Thursday, September 1, 2011

Gifts That Are Dear.



I have dear memories of my mom slaving away at the sewing machine, making our special home made 'Cabbage Patch', and 'Raggedy Ann' dolls for my sisters and I. I was so excited that she let me choose the hair color. I still have them stored safely away for my daughter and son to play with some day.

This Christmas the hubby and I decided on our meager family student budget to focus on sentiment rather than quantity when it came to gift giving this year. After going through dozens of patterns on www.ravelry.com for toys, sweaters and other possibilities I came across this darling Lamb pattern by Susan B. Anderson. It’s a free pattern on the above mentioned website, and was published along with other irresistible toys in her 2009 book Itty-Bitty Toys. I think there is a project waiting for me in the near future with the darling giraffe.

While I was at the local HEMTEX buying the pink sheets that were on sale for our guests, I was totally shocked to find a mohair bouclé yarn there in a bin labeled crafts, after I had spent the morning with a patient friend dragging her through shop after shop looking for the right weight of bouclé yarn, (of course it was the last store that had it). Fast forward to yesterday, I started knitting. As the little body took form, initially I was a little freaked out by how much it really did resemble a sheep. I caught my 2 year old running away with the “sheep” (at that point just the unknit ball of yarn), and giving it a special place tucked away in her tent. If she likes the actual finished toy as much as the ball of yarn, I think I made a good choice.

Having never worked with a bouclé before, there were some characteristics of that fiber that made it a little challenging. I had to be careful to not be fooled by the extra loops that appear naturally in that kind of a yarn and not mistake them for actual stitches, which happened quite a lot at the beginning. Also those loops also made it a little more challenging to pull the yarn through easily as I knitted. But the overall product is proving to make this well worth the occasional discomfort that I might experience.


"Lamb".



Two years later I finally finished this sampler blanket my mother and I started for my daughter. It still needs to be blocked, but I am happy to have it all together now.


Special knits. My sister and I wearing hats Nanan, my great-grandmother, knitted for us. 

4 comments:

  1. You are talented. What an adorable sheep that is going to be! And is that your house in Hawthorne Ward where I used to tend you? It kinda looks like it!

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  2. Thanks! It is on Roosevelt Ave.! The orange trim was later painted a jade green.

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  3. That sheep is just simply darling. I want one and i dont even know what i would do with it. I am amazed you can do stuff like that. Don't forget to post a pic of your finished product.

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