I've really run out of clever titles! There's no theme this week, just good books and fun knitting. I finished (NetGalley review book) Ode to the Half-Broken by Suzanne Palmer , which was a good sci-fi featuring sentient robots and found family. Recommend. Now I have a break between review books, and am reading Tyrant's Throne the fourth and final Greatcoats novel. Swashbuckling fantasy at its best! Next up I'm back on the NetGalley wagon, and back to my original plan with The Tea Planter's Secret (The Ceylon Series #2) by Clare Flynn the second in a historical romance series set in Ceylon. Maybe this will inspire me to actually plan the return trip to Sri Lanka, rather than just hope a plan appears. In knitting I'm making a Bendigo project with the leftovers from the jumper I was knitting last week, McKinnon Beanie by Susanna Kaartinen . Brioche with cables! It's been a long time since I brioched, and I'm not sure I've ever done c...
This year Richmond Knitters chose the Celeste Sweater by Petit Knits for our annual Bendigo Sheep show knitalong. It wasn't a jumper I felt particularly drawn to, but we had agreement, and early, so I was happy to knit it. the pattern is written for 8ply, and I have enough 8ply jumpers, particularly as a colourwork yoke adds quite a lot of warmth. For me a lighter jumper for inside with a jacket over the top if going outside is perfect for our Melbourne winters. Melbourne winter can be pretty sad and grey, so I wanted bright pastels (Easter egg , or 'candy' coloured were my inspiration ). I'm pretty happy with the results. There were a couple of dramas with the knitting - where the pattern calls for the main colour to be used in the yoke, it didn't really work, and then I used a speckled white, which also didn't work, so I ripped and reknit the last 8 round (the ones with ALL the stiches) twice. And then I realised the row that had been ripped out from and re...