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Tuesday, March 03, 2009
Progress

 

    After at least six weeks, I have finally finished the edging on the Lerwick shawl.  Feels good to have made some progress. 

     

    The yarn is 2/20 or 2/30 (can't read the label) which means extremely fine and the stitch pattern is worked on both sides - those two factors really slowed me down, plus there were 128 repeats of the 16 row pattern (36,864 stitches) - no wonder it took so long.

     

     

    The last step was to graft the two ends together.  I wanted to graft it in pattern and knew that would be really confusing even though it was only 15 stitches.  I decided to make a swatch in a heavier yarn with the row that was to be grafted knit with a contrasting color that I could follow when I did the actual graft:

     

     

     

    After my sweet husband set up some lighting so that I could see what I was doing, I was ready to begin the operation (he said it looked like I was performing surgery):

     

     

     

    I removed the provisional cast on and put those stitches on a second dpn, checked five times to make sure that I didn't have the length of edging twisted and was correctly matching up the ends, hitched up my glasses  for optimal magnification and began..........

     

     

     

     TADA!

     

    The next process is to pick up stitches (1,200+) along the straight edge (only took three tries to get it right) and knit the mitred border which is about 100 rows long - this could take a while - so far the four rows that I have knit took about 2 hours per row.

     

    On Sunday I went to a spin-in at Barb's (I don't spin but the nice fiber ladies let me bring my knitting).  A couple hours of knitting, eating, chatting - before I knew it I was ready to knit the toe on the second sock of a pair I've been working on since the start of the year.  Always glad to finish the second sock!  The pattern is a 7-stitch twisted rib cable.  The yarn is by Neighborhood Fiber Company (purchased at The Loopy Ewe):

     

     

    I had a lot of fun designing and knitting this colorful modular scarf in Crystal Palace Mini-Mochi purchased at The Kirkwood Knittery.  The pattern is being test knit and then it will be available on Ravelry and on my blog through Ravelry (you don't need to be a member of Ravelry to purchase a pattern).  The scarf is knit in garter stitch trapezoids, there are no seams.  One length is knit with the first skein and the second length is attached as it is knit with the second skein:

     

     

     

    This yarn is a  very loosely spun fingering weight wool.  It's very soft and has a pretty halo (makes it hard to rip out) with long repeats of various colors.

     

Posted at 04:38 pm by MakeOne

Barb
March 4, 2009   09:52 AM PST
 
Good idea on the graft model. Where did you have trouble picking up the 1200 stitches? Just in case I ever try such a project...

Great scarf.
Carmen
March 4, 2009   12:54 PM PST
 
OMG 36,864 stitches you are amazing!!!!
The scarf is just beautiful.
Robyn
March 4, 2009   03:07 PM PST
 
Thanks.

Well let's see - the first time around I carefully placed markers every 50 sts and came out with 10 extra so I panicked thinking I had one repeat too many and would need to redo the graft. R-I-P.
It was ok actually, I just can't count.
The second time I used to 24" circs and on the second row part of the sts fell out the back end of one circ, so I picked those up and plowed one. On the third row a lot of stitches fell out of two or three circ ends - R-I-P.
The third time I used a 29", went very slowly, counted thrice - still off a few stitches which I made up for on the first row. Close enough.
Wendy Miller
March 22, 2009   07:22 PM PDT
 
I am in love with the scarf. It reminds me of M.C. Escher. I absolutely love it.

How many skeins of the yarn do I need? I think I will buy the yarn now and wait for the pattern.
 

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