tiny happy

making journal

  • Gingham dress
    Morel
    Painting

    Baby bear 1

    Ke te pehea koe? How are you? 

    I'm sitting here typing this in a dress + sweater + shawl + tights + handknit socks combo. It's the first of July! I can't say I dislike having so many ways to wear wool, all at once. I hope you are keeping warm, or enjoying mid-summer, depending on where you are!

    Here are a few projects I've been working on lately:

    + + A gingham linen dress, using my own pattern (really a mash-up of a few patterns – the skirt + pockets from this one, the sleeves from this and the bodice self-drafted. The fabric was a wonderful find from my local shop – The Fabric Store one Sunday afternoon. I think I used a bit less than 1.5 metres in the end.

    = = A jumper for the winter (if I can finish it in time!) This is the Morel Sweater by the Danish designer Lærke of FiberTales. I'm knitting from a cone of natural (light fingering weight wool) from Holst Garn and am holding a strand of that together with a strand of hand-dyed silk-mohair from my friend Nikki's company, Dark Harbour Yarn.

    I love this design and really want to wear the finished garment but I'm finding the knitting to be slow going! The pattern includes a few different charts, so I need to sit down and concentrate when I'm working on it. I've realised that so much of my knitting happens because I'm doing it around other things – talking, hanging out with friends, drinking coffee, watching TV or listening to something. My goal is to put some decent time aside to work on it this coming week.

    ::: This is not one of my projects per se, but rather a gift from Keira to me! I've been collected big landscape paintings from op shops and hanging together on one wall in our living room (you can see how it looks here). Keira made me a small painting of a nearby landscape – our street, looking towards the bus tunnel. It's a view I look at every morning on my way to work so I love this wee painting!

    >> Finally, I've included a photo of a quick knit from the weekend: this is a wee baby bear bonnet made with two strands of yarn: hand-dyed merino-linen from Union Fibre and a strand of mohair-silk. I love making this pattern up for new babies in our circle! This one is a little big for its recipient, even though I made the smallest size, so I do hope it will fit next winter.

    I hope you are keeping well and finding time to work on your creative projects! I'd love to hear what you're up to, if you have time to leave a comment. 

    Spotify sent me this short piece of music on my 'Discover Weekly' (Who by Christina Galisatus) and it made me smile. I thought you might like it too! 

    Till next time. With love,
    Melissa

  • Solstice 5
    Solstice 3
    Solstice 4

    Solstice 2
    Solstice 1Macrame 2
    Macrame 1

    I love this time of year – the days are so short yet it's not properly winter-cold (at least here in Wellington) and I still like making and eating soup and tending the fire! It's nearly the solstice, which is special and always makes me think of our friends in Scandinavia and those long summer evenings we enjoyed when we lived there (although that was more than a decade ago now!)

    Other than wintry food, wearing all the knitwear, and watching Netflix under the new crocheted blanket, here are some other things I've been enjoying these days:

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    The Bloomsbury Cookbook by Jans Ondaatje Rolls, which is, as you might guess, all about the kitchen, picnics, parties, weddings, Christmases and everyday meals enjoyed by the Bloomsbury set and their families. I probably won't make many of these recipes, but I love looking at all the photos and letters and hand-written shopping lists in this book. Would make a great gift for a Bloomsbury fan you know, or yourself?

    Knitting on small projects such as ribbed hats for all the family (I've nearly finished my third of the season, using this trusty pattern) 

    A little embroidery – above you can see a couple of project bags I made recently. The one with colourful flowers was a gift.

    I recently bought a piece of eco-printed silk from a little shop in Featherston called Perpetua Studio. I really wanted to buy a long silk dress but that's a summer dream! Ceara prints her fabrics using leaves, lichen and natural dyes, and it's so beautiful. I used my piece to line an embroidered project bag, so I can admire it every time I get my knitting out. And there was a small bit left for a luxe scrunchie.

    Macrame! We needed a place to put two new house plants, so I decided to try making my own hangers. I've done this once before so I had enough cord stashed away to make the pot holder on the right (along with some wooden beads from an old necklace) and for the other one, I used some garden twine I found in the shed! I used a 1970s craft book to make my hangers, but I also found this YouTube tutorial useful for remembering how to do the various knots. 

    Finally, I recently finished reading Patch Work: A Life in Clothes by Claire Wilcox. I wasn't sure about this book at first, but have since decided it's wonderful. The author is a curator at the Victoria and Albert Museum. She writes in a poetic and moving way about her career, but also personal life by describing memories that are each sparked by a piece of clothing or fabric. If you love reading essays and/or memoir, I think you would enjoy Patch Work. 

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    Thank you for reading, friends! See you again very soon. Happy solstice to you, whether your nights are short or long right now.

  • Crochet a
    Crochet d
    Crochet b
    Reading
    Hat
    June is the month for reading, watching TV and working with wool. At least it is for me!

    I was so happy to complete my second crochet project – a queen-sized blanket – last week. For this, I used two cones of possum-merino blend DK I found at a Woolyarns mill sale a couple of years ago – one cone in medium grey and one in a peachy-pink shade. Both had the spinning oil still on the yarn, so it was quite stiff and rustic to work with, but light and soft after washing at the end.

    I worked them up with a size 4.5 crochet hook and used the Purl Soho granny square pattern to help me get started – for some reason, I just wasn't able to understand treble clusters until I read their pattern, and then something just clicked!

    The design is basically a giant granny square. I kept alternating colours for each round, and worked in a square until the blanket was big enough for our bed. Then I worked some single crochet around the edge to make a simple border.

    I found the clusters were very yarn-hungry and I nearly used up both cones of yarn. I think if you were to make one of these blankets with a finer or more expensive yarn, it could end up costing a lot. So I was very grateful for my possum merino stash!

    To 'block' it, I washed the blanket in the laundry tub which was just big enough, in quite warm water to which I'd added a decent amount of hair shampoo. 

    Then it went into the washing machine on the spin cycle. I realised I'd have to block it outside because of its size. So I used a tarpaulin in the garden (had to wash it clean first which was a mission) and pinned the crochet around the edge. After a day in the warm sun and fresh air, the blanket was beautifully soft and dry. And i's been keeping us warm on our bed ever since! I'm so happy with it and can't believe how warm it is. It might be the best and most useful thing I've ever made!

    I'm keen to have a good break away from crochet now, though, I must admit.

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    One of my goals for the year was to read more – I do love to read, but often find that I end up spending the evening knitting, listening to music and or watching Netflix instead! Especially when it's been busy at work or I feel like I've been reading all day on a screen. I thought that if I challenged myself to read more purely for fun, and kept track of what I was reading, I made pick up a book more often.

    I guess I"m halfway through the year and I think it has been working! I'm still quite a slow reader, but I've read some wonderful books so far – Ben Brown's A Fish in the Swim of the World was one I recently enjoyed. If you're interested in what else I've been reading, I've tried to remember to share each book in my Instagram 'stories', and those stories are saved as a highlight at the top of my profile page, under '2021 reads'.

    I'd love to know what you're reading at the moment if you feel like sharing that in the comments?

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    Finally, I thought I'd share a recently completed hat – I made this one for my brother in law N who had a birthday last month and knitted it up in Rowan Felted Tweed. This is a classic pattern – it's another from Purl Soho and you can find it for free here. I've already started one for Tom (but in black) and I think I'll cast one on for Arlo too. 

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    The lovely Sacha McNeil has a new site all about the handmade – it's called of small matters and I think you will like it! Sacha kindly featured me – I've offered up a beginner's embroidery tutorial and there's also a conversation we had about creativity for you to read. I also recommend the delicious caramel slice recipe from her friend (amazing chef and food writer Al Brown) that I can't wait to make myself!

    Thank you as always for reading, friends. I hope this finds you very well and keeping warm and cosy wherever you are in the world.

    X X X

     

  • Booties 1
    Autumn evening
    Nova 2
    Nova 1

    Shawls

    This time of year, at least in the Southern Hemisphere, is the turning point for crafting, I reckon- it's properly cool enough that knitting is always on the mind, and everyone seems to need new hats and jumpers. 

    We're also lucky enough to have some new babies in our family and friend circle – which is the loveliest reason to get making, don't you think? I've been trying out different bootie patterns for some of these babes – in the first photo above you can see a set of three I finished recently.

    These are: the 'suspension bridge booties' knitted up in cream DK wool (free pattern on Ravelry here), striped baby booties (from an old Debbie Bliss book I own) and a pair of 'greemy baby booties' in grey 4ply yarn (another free pattern – you can find it here). The latter is my favourite design because it's mostly seamless and I think they would stay on a baby's foot the best. 

    In my last post I showed some beautiful black wool fabric with a sparkly thread running through it, which was a lucky find at the most recent Fabricabrac fair here in Wellington. I used it to make a new winter jacket – the Nova Coat from Papercut Patterns. I made one of these a couple of years ago and still get lots of wear from it, so it's nice to have an updated version – perhaps for slightly fancier occasions, given the sparkly nature of it. I lined the coat in a black silk/cotton fabric with an embroidered texture, a bit like a Swiss dot. A bit of everyday luxury for sure!

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    And speaking of luxury, I bought myself a copy of Laine's 52 Weeks of Shawls, which is quite a special book, even just to look through, let alone knit from! As the title suggests, there are 52 patterns from designers around the world and there are many I'm keen to cast on. I also think I will learn a lot from these patterns as they have interesting design elements and construction methods. If you'd like to look through the different designs, you can do so on Ravelry here. I'm quite keen to cast on this one first – it's made using two strands of silk-mohair throughout. More luxury!

    A song that is keeping me company these days is this one, which has been around for a few years now but I still love deeply. Cattails by Big Thief

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    See you again soon, friends!

  • Ridarri
    Riddari 1

    Riddari 2
    Woolington

    Pressed flowers 1

    Kia ora, hello!

    It occurred to me that I never shared my major knitting project of autumn, aka Arlo's Icelandic jumper, here on the blog. I finished it up over Easter weekend and am really happy to have done so! It was a big project but I was happy with the result – and so was Arlo, which was the most important thing! Phew.

    I knitted the Riddari Sweater, a design by Védís Jónsdóttir for Ístex and I used Icelandic yarn (Ístex Lettlopi) from Holland Road Yarn to make it. Arlo chose the colours – they have lots of good contrast and look quite classic I think. I've listed the colourway numbers and how much I used of each colour over on my Ravelry page if you want to check out those details.

    The Riddari is knit bottom-up which is not my favourite construction, because I'm never quite sure how long to make the body and worry that my sizing is all wrong. For a long time, I thought that the sweater would be too small for Arlo so I went up a size and a needle size too. But the finished garment actually turned out to be too big. So I should have just trusted the pattern and relaxed! Next time I will.

    I think the finished piece looks lovely on him and he seems happy with it though we haven't had any weather cool enough for it yet – I'm sure that will be here soon enough!

    You can find more information about the Riddari Sweater here, and you can find a great 'Riddari-along set of blog posts by Pia Kammeborn here, if you'd like even more information! (I think the knitalong is long finished, but there's a lot of helpful info in those posts by Pia).

    Other than that, I've been doing some knitting for babies – so many bootees! – and I've also been working on a very bright, rainbow project. I'll show you that in my next post.

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    Autumn is always a good time for tidying up in the garden after the party of summer and so I've found myself pressing a few flowers and leaves after such gardening sessions. 

    In the second-to-last photo above, I've captured some of the new making materials that have come my way (okay, that I've bought!) lately. A couple of weekends ago I attended a wonderful new yarn festival in nearby Lower Hutt called Woollington. There were a few of my favourite hand-dyers there and I couldn't resist buying a few new skeins. It was also an excellent opportunity to catch up with fellow knitting friends! The sparkly black wool fabric you see in the same picture has now become a winter coat. Will share soon.

    I hope you are keeping well and happy, wherever you are in this world! Lots of love to you.

    Melissa

     

  • Thursday
    Limpet 3
    Thurs 3 (2)
    Thurs 4 (2)
    Thurs 2 (2)
    Hello from a sunny Sunday in autumn. I hope you are doing well, wherever you are.

    I thought I'd share a few of my recent projects, and some things that are bringing me happiness these days.

    You might have seen the other day that I published my first knitting pattern to Ravelry – for a pair of simple fingerless gloves or hand warmers. I'm calling the design 'Seashell mitts' because the simple lace pattern is a bit shell or even wave-like to me, and because I love shells and their shapes.

    I've made two pairs and for the second I used some beautiful merino-linen yarn I bought from Bonnie at Union Fibre. The colourway name was 'Limpet' but it makes me think of faded pink hydrangeas – it's very autumnal and lovely, I think.

    You can find the seashell mitts pattern for free download in my previous post, and the design's page on Ravelry is here.

    Other than that, I've been working on a few other projects, namely small items for expected babies, and I've also cast on something very colourful (and slightly unusual for me) as a gift for someone else. More about that in due course! 

    Work on my crochet granny square blanket continues at a slow pace – I like to work a round every now and then when watching Netflix or listening to a podcast but it's nowhere near the size it needs to be for a bed! I've also found it's really yarn-hungry, so I might just keep working until I run out of the two yarns I'm using.

    Over on my Instagram 'stories' I'm trying to share my non-work-related reading, as I finish books. These stories are saved as a highlight on my profile page. It's been a great way for me to keep track of the things I've read and what I thought of them. I recently finished Vesper Flights by Helen McDonald. I thought the writing was deep and beautiful and I'm still thinking about it.

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    Do you like flapjacks? My Mum used to make them often when we were kids and we all loved them, but I just don't seem to be able to recreate her version, which was not too buttery or sweet, but rather dense, deep and chewy. I've made a few batches in the attempt, though, which haven't been too bad, using this recipe (simple but super sweet, and easy to over-cook!) and this one (also good but still not quite how I remember them in childhood). I need to keep practising. Please let me know if you have an excellent recipe!

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    Would you like two and half minutes of mood-lifting jazzy deliciousness? I discovered this piece recently and you might like it too.

    XX – Melissa

  • Shell mitts 1
    Limpet 1
    Shell mitts 2

    I was after a new pair of fingerless gloves for the autumn and winter months, and came up with my own design – this super-simple pair with a shell pattern running down the back of the hand.

    I thought it would be fun to share my pattern, in case anyone else is keen to make a pair. I've popped it up on Ravelry (you can find the pattern page here), but I know some people are struggling to use the website since its re-design, so I wanted to share it here too.

    Download seashell mitts pattern (pdf)

    For the grey pair, I used a stray ball of Silver Lining Lumiere 4ply yarn I found in my stash – it's lovely yarn but has been discontinued. As you can probably tell, I ran out at the end of my project – and had to use another ball of the same yarn, but a different colour, for a 'contrast stripe' at the top of each mitt.

    To test my pattern, I made another pair from some very beautiful yarn hand-dyed by Bonnie of Union Fibre. The colour is 'Limpet' and the base is her Merino-Linen Singles. 

    One pair of these fingerless gloves takes about 40 grams of yarn. So you can definitely make two pairs from one 100gram skein and have enough leftover for a pair of baby booties.

    This pattern would be simple enough to adjust if you need a larger or smaller pair of mitts – you could knit additional or fewer repeats of the shell pattern, and knit more or less of the ribbing at the top and bottom. 

    I hope you enjoy making them if you decide to! Please let me know if I've made any mistakes, or there's any useful information missing.

    With thanks to my lovely friend Lizzie, for requesting the pattern, which encouraged me to write it down 🙂

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  • Autumn 1
    Autumn 3 (1)
    Autumn 4
    Autum 6
    Autumn 2
    Autumn 5
    Blues, greys, rusty pinks and green. The colours of late autumn! I thought I'd pop in today to show you some of my recent projects. I think some of my recent makes have been inspired by two titles from the 1980s I found in a second-hand bookshop: Glorious Colour and Family Album, by Kaffe Fassett. 

    My mum had both of these when I was a child and I loved to look through the pages and pretend I was one of the glamourous models. My favourite was always the poppy design – coloured circles on a black or blue background. I've never made one of these designs but I still love looking through the books, and am very pleased to have my own copies. The poppy is still my favourite – I might yet make one.

    I could do with some new 'everyday clothes' (i.e. suitable for wearing to work) for autumn and winter, so I'm going to have a go at making a few things over the next week or two. I started with a top, made from some beautiful viscose-twill I scored at Fabricabrac a couple of weekends back. The pattern is the Pinnacle Top from Papercut. The option I made was 'variation 2', with a round neckline, finished in bias binding, with a back opening and tie. I was really impressed with this pattern and will definitely make more. I'm thinking perhaps a drapey black version for work and I might try the jersey/sweatshirt option for winter too.

    I had a couple of metres of beautiful dark rose linen waiting for its moment, too, so I cut into it to make a new dress. I mostly just self-drafted this, using a mashup of shapes from other clothes I like wearing – i.e. the skirt width and length, and pocket pieces, etc. 

    I do love this one but am not 100% sold on the bodice design – it's a bit too loose-fitting to be comfortable and work well with other garments. I'm thinking I might cut it off and add a waistband instead, so I can wear the skirt portion at least.

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    I do love this time of year – the golden afternoon light and hazy evenings, the smell of woodsmoke and soup on the stove. I've been reading Vesper Flights, a book of essays by Helen Macdonald, and luxuriating in its rich descriptions and explanations of the natural world. So far, the chapter about the hidden world of fungi has been my favourite; it reminds me of searching for mushrooms on the farm with my grandad – basket, or more likely, plastic bucket in hand! 

    And as always at this time of year, I've pulled out my old Kate Bush records (and Spotify playlists) to listen to on my walks around the Hataitai hills. I don't know why her music and autumn are a match for me, but they are. 

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    I have been working on other projects – I have a winter coat cut out but am searching for the right lining fabric – and I've been knitting a fair bit lately, too. And the granny stripe/square blanket continues! (I'm afraid you might be hearing about that one for a long time – progress is slow…)

    I hope this finds you well and enjoying the slide into a new season, whether that's autumn or spring, depending on your hemisphere, and that you are finding time and space to work on your own projects. I also hope you are safe and in good spirits!

  • Mitts 1
    Mitts 2
    Te kopi 3
    Wairarapa
    Granny square 1

    Hello from a late summer Wednesday evening. I hope you're doing well!

    I don't have much to report this week. The mornings are getting darker here – though that means I can watch the beautiful pink sunrises with morning coffee in hand! I do love this turning time of year in Wellington.

    We recently went on a weekend trip with friends to the Wairarapa coast. It was beautiful – expansive skies and sea everywhere we looked. I've included a couple of photos – the third was taken from the Cape Palliser lighthouse which was built in 1897. I believe the sturdy steps up to the lighthouse are a relatively recent addition!

    The trip over there was good for knitting and crochet. I've started a new blanket – spurred on by the first crochet one I finished. This one is a giant granny square – I started in the centre and I'll keep going out until I have something queen-sized, all going well! I'm using some merino-possum yarn I bought on cones from a local yarn factory. The colours are a light charcoal and a peachy pink. I really enjoy working on it – it's really repetitive but weirdly addictive. It's like my brain can rest and play at the same time… not the best explanation of the joy of crochet, but hopefully you know what I mean?

    We've just celebrated Keira's birthday – she turned 16 – and one of her gifts was a pair of fingerless mitts I knitted for her. I had started out making her some socks in some self-striping Regia yarn that I love for its ''earthy rainbow'' vibes.

    She saw me knitting them and asked if they could be fingerless mittens instead. Of course! 

    To make these, I used a method very similar to the Purl Soho 'Colorblock Handwarmers' that can be found here…

    … but adjusted them a bit to K's specifications. I used about 35 grams of the 100g ball – so you might be able to get 3 pairs out of one ball, depending on their size and your gauge! Here's how I made them, in case you fancy casting a pair on:

    Keira's fingerless mitts

    1 ball 4-ply or fingering weight yarn (I used Regia Tweed Colour in the ''frost'' colourway, #07491 and used approx 35g of the ball)

    2.25mm needles (either a set of DPNs or a long circular, to work magic loop)

    Scissors + darning needle

    Cast on 64 stitches using the German Twisted Cast On or another stretchy method. Place marker and join to knit in the round (I used a long circular and the Magic Loop method)

    Knit 1 X 1 rib for around 4cms.

    Knit in stocking stitch until work measures 13cms.

    Now begin to work back and forth (not in the round) by working to marker, then turning back and purling until you reach the marker again. Work in this way (forming a split in the tube of knitting) until split portion measures 4.5cms.

    Now continue in the round again, thereby closing up the spilt section. Knit 4 rows in stocking stitch.

    Work 1 x 1 rib in the round for 4 cms (or until desired length).

    Rejoin yarn to the right side of the mitten, at the base of the thumbhole. Working around the hole, pick up 30 stitches around (this might be easier to do with double-pointed needles).

    Work 1 x 1 rib for three rows. Cast off in rib.

    Weave in ends and make a second mitt in the same way. Block gently in warm water.

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    Take care, friends! See you again soon.

    XX M

     

  • Op shop finds
    Baby set
    Crochet 2
    Crochet 3
    Hydrangeas (1)
    The details

    Kia ora, hello! It's been a while since I last wrote here. I hope you're doing well, wherever you are. 

    I thought I'd pop in to share some scenes of late summer life as it is right here. Focusing in on some favourite bits, of course!

    We are lucky enough to be expecting some new babies in our circle of friends and family soon. I have some serious baby knitting to do! Fresh off the needles is this little set made up in a Doespins merino/silk yarn hand-dyed dark grey. For the bonnet I used the Anker's Bonnet pattern by Petite Knit (link here) and this free pattern for the newborn socks. 

    In other craft news, I finished Keira's crochet blanket. This was my first ever crochet project, and I really enjoyed it! I think I mentioned another time about my annoyance at not learning this craft sooner. For some reason, the skill evaded me for many years. How to hold the yarn and hook, the way the stitches were constructed and the way the patterns are written – all of it.

    I'm not sure what changed, but my Mum helped me get the hang of it over the summer – she is a very patient teacher! And it was, after all, approximately the 50th time she had tried to teach me.

    Anyway, I'm happy with my super basic blanket and I think K likes it too. It's just the right size for her bed. I used all sorts of scrap yarns, mostly possum, merino, alpaca and mohair. I held the yarns double throughout and changed one at a time so it has quite a faded, marled vibe.

    It was really satisfying to work my way through the basket of leftover yarns with not a scrap left at the end! And I'm dreaming of my next crochet project now. Will keep you posted on that.

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    Also pictured above: some late-summer hydrangeas. It's probably obvious these came from a shop and not my garden, what with their long elegant stems. But they're cheering up the kitchen bench regardless.

    I've also been trying to keep up my goal of reading more this year and one of my recent books has been The Details: On Love, Death and Reading by Tegan Bennett Daylight. It's the Australian author and teacher's reflections on a life of reading and what books mean to her. She's a wonderful writer and I think my favourite bit remains her admission that she pays her teenaged kids to read certain classic books! My first reaction was ''no way…'' but then I realised it was actually quite smart and was tempted to do the same.

    I'm sharing the books I read over on Instagram in my stories. 

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    Lots of love to you, dear reader! See you again soon.

    M X