Sweater with Diagonal Ribs UNVEILED!

Sunday, February 27, 2005

  

Pattern: Rebecca 28, #41 Sweater with Diagonal Ribs and Cables
Yarn: Lion's Brand Kool Wool, 12 skeins x 60 yds = 720 yds total
Gauge: 14 sts to 10cm over 2x2 rib, size 10 needles

Hey they're different colors! Actual color most resembles the photo on the left. The photo on the right showcases the main reason why I picked this pattern to knit - those dainty yarn overs in between the ribs, coming together in such a pretty V. How clever to use yarn overs in lieu of a simple increase. I really love that detail. Here's another photo to show the side.

Me 'n my cozy winter sweater with the lovely side detail
lounging on the couch with an [empty] mug of coffee

This sweater was a fast and easy knit if you remove the whole seaming bit. It took me all of yesterday afternoon and most of the night to just seam and oh god I was so miserable. Pulling at my hair, cursing, crying, turning purple. D was all, "Girl I'm confused. I thought knitting was supposed to be relaxing?"  I hate hate hate seaming the sleeves on. 

None of my reference books had anything useful to say, except: "Pin center of sleeve to shoulder seam, ease into shape, and sew." ...And? AND??! So many pages devoted to how designing and charting sleeves and neckholes and this and that, but nothing on putting it together.

The cap sleeve seaming fiasco. I used white yarn first to see what I was doing. A very ad hoc process.

I started seaming from the top center of the sleeve down to the armhole, and then did it again for the other side. The Vogue Knitting book did mention using backstitch, but I couldn't make sense of how to do that when starting from the center of a piece? Instead I used a version of mattress stitch to attach the top of the sleeve to the shoulder, picking up about 2 shoulder stitches to 1 sleeve stitch.  It seemed to work out ok mathematically, but the end result is sloppy. I look like I'm wearing shoulder pads. The bulkiness of the yarn could be to blame for that.  D thinks it looks fine and maybe it does, but my eyes can't help but zero in on the awkward shoulder seaming.

Someone needs to show me how to do this properly. Otherwise from now on I'm sticking with raglan sleeves. So send any tips my way!

Also still having issues with neckshaping. There's a small hole boo boo in the back. If you don't look really hard you won't see it. But I know it's there and that's all that matters. Strangely enough even though the knowledge of the hole's existence will haunt me at night, I never considered stopping to rip out rows in order to fix it. Laziness always wins in the end.

The verdict is still out on the Kool Wool. It's a really heavy drape, and it looks like it's starting to pill already. On the other hand it's super soft and cozy. And cheap! Relatively speaking. I would definitely knit this sweater again.

And can I just say what a pleasure it is to follow a graphical pattern than it is to follow pure text of endless "row1: k1, p3, *[yo, k1, p3] repeat from * 14 times, k1, p3 blah blah blah"? American and English pattern books need to step it up and draw me a picture.

Another sweater, with cables, with turtleneck, in neutral.
This one's going to be HOT.

Next up in the queue - that other chunky cable sweater from Rebecca 28. From this point on I'm calling it Savanna, rather than "Sweater with Cables."  I've already started it, using DB chunky merino, in yet another neutral color. I love her yarns - they all have this certain sheen, even for wool.

I've already made a mistake with this one though. Not enough yarn. After knitting up that first skein and seeing how little it produced, I knew my stash was not going to be enough. My mistake: calculating the amount of yarn I needed using weight instead of yardage. I was substituting GGH Savanna with the DB, both are 50grams, but GGH has more yardage. Thus I am short 3 skeins. However I have a workaround that does not involve buying more, so fingers, paws, eyes crossed.

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This week in knitting

Friday, February 25, 2005

In between work and sleep I managed to finish a sleeve, and thus the SWDR is finally all knitted up, blocked and ready for seaming. I think I enjoy the seaming least out of the whole process, especially now that ratios will have to be calculated before seaming in the cap sleeves. I'm saving that for the weekend. In the meantime after casting off the last sleeve I immediately casted on the Ribby Cardi, without swatching. Look at me, renegade knitter. This morning however as I clomped in my snow boots on the way to work, bitter wind howling and snow drifts swirling, I decided to start the other Rebecca chunky merino wool instead, while we're still enjoying this 20 degree weather.

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Almost there

Monday, February 21, 2005

The other day I was poking around the garden picking up random litter that had blown in our yard and had my first sign of Spring: tips of daffodils and tulips pushing their way just past the surface. Huzzah! Spring is coming...Or is it? Snowing cats and dogs now, again.

sweater front all soft and dreamy in the sun

I'm still working on the SWDR. It's dragging because after a few rows, my hands turn to concrete on fire. I finished the front. The neckshaping scares me. I never quite understand the directions. For this pattern I think they gave right-side directions for knitting from the edge to the neck edge/center, even though the right side should have been from the neck edge/center to edge. So I flipped the pattern directions mirrorwise and it seemed to turn out ok. No holes, purls and knits where they should be. The next thing that I'm not looking forward to is seaming the sleeves. Ooo. Spooky.

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Check out my diagonal ribs

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

I haven't knitted in the past couple of days. Busy at work, trying to get to bed sooner in order to conquer the whole 'early to bed, early to rise' battle. Anyway this past weekend I started the SWDG (sweater with diagonal ribs) from Rebecca 28, using Lion Brand Kool Wool and finished the back.

Back of SWDG. The color is actually more moss than camel.

Love the diag ribbing, and the yarn-overs near the edge. I changed the placement of the double decreases, during mid-knitting, by just a stitch on each side.  Plus I think that's how it looks in the photo. The pattern was knitting up something differerent. Also with such chunky yarn like the Kool Wool, and with the previous two rows also containing decreases right below, the original placement of the double dec looked really messy, all big and bumpy .  

The Kool Wool is knitting up soft, spongy, and very springy.  Boing boing.




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