Time flies

Between several doctor’s appointments, bloodwork, and my two favorite medical tests*, I managed to find time to knit and photograph my finished project!!

Well, I decided to rip back the second sock and start it over with the other dye lot. As my grandmother used to say: If it’s worth doing, it’s worth doing right.

The socks are finished and I love how they turned out. I’ll get these socks to my sister-in-law asap. I will use the leftover 24 grams (out of 100) of yarn for something else where it won’t matter that the dye lots are different.

One might call these mullet socks as it’s all business in the front and a party in the back kind of like that 1980’s hairstyle. (I was going to grab a photo of a mullet but I just couldn’t do it.) I like the secret design running down the back of the leg.

The Curaçao blue is such an intense color that just draws you in like a deep pool of water.

The CoBaSi (cotton, bamboo, silk) yarn was a bit splitty but that’s just how cotton and cotton blend yarns are. I’m curious how these will hold up and hope they aren’t too thick or uncomfortable to wear.

Happy knitting!

*The squishing test and the “cleansing/probing” test. All is well!

A rookie mistake

I’m an experienced knitter, or maybe I should say that I’ve been knitting for a long time. My grandmother taught me how to knit when I was a kid.

I recently ordered some cotton blend yarn online to make socks for my sister-in-law. Other than it being a bit splitty (yes, Grammarly, it is a real word in the knitting world) it’s been a nice yarn to work with.

Well into the second sock and I discovered something that I should have noticed before I even began.

This shouldn’t have happened.

Can’t see it? Try this one.

Can you see it now?

Two different dye lots. If I had been more observant when I received the yarn and looked closer at the tags, I would have just started the second sock with the other dye lot rather than find out the hard way that they weren’t the same.

What would you do?

(A) Continue as if nothing is wrong? Or

(B) Restart the second sock with the other dye lot because no one will notice the slight change in the color between the two socks?

P.S. My sister is having surgery today. Will you say a little prayer for her safe and speedy recovery? Thanks. ❤️

Cutting the cord

Well, we did it. We cut the cord to our landline and only have our cell phones for calls.

We cut the TV cable cord years ago and have been just fine without that squawk box. Quite frankly (IMHO) there wasn’t much on TV worth watching. We stream what we want to watch and can back up, pause, stop, and forward as we please.

Of course, we still have internet. That is something we would have a hard time doing without.

So many people have either used their cell phones forever and never had a landline at all or gotten rid of the landline in favor of a cell phone. 99% of our landline calls were telemarketers anyway.

Do you use a landline, cell phone, or both?

New to me yarn

My sister-in-law can’t wear wool so I wanted to try a different yarn for a pair (or three) of socks for her. Enter CoBaSi by HiKoo. It’s a cotton, nylon, bamboo, silk blend that claims to be fingering weight but seems a bit heavier/thicker than that.

I ordered three different blue colors and decided to start with the Curacao (#068) color, a deep aqua.

It’s my basic 64-stitch sock with an added pattern to the back. I liked the Dorsal Socks (Helen Stewart’s Sock Society Season 2) I made a couple of years ago and thought the design running up the back of the sock made it and unexpected and fun detail .

I used the design from the It’s Tea Time sock in the Around the World in Knitted Socks. Sometimes a knitted pattern makes the socks thicker than the plain stockinette so hopefully this design won’t add bulk to the foot inside the shoe.

I thought the slipped-stitch heel flap would look better than the Eye of Partridge heel flap since there is some ribbing down the back of the sock.

The yarn is splitty sometimes though I always have that issue with cotton yarn. I should have these finished soon and am curious how they will wear.

One sock is finished and the second sock is already on the needles.