Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The Snowmaggedon Sweater (And Other Knits)

I've been working on getting the Hey, Teach cardigan going- I figure that, by the time I finish it, it will be the proper weather for it anyway. I'm calling it my Snowmaggedon Sweater since such a large portion of it was knit during these last two snowstorms.


I'm making the size XS. I started with the small, but it was looking huge! For some reason, I keep messing up and getting the wrong number of stitches when I'm working the lace, and have to keep ripping back- it's incredibly frustrating.

I'm also working on a pair of socks for my mother's birthday. Like me, her feet are always freezing, so I thought a pair of wool socks would fit the bill perfectly. However, she almost only wears black patterned socks- so I'm forced to knit with fingering-weight black yarn. I'm really not a fan of knitting in black, since I can't see my stitches, but I suppose I can do it for her...

I'm adapting the lace pattern from the Meret- it seemed like it would look really pretty on a sock, and it's so easy to follow! You just move the yarnovers every other row. I wish I could show you a picture, but I can't get anything near a decent photograph of a lace in black yarn.

Alright, back to the needles- I've got some more knitting to do!

4 comments:

  1. Ive been considering that pattern for a while. Can't wait to see yours done

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  2. I love the color. You know you can never have to many socks. Let's hope the snow is Over!

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  3. That's a great color! I tried that pattern, but I also kept ending up with incorrect stitch counts so I just threw it down in frustration. Maybe I'll try it again. Are you knitting it in all one piece to the armholes?

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  4. The incorrect stitch counts were driving me nuts, too- but since I had done the rest of the body, already, there was no way that I was giving up at that point! When I started shaping the armholes, I just started counting after every row to make sure that I had the right count- it was tedious, but took way less time than ripping it all out. The trick is not to do a yarn over or a decrease when there's not a decrease or a yarn over, respectively, to go with it- but that's way easier in theory than in reality! You have to pay such close attention to the shaping.

    I am knitting it in one piece to the armholes. I cannot for the life of me seem to get this seaming thing right, so I knit in one piece as much as I can to avoid it.

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