This week my knitting mojo took a detour. I had a couple of lovely projects on the needles, and lots of time for knitting (relatively speaking), but I just couldn’t seem to get into it. I have often noticed that the amount of knitting I get done is inversely related to the amount of reading I get done. I read 6 books this past week. I knit…..very little.
My goal for the week was to finish the yoke of the Ravi cardigan (the directions for which comprised Clue 1 of the Ravi KAL) before Clue 2 arrived. Clue 2 arrived in my mailbox (electronically of course) first thing this morning, and I finished the yoke section this afternoon. Mission very nearly accomplished. Of course, this was facilitated by having a very low goal set; I was mostly done with the yoke a week ago.
There was a lot of discussion on the KAL regarding which short row method would be best for this project. Carol Feller includes a link to the Japanese short row technique, which she recommends, but which seemed fussy to me; involving the use of many stitch holders or paper clips, and of course, the wrapping and turning and picking up wraps. I was not in the mood for fussy, and was interested to find on the KAL boards a link to the German short row method, which was decidedly unfussy. Guess which I ended up doing? I am not convinced if it was the most invisible method, but I decided early on that the short rows should be seen as a design feature of Ravi. Instead of trying to hide them within the fabric of the garter stitch, we should instead celebrate them, and have them literally jump out of the fabric. Looking at mine in the above photo, I think I accomplished that. They remind me of whalebone in a corset, providing the structure on which the curves are based.
Here is a very brief description of working German short rows in garter stitch. First, you knit up to the place in the pattern where it says to wrap and turn (first photo below). But, because we are doing this the easy way, we don’t wrap at all, merely turn (second photo below).
And please don’t fret; the technical portion of this post is completed. So, a few comments on the whole KAL thing (recall, this is knitting shorthand for a knit-along, a sort of mass knitting event). There are now just shy of 800 knitters participating in the online KAL for this cardigan. There are a number of good things that have emerged for me so far in this process. First, there was a lot of discussion about which yarn to use. Since I had never used the Blue Moon Fibre Arts Socks that Rock yarn before, and was considering using Wollmeise, I followed these discussions fairly closely. There were many helpful comments which helped me to settle on the BMF (and also on the colour, which a number of others are using; it is beautiful, is it not?)
On the other hand, I find all of the chatter on the KAL impossible to keep up with. Knitters, especially knitters on the internet, often have a tendency to be fan girls and to gush a lot (also to rant a lot, although not in this context). I barely have time to skim what I think are the crucial bits of this KAL, or even the fun or interesting bits. If I read every comment that was being posted on the KAL, I would never have time to knit.
Well, today I am in possession of the next clue, so I really should stop all this incessant reading and start knitting. I would like to say hello to both of my daughters, who are busy running around Berlin together this week and hopefully having far too much fun. I end with a silly photo of me, standing out in the rain and cold while Doug hurriedly took some shots.