Showing posts with label Scarves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scarves. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Red Scarf-age

...or, How to badly knit a scarf for the Red Scarf project.

There are so many things wrong with this scarf, it was almost a crime to mail it in to the Red Scarf Project, but, mail it I did. (I apparently have a high tolerance for shame.) I take 80% of the blame for this monstrosity. I blame one of the yarns used for the other 20% of the problems. But before I get deep into whine mode, let me step you through my process:

This jumbled mess of knitting is actually a scarf, knit lengthwise, in the round, with a steek that will be cut and become fringe, and is shown here prior to finishing or blocking:

*

Here's the 22-stitch steek, knit all in stockinette. All new yarns were joined in the middle of that steek, which is clearly obvious by the indentation in this photo:

*

And even more obvious on the flip-side, where all the tails hang:

*

Extreme close-up of live steek stitches with needle removed:

Eek! Live stitches! The sky is falling!
*

And here's the steek, post-surgery:

Mad woman cuts her knitting. News at 11.
*

The giant circle is now a long rectangle. Here it is with the steek stitches unraveled:

I sorta liked that curly look, but knew it was only temporary
*

Here is the curly fringe all knotted up and ready for a bath:


No bathtub shots. We're a modest blog here at Virgin Wool, after all.

But I will show it blocking:
My porch is the only place where I can block a scarf where it won't be in my way or walked on by cats.

Finally, it was time to even out the fringe. Here's the carnage:



And here's the Red Scarfage, ready for mailing:


Now for the knitty gritty details...

First, the specs:

Pattern: Maia's "Scarf Around" (download pdf file here)
Yarns:
* main color: Lion Cashmere Blend in # 113 (red) - (bought at Ben Franklin's 50% off sale)
* constrasting colors:
** Artyarns supermerino, three different colorways
** unlabeled Sari silk yarn
Needles: U.S. size 8 Denise interchangeable circulars on 40" cable
Gauge: who cares?

Next, the positives:

I loved knitting with that Lion Cashmere Blend (72% merino, 14% cashmere, 14% nylon) -- it is incredibly soft and sproingy, delightful to knit with, delightful to touch. It retails for about $9 for an 84 yard ball, which is more than I am willing to pay for any Lion Brand yarn, cashmere content not withstanding, but I got it at a 50% off sale, and snapped up all they had. I'd definitely knit with it again, but again, probably wouldn't buy it unless it's on sale. I'm a brand snob that way, I guess.

I also loved Maia's pattern and the idea of knitting a lengthwise scarf in the round. In practice, however, I struggled. Which leads us right into...

...the negatives:

Knitting a lengthwise scarf in the round, in actuality, is somewhat of a pain. 274 stitches on a 40" cord requires a lot of stopping & starting to allow for sliding the stitches around that giant loop. I feel like I spent more time sliding stitches around than actually knitting them, which added to the time it took to knit this scarf, refuting my original assumption that knitting it in the round would be faster. For anyone who doesn't like the Magic Loop method of knitting socks because of the sliding-stitches factor, you would HATE this method of knitting a scarf, because the sliding is magnified ten-fold.

In all fairness, however, I think that many of my problems were due to the tools I was using. Perhaps if I used a shorter cable (?), a smoother/skinnier cable (like an Addi Turbo), skinnier yarns (not the Sari silk) and larger needles, it would have been less of a struggle. Hard to say, at this point, though.

Knitting with the Lion Cashmere Blend and the Artyarns Supermerino yarns wasn't as difficult as knitting with the sari silk. That yarn can be quite bulky in places, making the stitches tighter and therefore harder to slide around the cable. In hindsight, I should have switched to larger needles while knitting that yarn. Now I know.

One of the yarns I used, and I'm not sure which, bled terribly in the scarf's Eucalan bath. So much so that, instead of a rinse-free wash promised by Eucalan, I had to rinse about three times before the water ran clear. The color that bled was red, so I'm thinking the Lion Brand yarn was the culprit, but there's no way of knowing, I suppose. If anyone else has used this yarn and knows if it bleeds or not, I'd love to hear it. I still have about six balls of this yarn left for some future project.

The pattern, as written, has you alternate rows of a solid red yarn with rows of sari silk yarn, which is what I planned on doing, but changed my mind after that first section of sari silk became such a chore to knit. I then decided to use different yarns (the ArtYarns supermerino) for the stripes in the middle, with one more stripe of sari silk on the end, before finishing with the solid red again.

One final negative, which is 100% my fault. I made the rookie mistake of binding off too tightly. I'd read (and promptly forgot, apparently), that when knitting a scarf lengthwise, you should bind off really loosely (with a needle at least one size larger), otherwise, you have one side that's very tight and one that's very loose, and the scarf then has a natural arc in it, so when stretched out, it has a dorky rainbow shape, instead of the expected long rectangle required of a scarf. You can sorta see it in the blocking picture, above, although I did not post the more rainbow-y pictures, I suppose out of shame. (See, I do have a sense of shame, apparently!)

Anyway, because of the weird final shape of the scarf, the ends were not nice neat horizontal edges, but rather, somewhat diagonal, and so my next dilemma was, how do I cut the fringe? Do I cut it straight across to form a horizontal bottom edge on the fringe, or on the diagonal, to match the scarf edge? I decided to cut it straight across, which turned out to look pretty stupid. The shame just continues....

After all was said and done, I was so ready to be rid of this scarf, I immediately folded it up, packaged it and put it in the mailbox, and it was picked up by the mailman within five minutes, gone from my sight forever. Foisted upon some poor orphaned college kid. That's adding insult to injury, is it not? Probably a good thing I don't have kids.

My apologies to orphans everywhere. Next year I'll try to do better.
*

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Happy Blogiversary to Me and You!

***
Howdy!

One year ago today, I created this knitting blog in response to my need to document somewhere my thoughts, questions, progress, setbacks and random musings about knitting, and occasionally other areas of my life. My sister-in-law Jenny taught me to knit in July of '05, and this blog was an attempt to give her some relief from a constant barrage of questions, emails and phone calls about knitting from this overly-enthusiastic beginner.

I had no idea how much knitting and knit-blogging would open up my world, and I hope there are many more years of knitting and blogging ahead of me. I've met so many great folks through this medium, both in person and virtually, and I've learned a TON from reading others' knitting blogs, as well as attending classes and joining my knitting group, which I found thru another local knit-blogger. (Thanks, Jane!). Knitting, and blogging-about-knitting has truly enriched my life.

In celebration of today's event, I've decided to have a little contest, of sorts. I've pondered long and hard as to the format of and prizes for this contest and its winners, and I think I've come up with a workable solution, and one that actually becomes a win-win situation.

But first, a little background.

Back in April, I blogged about a wonderful little charity knit-along that my friend Sydney created. It's called the "Think Pink Challenge", and the gist of it is that she's encouraging knitters and other crafters to knit (or crochet or weave) a pink scarf for Breast Cancer Awareness, and she will then distribute the scarves to groups that will ultimately get them in the hands of patients undergoing treatment.

Syd's original deadline was the end of September, but she's had a new upsurge of responses, so she's extended the deadline to October 15th.

I recently finished my scarf, so I thought I'd share the finished object today, the first day of National Breast Cancer Awareness month. The pattern is the pink heart scarf from the Fall '04 special Breast Cancer Awareness issue (<- pdf file) of Knitty.

Early progress - yarn is Crystal Palace "Iceland"
***
Decided to block the two sides separately before grafting
***
Close-up of blocking
***
Finished object
***

Close-up of kitchener's graft - a little wonky, but I'm not stressing over it
***

Okay, enough about my scarf. It's on it's way to Syd, along with two others. Here's hoping they go to someone who will find comfort in them.

On to the contest. And here it is:

I am throwing down the gauntlet. Anyone who, in response to reading this post, knits (or crochets or weaves) a new scarf to contribute to this knit-along, will qualify for a drawing to win a skein of Blue Moon Fiber Arts' "Socks That Rock" sock yarn, in the colorway of the winner's choice. If that particular yarn is not to the individual's liking, (you're not a sock knitter, let's say, or you don't knit with wool yarns), I'm willing to send the qualifying winner a comparably-priced yarn of their choice.

If there is a large response, I will draw up to five names of winners, possibly more, depending on the response. Anyone contributing more than one scarf will automatically get additional entries into the drawing, one entry for each new scarf created, which will increase that person's chances of winning a skein of yarn. Once a person wins their first skein, however, they are not qualified to win any more during this contest.

Here are the guidelines:

1) This should be a new scarf, created sometime between today and October 15th.

2) In order to qualify for the contest, it must be received by Syd by October 15th. Syd's mailing address is on the Think Pink blog.

3) Once you've completed and mailed your scarf, email me (maryklarson[AT]comcast[D0T]net) and let me know, so that I can confirm with Syd that she's received it. Only then will your name be entered into the drawing. If you include a digital picture of your finished scarf -- all the better, but it's not a requirement.

4) Drawing will be held sometime during the week of October 15th -- perhaps during my Tuesday Night knitting group, so that it can be photographically documented. Winners will be announced shortly after the drawing, and prizes will be purchased & shipped immediately upon learning the winner's choice of preferred yarn.


I hope I haven't forgotten any details. If you have any questions, feel free to email me or leave a comment here.

Thanks, in advance, everyone, for your contributions!
***

Monday, September 11, 2006

UFO sightings

***
(First of all, I wonder how many hits I'll get from alien-hunters because of this post's title ?)

Actually, it's not an accurate title anyway, as what I'll be sharing here are finished (!!), rather than UnFinished Objects. W00t!

I got a bee in my bonnet this weekend and decided to finish a couple of things that have been laying around collecting dust for months and months.

First of all, there's this scarf. I've had it piled in a bag since March, finished. It just needed its ends woven in and then it needed to be felted. So after I wove in all seven thousand ends, (seemingly), I measured it before felting:

Yarn: Plymouth "Sinsation" rayon chenille in aqua, 10 balls
Needles: Crystal Palace US size #11 bamboo straights
Gauge: Who cares? But for history's sake, ~3.15 spi
"Pattern"
: Cast-on 28 stitches, knit every row


Width, unfelted: ~9 inches
***
Length, unfelted: 60" + 27" = 87 inches = 7'3"
(my tape measure is only 60" long)
***
Total scarf acreage, unfelted: 783 square inches or ~5.5 square feet.

Here it is post-felting:

Width, felted: 5 inches
(a reduction of 44%)
***

Length, felted: 44.5" x 2 (folded scarf in half to measure) = 89" = ~ 7'5"
(How did I GAIN two inches???)
***
Total scarf acreage, felted: 445 inches squared, or ~3.1 square feet.
An overall reduction in acreage of ~44%.

Extreme close up of fabric, post-felting.
It really is as cool and silky and slinky feeling as it appears here.
***

Okay, this scarf sure feels really nice to the touch, but it is HEAVY. And way too long. 7+ feet of a heavy scarf is a LOT of scarf. Lesson learned -- felted things shrink in width but not length, apparently! In the future, I would have cast on maybe 60 stitches and used circular needles. But I don't think I'll knit with this stuff again for awhile, if ever. Besides the expense of this yarn and the tiny amount of yardage per ball, chenille, especially this slippery rayon chenille, makes a horribly wormy garter stitch fabric which can be just a royal pain to knit. Its saving grace is the wool core which allows for felting and makes that stunning final fabric.

On the other end of the beautiful fabric spectrum, (i.e., the ugly end), I give you the butt-ugly scarf:


Can someone, somewhere love me?
***

(Conveniently meeting another description of "UFO", i.e., Ugly Finished Object).

I started this thing almost a year ago, and never finished it because it was just so, so bad. In my defense, I was a fairly new knitter at the time and like many new knitters, I thought gold dripped from my knitting needles. More like fool's gold. If You Knit What? were still up and running, I'd submit it to them. So, why finish it? Because it took almost no time and I felt sorry for it.

My sister-in-law thinks that I should make this scarf a booby prize in a contest of some sort. I'm open to suggestions as to the type of contest!

Knitted Fug. I'm just so proud.
***

Monday, January 09, 2006

Off and On the Needles

***
A recent finished object:



And here is the lovely Ali modeling it:

(She's just barely tolerating it -- notice the ears wanting to point backwards?)

And a close-up of the knitting.

Doesn't it look soft? It is!

Made with 2 balls of Berroco Plush Colors # 1958, "Taffy". US size 10 needles, cast-on 20 stitches, knit every row. I knit this over Christmas. It is for no one else but me! :-) I've taken to wearing it around the house on chilly mornings, but today is a gorgeous 66ºF, and so not needed.

During that knitting segment on the Carol Duvall show the other day, she showed a really cool way to wear a scarf which I'd not seen before. Basically, you fold the scarf in half, and then drap that evenly around your neck, and then pull the two ends through the loop made made by the fold, and snug it up a bit around your neck. It makes for a very pulled-together look when wearing a scarf, and keeps it from sliding off. Brilliant!

***

A current work-in-progress:

Remember this? Which prompted me to buy this? I'm finally now getting around to knitting that up, and here is my progress thus far:

And a close up of the knitting:

Unfelted, it has that typical "wormy" look of a garter stitch chenille fabric.

I'm on the third ball (out of 10) so far, and after three or four attempts, finally found a gauge (28 stitches, size 11 needles) where I feel the finished, felted object will still be big enough for a regular-sized scarf. I can't wait to finish and felt this thing! Pictures will be posted, for sure!

***

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Another FO


Christmas knitting is progressing. I don't need to have everything finished until next Wednesday, 12/28, when our family is having the big family celebration. Last night I finished another scarf, made from:


Crystal Palace "Musique" (love the name of that yarn), color: 9364, and GGH "Apart", color: 15.

This scarf was going to be for my sister, but I decided to give it to my mom, instead, and give my sister the scarf originally intended for my mom. This one is warmer, and my mom is tiny and always cold, so I think she needs the warmer version.

Here's the finished object, hanging on my porch railing:


14 stitches, US size 15 needles (bamboo; would have been easier on aluminum), knit every row. It took two balls of "Musique", one of "Apart".

Close-up of the knitting:

Not the most in-focus picture I could have taken, but of all the pictures I took under various light conditions, these colors are the most accurate, (surprisingly, since this is taken in incandescent light with no flash). I wonder why incandescent light seems more accurate to me than natural daylight? I know blues are hard to capture accurately on film - wonder if that's also true with digital.

Only two more UFO's to finish before Christmas/New Year's, and both are well underway. I hope to finish another tonight. If so, pictures tomorrow!

Saturday, December 03, 2005

A UFO & 2 FO's

***
UFO: A soon-to-be-completed birthday scarf for niece & goddaughter Jessica, who turns 16 on January 1st and loves pink & orange:



Made with "Dawn" carried with GGH's "Apart"; size 17 needles, 10 stitches, knit every row.
---

FO#1: Green scarf for friend Linda:



Lane Borgogesia's "Tibet", shade #3 carried with Berroco Crystal FX "Cryptonite"; size 15 needles, 10 stitches, knit every row.
---

FO #2: Blue-green/teal scarf for moi:


Berroco Optik Peacock and Crystal FX "Caribe"; size 15 needles, 12 stitches, knit every row (duh).

(I had vowed I wouldn't knit anything for myself until after the holidays, but I just couldn't resist this, and it knitted up so quickly that, before I knew it, it was done. If I find myself short a hand-knitted gift for someone, it may end up going to someone else anyway, but it's a bit scratchy, so I'm not sure someone else would want it. So, Yay - now I have my own hand-knit scarf to wear, now that it's cold!)

Thursday, November 17, 2005

And yet another novelty yarn scarf....

***
Take one ball of Lane Borgogesia's "Tibet" in shade #3:

Add a ball of Berroco Crystal FX "Cryptonite" (#4704) --

(it's really a slate green and not purpley like it appears here in incandescent light):

Carry together, cast on 10 stitches on US size 15 needles, knit every row:

And you get this:
A close-up:


...which will be a Christmas gift for one of my friends (who likes green). I had to put aside the teal scarf knitting because (a) it's for me, which means it needs to wait until after Christmas, and (b) I only have one pair of size 15 needles. But I'm eyeing it longingly....

Monday, October 24, 2005

The Rainbow Scarf - she be finished

After much agonizing back and forth as to gauge, I stuck with my original needle size (11) for the Sari Rainbow ribbon yarn, and finished up the scarf for my sister this past Saturday.

(This is what replaced the ROYGBV scarf I originally intended to knit her but chickened out after trying to cast-on 300 stitches on too-short circular needles. Never fear - I will still use the other yarn originally intended for ROYGBV -- I'm thinking it could make a cool rainbow-striped felted purse one of these days. Or, I could actually go back and knit the ROYGBV scarf. Either of those projects will have to occur after the holidays. But I digress.)

My sister received the Sari Rainbow scarf Saturday evening while on her Emmaus weekend. Her email today indicates that she likes it, although she referred to it as a "stole", (not sure how one wears a 3-inch-wide scarf as a stole, but whatevah). I think it came out okay, and am happy that for the first time, a FO of mine has reached its intended recipient. I'm a real knitter now! (Sorta.)

<-- This is a gauge swatch of that yarn on some size 19 needles, which I decided was just too loose and flimsy-feeling and unstructured for my preference. I ripped that out and tried it on size 15's, which was still too loose, so I kept with the original tight gauge made using the size 11's.



<-- This is a side-by-side comparison of the two gauges (size 11 vs size 19).





Two things happen with this yarn when it is knitted:

1) if on smaller needles (the 11's), it folds in half lengthwise on itself, so that what is really a 1-centimeter-wide ribbon becomes about half that width when knitted. That bothered me originally, but after testing the larger, looser gauges which I didn't like, I got over it.

2) Knitting puts a slight twist in whatever yarn you use, and when using a ribbon yarn, that can be a problem (at least it was for me). The twists back up between the right-hand needle and the ball of yarn, and if you don't untwist it on occasion, it will become so twisted as to be unrecognizable as a ribbon, once you knit it. So, it requires that you stop every few rows and hold up your knitting to let it "spin" and untwist, before proceeding. Later I figured out that as long as you pull a long enough length of yarn from the ball, the twists can get spaced out so that they don't "back up" and become a problem. Live and learn.

<-- My niece, modeling the scarf before it was wrapped and delivered to my sister's pillow up at the retreat center. This young lady has learned how to knit, by the way, and has the most unusual technique I've ever seen. I should have taken pictures of that!



Now, on to my next project, which is a chemo cap. I started it week-before-last, but messed up the ribbing so will mostly frog and re-knit sometime this week. More on that in a later post.

Sunday, October 02, 2005

Ahhh... at last... The Autumn Rush scarf

Finally, finally, finally I think I've found a yarn that will make a suitably gift-able autumn-colored scarf for my sister-in-law Mary's birthday.

It is:









Which knits up like this:



(how appropriate to pose it with actual autumn leaves)





Here's a close-up, although the colors are truer in the previous image:




I love the random self-striping.





You'd think I had stock in On Line's Linie yarns, but it's just coincidence, I swear! I guess since they make a lot of novelty yarns, and I'm currently drawn to those types of yarns, it just makes sense that I'd end up buying a lot of their yarn.

As per usual, since I didn't figure out gauge before I start knitting, (come on - it's a scarf!), I ran out of the yarn after two balls, and the scarf clearly needs two more, at least. And of course, the LYS (Lettuce Knit) where I purchased it was all out of that particular color. I almost offered to buy the knitted sample they had in that color, but figured they'd turn me down anyway. I found more at WEBS, however, and it's already in the mail, so I should get it sometime next week. WEBS looks like a great store - maybe I'll be lucky enough to find myself in Massachusetts some day so I can go visit their huge shop/warehouse.

So, this scarf is on temporary hold until the new yarn arrives. Which gives me a chance to finish up the Linie Spot turquoise scarf (wide version). I'm almost done with that, so will just need to weave in the ends and add some fringe. It can wait, too, because it's going to be a Christmas gift. I really need to work on what is most pressing, which is a gift for my sister which is due in about three weeks. See next post (ROYGBV scarf) for discussion of that one....

The butt-ugly scarf

***
*CAUTION: Avert your eyes if you are hung-over or prone to nausea!*

There's really no other term for this -- butt-ugly just suits it so well. I asked sister-in-law Jenny to confirm the butt-ugliness, and although she was kind and didn't use that particular term, she did say that the (Gedifra Chapello) yarn that I'm using as fringe (sort of) was "a little much". Talk about understatement! I finally figured out that it is an exact match to the shag carpet we had in our family room growing up in the 1970's. And so, I cannot in good conscience give this as a gift to sister-in-law Mary or anyone that I care about. I might wear it at Thanksgiving and give it to the first person who makes any kind of comment (good or bad), just to get it the heck out of my house....

It was knitted on size 13 needles, casting on 15 stitches, not that anyone cares.


Close-ups of knitting (aka, my alternative to syrup of ipecac):


***

Plymouth 'Sinsation' felted chenille skinny scarf


I went to the beach this August with my brother & his family, (thanks, Pat & Jenny!), and found this yarn at the local yarn store down there called "Knitting Addiction". It knits up like any chenille, I guess, in that the stitches tend to swim across the item rather than line up nicely, an attribute called "worming" according to the pattern written by the LYS owner for this scarf. HOWEVER, because this yarn is 70% rayon with a 30% wool core, it is great for "felting", and so, according to the pattern instructions, I machine-washed and machine-dried it, and it shrunk up a bit and straightened out the stitches and made this lovely, silky fabric. I used size 11 needles (the ones I pulled out of the turquoise Lion brand chenille scarf) and cast on 15 stitches, knitting all rows. It took three balls of this yarn, which only comes with about 35 yards to the ball. After washing/drying, the scarf is about 3 inches wide and 4 feet long, which is fine for a skinny scarf, but now I want to make another one, but bigger!