Tag Archives: deepvargyle

Facing my demons

Firstly, a huge thank you for all the comments last Friday on my saggy vest disaster. It really meant a huge amount to me to just get some sympathy and virtual hugs.

I did stuff the whole vest in the corner of my bedroom and ignore it for the weekend. I was cross with the pattern, with myself for not doing enough measuring beforehand and just feeling very disillusioned. I was sorely tempted to fetch some yarn from my stash and start a new project; it’s not as if my queue isn’t lacking in jumpers and cardigans. But I am very, very stubborn about some things and I wanted a vest, dammit! I’d bought a new shirt ready to wear underneath it and I was determined that it wouldn’t go to waste (I can’t wear the shirt without something over the top unless I buy some less-colourful underwear..!).

I was ready to frog to the point before the first steek was set, as I couldn’t see how else I could frog it. But Lien suggested in the comments that I just unravel the shoulders to a suitable point. In the end, I had nothing extra to lose by trying this, so why not? The snowy weather and a house full of people put paid to my plans for fixing the vest after the weekend, but Mr B is back at work, the school is open and I sat down this morning to start.

Fortunately, I hadn’t woven in the ends very much, so unpicking all the ribbing wasn’t too much hassle. I painstakingly put the reserved stitches from the armscye and neck shaping onto spare needles or yarn and then began the terror of the great unravelling.

What I hadn’t thought about was the fact that there would be so many ends.

Ends!

Each row is two strands of yarn, cut either end by the steeking process. So for each row I had to find the right brown and cream thread and unravel them. It took a long time. But finally, I was happy with the result and grafted the shoulders together at the new finishing point.

Second attempt

I’ve lost the back neck shaping, of course, but without knitting backwards and forwards there’s no way to recreate it, as I can’t re-steek. But after trying it on, even with the dangling threads and needles around my neck, I’m much happier:

Fitting better

Once the ribbing is redone and I have reblocked it, I’m hopeful that I’ll now have a wearable vest. Though I also have lots of crinkly yarn which I think will need unkinking before I can reuse it. It’s never easy to fix something, is it?!

Ugh

This sucks

See the problem? No? How about now?

This also sucks

The vest fits perfectly up to the armholes and then it goes very, very wrong. If I wore a lot of padding around my arms, perhaps it would fit better, but they’re just too deep and the fabric just flops over and looks stupid. Ideally I need to lose about two to four inches from the length. :(

I am a lot calmer about this than I was yesterday. If I’d written this post yesterday afternoon then the language would have been enough to make a sailor blush. But I ranted a bit to Diane and eventually realised that in the end there was only one thing I could do.

So when I can face it, I’m unpicking all the ribbing, undoing the crocheted steeks and very slowly unravelling back to before the first steek and starting again with a revised chart for the rate of decreasing. But this weekend will be sock knitting. You know where you are with a sock.

Sneak preview

Deep V Argyle

So yesterday armed with the new ball of yarn, I knitted the final 7½ rows of ribbing on the neck of the Deep V Argyle Vest, finished it off and now it is blocking. I have no idea when it’ll be dry. I squidged as much water out of it as I could before laying it on plastic bags to dry, as recommended in the pattern. It’s also in my new favourite blocking spot which is on the landing, as there are heating pipes running directly under the floorboards so it’s a fairly warm spot. It would be lovely to have a finished project parade before the end of the month. ;-)

Anyway, I do realise that I’m becoming a bit of a sweater bore right now, with about three weeks of posts with little content other than stranded knitting and steeks. But the end is in sight… until the next project that I get obsessed about. :-P

No need for words

Steek

Steek

Steeked!

Except maybe – woohoo! :-D

And now for the scary part…

Starting the steeks

The body of the vest is done. Now comes a *lot* of crocheting and then the scissors… wish me luck!

Sneakily steeking

Deep V Argyle - getting to the end!

Progress has been made. :-D The armhole steeks are in place and now I’m working up to the top of the neck and the final one. It’s getting a little slower now: the knitting is pretty heavy and a bit more cumbersome.

I should point out to all the people who think that I’m some sort of super fast knitter that I’ve been working on this exclusively for the past week and pretty much neglecting everything else. Housework, feeding people, laundry, and so on… ;-)

Deeply in love

Deep V Argyle

I have fallen completely, utterly and totally in love with stranded knitting. Ever since I knitted my first two-colour project, I knew that it was something that I enjoyed, but it wasn’t until I started this Deep V Argyle Vest – the biggest colourwork project I’ve ever attempted – that I realised just how much I want to make sure that every project I make for evermore uses two colours in every row. :-P

I’ve been fortunate to never have problems with stranding. I just picked up one yarn in each hand and started knitting and it was as if I’d been doing it all my life. The rhythm of the pattern, the constant changing from one hand to the other and seeing the pattern form in the fabric is addictive.

Deep V Argyle

I have set the steek for the neck shaping, and will shortly reach the armhole shaping where I’ll need to put more steeks. Then it’s fairly plain sailing until the end when there’s one more final steek and then the fun really begins… :-D

And finally knitting

And so it starts...

My needles arrived! Now if I could just manage to cast on and join the stitches in the round without twisting them, I’d be a lot happier… :-P

Swatching

The Lily of the Valley Scarf is finished and ready to block, so I’m free to start the first of my selfish projects. :-)

It’s a long time since I knitted anything that needed to fit to such a precise tension. But as I was not going to cast on the entire amount of stitches for my size and then knit for a few inches and discover it was too small, it had to be done. I started off with needles in the size stated in the pattern and knit a pattern repeat over fifty or so stitches.

Deep V Argyle Vest - more swatches

This proved to be too small, so I tried 4mm needles, which was also too small so I had a fit, calmed down, washed the swatch, measured it, had a fit again and then stopped poking at it and left it to dry. Once it was dry, the tension was perfect and I stopped scaring everyone with my swatch induced rantings.

Despite the tension traumas, I am definitely loving the New Lanark yarn so far. It’s got a lovely stickiness to it, which reassures me that it will steek nicely. It also softened up after soaking and while it’s not going to be like wearing cashmere, I am never going to wear the vest against my skin, so I don’t have to worry about the chance of it irritating me.

So I’m all set to start, except that:

a) I don’t have a long enough circular needle in the right size, and

b) My printer is out of ink so I can’t print out the charts I need for my size. I printed the pattern out when I first bought it (probably a couple of years ago now!), but only the directions for the larger size range. I’m knitting the 42″ size, which is the biggest of the smaller size range. At least if a is resolved before b, I can cast on and work the ribbing.

And in the meantime, there’s blocking to do! Plus, it’s not as if I don’t have plenty of other projects to finish while I wait… ;-)