Rogue Ninja Coffee Cozy

About ten years ago, I designed a cozy for our French press coffee pot called Java Ninja. It’s a free download from Ravelry. The original Ninja looked like this:

Java Ninja by Deborah Cooke knit in Patons Classic Wool by Deborah Cooke
Java Ninja by Deborah Cooke knit in Patons Classic Wool by Deborah Cooke

I knit this one in two colours of Patons Classic Wool Tweed. It’s knit top-down, then I added to contrasting I-cord at the top and the flap to go under the handle for the buttons.

Here’s a link to my original project on Ravelry and to the free pattern download there. Ha. I finished that in September 2011!

Over the years, coffee dribbled, the wool soaked it up, the wool felted when washed and we broke that French press. Our current one is a bit taller. Mr. Math also was not a fan of the buttons – since he makes the coffee, his opinion rules.

I made a new coffee cozy recently. I called it Rogue Ninja because I simplified the pattern. There’s only one colour of yarn, there’s no flap or buttons and no contrasting I-cord at the top. I also used a heavier yarn and knit it more tightly. Red Heart Gemstone is an acrylic yarn with a slow gradation. It won’t felt. It’s also a bulky weight instead of a worsted, so I knit it on bigger needles and increased the top to fewer stitches all around.

Here’s the result:

Rogue Java Ninja knit by Deborah Cooke in Red Heart Gemstone
Rogue Java Ninja knit by Deborah Cooke in Red Heart Gemstone

This used 55 grams which is just over a quarter of a ball. I’m quite pleased with how it came out. It’s very sturdy and will actually stand up by itself, which makes it look like a medieval knight’s tent.

Here’s my Ravelry project page with details. Maybe this one will last ten years, too!

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.