Pink is the new brown

Literally, in this case. You may remember I knitted a brown Sabai top earlier in the summer (blogged here), and now I have knitted a pink Sabai top:

Pink is the new brown. And it looks completely amazing with red. (What can I say? Bright colours are my jam.) In fact, I am pretty sure that I can pair it with almost everything in my wardrobe. It looks especially good with my A Walk in the Park Shawl (blogged here).

I finished this one the day after returning from Vancouver (just under a month ago) and have already worn it many times, proving it’s versatility.

I made this one to be ever-so-slightly looser than the brown one. I added a few more rows before increasing at the sides, thus lowering the armholes a bit. (Note that many people found the armholes too low and did the opposite; check your row gauge before starting the increases.) I also added one extra set of increases, giving me an extra 4 stitches once joined in the round. And I made it 2″/5cm longer.

The pattern, by Susanne Müller, is super easy to follow and results in a nice top for the summer, which also looks great as a base layer under a jacket. This may be why there are thousands of Sabai tops in knitter’s wardrobes (over 5000 today on Ravelry alone). It has really nice features, which feel both elegant and casual.

I used Knitting for Olive Pure Silk held double, the same yarn that I used for the brown one. I love this yarn. It comes in fantastic brights, and also great neutrals. The only real trick is knitting it double. I wound two balls together before knitting to try to avoid knots. I still managed to tie it all into an inexplicable knot; as you can see, I had many hands to help me with the untangling.

Now I just have to keep Doug from “borrowing” my shawl. I suppose I will have to knit something for him.

Happy Thanksgiving to all you Canadians out there!

Summer tank, summer weather

Deciding to knit a Sabai top, designed by Susanne Müller, was the easy part. Deciding to use Knitting for Olive Pure Silk (held double) was easy too. Even knitting it was easy. Choosing the colour was hard. First, though, the finished project:

I looked through my knitting projects from the past 15 years or so, and the only other thing I knitted in brown was a cowl for Doug. This colour is not in my normal colour wheelhouse. I started with a text sending Emma links to the pattern and the yarn. We texted back and forth for a while and couldn’t decide. This was followed up by numerous discussions with Emma, and again no decision. A few days later, I checked the yarn shop and they had re-stocked and had more colours in stock. Thus started a new round of texts of which the below is a small sample:

I still couldn’t decide. Then, one day out in the garden, with the sun shining down so that my screen was barely visible, I handed the phone to Doug, said “Pick a colour now!” He picked Dark Cognac, I hit the order button and that was that. Until I opened up the package and discovered that Dark Cognac was not the lovely deep bronze shade I was expecting but a pretty mid-range brown. I consoled myself with the idea that it would look good with my checked suit. And it does:

I still don’t love the shade on me, but I am starting to appreciate it. I can use it to tone down my wild African print palazzo trousers (top photo), create a classic look with a suit jacket, or even pair it with more brown-y tones to look casually beige (which is apparently chic, if sort of boring).

I knitted this is the 4th size (Large) with two strands of Knitting for Olive Pure Silk held together and US6/4mm needles. I followed the pattern exactly. It is a very easy, well-written pattern. I found that in order to knit with two strands of the silk, I had to first wind two balls together on my ball winder; otherwise, the yarn quickly evolved into a knotted mess. If you look at the comments on some of the thousands (literally) of projects on Ravelry, you will find that many knitters found that there was too much space under the arm and therefore started the underarm increases early (it is knitted in one piece top down). I had the opposite problem as my row gauge was tight, so I added rows before starting the increases. I think it fits fairly well.

It took me three weeks start to finish to make this. It would have been two weeks except that when I packed to go to Potsdam, I tucked the last ball of yarn away somewhere in my house, and then couldn’t find it when I got back home. It took me a week to find it!

I knitted almost the entire top while watching the French Open. Hmm. Wimbledon starts tomorrow. Maybe I should make another one? But which colour? Never fear: I took Emma’s advice and pre-ordered the yarn in Pink Daisies.