Friday, March 31, 2017
One Plain One Fancy
One Plain One Fancy
Last month I wrote a piece for Lion Brand Yarns that mentioned an almost century-old pattern that Ive had my eye on. This is it:
Look at that collar. Gorgeous, and perfectly practical for a pencil-neck like me who is prone to agonies of stiffness if I get even a whisper of draught down my back. I saw it, I want it, Im going to make it.
Mind you, Im going to change it. Its too long, for starters. As written,* it would hang to halfway down my thigh. Not pretty. Im adding shaping in the torso, tooa taper from chest to waist.
Itll be gentle taper, because a sweater like this is meant to be a smidge loose. You put it on at home, in your study, when youve finally taken off your jacket and loosened your tie. Its not for the office. Its for quiet solitude. However, should somebody drop in on my solitude, Id rather not have it hang on me like Im wearing daddys old bathrobe.
So, the Product Knitter within wanted to knit the sweater in order to wear the sweater. The Process Knitter withinwhich is dominantwanted to try out the pockets.
Heres a shot of one pocket.
As you can see, not much else happening for acres and acres of stockinette but that pocket. Marvelously smooth opening, no?
You make it by knitting to the point at which you want your pocket opening to lie. Thenwithout breaking the working yarnyou work only on the stitches that will form the interior of the pocket, knitting and purling back and forth on them until you have a strip thats twice the intended depth of the pocket.
Then you line up the live stitches of this strip with the live stitches you left sitting on your needle andagain, without breaking the working yarnresume knitting across all your stitches. The strip, now folded in half, forms the interior of the pocket. Its very neat, and just requires seams up the sides when the piece is finished.
Here it is in hasty scribble form.
And heres what the actual pocket (finished except for side seams) looks like from the wrong side.
I like it. The opening is, of course, seamless. The method is straightforward. You must plan for your pockets in advance, of courseso the devil-may-care atttiude I enjoy when putting in afterthought pockets is replaced by the smug satisfaction of knowing that part of the work is done, and I can just motor on toward the front-and-back shaping.
The yarn is proving to be a perfect choiceLB Collection Organic Wool. Its soft (without being so namby-pamby that itll start to pill before the sweater is complete), its springy, its cuddly as a puppy wrapped in polar fleece, and the rustic texture is a welcome accent for a piece thats otherwise so plain.
Really, really curious about the collar, since to be blunt I havent the faintest idea of how its going to work after reading the pattern fifty times. Sometimes you just have to buckle on the parachute and jump.
How I Got This Way
Speaking of Lion Brand, the most recent essay I wrote for them"Inheritance"talks about creativity running in familiesthough often your creative family tree will include folks who arent necessarily blood relations. I enjoyed writing (and drawing) this one...and my mother left a comment. That was a good day.
Turning Weaving Into Knitting
Quick update on the bag that card weaver John Mullarkey and I are collaborating on, using HiKoo CoBaSi. John sent along four band designs to choose from. Hell use the band as the basis for the strap.
I settled on the second from the top. What he wove, Im going to try to interpret (not necessarily copy) in knitting for the body of the bag. Joy of joys, its swatch time! Im thinking mosaic might be the way to go, for the highly scientific reason that Ive never tried it and it looks interesting. But first, we chart.
More to come.
*If you want it, the pattern is in the facsimile edition of the 1916 Lion Yarn Book that is available here. Facsimile means its an unaltered copy of the originalso youd be working from the period pattern, just as I am.
Available link for download
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