FO: ON THE GRASS SWEATER

Two or so years ago I bought a couple skeins of Miss Babs Yowza yarn, which is a DK wool. I would really call it light worsted. I loved this dark variegated colorway called “Berlin” – it reminded me of a city at night. Which may have been the point! haha

I started a sweater that eventually got chewed on by some sort of bug while I was still working on it.  I’d never had this issue before. But they nibbled right through the yarn in several strategic places. I picked them out and sealed up the half-knit sweater in an airtight container, ticked off that $80 worth of yarn was ruined.

But was it? A year and a half later, I looked at that bag of yarn, and got to thinking. So I took it out of its bag and began unraveling the sweater. I checked for bug carcasses – none. No new ones either. I looped the yarn into several hanks and gave it a soak in wool wash to unkink it. It dried nicely on my drying rack, and I started fresh**.

Here’s On the Grass by Joji Locatelli:

I knit the 2nd to last size and the largest sleeves – because despite my best efforts, I could not seem to pick up the amount called for in the pattern. It’s just as well because I think with the ribbed “stripe” there is a bit of unflattering attention paid to the upper arm if you knit too tight of a sleeve. Anyway, this was my first time knitting top-down set-in sleeves, which is a great skill to have! I highly recommend it. While I very much like raglan sleeves and they are very flattering on me, I do like other options in my wardrobe, and learning a new technique is always good for your skill-set as well as your brain.

The yarn, despite finding several areas that needed to be snipped due to unraveling (possible more bug damage…), was a dream to knit with. Not a dream: weaving in one million ends. Like for reals. One million ends. 🙁

For a long-sleeved sweater if you are knitting over a 42″ bust and using Yowza, I would recommend 3 skeins. I used just about every last inch of 2 skeins for my shorter sleeved version.

Next up: Finishing Papaver Socks #2 (which have been marinating for several years, oops), another pair of Monkeys I impulsively started last year,  Whitehorse by Caitlyn Hunter (bobbles and all!) – I am actually half done with this sweater already.  I also ordered yarn from Knitpicks (Palette in Stellar and Ice Lily) to knit her Zweig sweater, which is just absolutely gorgeous. When we go to Stitches West in a few weeks I plan on getting yarn for her Sunset Highway sweater as well… Can you tell I’m a newly minted Caitlyn Hunter fan??

**Someone asked me why I didn’t just get rid of the yarn since it got eaten. Well, for one thing, I spent a lot of money on it. Plus, there were no more moths or whatever in it and I washed the yarn… I see no reason to be wasteful when it’s not warranted.

Current Projects

I have been haphazardly working on various projects, and finishing none! It’s highly annoying. You would think that with the sheer amount of time I have on my hands I would be whipping out the finished objects like nobody’s business, but instead I’ve mostly been back and forth over the following projects:

Rainbow Over Lahaina

These are the Rainbow Over Lahaina socks from the Sock Club book. I like them a lot. They are pretty easy to memorize.

Then we have Jaywalkers:

Jaywalker

I’ve never knit Jaywalkers before, can you believe it? They’re kind of a classic. They’re being knit up in Knitpicks Felici, which I continue to enjoy working with (and good thing too, considering the sheer amount of it I have in my stash. Does one person need this many striped socks? Well, obviously.)

Then we have this Lacy Kerchief scarf (Rav link) that is going to take me for-effing-ever to finish because scarves are boring. This one is less boring, and I actually desire the finished product, so we’ll see how long it takes me. Not super long, I hope.

Lacy Kerchief Scarf

But I’m really like the garter stitch aspects of it. It’s still not quite reversible, but it’s an interesting knit, which is the important thing.

I also wanted to work on a sweater that’s not totally boring like the alpaca blob (but I will LOVE the alpaca blob when it’s done, hopefully by the end of the summer. I like the look of stockinette, I just hate knitting it when it’s not in the round). So one of the things I have been mulling over was making another Forecast. However, I already have one, and I do like the designer’s Bulky Cable Sweater as well. Though I don’t want a bulky sweater – I just want a regular worsted weight sweater. So I hybridized the two patterns and came up with this:

Red Sweater

It’s knit out of the Stitch Nation Bamboo Ewe in geranium (a tomato-y red) which I got on sale awhile back. It’s actually pretty nice and is half wool, half bamboo (well, rayon if you want to get technical). A little splitty but nothing my inexplicably sharp Susan Bates circulars can’t handle. Seriously, those things are sharper than the Addi lace circulars, which are pretty dang sharp. What gives, Susan Bates? Incidentally, I really like them. If you’re going to go cheap on your needles, go Susan Bates.

Anyway, I think that’s pretty much it around here on the knitting front. I’ve also been working on some jewelry but haven’t taken pictures of that yet.

I have to go to a meeting for the library gala thing I’m docenting at this weekend and then going to Jason’s after for dinner, so I probably won’t have a jewelry post until tomorrow. But hey at least this whole unemployment situation has gotten me to blog more, right? I’m having fun with it again at long last.

VAILA

I used to hate to purl. It just isn’t my favorite thing ever.  Especially great swaths of purling like that which is practically the entire body of Vaila.

Vaila

Vaila is knit from the bottom up, both the sleeves and body. I, of course, couldn’t be hacked to actually follow the directions. So, I knit it top down.

My aunt has accused me of not being very specific when it comes to talking about the mods I make on my knits, which are plentiful and varied. So here are the mods that I made, just for you, AUNTIE M.

  1. Knit from the top down. I use the 35/15 method: that is, the front and back use 35% of the stitches each and the sleeves use 15% of the stitches each. This means that if you cast on 100 stitches the front will have 35 stitches, the back 35 stitches, the right sleeve 15 stitches, the left sleeve 15 stitches.  Place markers at each of these stitches. I can’t quite explain the math because math (especially percentages) breaks my brain, but I can assure you that using this method works. At least for me. I also used the number of stitches at the CAST OFF part of the pattern as a starting point, then knit K2P3 ribbing for an inch. (Should have gone a little longer – and I may carefully rip out the neck ribbing and redo.)
  2. The top-down knit raglans: To get the same look as the raglans in the pattern, the increases you  will need to use are:  knit to 3 stitches before the marker, “purl front and back in the stitch” (similar to kfb), knit 1, kfb.  With these increases you will get the same look as the pattern, which is knit stitches on a sea of purl.
  3. I didn’t convert the lace insert at all.  I knit it as is, and it looks pretty much the same no matter which direction it’s pointed.
  4. I knit the sleeves inside out.  I couldn’t stomach the thought of all the purl in the round, even though I don’t hate purling anymore.  So  I knit the sleeves in the round and then turned it right side out and knit the cuffs. If you do this, you should be careful that you make sure to  pick up the underarm stitches in the right way so the seem is on the inside of the sweater.

I think that is it in terms of modifications.

Vaila

Anyway, here are the stats:

Pattern: Vaila from Twist Collective
Yarn: Berroco Vintage (An acrylic/wool blend.  I like it.)
Gauge: I dunno
Needles: US 9 29″ circular

 Happy Monday (and MARCH, wow), dudes. 

So, now I am totally working on another sweater. I don’t know what is wrong with me. I haven’t knit on a sock in three months!