Birita Faroe Shawl

Birita is done! Huzzah. I am pretty sure I would have finished this sooner if I hadn’t been sure I would run out of yarn. To recap; this pattern calls for 2 balls {500 yds} of Icelandic Laceweight yarn. Including a fancy crochet border. I purchased 3 balls of the yarn well before 2018 {the shop closed in 2018!} and then an additional partial ball when it became clear I would not have enough yarn. I cast on this project in 2019 and completed my first ball of yarn @ row 30, my second ball @ row 65. Frogged the project and cast on again last month…. the third ball was completed @ row 110 and finished the other 100-ish rows with the fourth ball. All in all I used 995.2 yards with a scant 3 inch tail at cast on and 9 grams {49.2 yards} left of fourth partial ball. I neither crochet nor had enough yarn for the fancy scalloped border but if you want to do either a fringe or crochet border you will obviously need a 5th ball.

Currently my shawl is laid out on my bed drying. I didn’t pin it out with wires or anything. The yarn softened significantly although I did enjoy working with its scrunchy wool handle. It is thick and thin and I used spit splicing along the way. I was thinking of gifting this project to my mom but now that I am over the stress of finding a source for this yarn in this color I am super happy with the finished project.

I am participating in a secret swap-along for an online group I belong to and have cast on my next project which is another pair of Elegant Gauntlets from Sally Melville’s The Purl Stitch. I have knit this project numerous times as gifts and it is fairly quick and easy. There are errors in the pattern. Namely the sizing is due to gauge changes. XRX was using a chart method to depicting gauge, yarn, needles etc at the time. I think it was the beginning of using what was termed the Japanese method of pattern writing. XRX had a few articles on the graphic representation of not only the patterns schematic but also the information required to follow the pattern. On page 29 of the book we read:

The vitals column that accompanies every pattern is loaded with information, replacing a whole lot of words that can make knitting patterns look like no-fun text books…. Their most important function may be to make knitting a universal language.

As far as I recall, XRX and Knitter’s magazine was on the forefront of presenting patterns in this manner in the US.

There are two sizes S-M (L-XL) which corresponds to a circumference of 8 1/2 (10)”. The gauge is given as being 24 (28) per 4″ and the needles suggested are 2.75 for S-M and 3.25 for M-L. You can see the error in a couple of different ways. Usually one decreases the needle size if they want to increase the number of stitches but their chart shows the 24 sts being obtained with the smaller needles and the 28 sets being obtained with the larger needles. This is backwards. The second area an error stands out is in the gauge itself. If you cast on 60 stitches and are getting 24 sts per 4 inches you will get a finished circumference of 10 inches but that is the gauge required for the small size. And it follows that if you get the gauge required for the large size you will end up with the circumference for the smaller arm warmers. Many knitters at the time complained that the size small was too large and the large size was too small. The issue is not necessarily the sizing but more the transposition of numbers for gauge. If you have read reviews on sizing that kept you from knitting this project rest assured that all you need to do is switch the suggested gauge and cast on. It is honestly a lovely project and there were a couple of years where my coworkers asked me to make them ‘sock arms’

yarny days and knitterly evenings~ Elka

More Knitting for Others

Two more knits for others…

 

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Elegant Gauntlets with Fetching Mitts

 

I started the Elegant Gauntlets for another coworker a month ago!  I have been super busy on the weekends lately with birthdays galore and it took that long to complete them.  I used Socks That Rock Mediumweight in Thraven by Blue Moon Fiber Arts which was stashed about 8 yrs ago.  I purchased it at The Fold which used to be the only retailer for the yarn–not sure if it can be found elsewhere.  Anyway back then there was much hubbub on the net about STR yarn and I was insanely curious.  I drove through a virtual blizzard to see the yarn in person and joined the Socks that Rock club in 2008 to stash more.  It was the last time I ever joined a club because I like a bit more control over what I get both pattern wise and color wise.  Plus I decided I really don’t like the yarn that much.  I did go nuts for the Raven series since I figured it would be less stripey and I was right.  Love this color way.  And the gauntlets are perfect.  The yarn is nice and weighty so feel really luxe.  I actually might like these better than the pair I made for myself!  Anyway I am really pleased to be done with them and hope the recipient likes them as much as she liked the Merino Mia pair she had tried on before requesting a pair.

Immediately after weaving in the last end of the Elegant Gauntlets #3 I cast on for Fetching.  A third coworker had asked for a pair of fingerless mitts.  She specifically requested short so that they wouldn’t bunch up in her coat sleeves and I thought this pattern would do the trick.  She provided the yarn herself and it is very slinky so I had to be careful cabling.  It is called Diva Sequin by Yarn Bee.  It has little pailettes spun in and they wanted to move to the purl side.  I remember seeing an article in Vogue Knitting in the 80’s maybe early 90’s on how to knit with pailette yarn but I never read it since I don’t tend to pick out yarn that has sequins or beads as part of it’s composition. It was fun watching them come up and add a bit of glitz to the finished product.  I worked really hard trying to weave in my ends invisibly so that she could wear them inside out if she felt like it and used my needle tip to shove the sequins to outside if I wasn’t able to hold them in place while working the next row.  The yarn is also interesting in that it has very long color runs but I didn’t see any portion that repeated in the skein.  I am sure it does mind you but it seemed like I was hitting slightly different shades of green and teal between the purple.  The color way is Scotish Heath.  Part of me is offended they misspelled Scottish.  

Fetching Mitts

Fetching Mitts

 

Fetching ends with a picot bind off and the finger portion flares because of that.  I knit this pattern for myself many years ago out of Brown Sheep Worsted and that bothered me a bit but in the end it proved useful to not have my fingers hobbled so I repeated the specified bind off for her pair.  I also didn’t gauge for the mittens but went down a couple of needle sizes for a velvety texture.  The ribbing is forgiving and should fit her smaller hands well.

I am off to knit something for myself although I offered to knit a bit more for coworkers.  A headband out of the remaining Diva Sequins and a pair of Toasts for a small child out of machine washable cherry red yarn.  I am not sure I own any machine washable cherry red yarn and am in the midst of stashdown right now.  I will have to stash dive and hope I find some or break down and go to store. Or swap.  If you own machine washable worsted weight cherry red yarn you are willing to part with leave me a message.

yarny days and knitterly evenings

~Elka

Knitting for Others

Disco Socka

Disco Socka

I really enjoy knitting for my beloved.  He is very appreciative of anything I make for him.  I have only knit him socks and mitts but he never complains about color or fiber choices.

I do worry, however, when knitting for others.  My children are persnickity, my sister doesn’t wear my hand knits and my mom tends tuck away the goods as too nice to wear.  Did I mention I saw her in Chicago when I went to see the big Greek Exhibit over holiday break?  She, my mom, was wearing Laminaria over her winter coat.  I knit that when the pattern came out–over the winter ’07/spring ’08 and gave it to her for Christmas ’08 so it was nice to see it in action.

So update.  Strokkur is idling.  It seems that in my hurry to have something super warm and toasty to wear over the winter I tightened up my gauge as I progressed with the knitting.  Yes I knit the sleeves first.  Yes I measured my washed and unwashed swatches.  I ripped and restarted the sweater with  larger needles and once again my knitting tightened up.  I am a bit frustrated by this turn of events.  Only once before have I had this happen to me–when knitting a throw for Berroco yarns in their Chinchilla yarn.  I think I tried to  knit that a dozen times before I called and said it just wasn’t going to work.

My proposed fix at the moment is to wait until it is sweltering outside and I will not be in any hurry whatsoever to wear it and then cast on again.

Meanwhile I was showing my fabulous elegant gauntlets to a co-worker and her eyes just lit up.  She exclaimed about how soft they were and pretty and warm.  I offered to knit her a pair of her very own for a flat rate that would kinda cover the cost of yarn.  I did this while another co-worker was in the office and she too would like a pair of ‘arm socks’  Very gratifying to this knitter’s heart that others are wanting gauntlets of their very own.

Once I faced the fact that this winter was to pass without my wearing Strokkur I was a bit down in the doldrums and it took a while to find my knitting mojo & suitable yarns in my stash.  For the first co-worker I am having a hard time finding a yarn with the similar feel, color etc as my prism mia but the second said she liked pink and most importantly I believe, easy care.  I went through my stash and found several balls of the now discontinued Schoeller + Stahl Fortissimo Colori Disco Socka.  Wow what a mouthful.  I have actually knit several socks and hats and mitts out of this yarn and find it to be a true workhorse of a yarn.  It doesn’t pill, barely fades and I have yet to encounter a hole in any item knit out of it.  I have a pair of socks that are 8 yrs old at this point that still look brand new.  Anyway I decided that this yarn would be perfect for Kristen’s arm socks.  The finished babies are in the washing machine right now having the stitches evened out so a picture of the gauntlets in progress will have to suffice.  Above you have a close up of the yarn chosen that I sent to Kristen to make sure it wasn’t too pink or glitzy for her and below you see proof that despite being knit smaller than mine they still fit a human arm.  The wrist looks impossibly tiny on and off the needles… a heads up for anybody who looks at the gauntlets and thinks these will never fit.  They do. 🙂

Trying on impossibly tiny mitts to make sure they fit.

Trying on impossibly tiny mitts to make sure they fit.

yarny days and knitterly evenings~Elka

 

Gauntlets Done & Strokkur Choices

Elegant Gauntlets

Elegant Gauntlets

I finished weaving in the ends of my Elegant Gauntlets.  The yarn, Merino Mia by Prism, stretched out horridly when wet and I dried them in the machine to counteract this.  Even so my gloves are looser now than when I washed them.  This is what I get for not washing my swatch in advance. However, the entire hand portion, most notably the thumb, was longer than expected going by pictures and description.  I suppose this means I have particularly short digits.  They look to be a ‘casual’ length but were knit for the shorter 1″ post thumb opening for dressy version.  My thumb is practically eastern up by that lone inch:

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poor missing thumb….

As I mentioned last time the colors are glorious and I believe they show up  much better in this post than last.  I enlisted my beloved husband into helping me take the pictures but the close up was taken under a light by myself in hopes of getting all the brown, blue, and purples in the smoke color way.

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pretty colors

I am fairly certain that I will not rip out the thumb and tinker with it at all.  I figure a few washings and drying in the machine will work their magic and shorten my mitts a bit.

I am excitedly working on Strokkur.  When I ordered the yarn I went with the called for gray for body and ash for 1st contrast color.  Ysolda knit this with a yellow for the 2nd contrast color and to be honest I don’t actually wear much yellow.  I do own a yellow bee scarf that I tie into my hair occasionally but other than that nothing primarily yellow in my wardrobe.  I am being drown to the gray/yellow combos I am seeing so may end up adding a bit of it here or there.  However I do own a Pendleton Wool skirt from way back when.  It has accents of pink and lilac which I tried matching via online color cards.  I did well with the pink and rose shades but the lilac is way off.  I would have preferred the lilac since pink is another underrepresented color although I do think it looks great with gray.  I have completed one sleeve so have quite a bit to go before making my final decision.

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Strokkur Color Choices

yarny days and knitterly evenings to all

Elka