Witch Hare Kit

A bit ago, I treated myself to a knitting kit and it arrived yesterday. It’s from Virtual Yarns and is the Witch Hare kit, for mittens and a hat. You can see it on their website, right here. Virtual Yarns is Alice Starmore and Jade Starmore’s company, featuring many patterns, books and yarns designed by Alice and Jade. There’s some wonderful eye candy on their website, so treat yourself to a few minutes of browsing.

Here are the pattern cards in the kit. They really are lovely, full colour on sturdy stock. (Apologies for the flash!)

Virtual Yarns Witch Hare kit - patterns

I like this design, especially the mittens, and I was curious about the Virtual Yarns tweeds. A kit seemed a good way to check them out.

Here are the yarns in the kit. They look scrumptious.

Virtual Yarns Witch Hare kit - yarns

And here are the patterns on Ravelry, in case you want to check out some other projects. They’re listed separately – first the mittens, then the hat.

The plan is to make the set once as the kit instructs, then possibly make the mittens again with another yarn (what yarn?) held double with KSH. The ones by the kit might get a KSH lining. We’ll see. Lovely yarn, though. I can’t wait to see how it knits up.

Another Project Finished

I showed you this scarf and mittens in progress last month in this post about Comfort Knitting. The project started with a bag of mill ends from Spinrite of Patons Rumor, a long discontinued yarn. Here it is on Ravelry. It’s a bulky weight yarn that’s mostly acrylic but also is 15% alpaca, which makes it very soft and a bit fuzzy.

This colourway, which is a light purple, is called Hibiscus Heather. This was the picture I showed you last month of the mittens and part of the scarf.

Mittens and scarf knit by Deborah Cooke in Patons Rumor

The mittens are from the Tin Can Knits’ World’s Simplest Mittens pattern. (That’s a Ravelry link.) If you don’t have a basic mitten pattern, this is a really good one – and it’s free! It includes instructions for four sizes of mitten, each in four different weights of yarn. I used the chunky instructions for an adult small.

The scarf is a design I made up as I worked. It ended up with nine diamonds – mostly because I mucked up the fifth one and made it a bit smaller by accident. It thus became a midpoint design element. 🙂

Here’s the completed scarf.

scarf knit by Deborah Cooke in Patons Rumor, no pattern

I think it could do with a blocking. The edges are very curly.

Rowan Gypsy hat designed by Grace Melville and knit it Rowan Cocoon from Rowan 48

I have enough yarn left for a hat, but I tend to dislike knitted hats. I had a sift through my library on Ravelry (I love that search engine!) and found a possibility – it’s Gypsy from Rowan 48, a seed stitch hat with a cable trim. (That’s a Ravelry link.) I like the brim on this one. The pattern specifies Rowan Cocoon, which is similar in weight to Patons Rumor, so I’ll give it a try. It’s a hat, though, so I’ll probably have to knit, frog and reknit at least once.

Of course, now I’m flipping through Rowan 48 and being distracted by other designs. 🙂

Comfort Knitting

As mentioned last week, I’ve been doing some comfort knitting. Besides making clothes for the girls, this usually means knitting socks and/or mittens. I also sorted some stash and rehomed a bunch of it, which meant I rediscovered some goodies, too.

The mittens are from one of these rediscoveries. They started with a bag of mill ends from Spinrite of Patons Rumor, a long discontinued yarn. Here it is on Ravelry. It’s a bulky weight yarn that’s mostly acrylic but also is 15% alpaca, which makes it very soft and a bit fuzzy.

This colourway, which is a light purple, is called Hibiscus Heather.

Mittens and scarf knit by Deborah Cooke in Patons Rumor

I first made a pair of mittens for myself, using the Tin Can Knits’ World’s Simplest Mittens pattern. (That’s a Ravelry link.) If you don’t have a basic mitten pattern, this is a really good one – and it’s free! It includes instructions for four sizes of mitten, each in four different weights of yarn. I used the chunky instructions for an adult small.

I also cast on a scarf for myself to match and am just making it up as I go. I’m really enjoying this knitting – it’s the combination of the yarn, which feels nice, and the Brittany birch needles, which I always love to use. This is about the midpoint. I’ll make nine diamonds, then taper down to the other point. Will it need a tassel on each end? Possibly…

Mummers from Saltwater Mittens

Things have been quiet here on the blog. I had a bit of a crazy January – I was (as usual) racing toward deadline on a new book but got sick with a mild case of Covid-19. It still pretty much flattened me, which makes me glad we’re vaccinated. I’ve been working like mad on that book ever since and now need to catch up on everything else.

Of course, I’ve been knitting, too, just not documenting it all. Today, we start to fix that.

Saltwater Mittens by Christine LeGrow and Shirley A. Scott

These mittens are from a book called Saltwater Mittens by Christine LeGrow and Shirley A. Scott. Here’s a Ravelry link to the pattern book, and here’s a link to the book’s landing page at the publisher, Boulder Books.

This pattern is called Mummers. I was so excited to discover that they have mummers in Newfoundland – yet another reason to visit one of these days. How amazingly blue the light is here right now. I took these pictures at midday but in the shade since the snow was so bright.

Mummers mittens from Saltwater Mittens knit by Deborah Cooke in Harrisville Highland

I knit mine in yarn from my stash. One of the recommended yarns is Briggs & Little Regal – that’s the B&L website. You can order directly from them. I have some of that, but I also had Harrisville Designs Highland left over from Mr. Math’s sweater and I like the colours together and thought it similar. This is an interesting yarn because it’s put up in two different ways – washed and skeined which is the link above, or unwashed on cones which you’ll find on this link. It’s cheaper on the cone if you need a lot and I like seeing it full when the finished garment is washed.

Mummers mittens from Saltwater Mittens knit by Deborah Cooke in Harrisville Highland
Balkan by Brandon Mably knit by Deborah Cooke in Harrisville Designs Highland

On the left is Mr. Math’s sweater in the same yarn – the pattern is called Balkan by Brandon Mably (that’s a Ravelry link) and here’s the link to my Ravelry project page. I made a yarn substitution – it’s supposed to be knit in Rowan Colourspun (Ravelry link) which is a yarn I like a lot and is now discontinued. The mister thought it was too soft plus he wanted a more graphic color combination. Done and done. (Hmm. Did I blog about this project? Yes! I did! Balkan sweater for Mr. Math.)

And now there are mittens to coordinate!

More Mittens in Gemstone

Remember those three balls of Red Heart Gemstone I found in the mill ends at Spinrite? Here they are again:

Seconds of Red Heart Gemstone

The three balls are all a little light. They should be 200g each and are closer to 140g each, which would be why they were in the mill ends. I’m knitting mittens with the free pattern from Tin Can Knits called The World’s Simplest Mittens. I finished up the ball of Flourite and got two pairs of the second largest size out of it, with a bit of yarn left over.

World's Simplest Mittens by Tin Can Knits, knit in Red Heart Gemstone by Deborah CookeThe repeat on the colour was longer than the amount of yarn needed for one ball. I just knit the four, then matched them up the best I could.

Last week, I finished up the Amethyst ball. I made two pairs of the third size, then one pair in the second size – with some stripes of Flourite, just for fun. Here they are:
World's Simplest Mittens knit in Red Heart Gemstone by Deborah CookeIt’s interesting how the mitts matched more easily, even though this was the smaller size. The repeat on the gradation must be shorter in this colourway.

Next up, the red ball – Fire Agate!

Red Heart Gemstone

Last week, on a beautiful sunny day, I drove up to Spinrite. Spinrite is in Listowel, Ontario. It’s a former mill for Patons, and has an outlet store. I don’t know how much yarn they spin there anymore – it seems that mostly they ball and band yarn for Patons, Bernat, Caron, Red Heart, Sugar Bush and other brands owned by Coats, which owns the mill. (You can see their yarns on the Yarnspirations site.) The outlet store has first quality yarns – mostly Patons and Bernat – for sale, as well as a lot of seconds and discontinued yarns/colours. I’ve bought a lot of seconds there over the years and quite often the issue is the weight of the ball: it’s too big or too small. One of the ladies there told me that these balls are the result of setting up the balling machines. They also stock an excellent range of needles in the brand I like (Prym) so when I need needles, I’ll often go up there and have a poke around the seconds bins while I’m there.

I found three balls that looked interesting on the seconds table on that last visit. Part of the fun (for me) is figuring out what the seconds yarns are. They don’t have bands, although they’re broadly separated by fiber – there’s a table for acrylic (although some blends slide in there) and one for cottons. The wool is usually in a box under one table since the ladies separate it out as they’re adding yarn to the tables. These three balls were all the same type of yarn – it was a marl spun of two gradient plies, bulky weight, a big ball and probably acrylic. I couldn’t find it in the store, but found it on the website when I got home.Seconds of Red Heart Gemstone

As if often the case, the colours are a bit off in the image. The red is much richer and deeper (for some reason, red always skews pink in pictures with this camera) and the mauve is deeper, too. The colour of the bottom ball is pretty true. It’s Red Heart Gemstone, which should be a 200g ball. These balls are all between 140g and 145g. I’m guessing that these colourways are Amethyst, Fire Agate and Flourite.

You can see that I’ve already knit one mitten from the Flourite. The second one isn’t going to match perfectly, which is making me twitch a bit (but not enough to break the yarn and discard this rosy section.) Mittens are my comfort knitting. I like knitting mittens when I’m thinking about other things because I don’t have to think about my knitting much. Also, mittens are finished faster than socks, especially when I use a bulky yarn like this one. I often to use an old Patons pattern, but it’s for worsted weight yarn. A couple of years ago, I found this fabulous pattern on Ravelry – The World’s Simplest Mittens by Tin Can Knits. This pattern has instructions for basic mittens in five sizes in four weights of yarn (fingering, DK, worsted and bulky). It’s a good clear pattern and it’s free. Here’s the Ravelry link and here’s the Tin Can Knits website.

Here are the first of my mittens:

If you’re interested in visiting Spinrite, you can find more information about the store and their tent sales, as well as directions, on their website right here. You can see the mill from the store, but I don’t think they offer tours. The stock of seconds and discontinued yarns changes all the time, so you never know what you’re going to find. That’s part of the adventure.