Our machine knitting guild had an "in-town knit camp" this past weekend. There were 11 of us in a nice room usually used by quilters at a quilt shop. We all like to go home to our own beds, hence the "in-town" aspect. My personal goal was to use up some yarn. I did manage to get 13 hats done. Not as much yarn used up as you might think. Eating the fantastic potlucks took up some time, don't you know. Lots of laughs too. I used the LK 150 for all. (Click picture on right side here for pattern .)
Here's a good tip. A guild member's technique for hanging the hem made quick work of it. He pulls out to d position every other needle, knits one row with main yarn, hangs the metal cast on comb that has the wicked teeth, backwards. (no waste yarn or ravel cord.) Then he brings the alternate needles to work and knits twice the length of the hem. Then he brings out every other needle again, puts a weighted metal dowel onto (on top of, across) the knitting and brings up the beginning stitches and hangs all stitches in one fell swoop. When you tip the cast on bar, the stitches slip onto the needles you have pulled out. Remove cast on comb. It requires a little practice, but I love how much time it saves. It is NOT as pretty as a regular hung hem, but I doubt kids are going to check out the inside of the hat. Another advantage is that the dowel weights the knitting evenly for the duration. Try it. You may agree. You can purchase a metal rod at the hardware store for cheap. It is nearly impossible to do this if a ribber is attached because you can't get to the bottom of the knitting to grab the cast on comb without dumping the stitches prematurely. Just a warning.
I also knit a Gryffindor scarf for my grandson. He's currently a fan of Harry Potter. It's 7 inches across doubled and seamed up the back, about 5 1/2 feet long. Gauge was about 5 st and 6 r to the inch. I didn't write it down, but I think it was 70 st by 280 rows, each stripe was 20 rows. T 9. Usually I'm religious about writing these things down, but I guess I thought I'd never knit another one. I used less than 2 skeins of sport weight hand knitting yarn, 100 gr each and I bought 4. O dear, more charity hats with U of M colors.
I found a free machine embroidery patch that is the Gryffindor shield and did that at home ahead of time, glued it on with a hot glue gun. Only problem was that the guy who designed it spelled Griffindor wrong. So I had to use some emb software to change it to a "Y". Hard to work on someone else's design but I managed ok. Not perfect, but ok. Since grandson lives in CA, it's just going to be part of his Harry costume, not really utilitarian. Too hot. I think he'll like it, though.
When he was here a few weeks ago I gave him the robe, glasses and the rep tie. Pretty cute. So now he should be all set.