Wednesday 30 October 2024

You said how baggy?

P has been loving his oversized Jalie trackpants which I've made him 4 pairs of now (and a pair of shorts) and made zero notes or blog posts about how oversized or how much extra leg length. He also has a pair of black denim Thread Theory cargo pants that were upsized to a 34 waist (then elasticated) and extra leg length added, also undocumented.

Anyway, he ever so kindly asked me for some massively oversized jeans...

I toyed with the idea of just up sizing a pattern I already had and then cinching in the waist with elastic, but I'd already done that with the Thread Theory and he wanted even bigger. Anyway, pattern shopping sounded much more appealing. I typed something like "ridiculously baggy men's jeans sewing pattern" into a search engine and found a few new to me sewing pattern companies specialising in men's patterns.

I landed on the Mascultory Baggy Jeans_02 an even daggier-crotched baggy version of their Baggy Jeans pattern.

They're single size patterns and he has a good two size discrepancy between waist and hips (as does his dad). While the pattern suggested choosing by hip size for pants I went with waist size as otherwise I was worried they'd just fall straight off him. His waist put him at upper end of size 28 and his hips at the upper end of 32. I went with a size 30.

Instant download and emailed straight to Creffield digital print and I had the pattern in my hands the next day.

The instructions were all on a Youtube tutorial which is not my favourite way to work, but it was clearly presented and nicely done. The buttonfly was the first one I've done and it came together very neatly. All the pattern markings were clear and the whole pattern experience was very good.

 The pattern helpfully give an outer leg length measurement (waist to hem) but I'd only measured the kid's inner leg and I had no idea how low that crotch would be. I added 20cm length when I cut the fabric to be safe but ended up removing all but 7cm of it. Still, if they're going to be ludicrously oversized they can not be too short!

I gave the back pockets a bit of mountain bike embroidery but I was restricted by the black only instructions. I did sneak some reflective silver tape under the pocket edges and threw some labels on.

The fabric was some stashed cotton drill from SuperCheap Fabrics if I remember correctly, so all up, with pattern purchase, printing and fabric it was probably less than $40 total.

And he loves them like they're worth tent times that. Happy days (just don't forget to tuck them into your socks before you get on your bike kiddo)



Monday 8 April 2024

Shawls (that necessitated white shirts)

Wow, happy new year I guess, and it's April...

I've been making the same ludicrous amount of stuff but I just can't seem to get around to documenting anything. And of course that means I have no idea if that means I added 4" leg length to P's trackpants, or 8" to his sleeve length. And since that's meant to be the whole point of the blog, I get stuck and don't start.

Here's some pictures of shawls I knitted in 2023 that then required me to sew black ponte leggings and white shirts. Which did get recorded on the blog.



It came about after I'd attended the She's So Crafty stall/fair with Rootaberger and bought three skeins of gorgeously squishy yarn with no particular plan in mind.


All three are merino/silk/yak light fingering weight. Two from Fluff and Nonsense, and one from The Purl Box (Maven yarn)

Then I just had to find a pattern that would use no more than what I'd bought, all three colours, and be interesting to knit. 


The pattern was very well written and definitely engaging. It also helped that I'd just rolled my ankle at that mountain bike race, round about this time last year, so I was very happy to sit and knit. And knit. And knit. 


I hadn't really thought I was a pom pom person, but they're perfect on the shawl.



I'm sure I then went on to sew, crochet or knit other things. I might have even tidied up, or done my tax return. But since I photographed this next shawl on the same day, it can be documented here, all out of order, as well.

This time I knew exactly what I wanted to make, and then I set out to find the yarn to suit the pattern. The pattern is the Scout Mini Shawl by Florence Spurling

I had so much fun knitting the big Scout Shawl. This one has all same interest generated by little panels of colourwork joined with intarsia, but with a smaller yarn and time outlay. Winner!



The yarns came from Fibresmith and are their hand-dyed merino mini skeins. At that stage Leslie was only selling them in bundles and at 70m/20g I would need two of each colour, plus a third skein of one of them. thankfully, with a little begging email I managed to get a single skein of almost the exact same shade as the two lightest skeins.

Then I just had to work out which ones to use where... It's very low contrast colourwork no matter how I arranged them, but I'm good with that.




This yarn comes in at about 400m/100g and the difference in the final knitted fabric between this, and my original scout shawl is quiet noticeable. this is a really, dense, almost felted feeling fabric. I suspect I may not have swatched and just used the pattern's recommended needle size, whereas I'd gone up two sizes for my Scout Shawl



I could definitely make this pattern over again as well. I guess I'm on my way to having enough little bits of yarn leftovers that a "free" one might come about one day...

Monday 8 January 2024

NAiMA Pullover

It's been such a constantly rainy day here that it seems appropriate to finally upload some details of a jumper I knitted in winter of last year.


It's the NAiMA Pullover by Ankestrick knitted in cascade Heathers yarn (100g/200m Colour 2431)

I think it was as I was making white shirts I suddenly decided I needed a chocolate brown, chunky knit sweater to wear over them, But then I went and fell in love with a sweater pattern that had a high neck such that it wouldn't work well over a collar with a shirt after all.


I got gauge, or at least very close to, using bigger needles than the pattern recommended: 4.5mm for body and 3.75mm for the ribbing. My gauge was 17 stitches and 22 rows per 10x10cm instead of 16/22 and I guess over a full garment that one stitch per 10cm makes a difference.


I made size 4 which would give me 5" positive ease around the chest but it probably came out a bit smaller, and more fitted, than the pattern model's version. But I really like the fit as it is. Initially I was wishing I'd gone slightly longer in the body, but after wearing it quite a bit last winter I've come around to the top of the hip length. I knitted the straight body version (there balloon shape and  A line shape options) and did, for some reason, stop about 5cm shorter than the pattern suggestion.


The pattern was very well written and was a delight to knit. There is this lovely eyelet pattern that continues from the raglan sleeve down the front and back sides. It's not the softest wool in the world (there's a knitted cardigan in the world's softest wool yet to be blogged about) but over a merino tee it's a very useful winter sweater.

Of course I did then go on to find the perfect V neck pattern (and more yarn :) ) to knit for wearing over my white shirts. That one will have to wait until next winter. It might be raining here but it's not cold enough to be knitting heavy wool