I’ve been knitting pretty enthusiastically lately. I think it’s mostly due to tackling lots of children’s toys, which are easy, quick and fun. After finishing Kevin’s sweater, I really wanted a break from major projects.
I started with a bobble hat from one of my favorite knitting books:

I think this book is ideal for a beginner as it’s filled with adorable, easy, quick knits. This baby hat was actually a little more work than I’d bargained for as bobbles (the little balls) are a pain, as is trinity stitch, which comprises most of the hat. However, I think it looks adorable on L. I finished it up while I was sick and spending a lot of time in bed, and it helped pass the time along with Grey’s Anatomy.

After the hat, I wanted another super easy knit, this one for a girl newborn for my co-worker. I’d been wanting to make an elephant onesie from the same book ever since I saw it, so I seized the day. It was the first time I’d ever done stranded color knitting (the elephants). Basically, when you do stranded color knitting you have two colors, no more, no less. You hold one color in one hand and the other color in the other hand. This means you need to be able to knit with your left hand to knit with the second color. “Knitting with your left hand” is another way to describe continental knitting, or the way people on the European continent (not Ireland or the UK) knit. Anyway, it’s not hard – no harder than American knitting, but it was a new skill. Overall, I was very happy with the onesie.


I’ve done a couple toys from this book:

It’s filled with knits that can be done in a week or two without any major time commitment. I started with this koala:

He’s not really my finest work. Getting the feet on straight was basically impossible, and his tummy is a little wonky, as are his ears, but after Kevin’s sweater, this was a welcome change of pace. Gratifyingly, L seems to like him.
Next, I wanted another quick but nice knit for a new baby. B’s friends are expecting this Fall. They had trouble conceiving and have been waiting a long time for this baby. Basically, they apparently were trying before B and I were for L. I know how frustrating 8 months was for me, and I can only imagine what they have been through. Anyway, I decided to knit a super simple blanket in organic cotton. It’s super soft, and I think it’ll be great to wrap a new baby in. I got a little creative with the photo taking as you can see below.


Finally, I just finished knitting a reversible doll for L. L has a ridiculous number of toys, but she has only one doll, a Raggedy Ann, so I thought I’d make her another. An interesting feature is that it’s reversible. This was actually not particularly difficult to make; I just followed the directions. The challenge in this piece was actually crocheting the flower the one girl is holding and the flower on the other girl’s hat. I don’t really know how to crochet, so I had to go to the internet for tutorials. The flower hat turned out well, but the one the girl is holding is pretty wonky. I probably should have re-done it, but I was too lazy.

Now, I’ve moved back to try and make some progress on the christening gown I started a couple of years ago. I’m still nowhere near finishing, but I’m approaching the halfway point. I’m three or four times as far along as I was in the picture below. It’s frustrating because I keep making mistakes, and I don’t really know how to fix them or stop making them. The pattern is insanely complicated. (It is 150 lines long.) Normally, I can just memorize a pattern if it’s say 30 lines or so, but this is beyond me. I also just cannot read the lace the way I can an Aran knit. Nevertheless, I’m plugging away.

