Who left the swift here?

Nobody was as surprised as I was by the latest big needle garter stitch phase. I have very little against big needles (as evidenced by the way that I didn’t need to go buy some when the urge struck) and even less against garter stitch, which I consider very elegant. (I understand the complaints of some anti-garter types who find it boring and somewhat numbing, but I like the simplicity of it.)

Still, I was surprised. I’d sort of thought that the whiplash of knitting one thing for sixteen days would be a wicked case of startitis and an overwhelming need for variety. When recovery consisted of housekeeping and brain dead back and forth knitting…you could have knocked me over with a feather. Most unlike me. I worried actually, that perhaps I was coming down with something. That maybe this simple knitting phase was an early warning system for a cold, or the flu…or maybe an indication that I had finally gathered enough inner peace to knit that garter stitch jacket I’ve been thinking about. I shouldn’t have worried. Now that I’ve got that out of my system, I seem to have contracted the predicted exceptional case of startitis.

Symptoms consist of the following:

Tinksbacksadl3

Working on the tinks sweaters with a zeal I’d forgotten. I’m suddenly aware that they are growing quickly and that if I don’t get the lead out I’m going to have spent all this time and energy knitting them hats with sleeves. Realistically speaking, this means that all I should be knitting is the tinks sweaters….and yet….

Regsocksnotdone4

Ahem. A pair of socks seems to be almost finished, and worse than that….

Denscrf3

Er, there is possibly (though I don’t exactly remember how this happened) a lace scarf started out of the single ball of Misti Alpaca that I had leftover from the snowflake shawl. Does it end here? No my friends, it does not.

Flowermittswound2

This would appear to be a mitten kit from Susanna, a gift from ages ago that has been stalking me from the stash. I’ve managed to resist it for a good long time, but there’s my favourite kind of mitten talk in the blogosphere and this represents a desperate attempt to avoid getting sucked into the vortex of Latvian braids. (Maybe I’ll put one little braid on the cuff….just to take the edge off.) It would appear that I wound this up very quickly sometime yesterday while I was on the phone. It’s a blur.

I know that Rams is reading all of this (muttering darkly of commitment and faith and Tuesdays being for spinning while readying the stash-weasels to beset me) waiting for me to make some sort of gansey noise, so my fear of her wrath has a big lump of gansey Corridale making it’s way through the wash today.

Ganseycorrwash7

I can’t spin that wet, so….

Boogierov4

Sigh. Roving from Spunky Eclectic. I am helpless in the face of it.

I distract you now with yet another gift for an Olympian, (one that I neglected to give out the other day, what with being distracted by all of that garter stitch) this time from Rabbitch

Rabbitchmarkers

Beautiful peridot and silver stitch markers (Rabbitch acknowledges, and I concur, that it is very difficult to take pictures of sparkly things.) that spell “knit”. Renee S. is the lucky winner. (Great. I went to Renee’s blog and now I want to cast on those socks.)

Now, if you’ll excuse me, it’s occurred to me that Fiona’s Book Launch is tomorrow…

Inspired-Cable-Knits

(Have you seen this book? It’s beautiful. Maybe I’ll review it tomorrow.) …and I should totally go cast on something cabled. You know, not because I can’t control myself…just so I’m knitting something appropriate at the Launch. It’s about Fiona, not me. I can stop whenever I want to. It’s a choice. Where’s my ball winder? Get out of my way.

104 thoughts on “Who left the swift here?

  1. I pre-ordered that book awhile ago. Can’t wait to get my greedy little hands on it.
    Nice job of dodging the stash weasels-this week anyway.

  2. Aaaaaaahhh. So good to see you back, really.
    Of _course_ you can stop any time. Aaaaaaaaany time. Let’s see — lace, spinning, socks, mittens, colorwork, book reviewing. What could you add? Something intarsia? Oh no, no, no! Stop now. That would be addictive behavior.

  3. And here I thought it was just me who stalled after my mittens were complete. I knit on a seed stitch afghan square and am now — believe it or not — in the midst of cleaning up my knitting niche before I decide what project to start next. I kinda had to dangle a carrot in fronot of my nose to get the area cleaned otherwise the stack of mail and magazines was about to swallow up any knitting.

  4. If you start the cables, you really oughtta drop the lace. You’re making me queasy!

  5. And here all my knitting time (AND overdue housework time) is being spent checking out the fabulous K.O. items that have been knitted.
    Of the 4,000 plus … sigh. Who knew so many had blogs? (Really must get one of my own.)
    I’ve garnered at least twice as many projects on my “must make immediately” list as the number you are actually making.
    And at a meeting yesterday, while showing off my own Knitting Olympics item (a lacey scarf – “Branching Out” to be specific), I got a serious request to knit one for another meeting attendee.

  6. Where would I get a ball winder from? Rather worried that an internet search will turn up all sorts.

  7. I don’t know, Steph… the whole idea of the unfinished tink sweaters is making me itchy… I can’t STAND unfinished knitting for babies… all of that work, so little time to wear it as it is… I think, in your shoes, I’d start a feverish, frantic sprint to finish that, and then I’d cast on everything you just mentioned plus an the Guenivere lace thing in Wrap Style… but that’s just my stash calling, plus my older daughter who’s apparently hooked on the attention that home made stuff gets her from school…

  8. I think whatever you got is catching on this side of the country too, cause I have some post-Olympic projects in my living room and I’m not sure how they got here…

  9. I knew you couldn’t handle project monogamy for long. Howzabout finishing something? Anything? Just do it for me, okay?

  10. Love the book! I just got it a day or two ago in the mail. Plenty in there to keep me cabling for a long time. I too have plenty of WIP’s now…hard to stay focused on one thing but I am knitting faster at least so while scattered I am, I’m still finishing projects at a good clip. I totally understand.

  11. I can vouch for the socks. Mum’s knitting the potawhatever socks right now and they look fantastic. My only warning is to actually check your guage. Mum’s are turning out quick narrow.

  12. Rams is much more subtle, not to say devious, than she gets credit for. (Referring to self in third person AND ending a sentence with a preposition. Must be early March.) And more benign. For example,I believe in encouraging people to read all the comments. For those who get this far, there is a reward:
    http://whatswanniettaknittingtoday.blogspot.com/
    then scroll down just a bit.
    Well, STPHanie wasn’t coming through…(That’s carded batts by this time tomorrow, tulip, or worse will follow. Washing ain’t carding and carding ain’t spinning.) (But you could cast on the ribbing and I’d understand)

  13. It was just a matter of time. I sat down the other night and started gathering all my partial projects. I overflowed one basket and decided I needed to do something about it. So I did. I put them away and cast on a new pair of socks. What? What? There’s nothing wrong with that – socks are necessary! It’s winter! In Canada! Yeah, that’s it…

  14. A sock. A teddy bear. A scarf. An afghan square(or two). And the pattern for Stashghan, in a (vain?) attempt to use some of my stash. Looks like I’m in good company.

  15. If you now have another deadline but have changed the yarn thereof twice, involving abandoning 5 inches of a very nice lace design in a yarn you’re afraid you will run out of, does that count as startitis? Yeah, probably.
    I gotta have that cable book! I’m the cable gal. As soon as I finish this lace thingie.

  16. I totally understand you! 🙂
    After finishing the shawl, which consisted of 1 kg of orange, I just am not ready yet to return to my orange pullover which I should finish before spring arrives – it’s a warm winter yarn! Instead, I started (and finished) four pairs of socks and am just casting on for another. None of them is orange, of course. But, I managed to put all the things I need in my knitting place on the couch, so maybe tonight… 😉
    But all of the pairs of socks had different patterns, so it looks like the patterns of the shawl did something. I’m not quite sure if it’s good, though, knitting everything with a different pattern. I really need some patterns for self-striping sock yarns now! 😉

  17. I’m laughing – the urge to have multiple projects going is the reason why I have my own separate storage room in our house _and_ I’ve taken over both the basement and the garage.
    At least yours all seem to be fiber related – mine include that, other arts and crafts, gardening, camping, carpentry…
    Cool picture, rams!

  18. It’s clear that I’ve been living in a cave. I haven’t seen that book and now I want it! I’d love to see a review – just to, you know, validate my idea that it’s a must have. Glad to see things are back to normal in your world.

  19. Well, what’s the point of knitting if you can’t have fun 🙂 So many beautiful things to make, and a yarn stash staring at you… It is all so seductive.

  20. reading this blog entry makes me want to go home and start fifty million projects ;P
    but i’m determined to stick to my knew found ability to stay with one project until it’s done..
    (though, is it cheating if I count the back panel of a sweater one panel, and move on to something not a part of that sweater for awhile..? 😮 )

  21. That’s Rebound with a capital R!
    Fiona’s book? I got my copy last month, and it’s just luscious. Some really amazing patterns in there, I think I’m in love.

  22. I am right with you. I have a sweater on the needles for my daughter that just kind of…appeared.
    But to heck with that…what about *your* new book, hmmm? 🙂 Based on past launches of your stuff, I’m guesstimating just 2-3 weeks before it will be available in stores. I’m very excited. Sometimes I even hop.

  23. I did see the CABLE BOOK (and I say this will all reverence as cables are zen to me. However, I put it back with every ounce of will power I had because I had already planed on buying a couple of obscure little books by a Stephanie Pearl-McPhee– maybe you’ve heard of her.
    Yeah, I know I’m behind my time, but I just learned of the world of knitting blogs due to the Olympics.

  24. I’ve gotta be a true follower, now. I just started a garter stitch shawl to wrap myself in out of the ribited and over with attempt at olympian fame. Since starting the shawl, though, I have discovered many unfinished things and I can’t seem to detach myself from my new spinning wheel. Meanwhile, the family is starting to whine and the sheep are trying to remind me that all this shiny wool comes from SOMEWHERE. wHY won’t they leave me alone?

  25. I feel ever so much better now; your monogamy stage was making me feel like the planets were a bit out of alignment.

  26. Whee! I’m a bit dizzy from reading that post and spinning from item to item to item, all the while thinking that THIS must be the last item…

  27. I won something? Cool! Those markers were meant for me – my birthstone is peridot. This sooo makes up for a) the crushing sense of defeat I have from not getting my medal b) all the bad luck I’ve had with rolling up rims these past two weeks.
    The socks are a load of fun (and maybe a smidgen narrow). You need them. You know you do. Come on….what’s one more project?

  28. You and I both know if you cast on those mittens, you’ll have the whole cuff, and maybe past the thumb gusset done by tomorrow.
    I tried this very tactic this week in regards to my insane, large, lace knitting to a deadline malaise, and was past the heel before I knew it (although I’m thinking I may just have to rip it back, because the color is not behaving properly, and I didn’t properly diagnose the problem until late last night).
    Of course, I also realize that knowing this will not keep you from casting on those mittens. I pretty much suspected it before starting the sock… but I just had to, lest I contract a case of knitting insanity from sticking with the pattern that I was so tired of.

  29. You have to have the appropriate knitting for the situation. Cast them all on now, so when the urge to knit cables hits you, voila! You have the appropriate project. Latvian mittens? Got some right here. Beautiful delicate lace? Check. Sock for the line at the bank? Yup. Hey. It’s your yarn, do whatever you want with it.

  30. My world makes sense once again. Thank you.
    I got my Fiona Ellis book yesterday. I’d cast on for the scarf in there ‘cept for the fact that if I don’t finish up my Olympic project by Friday, Jen’s gonna laugh at me.

  31. I made those pomatomus socks for my knitting olympics challenge! They are so pretty!
    Hmm, you have more on the needles now than I do and that is saying something!

  32. Wow. Startitis, but inspiring nonetheless. I really like the vivid colors in the pair of socks, and Misti Alpaca is fabulous stuff. Plus ooo – spinning! You’ve inspired me to try to head to the hardware store to buy a screwdriver to put the tensioned lazy kate together so I can do some playing (er, plying) this evening. 🙂

  33. Toronto and area folks – if you got the impression the book launch tomorrow evening is Invitation Only, (I know at least 2 of us did) it isn’t. I called the Textile Museum and checked. Absolutely open to the public, and free.
    So if you can make it and feel so inclined, come on out and support Fiona! She’s lovely, and I’ve seen some of the sweaters test knit for the book which are Even More Gorgeous In Person Than In The Photos. I’ll be there, and I’m bringing a Starmore fan with a rabid case of Startitis with me. (yes, Brigitte, I mean you. hee.)

  34. She who dies with the most works in progress gets to come back as a yarn shop owner. We might have a tie…

  35. Stephanie, are you willing to share your basic sock pattern? Have you done so in your latest book? Can’t wait for that to be on my shelf! Blessings, Julie

  36. Well, your monogamy didn’t last long, but I think it’s totally understandable. I am attempting to be more monogamous myself, and it has resulted in me HATING the scarf I’m working on. It’s bringing me down, with it’s boring, interminable garter-ness…….sigh.
    I want to cast on something else! Must – fight – urge!

  37. I still haven’t finished my Christmas knitting and I just started some entrelac and a lace shawl and and and… “hats with sleeves” BWAHAHAHAHA!

  38. That is a great book. I got so taken with the wrap that I spent some time spelunking the stash this weekend (thank you Fluffa Becky for supplying the term of art) and did not emerge until I had yarn to knit that wrap. (Debbie Bliss Cotton Angora. Perfect.)
    I haven’t cast on. Yet. But the yarn and the book are inching their way over to the trough between my bed and the dresser. That is where projects go when I don’t want to admit that I’ve cast on a new project without finishing an old one. (It appears that to my mind, a new project hasn’t really been started if it isn’t in a basket yet. Even if I pick it up and work on it from time to time, it doesn’t count.)
    They only have another seven feet to go. I really don’t know how we’re expected to keep up “WIP reduction” as a goal when yarn can migrate on its own?

  39. Oh, you are back…..all is right with the world…..I have a few things that have mysteriously appeared on various needles. Is this like stretching after vigorous activity???? Olympics backlash me thinks????
    By the way, being new to this community, when is you next book coming out??? I have lent the other two to a knitting couple I know and under threat of death ( I don’t have pointy needles for nuthin’) I hope to get them back….but in the mean time, I am ready for something new to read!!!! I have jury duty all next week and need a book and project.
    On a completely other topic, I am a preschool teacher and we are going to be having a silent auction…any suggestions for quick projects that might appeal to the masses. I need to donate and am a little dizzy from looking at my patterns and stash. Any thoughts out there????

  40. No, no Audrey. If you have enough stuff on your needles, you can’t die. See, the universe can’t handle too many unfinished things in one place–it disbalances things. I think the magic number (taken from the Kaballah) is 613 works in progress. Steph might be currently immortal.

  41. First time to comment, but just had to say I was totally with you there on the gorgeous garter stitch. I’m blogless, so didn’t join in on the Olympics. I do know, however, from my own past experience when I’ve finished something difficult on a time schedule, there’s a time afterward that it becomes all about the yarn for me. The way I see it, you didn’t just knit an Olympic level sweater in barely over two weeks, you did it while keeping up an extremely hectic pace. Personally, I think it’s very natural that after all that you took refuge in garter stitch while soothing your knitterly soul with luscious fibers drenched in heavenly colours. Gorgeous stuff, as always.

  42. When I was a kid, my grandma knit bandages for lepers. White pearl cotton, garter stitch.
    At the time, I thought — “The most mind-numbing job on the planet!” but as an adult — I can see it. I like just sitting there watching the stitches come together. No nasty *thinking*…..
    I prefer a more interesting yarn, though. 🙂
    Garter stitch scarf, out of excellent bright colors? Perfect for r&r when the brain and energy are exhausted.
    — Vicki in Michigan, who has made another Sockotta sock in the last week. Not quite on the Olympic pace, but still producing, and still finishing, despite having to think about heels and where to stop at the top and all that stuff….

  43. I’m a day ahead, so I’ll take advantage of the Intl date line to wish you and other blogmates a happy International Women’s Day.
    Don’t get to hung up about startitis. The post-Olympic monogamous phase should be celebrated for what it is – startling and unlikely to appear again for another 4 years. Unless….
    Commonwealth Games! Are you going to watch? We’ve had the Queen’s Baton go through Wagga Wagga last weekend on it’s way south to Melbourne – the faces on the kids holding it were brighter than the torch! So gorgeous.

  44. The stash is there to be knit! It wouldn’t be very kind of you to just let it sit around, would it???? You’re doing your part for the GOOD OF THE STASH!! At the same time, those poor UFO’s – I mean, really, it’s just cruel to NOT work on them. But not too much – don’t spoil the UFO’s. They get nasty and bad things happen. So really, you’re doing EXACTLY what you’re supposed to – balancing the stash and the UFO’s is not easy!

  45. Not only did I order Fiona’s book, but I pre-ordered bookbookbook, and I also ordered the book that Lene was raving about, “The Historian”. I love Amazon.

  46. Hey! I was just playing with cables this weekend! What a wild co-ink-y-dink! I will say that reading your blog has made me want to learn to knit socks. I started sun night and passed the gussets this afternoon. Hurrah me and thanks Steph. Said hello to ken, (nice guy)on his b-day and really enjoyed the K.O. Heard your voice on a podcast! SO not what I thought you’d sound like. Very nice alto tho…Have fun with your many projects.

  47. I WILL finish the two WIPs before I cast on again (she says, gritting her teeth), but I have the dreadful feeling that the choice of a new project will be like ordering at a restaurant which has too many “favorites”. I’ll sigh, “That wasn’t what I wanted” and end up casting on a few different projects/UFOs in training. Option overload, what a cruel mistress…

  48. We got that book today at the LYS I work at . Not really overly impressed. I think the cable placement is funny. But I do appreciate and respect the creativity.
    What sock yarn is that? I’ve admired it before, but now I need some….

  49. OMG! Spunky Eclectic roving is amazing! Why, oh why did I leave my wheel in the States? I will spend the summer reigniting my stormy relationship with it. The good news? My Olympic lace socks were finished – 4 days after the flame – but finished. I’m off to start a new project. You are a (bad influence) muse!

  50. I’ve decided to finally stop lurking in the shadows. I found your blog two months ago, read every entry starting at the beginning, and it has totally inspired me. I’m 19, and I’ve been knitting since I’ve been 12, but only scarves. You would not believe how many scarves one person can own! Anyway, I agree with a few people I saw in the comments earlier, I would love your basic sock pattern, I just gotta start making something useful (not that scarves aren’t useful, but I live in West Texas, and the high today was 87)!

  51. P.S. I’m going to Barnes and Nobles to buy your books this weekend, ’cause I can’t get enough Harlot, so if the sock pattern isn’t in there you just gotta put it in the next one!

  52. I am so relieved you’re back to normal. I felt lost and strangely sad, like something was missing. Now, all is right with the world!

  53. Sweetie, you knit whatever the hell you feel like knitting. Since the end of the KO, I’ve finished one UFO and have nearly finished two more — one on hold due to lack of yarn, which should be here on Friday, both of which should be finished by the end of the weekend (despite my Divorce Party on Friday.) And I’ve quit backing out of yarn purchases — yarn-sellers rejoice! — so I’m going to bet I’ll have as much on the needles as ever very soon. In fact, I think I’ll go buy more yarn now . . . Stash? What stash?

  54. Sherry W, you are an evil, evil person. I made the mistake of following your link. Now I desperately crave Selbu knitting patterns. All of them. They must be mine!!!

  55. Amongst all the startitis, whatever happened to your moebius??? I was so inspired, I figured out how to do it and actually made a scarf.
    Want to see? I can send a picture in an email if you want.

  56. You are a riot! You’ve made my day, giving me proof I am not the only knitter with more than a half dozen knitting bags/baskets next to my bed, some with multiple projects…

  57. i got my fiona ellis book a couple of weeks ago. i love the cables and patterns and photography, HOWEVER, i wish they had photographed the sweaters with more attention to what knitters would need to see. there are a couple of sweaters i like enough to make, but they are photographed only sideways and blurry, or from the shoulder down. i am not sure if that is because they actaully hang funny or what! and i can’t see any of the details i would want to be able to view if i were knitting these pieces.

  58. Hmmmmmmm… Garter stitch baby blanket (had all the members of the family knit on this one so we can wrap the new member in love), garter stitch baby sweater (Elizabeth Zimmerman), Valentine’s socks (my design and hey! they’ll be ready for next year) and 2 baby quilts, also getting ready for the sewing yard sale (why did I buy red brocade? I work in an elementary school!)guess I’ve gone round the bend, too!

  59. I’m relieved to know that my start-itis is temporally related to the knitting olympics, because that means that there is hope of it being temporary. I cast on for the alpaca lace scarf from the latest Interweave Knits magazine, a sweater, frogged some socks that I want to restart, etc.etc. I was afraid after a few weeks of this I wouldn’t be able to remember all of the things that I have on the needles.

  60. Steph, The Einstein Coat in The Knit Stitch book is really great. Never thought I would like to do something that big in just plain old garter stitch. Once you get the bottom panel finished it goes fast. I finally started it this past fall; finished it when we got to Florida this winter and just love it. Most of the gals down here do needlepoint. Took my spinning wheel to stitch in last week and wowed them with spinning. Even the shop-owner! We do have knitters also, but mostly stitchers.

  61. I’m knitting Einstein for my daughter… down to the last inches on both sleeves (unfortunately, it has been sitting like this since pre OK)… anyhow, the first part is a bit time consuming, but after that it does fly… used Lamb’s Pride Bulky. In the meantime, I’ve got 4-5 things on needles – startitius is in the air. Glad to see it’s hit you too!

  62. I’m always glad to have my need to serially start projects validated by a pro! Currently going a lace shawl as a gift, a Whisper scarf (seen on this blog) in Kidsilk Night for (?), several sweaters (for various family members), and on and on. Just have not yet gotten interested in socks — maybe b/c I just don’t like to wear them. Thanks to my unofficial participation in the Knitting Olympics, I finished a beautiful Clapotis in Silk Garden as a farewell gift for my secretary who transfers to a new embassy this summer. (Now I just have to exercise the self control not to steal it for myself between now and summer!)
    Stephanie — you rock — I love reading the blog – makes me laugh and lets me know I’m not alone in my knitting obsessions.

  63. One more try:
    South Slocan Scarf; uncanny resemblance to Snowdrop shawl. February 17th, Knitting-Pattern-a-Day Calendar. Might be legit; I don’t know.
    Sorry for the telegraphic style, but this is my fourth shot at trying to let Stephanie know about this.

  64. Whew! Thank heavens, you’re back to normal. Garter stitch was worrying me!
    Got Fiona’s book last week. I did NOT go to Barnes to buy another knitting book, honest. One look at the sweaters, and I was sucked in. I seem to have become fixated on cables. Although socks are beginning to interest me (I need something small enough to take on the boat now spring is here!). Wonder if there’s something like a sock of the month, or holiday socks, or . . . Although if I buy any more yarn, the stash weasel may need a companion, he’s already overworked!
    And *taps foot on floor* Where Is Your Book?!?

  65. You do whatcha gotta do… i.e., you knit whatcha gotta knit!
    I encourage your ambition.
    pssssssst… there are no rules!!

  66. love that sock! what kind of yarn did you use? also–love your blog! this is my first time though i’ve read your books…

  67. Love all the WIP, BUT aren’t you supposed to be in Hawaii for some R&R? hehe IF you do get to go take ONLY your tinks with you —just got to finish it up as I’m really looking foward to seeing it completed. I got through all the magazines since KO ended and now have been haunting the yarn shops –JUST LOOKING (NOT) My stash doth growith each day!!!!Is there some island I can go to that has NEVER heard of wool ?

  68. It’s not that I find garter stitch boring or mindnumbing…. I’ve just always thought of how it looks as a little bit “white trash” or “nascar”
    as some would say. Kinda like how I feel about cabbage. Not sure why I felt I needed to share that with you…..

  69. The new cable book is AMAZING. I already own it. Have drooled over it (it IS my copy). Have plastered it with post-its. And wish I could knit faster!
    When is YOUR book coming out?

  70. I see you have little paper inserts in your balls of yarn. Do you hand wind or start with paper on the ball winder? That was originally typed ‘had wine’, I think I still have Olympic hangover.

  71. I just got Fiona’s book the other day at my LYS and it is WONDERFUL!!! I can’t wait to make my first project from it. It is a must for any knitter’s book collection. I can’t say enough good things about it.

  72. I have a lot of family and i am the only knitter, therefore I am in a constant state of baby blanket. Most times, the child isn’t entering pre-K when they recieve their blanket. I knit baby blankets for functionality, not solely asthetics. My happy place is a garter st diagonal baby blanket knit contenental style. there is something so…natural about it. LIstening to some good music helps too.

  73. I liked Fiona Ellis’ book on cabled items very much. I’m a little scared off by the price, as I recall, since I would only actually make one or two of the sweaters in the book.

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