December 29, 2005

Thoughts on the "Backyard Leaves" Scarf

Here is Backyard Leaves, all finished and sewn up, ready to send off to its recipient and only a few days after Christmas!

Backyardleaves1

This scarf is not exactly hard, but it certainly is complex.  It took me almost two hours to do the first repeat, and I thought I'd really gotten myself into a project that would take forever, but as so often happens with lacy patterns, once I could see what was happening, it all started to make sense.  I never did memorize it, and had the pattern next to me all of the time, but often that was just to reassure myself that it was going well. 

My gauge was quite different than it would have been with the merino of the original, and I did extra repeats in an attempt to compensate for the finer gauge -- the scarf ended up being about 4 1/2 inches wide and a rather gasp-inducing 100 inches long, but it is so fine and soft that wrapping it three or four times around my neck was in fact a pleasure, and it's warm without being stifling.  I'm not entirely pleased with the join in the middle, and I can't help thinking that it wasn't the best way of going about it, design-wise, but merely the least complicated -- luckily, with all of the wrapping that will be necessary to wear it, one little seam will never be noticed!

The Cashmere/Seta is perhaps a touch too fine to show off the leaf pattern to its best advantage, but it is certainly wonderfully soft.  I like the fact that the modified I-cord edging smooths out the edges, too, as so often garter stitch and the wrong side of stockinette make a yarn feel a bit rougher than it did in the ball.  This yarn is so soft that the leaves don't stand out as much as with the original merino, but ... did I mention how soft it is?!

Backyardleaves4

Merry Christmas, Helen!

November 14, 2005

A Slippery Path

I am making pretty good progress on my Christmas present project -- I have to say, though, that it is handsome but dull.  (Unlike its recipient, who is handsome and interesting.)  So, in order to relieve the monotony, I swatched another Christmas present, which I can in fact show, since I already asked that recipient if the color was all right.  This is the Falling Leaves scarf from Scarf Style.  It is quite a complicated little thing -- the chart looks like a Rorschach blot, bits sticking out all over everywhere.  Still, it comes out like this,

Falling_leaves_2reps

which is quite nice.  The yarn is Filatura di Amigo Cashmere/Seta, a lovely squishy merino/silk/cashmere blend, that I got from Joy, who was de-stashing.

So, two new projects, on top of my Ostrich Plume blanket and Beginner's Triangle, and a Multi-Directional Scarf that was supposed to be using up the last bits of my Silk Garden #88 but stalled when I realized that it wasn't long enough and I haven't found any more of this now-discontinued color yet.  And still, my mind kept wandering ...

Shetland_aran

This is Jaeger Shetland Aran in Charcoal Tweed, and I couldn't stop thinking about it.  I told myself that I'd just feel it.  Then I told myself I'd just hold it for a little while.

Swatch

Then I just swatched it, to see how it worked up. 

And last night, I couldn't sleep for some reason.  I watched the first part of "The Virgin Queen" on Masterpiece Theatre, went to bed, tossed and turned, then at about two o'clock found myself casting on for Cinxia.

Lesson: Sleep deprivation is hazardous to the WIP pile.  Still, I'm really liking those little colored nubs in amongst the gray tweed....

July 24, 2005

Thoughts on "Forbes Forest"

Here is "Forbes Forest," finished and blocked --

Forbes_forest_2

The pattern is fairly simple for cabling, and easily memorized.  It was nice to just breeze along the wrong side working "as presented" (that is, knitting the Ks and purling the Ps).  I did have a little trouble keeping interested, as I've said before, but I'm happy with the way it turned out.

The Jaeger is very pleasant to work with, and softened even more with just the simple rinse I gave it.  The scarf does still curl in at the edges a bit, just inside the garter stitch border.

The color is off a shade or so in these close-ups -- it's a pine-y loden green, deeper and more "forest-y" than the rather mossy original.

Forbes_forest_3

Forbes_and_lady

(Lady looked very pretty  with her heliotrope and purple against the loden.  My favorite train layouts have a lot of  S-curves, as I love the motions of the trains as they wind, so this part of the cable has a special appeal to me!)

June 16, 2005

Thoughts on the "Misty Garden" Scarf

I finished the Misty Garden scarf yesterday afternoon, after splicing on the last ball mere hours earlier.  It's a fairly easy knit, other than keeping an eye out that the mohair stitches don't get dropped accidentally.

Misty_garden_2_small 

I've not been much of a mohair fan, but the colors of this Rare Comfort Infusion are simply beautiful.  There was a noticeable difference in one of the balls -- despite being the same dye-lot -- in that the mossy green lengths were much shorter, working into a mere stitch or two, instead of three or even four.  The other two balls were closer to the photograph in the "Scarf Style" book.  The Old Shale pattern is a very good choice for this yarn -- stitch definition tends to disappear in the mohair, but the ripples enhance the colors and the odd row of garter not only keeps the scarf from curling, but gives the mohair another element of volume in addition to the natural haze.

Misty_garden_3_small

(I'm not happy with the photos -- don't know what I'm doing wrong, but the focus rarely pleases me.  Will try again later -- it's starting to rain.)

April 24, 2005

Thoughts on "Ene's Scarf"

Enes_scarf_1

Finished "Ene's Scarf" yesterday morning.  All things considered, it is a fairly easy knit, for lace.  The main pattern is easy to memorize, thus I found myself daydreaming and adding a yo where I wasn't supposed to, but the mistakes are easy to catch (the pattern will be obviously out of sync at the exact point of the mistake) and easy to fix.

It's a little difficult to visualize how the scarf will come together at first, but when you understand that the garter stitch "edging" is actually the top edge of the shawl (the hypotenuse, if you will), it becomes clear.

Ene_blocking_1 

The Merinogold is very pleasant to work with, very soft and springy.  It splits occasionally, but not enough to be annoying -- it doesn't splice very well, but I was just working with Silk Garden, which makes a really sturdy, practically invisible join (the clingy mohair or the silk?), so the merino had a hard act to follow.  It does have a strange mothbally smell when wet, but that shouldn't be a problem once it is dry.

I like the cast-on, the knitted method (as opposed to the usual cable cast-on) used with yarn doubled.  This cast-on usually looks a bit limp, but with the doubled yarn it has an interesting almost braided twist look.  I wasn't terribly impressed with the sl 1 knitwise, K2 tog, psso combination -- my psso stitches always look a bit straggly -- and would recommend trying sl next 3 knitwise, K3 tog tbl as a possible alternative.  I would also recommend swatching on the lace pattern instead of st st, as I tend to knit a lot looser in lace (why did I forget this?), and my scarf came out a bit bigger than the original.

Ene_stitchdetail_1

One of the most fun things about this pattern is that even though it starts off with a rather appalling 375 sts, the decreases come thick and fast, so by the time of the second repeat of Chart 3, it felt like I was really sailing along.  It was amazing, how much quicker the chart repeats became!

Quote


  • "A famous Teacher of Arithmetick, who had long been married without being able to get his Wife with Child: One said to her, Madam, your Husband is an excellent Arithmetician. Yes, replies she, only he can’t multiply." -- "Joe Miller's Jests; or, The Wits Vade-Mecum" (1739)

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