UFO Challenge 2016

A group from our local yarn shop started a UFO Challenge – and I’m one of the group!  No, we aren’t out looking for aliens – this is an Un-Finished Object Challenge.  At the beginning of the year, we each made a list of 5 Things that we wanted to finish from projects in our stash, queue, or WIPs (Works in Progress).  What qualified as a “Thing” was up to us.  It could be anything from finish the sleeves on the blue sweater, to make the 2nd sock, to sew a project bag, to make something from the variegated yarn.

When the challenge started, we each put $5 in the Prize Pot.  We then drew a number from 1-5, and that was the item on our list that we needed to complete in the first time frame.  We get about 2 months to finish each Thing, which gives us a decent amount of time but yet ensures that we will be done the Challenge before the busyness of the holidays.  At the end of the time frame for each Thing, we all meet to show off our Finished Objects.  If we didn’t finish, we pay $5 to the Pot.  If we DID finish, then we get an entry into the Prize Pot drawing at the end of the Challenge.

I may be a monogamous knitter (meaning I only work on one project at a time) but I have many projects in my stash just waiting to make their way into my queue.  And for whatever reason, I have a few that seem to keep getting passed over in favor of other projects.  For me, the first number to be drawn was for my Tatras Fingerless Mitts.  It was a kit I had won at a yarn crawl last year, and it was a very fun project!  I’m sure they will get lots of wear this winter.

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My second Thing turned out to be the Azure Head Scarf that I made with some really beautiful mystery yarn I found in a clearance bin at a fiber festival.  I wear this boho head scarf often – I love it.

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My third Thing was the De Stijl Socks from Alice Yu’s book Socktopus.  I made this out of Canon Hand Dyes Charles Merino Self Striping Yarn in the Rhinebeck Rainbow colorway.  I had been given that yarn as a gift and knew that it would knit up into really beautiful, distinct stripes, and this pattern was a perfect fit.  The pattern also taught me a new stitch technique that I really enjoyed doing.

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Just this past week I finished my fourth Thing, 10 blocks from The Next Step Blanket by Jane Schwartz.  Many of the block patterns have errors and are a little frustrating for me, so 10 blocks at a time is about all I can handle.  Some blocks are more fun than others.  I think my favorite out of this group was the Faux Quilting design.

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This FO is due at the end of August, so I’m done in plenty of time.  The next (and final!) Thing for me will be the Elfe Sweater by Astrid Schramm.  I think I’m right on track to not have to contribute any more money to the Pot and getting the maximum number of entries into the drawing!  🙂

This is the second UFO Challenge I’ve participated in and I love them.  It’s exactly the type of motivation I need to get projects done.  All the info for my FOs can be found on my Ravelry Project page – I’m QuillPen.

Have you ever done a challenge like this?  How do you get all your projects done, especially the ones that seem to often fall through the cracks of a queue?  I’d love to hear your strategies!

 

 

Episode 01: The One Without A Logo

Watch the episode here:  Episode 01

Today I am celebrating my very first podcast!!  This project has been awhile in the making and it is exciting seeing it come to fruition.  So, if you tuned in, thanks for watching!

* NOTE: I worked so hard on my cute logo for section transitions and could not for the life of me get my computer to read them when I put the video together.  I will work on that and try to figure out a good solution before the next podcast!  But here are some of the images so that you can imagine what they were supposed to look like in the podcast.

QUILLPEN'S QUIPS (1) On My Needles Sign of the Day Thanks

ON MY NEEDLES
The Next Step by Jane Schwartz (Faux Quilting Stitch Pattern Block)
Yarn: Rowan Pure Wool Worsted – #4198

FINISHED OBJECTS
De Stijl Socks by Alice Yu from Socktopus
Yarn:
Canon Hand Dyed Charles Merino Self-Striping – “Rhinebeck Rainbow”

Happypotamus the Happy Hippo by Heidi Bears
Yarn:
Stash buster!

UP COMING PROJECT
I mentioned that next week I will be doing the 5 Shawls in 5 Days Challenge from Aroha Knits!  You can sign up for it at this website – and I highly recommend that you do!

PODCASTS MENTIONED
Geeky Girls Knits
The Knitting Broomstick

 

5 Shawls in 5 Days

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Photo by Aroha Knits

A few months ago, on a whim, I signed up for Francoise Danoy’s Initiate Knit Design Challenge.  She goes by Frenchie and is the designer behind Aroha Knits.  I went into that challenge knowing nothing about knitwear design, and after the five days she had me hooked.  Throughout the course of the challenge, from the chatter on the Facebook group, I heard so many wonderful things about Frenchie’s 5 shawls in 5 days challenge.  So when I saw that she was doing another one, I didn’t hesitate to sign up!  It starts July 25th and it is completely free, so you still have time to sign up, and no reason not to!

Here’s how it works:  Every day for five days starting Monday, July 25th, you will get an email from Frenchie.  For this challenge (although it is really more of a course than a challenge) the email will include that day’s shawl pattern along with instructions for how to knit it and Frenchie’s tips and tricks.  The purpose is to teach you the construction for a variety of shawl styles, but I can guarantee you’ll walk away from this with a lot more information!  You then knit a mini version of that shawl during the day and post a picture to Facebook or Instagram with the hashtag #5shawls5days – at the very least post it to special Facebook group’s page (you get an invite link to that group when you sign up for the challenge!).  Then you repeat that each day!

Also, Frenchie will post a Facebook video in the group page each day where she will talk about the day’s assignment and any suggestions, resources, or tricks.  Having the videos during the Initiate Knit Design challenge really helped me feel like I got to know her, like we were friends and she was teaching me some new things about knitting – even though she was recording from Japan where she and her husband lived at the time!  I looked forward to those videos everyday, and I picked up a lot of useful information about knitting, yarn, designers, etc.   By doing everything on the Facebook videos and through emails, you can always go back and watch and read the information later, at a time that is convenient for you.  You can even keep those emails as a valuable resource for future knitting!  Posting the daily pictures with the hashtag #5shawls5days makes you eligible for any prizes, but there is certainly no negative consequences if you don’t, so there’s no pressure!

I’m particularly excited about this because the math behind various shawls shapes is currently over my head, even though I’ve knit quite a few shawls!  Understanding shawl construction, especially for unique shapes, will not only help me in knitting up any shawl pattern I want to, but it will also open doors for me to design my own patterns.  I have so many ideas in my head after the Initiate Knit Design challenge that I can’t wait to get started!

Someone suggested how cute all the little mini shawls would look in a frame together as wall art for a craft room or yarn studio, and I think that’s such a cute idea!

So, if you are a knitter and interested in learning more about making shawls and how various shawl shapes are constructed, join me for this!  You can sign up here and you’ll get your welcome email right away!