Author Archives: lauren

Yarn Stores in Hong Kong

My husband had a business trip to Hong Kong a couple of weeks ago, so I thought I'd tag along, having never been there. I had fun walking around, soaking in the atmosphere, even though it was only a couple of days. (Yes, flew out on Tuesday and back home on Saturday, doesn't leave much time after you take away the time spent in airports and airplanes). More about the trip is on my main blog, under the title Hong Kong Impressions.

I did manage to get to three yarn stores, which is hardly representative, but fun anyway. I looked them up on the Hong Kong Knitters Ravelry group and picked what looked like a couple of interesting ones, Cheer Wool and Tailor & Alteration.

This is what Tailor & Alteration looked like inside:

Tailor and Alteration aisle   Tailor and Alteration - yet another aisle

The aisles were so crowded I couldn't get down some of them without knocking stuff off the shelves. It was fun! I went in the morning and browsed around, picked out some yarn that I haven't seen in Vancouver, and added to my stash of patterns. This time in Japanese, so that will be an interesting learning experience. They had some lovely Japanese silk and linen yarn that almost insisted on coming home with me, but I managed to resist. I did, however, get their lifetime membership card which gave a decent-sized discount on everything, and the woman who runs the store made a point of telling me that they ship world-wide... They also carry supplies for other crafts, such as beading, quilting, and needlepoint/cross-stitch.

The store itself is on the 14th floor of a building, with no signage on the street except for that advertising dentists, most of whom trained in some other country. I guess this not only tells people they should be good, but also says that they will understand English, not a small point in a country where many people do not.

tailoralterationbuilding

CheerWool was less interesting; the yarns were fairly standard, and the store had much more room to move around in. It was also easier to find, and being on the ground floor in a popular sales district, was more expensive. As seems usual in Hong Kong, much of the yarn was wrapped in plastic bags, but none of it called out to me to be unwrapped.

The last store I went to was mui tong. It was only up one flight of stairs, a small store with all the yarn wrapped in plastic bags. I was looking at one of the bags when the owner came over with a lovely vest she had knitted in that yarn, to show me how it knitted up. I ended up buying some of it, it was much nicer knitted up than it looked through the plastic bag. I guess they just want to keep the yarn clean.

Most of the yarns I saw in all the stores were Japanese or European; lots of Italian wools with the fine merino. Japanese bamboo knitting needles seem very popular, along with the Aero needles and Addi needles. I didn't see any Chinese knitting needles such as Hiya Hiya, which surprised me a little, although I also didn't ask for them. The Japanese pattern books are popular, together with Rowan. I did my bit for the local economy without going over the import limit for travellers returning to Canada; now I just have to figure out what to knit with the yarn and which pattern from the book to tackle first.

Chevalier Mittens

I finally took the photos of my Chevalier mittens (well, my husband did, those are my hands in them). They're mittens my mother-in-law asked me to make, since she doesn't knit. I think they turned out fairly well, although they'd be a little too scratchy for me.

chevalier mittens

chevalier mittens

Yarn: Briggs & Little Sport, just under 1 skein @ 393.2m

Needles: 4.0 mm

Pattern: Chevalier Mittens (the pattern is free) (Ravelry link)

Mods: none

Comments: a little difficult to knit, but only because the yarn is doubled so it's very stiff. Other than that it's a good pattern and I enjoyed knitting them. The yarn is a little scratchy, although it did soften up when washed and blocked. They should keep the cold out.

More Knitting Time

After leaving Sun on Thursday, I did quite a lot of knitting over the weekend. There's something meditative about the stitches gliding off the needles, even if I did have a few false starts on the pattern. I've discovered that doing Japanese short rows on purls is a little tricky, so I need to think about that a bit more. The reason for the short rows? The sweater has a combination of stitch patterns across the back, including a brioche section in the centre. Brioche has a smaller row gauge, so I need more rows of brioche to make sure the back hemline is even when it's finished. In total I need to keep track of how many rows I've knitted, the waist shaping, the short-row repeat, and the pattern repeat. I'm starting to think a better row counter is in my future.

Frustrating Mittens

In between working on gift knitting, I decided to at least finish one of the fingerless mittens I'm working on for me, using the endpaper mitts pattern. (Ravelry link to my project). The knitting went reasonably well, good practice for stranded knitting, but there's just one little snag.

I suffer from irritation sensitivity, sometimes called dermographism. It's a condition that a lot of children have, where irritation to the skin produces symptoms like an allergic reaction, such as hives or itchy spots. And it looks like woolen gloves, especially tight ones like these mitts, set it off. I'm going to try soaking them in shampoo and hair conditioner, in the hope they soften up enough, but otherwise I guess it's back to the fleece or fabric gloves for me, or maybe some less scratchy yarn (I used Sisu sock yarn from my stash) and mitts that aren't as tight.

Gift Knitting

I had the great idea of knitting gifts this year; it's the first year in a while where I've had the energy to even contemplate it! I'm enjoying the process, picking out yarns in colours I hope the recipient will like, picking patterns to (I hope) suit their tastes for wearing as well as mine for knitting. Now all I have to do is find the time required to finish them, in between all the other things that need to be done before late December. This is one reason why I picked the "Grownup Bonnet" (Ravelry link; my Ravelry project page) from Knit 2 Together for one of them; lots of mindless knitting suitable for the car or on work phone calls when I don't have to take notes.