to try but have little interest in returning to the second mitten.  But frog a perfectly good mitten?  This needs a good home.  Someone in knitting group would enjoy knitting just one mitten too.

Cable Tunic - no loss here.  I started as a tunic for my daughter - the yarn was an easy care, big box brand that ended up too shiny, limp and splitty.  I lost interest and now her tastes have changed.  Give the yarn away. (no pic)

Norah Wedgette: This was a KAL with the "Norah".  I was honored to have an inside look at the design process and test knit as we went.   However - "design as you go" has problems and I quickly saw that mine would not fit. Strike 1. The group soon passed me and I moved on. Strike 2 The yarn was a desperate impulse purchase.  I found the KAL at the last minute and needed the exact yarn they called for to make sure I did Norah right.  Purple is never a easy color for the me wear. Strike 3.  This is a high quality superwash and could make a nice little girl's sweater so will add to stash for a while and see what happens.

Cross my fingers.  Name says it all.  My first color project, I used this project to teach myself two handed colorwork knitting.  My own design conglomeration., I used a pullover sweater (knit in the round) that called for DK and a colorway chart from a bulky sweater (knit flat) in a larger size.  All was well until the pattern change and require side floats of 30 - 50 stitches.  I adapted to knitting flat and hated the process of colorwork and purling.  Next!.....  Yarn is in two lovely complimentary colors and quality silky wool that would be great  together.  Will keep in stash and explore possibilities on Ravelry.  Maybe a striped sweater (Paulie?)


Garter Jacket:  Fell in love with a project on Rav that was never published.  I decide to recreate a top down version for myself.  Weather changed, color grew weary (black) and it seemed like a black block.  Then I saw the FLOGS jacket and knew this was a better and more shapely option for me.  Threw in a bag and forgot about it all summer.  Should dig up, frog and que FLOGS up for fall.