Big sleeves and bobbles

I have issues with big sleeves.  Two to be precise: they get in the way (for example, when trying to eat) and they don’t fit under a coat.  When I balance these two practical concerns against fashion, practicality usually wins.  I am also not a fan of bobbles.  Again for two reasons: they are a pain to make, and they look funny.  So, mark me surprised when the new issue of Pom Pom Quarterly came out today and I found myself intrigued by two sweaters which have both big sleeves and bobbles.

The first is Osmunda by Boadicea Binnerts:

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© Laura Morsman

I think this is super cool.  It’s sleeves will get in the way of everything, it is full of bobbles, and furthermore I would roast in a sweater this heavy; nevertheless, I think it is great.

And then there’s Willowwood by Caitlin Hunter:

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© Laura Morsman

This sweater is so not my type, and yet…..it’s rather appealing.  This issue of Pom Pom is edited by the incomparable Norah Gaughan and contains some great designers.  My first thought on seeing the sweaters was that they looked like armour.  And then I read Pom Pom’s description of this edition:  “The knits in this issue are imagined for the modern heroine. Create your own knitted armour with swirling cables and sculptural stitch details; it’s time to celebrate texture and sumptuous colours!”

By the way, even though I am not a big fan of bobbles, I do think that they look great with the right project.  Here is a photo of Emma in a pullover which I knit for her in my pre-blogging days, Camden, by Ashley Adams Moncrief (from Knitty, Fall 2008):

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And a final note on the blog: perhaps you noticed a new banner?  Emma isn’t involved much in the blog these days (except as general muse and sounding board), but she has always done my banners (the photo splashed across the top).  I have been bugging Emma for months to make a new one.  She wrote me last night to say that she had created a new banner, and had set it up so that all of the banners (from seven years of this blog) will rotate randomly each time you visit the blog.  Cool, no?  I keep pushing the re-load button but have yet to see the new banner! I wonder what it is?  Hope you like looking at these snapshots of my blog history as much as I do.

Toil and trouble

Do you know those knitting bloggers who make you terribly envious?  The ones who can whip out a complicated project at the drop of a hat, and every picture looks perfect, and every project appears to emerge from the needles without toil or trouble?  If you are looking for a post like that, please dear reader, look away!  Warning! Toil and trouble ahead!

And for which project did this struggle occur?  Something fabulous and intricate?  Something never before attempted?  Truth be told – it’s a hat.  A very lovely hat, indeed.  But it’s a hat that – as of today – has 1994 projects on Ravelry.  (I don’t know how many that means there are in the wild, but if we assume that half of them make it on to Ravelry, and awful lot of people have made this hat.)  It is the Bousta Beanie, designed by Gudrun Johnston, originally for the Shetland Wool Week 2017, but now available as well on Ravelry.  Here is mine:

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But, you may say: “Hey, it turned out OK.!” Yes, it did.  The toil and trouble is not reflected in the output (thankfully!).  I picked this project to try to learn the skill of two-handed fair isle knitting.  I have actually done a few colourwork projects before, and have attempted to do two-handed knitting (one yarn held in the left hand and knitted continental style and one yarn held in the right hand and knitted English style) before.  I have always cheated quite a bit however, and have usually resorted to a not-very-efficient style of holding a yarn in the right hand, knitting with it, and dropping it and picking up the other yarn in the right hand and knitting with it.  This is slow and often leads to my tangling the yarns and getting the yarn dominance mixed up.

Before going any further, let me say that I do not approve of knitting police!  The right way to knit is the way which works for you.  Period!  However, I have wished for a very long time to be able to add this skill to my knitting repertoire, and I have decided that this is the year!  (Of course, it is now approaching the end of the year, but I am not being literal here.)  I wanted to start by knitting a fair isle vest for Doug, and even joined a Vest KAL on Ravelry to help motivate me.  I soon realised, however, that I needed to start with a much more basic project; thus, the Bousta Beanie.  The Bousta is often described as a perfect first Fair Isle project.  It has a four stitch repeat.  It is easy to memorise.  It is pleasing to the eye and lovely to wear.  The emerging pattern is far more intricate and flowing than the simple pattern would suggest.

I had a bunch of 4-ply yarn in my stash from The Little Grey Sheep – mini skeins in a number of colours, and I picked three which I thought would be pretty together.  (I used 2 mini-skeins for the purple, and one for each of the contrasting colours.)  I cast on and started to knit.  After I had finished the ribbing and had very laboriously added a few rows of pattern, I decided the hat would be too small.  I ripped it off the needles, and then in a very fortuitous act decided to try it on over my head before frogging.  It fit!  I put it back on the needles and kept knitting.

If I were to list the important elements in knitting this, I would say that there are four:

  1.  The knitting itself – getting my head around the two-handed technique
  2.  The pattern – staying in pattern while you knit
  3.  The crown – managing the decreases while also knitting on DPNs
  4.  Managing the yarns – carrying up the unused colour and avoiding twisting

I managed to screw up every one of these!

1 – The knitting itself.  I find it close to impossible to knit with the yarn in my left hand.  Hundreds of thousands (millions?) of Continental knitters have the hang of this but I really struggle with it.  And I am left-handed!  It is hard to describe why I find it so difficult.  The first issue I have is with tensioning the yarn.  The way I normally knit, where I hold the yarn in my right hand and literally carry it around the needle, doesn’t involve any tensioning at all.  I have never had to wind the yarn around fingers and control the speed at which it slips through.   I looked at dozens of videos of how to do this.  I tried many different ways of tensioning the yarn.  I ended up having the yarn wrapped twice around my left index finger, something which I am unhappy with but really seemed to be the only working solution.

The second problem is the actual mechanics of inserting the right needle into the knit stitch and then looping it around this yarn which is mysteriously held wrapped around the left index finger.  I was so incredibly slow, knitting stitch by stitch in total concentration.  I kept telling myself that Continental is the fast knitting style, but my brain and fingers were not cooperating and laughed at my attempts at self-motivation.  The third problem I had was in advancing the stitches towards the tip of the left needle. This seems easy and intuitive when I am knitting normally but not so here.  When you are holding the yarn in the left, desperately trying to keep the tension even, how do you advance the stitches with that hand at the same time?  Truly, knitting this way is hard.  Maybe my brain is too old to learn new tricks.  I am determined to persevere, however!

2 – Staying in pattern.  This should be easy; the Bousta Beanie has an incredibly simple, intuitive pattern that should be a snap to follow.  In fact, hundreds of knitters make exactly that comment on their project pages.  Nevertheless, after some very slow knitting, this is what happened:

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On the top, you see one side of the hat, looking rather nice.  On the bottom, you see the other side of the hat, where I have totally messed up the pattern in the second orange section.  I debated trying some sort of tricky fix with a crochet hook to fix these stitches, but decided that I was having enough trouble with knitting fair isle to try anything fancy.  So, I ripped it out (down to where the pattern started going wonky). Note to self: ripping out fair isle takes longer than normal ripping.

I then started knitting again, reminding myself that the hat was meant to be practice for two-handed knitting and the act of frogging and re-knitting meant more practice.  How convenient to have to knit it twice!  After a while, I caught up and then did the same mistake again, this time on the third orange pattern sequence:

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At least I caught the mistake much sooner.  It may be hard to see but in the orange bit on the top I have made exactly the same pattern error that I made the first time.  Once again, I ripped (just a row or two this time).  This leads me to ponder: if I can’t manage to keep an easy pattern like this straight, how will I manage an intricate pattern?

3 – The crown.  The pattern calls for 3.5 repeats before starting the crown decreases.  I realised that this would make the hat longer than I preferred.  I tend more towards the beanie hat style than the slouchy ones.  So, I determined to take out one half of a pattern repeat and start the crown decreases early.  The problem with this is that the pattern is moving in the opposite direction at that point so the crown shapings have to be reversed.  Many knitters seem to have taken this approach.  Jen, of JenACKnitwear, comments on her Bousta Beanie project page: “I took out half a pattern repeat and then worked the crown shaping chart backwards.”  Well, that sounds easy; it’s only 10 rows of shaping on a short repeat pattern.  I spent part of two evenings trying to figure it out.

Before you really shake your heads at this, I will point out that I have been especailly stressed at work lately.  This stress seems to have bled out into my knitting.  I have also this week given up caffeine, and that is having an effect on my brain, not to mention my mood, my sleep patterns, and my hand-eye coordination.  Those are my excuses and I will stick with them.  Being an idiot didn’t factor into this; not at all!

Finally, in an act of desperation, I went onto Ravelry, in a forum on Jen’s group, and asked for some help.  Jen replied in minutes (yes, in minutes; how great is that!) with an intriguing suggestion:  “…you need to mirror image the chart.  Could you hold it up to a mirror and take a photo of it?”  Genius!  After a slight problem (who knew that my phone would automatically adjust the image so that it would not be mirrored?), I was able to get a photo of the mirrored crown shaping pattern and start knitting.  I still had trouble with the leaning decreases – I couldn’t figure out how to make left-leaning decreases while knitting fair isle, so settled on k2tog which put the colours in the right places but ended up leaning the wrong way.  I don’t think anyone will notice.

The last problem with the crown was trying to knit with my very bad two-handed techniques while using DPNs; this took a bit of juggling to get used to.

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4 – Managing the yarns.  Here you see the inside of the hat:

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The top photo shows how nicely the inside looks – it is all very neat and orderly.  The bottom photo shows the terrible job I made of carrying the extra thread up the inside.  For a while there, near the beginning, I managed to get it right and the yarn is carried up almost invisibly, but then I somehow screwed it all up.  I know you can’t see it and it doesn’t affect the finished project, but it offends my sense of beauty.  I want the inside to look great, too.  Even more, I want to know how to twist the yarn while carrying it up so that it feels organic; it never felt right.

I also wonder, looking at the finished photos, whether I should have reversed the dominance and made the purple the dominant colour.  One of the things I like about the pattern is the way the main colour forms ripples up and down the hat.  I could see these while I was knitting, but in the washed and blocked hat they don’t stand out.  I’m not sure how that happened but I suspect that dominance might be the answer.

Given all of the troubles I had knitting this, I think it is a pretty cool hat and I am pleased with the final product.  The pattern is really lovely and the yarn is soft, light, but very warm.

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This hat is the first installment in Project Fair Isle!  I plan to work my way up to some fancy stitchwork.   Stay tuned for more adventures in fair isle knitting.

But first, back to some of my WIPs…..

100 on Ravelry

I realised this week that I have 100 finished projects recorded on Ravelry.  If you look at my Ravelry project page, it says I have 119 projects – however, this number includes WIPs, frogged projects, and so-called “hibernating” projects.  Thus, I didn’t notice right away that my Sayer tank was the 100th FO (finished object).  I have, of course, knitted many more than that in the 50 years that I have been knitting; however, since my Ravelry account was started in December 2007 (I was Raveler #51878), I have recorded 100 finished projects.

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Since this was a lovely autumn day, I gathered up all of the hand-knitted projects I had in the house (those I had knitted myself) and piled them up outside for some photos.  Here I am covered from head to toe in hand-knitted items:

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Given my general tendency towards nerdiness, this realisation – of reaching 100 FOs – immediately caused me to collect data on my projects.  (This task also prevented me from engaging in other tasks, like house cleaning.)  Of the 100 projects, 49 are sweaters!  The distribution by project type is as follows:

  • 49 Sweaters
  • 15 Cowls
  • 14 Mitts
  •  7 Shawls
  •  4 Hats
  •  4 Skirts
  •  2 Scarfs
  •  2 Shrugs
  •  1 Pillow
  •  1 Poncho
  •  1 Dress

Obviously, I am a sweater kind of girl; these are by far my favorite projects.  Of the sweaters, 31 are pullovers and 18 are cardigans.  Most of them are for me: 30 are for me, 6 for Emma, 8 for Leah, 2 for Doug, and 3 for babies.  (Yes, I am a selfish knitter!) That said, most of the mitts, cowls, skirts, and other things were gifted.

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Of the 100 projects, 16 are either my designs or things I just fooled around with and came up with on my own (but aren’t really “designs”).  Of the other 84 projects, there are only a few repeat designers, which follow:

  • 5 projects designed by Kim Hargreaves
  • 3 projects designed by Carol Feller
  • 2 projects designed by each of:
    • Wendy Bernard
    • Lily M. Chin
    • Kate Davies
    • Hanne Falkenberg
    • Ashley Adams Moncrief
    • Alexis Winslow

The remaining 64 projects were designed by 64 different designers.  I think that makes me pretty inclusive!

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My favorite garments: my Ormolu (blogged here), Doug’s Brick (blogged here and here), Emma’s Audrey (blogged here) and Leah’s Peloponnese (blogged here).  The most fun thing to knit: The Tolkien-inspired giant pillow I knit for Leah (blogged here).  The knitted garment that has been worn the most: Emma’s Carnaby skirt (blogged here).  And my favorite accessory: my own Cool Boots Shawl (blogged here).

In the 100, there are only 3 items which I have knit twice.  These are my Wedgewood Mitts (blogged here and here, and knitted with elephants too), Kim Hargreaves’ Audrey (blogged here and here) and Lily M. Chin’s Cabled-Rib Shawl (blogged here and here).

I like this photo where you can just see my boots peeking out from under the great pile of knits:

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That’s enough nerdiness for today!  Seeing how few hats I’ve knit, I’m off to cast one on!

Dark

There is a trend in knitting photoshoots these days –  dark sweaters on very dark backgrounds.  This popped up on my sweater pattern feed today:

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© Amy Gunderson

It is called Alexandrite, designed by Amy Gunderson, and appears in a collection called Jewels from Making Stories.  The collection contains a number of designs using mostly dark colours photographed against the dark.  Here is another one, Topaz by Katrine Birkenwasser:

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© Katrine Birkenwasser

I think these are lovely sweaters – in fact, I suspect they are gorgeous sweaters, but alas I can’t really tell.  The second one: is it a dress, a tunic, or a sweater?  Can you tell?  I recently spent time hiking in a massive cave in Crete, so I can guess at the effect they are trying to create here. (Jewels, cave, get it?) And they capture it really well.  I am not trying to pick on this collection, either – this is a trend which has become pretty ubiquitous.  Witness Brooklyn Tweed’s latest collection, BT Winter 18.  Maybe I am just getting old and grumpy and need new glasses, so forgive me a little grumbling.

This has been a very dark week and I am feeling dark – angry, sad, depressed.  This is a week when I could use some light.