| Taken on Northeast Corridor near Norwalk, CT. |
Exploring the art of knitting in Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine.
Showing posts with label Purl Soho. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Purl Soho. Show all posts
Sunday, November 16, 2014
Mise en train...
A cabal of knitters was sighted yesterday evening on the Metro North commuter rail originating at Grand Central Station, New York City, heading towards New Haven, returning from a self-designed yarn crawl that covered most of the LYS from midtown to lower Manhattan: Habu, School Products Yarns, Purl Soho, Seaport Yarn. Sushi, tea, espresso, vino, charcuterie, chocolate, the acquisition of a Japanese knitting magazine with great designs and unintelligible instrux, and excellent weather enhanced the experience.
Monday, January 6, 2014
Hedge Fund
William (right) has a new friend (left), as yet unnamed.
They are both born of wonderful free patterns, from Purl Soho and Lion Brand.
"..I could be bounded in a nutshell, and count myself a king of infinite space...."
Hamlet, II, ii, 254 ff.
Saturday, October 27, 2012
Friend and FO
The wheels of change grind slowly, but gradually I'm reaching the bottom of the UFO pile. This latest FO, called the "Petite Popover" and modeled by Ted and the owls, is one of those delicious free patterns to which I'm heavily addicted. It came to me via the Purl Bee newsletter from Purl Soho, and if you don't know about the amazing stuff this shop sells, I invite you to click on their link.
The garment knits up fast and is a clever way to keep a small child warm, since it combines a hat and generous scarf, thus preventing the dreaded Chilly Neck Syndrome. (Size is adjustable from baby to toddler to child.) Pop it over the kid's head, stuff the ends into the snowsuit/jacket/bunting, and you're ready to roll. I forced myself to knit this in acrylic because I don't trust the parents of Caiden (beneficiary, age 6 months) to hand-wash anything. And much as I detest synthetic yarn, I have to admit that what I used--SMC Northern Worsted--is nice. (Purl Soho shows the popover gorgeously done-up in cashmere and a top-of-the-line merino from Swans Island.)
Speaking of Swans Island yarns, catch my latest article in Knitscene's Winter 2012 issue about Coastal New England Yarns, from Block Island (North Light Fibers) to Swans Island!
The garment knits up fast and is a clever way to keep a small child warm, since it combines a hat and generous scarf, thus preventing the dreaded Chilly Neck Syndrome. (Size is adjustable from baby to toddler to child.) Pop it over the kid's head, stuff the ends into the snowsuit/jacket/bunting, and you're ready to roll. I forced myself to knit this in acrylic because I don't trust the parents of Caiden (beneficiary, age 6 months) to hand-wash anything. And much as I detest synthetic yarn, I have to admit that what I used--SMC Northern Worsted--is nice. (Purl Soho shows the popover gorgeously done-up in cashmere and a top-of-the-line merino from Swans Island.)
Speaking of Swans Island yarns, catch my latest article in Knitscene's Winter 2012 issue about Coastal New England Yarns, from Block Island (North Light Fibers) to Swans Island!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


