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Swirl Socks

Swirl Socks
by Jennifer Crowley

Published in: Tinking Turtle Designs
Craft: Knitting
Category: Feet / Legs → Socks → Mid-calf
Published: March 2013
Yarns suggested: Three Irish Girls Kells Sport
Yarn weight: Sport / 5 ply (12 wpi)
Gauge: 8 stitches and 13 rows = 1 inch in stokinette
Needle size: US 0 – 2.0 mm
Yardage: 250 – 380 yards (229 – 347 m)
Sizes available: 7, 8, 9″ circumference, 7, 8, 9″ foot length, length can be adjusted

This pattern is available for $6.00 USD

These socks are toe-up with a short-row heel. You will need to know how to work wraps and turns. You can, of course, substitute your own heel or toe quite easily.

Ravelry Link

Post Mortem: Newport

Newport started as a submission titled Whisper.

I knew I wanted to design for Classic Elite Yarns, and had gotten in touch with someone on Ravelry who had designed for them before, asking how I would go about approaching them.  The Ravelry user told me that Classic Elite has a mailing list for designers who want to know about design calls.  The Ravelry user gave me the person to contact, and I went about emailing CEY.  There’d been a design call that had ended a day or two ago, but CEY said if I could pull a proposal off by the end of the week, they would consider it.

The design call featured lots of color blocks, open and airy pieces (makes sense – it is the spring call).  Some of the pictures had a beach in the background, or sailor themed jackets.  You can see some of the slides that were included below:

In about a day I pulled together my design proposal, as you can see below:

Or view above.
Things I Did Well:
  • I followed the design demands.
  • I’ve got a clear schematic, that is actually really well drawn, considering.
  • My sketch approximates colors that Classic Elite actually carries in Classic Silk
  • I’ve got a bio, my contact information, needles needed, how it’s worked up, and a lot of other information that helps them come to an informed decision.
  • Right Place, Right time.  I was late, but I just happened to submit a crochet pattern in the yarn they needed to fill in the CEY Crochet Booklet.  I was late, but somehow, I managed to be the thing they needed right then.  Being in the right place at the right time cannot be discounted.  And the only way to do that is to put yourself forward.  If I’d decided to put myself forward a week later, it would have been too late, I’m sure.

What I could have done better:

  • The Sketch seems rough, which it is.  I was rushed.  Also, I think she looks rather like a boy.  Not a bad thing, but not what I was going for.
  • I wish it was on one page.  One page is about all people have the attention for, luckily my second page is just a visual, and not much reading.  Acceptable.
  • The bio needs to be smaller.  Gosh, that took up so much space that I could have used for other things.
  • The swatch is not blocked very well, and is rather small and long.  I would have liked to have done something wider so it gave a better idea of fabric – but again, time.
Some nitpicky personal things:
  • you’ll notice the sleeves are shaped differently than is said in the sketch.  I figured out the way I imagined was a lot of fabric and didn’t look good.
  • Also, there’s only one sleeve length in the final pattern.  Grading one sleeve length was enough.  Don’t need long sleeves on a spring pattern either.
  • Shaping is done differently than described: I use short rows instead of shaping like the Cap-Sleeve Top by Mary Jane Hall that inspired the pattern.  This, I think, is a good thing.
  • The name changed.  This happens in about 50% of patterns, especially in magazines and cohesive collections like CEY puts out.  They have a theme, and the name will be changed to reflect the theme.  I think Newport is a better name than Whisper anyway.
So what are your thoughts?  What could have been done better?  What do you think worked well?  Are you surprised by anything?  How does the proposal compare to the original?

One last thing: I’m not the only one who is doing Post Mortems.  Check out this post inspired by my last Post Mortem.

Newport and it’s Namesake

I wanted to share this story the day that it happened, but couldn’t, because it would have given things away for Classic Elite, and they like their surprises.  But now that the design is out, I can tell you about it.

I wrote the Newport design nearly ten months ago.  By October, I had put the design out of my mind, and was working on other things.  I got an email from Classic Elite; they needed me to resend my pattern and, by the way, here’s some of the pictures from the photoshoot for the sample.

The pictures, which you can see on Ravelry, or in the previous pictures in my blog, were stunning.  I could hardly contain myself.  I went to call my mother, after forwarding her the email (probably against the rules, as I’m not supposed to make public the details of my design until they publish it, but I thought my mother could be… mum. heh.)  I’d forgotten that my mother and my two grandmothers had taken a trip that weekend TO Newport.

You can’t see it so clearly in any of the pictures used for Newport, but in Bondi, pictured at right, you can see some of the resort/hotels/condos that are typical of the Newport Beaches.  While I didn’t know for certain, I mentioned to my mother and grandmothers that I *thought* they had done the photoshoot in Newport.

I should have known that was dangerous.  Before I could say more, my grandmothers had declared that they were going to look and see if they could find the stretch of beach where the pictures were taken.

My poor mother knows not to protest when my grandmothers go off on a tear.

Me?  I could hardly contain my laughter.  Mostly because had I been with them, I would have been searching the beaches too.

Inspirations and Influences: Newport

Newport is one of the few designs that didn’t start with a stitch pattern, which is how I mostly design.  I get an idea for a pattern, and then I pull the shape of the thing around it.  Instead, Newport was directly inspired by Mary Jane Hall’s Cap Sleeve Top.  My room mate at the time had just created one in Ty-Dy Cotton, and I responded by creating my own in Ty Dy Wool.  I liked it, but I began wondering what would happen if I…?

About the same time, I had been admiring the patterns in New England Knits, specifically the pattern on the cover, the Middlefield Pullover.  I loved the asymmetrical line going down the side, I loved the open neck that showed the collarbones.  But… I wanted something in crochet.  And I wasn’t sure I wanted something quite as warm, or quite as fitted.

You can see where this is going, right?

The clincher was I had just finished a knit-along in Classic Silk, and after I had managed to pick the right size (I had forgotten I had lost so much weight, and used old measurements… silly me), I had a ball knitting the top up.  It just simply flew off the needles.  I had some classic silk left over, so I worked up a swatch in that, and sent it in.

The rest?  Well that’s another story that you’ll have to wait for.

Newport Classic Elite #9213, Surf’s Up

Newport

by Jennifer Crowley

Published in: Classic Elite #9213, Surf’s Up
Craft: Crochet
Category: Sweater → Pullover
Published: February 2013
Yarns suggested: Classic Elite Yarns Classic Silk
Yarn weight: DK / 8 ply (11 wpi) 
Gauge: 16 stitches and 8 rows = 4 inches in Sc-blo with larger hook
Hook size: 3.5 mm (E), 4.0 mm (G)
Yardage: 945 – 1485 yards (864 – 1358 m)
Sizes available: S (M, L, XL, 2XL, 3XL)
Finished Measurements: 36¼ (38¼, 40¾, 43¾, 45¼, 47¾)”
Yarn Requirements: 6934 Plum MC 6 (7, 7, 8, 9, 10) balls, 6910 Soft Violet 1 ball

Ravelry Link

This pattern is available for instant download for $6 through Ravelry
You can also buy it on the Classic Elite Website.
It is also part of the pattern booklet #9213, Surf’s Up, by Classic Elite Yarns.  You can buy it in print at your local yarn store.

Debating if this pattern is for you?  Got questions?  This is the place to ask them.  Over the next few days I’ll be talking about the design process for Newport, including a great story about when I first saw the shots of the sample on the model.

See the Pretty?

Cleaning up the Links

Since I’ve been putting out fires for the last two weeks – there’s been links piling up of things I’ve wanted to share.

I’ve got some new classes that I’ll be teaching over the summer at Fibre Space – a more detailed post is forthcoming, but you can take a look at them here.

Anne Merrow, one of the editors at Interweave, wrote a great post covering the blog tour the Sockupied Spring 2013 designers.  My favorite line? “Jennifer Crowley even created a series about the process of proposing and designing her Totem Socks for the issue, a great resource for knitters interested in designing for future issues of Sockupied.”  *does a little dance here*


In line with the Post Mortem of Totem I did, Stefanie (Chaoscat on Ravelry) has taken my idea and added her own spin: creating a debriefing of her own design, Marching Band Gloves.  Take a look at it here.  I’m hoping this will catch on – I’m going to have to create some type of graphic for it now.

On Saturday I had a friend of Micahel’s come over to let me try his DSLR camera – and specifically, the lenses that I was planning on buying.  He’s loaning it to me for a couple of weeks until I can get my own.  As a result, whenever I complete a “work chunk” and get a break, I’ve been “playing” with the camera.


It’s amazing what you can do when you have the right resources at hand.

This was going to be a post about how I desperately hoped that spring was around the corner, because I’m reading for this cold to end.

Then I got distracted by a picture of Sweetness, when she turned six, and I spent a good 15 minutes realizing that Light is the age of Sweetness when I first started watching the both of them.

Then I thought I’d do a recap of what has been going on the last few weeks – since it’s been a while, hasn’t it?

But I decided that all that can wait.  I want to tell you a story of some boxes in an attic.

You see, when Michael and I decided to move to the DC area nearly 3 years ago, we weren’t sure how much room we would have in our next place.  Living in Davidson, space was pretty cheap, in a way it isn’t in DC. We would be downgrading space.  So we took many of the non-essentials, and put them in the attic at Michael’s family vacation spot.  Once we move in, we could sort and figure out what else we wanted.

Fast forward three years.  We’ve occasionally gotten some boxes down from the attic (like Christmas decorations and a few things Michael wanted) and we still hadn’t brought home the boxes filled with my books, papers, and things from college.  Last weekend when we were at the farm, I’d HAD ENOUGH.

I carried them down from the attic, and began sorting them, right in the kitchen.

It was a blast from the past.  Letters I’d saved from Michael and my family.  The My Little Pony pictures my roommate and I had colored and put on our door.  Bank statements, and best of all, some of my writing which had been lost in a computer crash.  Here was all my work from my memoir class.  Hallelujah!

And books.  Books that were old friends I hadn’t seen in a long time.  My favorite books from college, some that I wondered if I lost, were there.

Also, when I couldn’t find the glue Michael, and you told me I lost it?  That was there too.

This is where I would normally show a picture of the weekend, or at least a picture of the books, or something, but all the pictures of this last weekend turned out a blur.  I had my settings wrong, and forgot to change them… and well, it was like a blast from the past, when I’d develop a roll of film, and there would be ONE picture that was good.

So I’ll give you the view from the farm porch, not this trip, but it doesn’t change much.

https://www.tinkingturtle.com/2013/03/this-was-going-to-be-post-about-how-i/

Feline Friday

I loff you – you’re so fluffy.

Awhile ago, we had our friends bring their kitten, Cat, to play with Peake and Watson.  It was mission socialize cats – and for a first playdate it went really well.  Very little hissing, and by the end of the night, they were tolerating each other fairly well.  Watson so wanted to be friends with Cat, but Cat wasn’t too keen.  It resulted in some pretty cute pictures.

About a week or two later, Cat died suddenly.  Our friends were pretty broken up about it.  They now have two new kittens (and we’re still planing to try and do playdates in the future – don’t worry, we were safe about it before, and will be safe about it later if it comes to pass).  I finally feel I can post these pictures without it being too painful.

Snow Day? And stories about Newport

Today was supposedly a snow day – not that you would know it from where I was standing.  Michael stayed home though, which meant I was super productive – by the end of the day my brain hurt something fierce.  Mostly, my head has been buried as I have several design due-dates, both personal and professional I’m trying to meet before the wedding.  It may very nearly kill me.

On a higher note, yesterday I went to The Yarn Spot for the first time in forever.  I was sick, and planning the wedding and… well, just run down.  It was SO GOOD to see people I hadn’t seen in forever.  I need to get there more.

Much to my surprise I found that Victoria had arranged for the most wonderful gesture for me – I was nearly beside myself.  There, on the table, was my sample (the one I crocheted for Classic Elite).  Victoria had made sure to be the first store in the trunk show when the pattern went out.  There I am, dopey happy grin on my face, copy of the pattern in my hand, and crochet top (which I thought I’d never see again – samples are not typically returned to the designer) in my hands.

I was beyond myself.

Anyway, this is the unofficial way of announcing that my crochet pattern with Classic Elite is now out.  The collection is called Surf’s Up #9213, and it’s available for purchase at your local yarn shop.  The pattern is called Newport.

I’ll talk more about it in the next few days.

For now?  I’ve got a dopey grin pasted on my face.  My LYS loves me.