I remembered! And though the model was busy, I do have a couple of photographs of the finished shawl. With a person will hopefully come soon!
But here is Moana:
Little sister to Arcobaleno ... can you see the family resemblance???
Friday, July 10, 2015
Thursday, July 9, 2015
Oops!
Well, I fully intended to return with a picture of the finished Supersymmetry ... and here it is July!
I have yet to get a modelled shot but I did fold it so that the stripes are on the inside:
Not quite sure what I will do with it -- but it's another skein of stash yarn that has been converted into a Finished Object!
I moved on to another shawl by the same designer. The shawl is called Rocky Mountaineer and I couldn't resist it since last fall I travelled on the Rocky Mountaineer train through the Canadian Rockies. I chose my yarn with great care, and wound up with a reminder of the glacial lakes as well as my travels through the mountains.
A friend very obligingly modelled it for me:
It seems to me that this is the perfect shawl for those places that are over airconditioned.
Tonight I finished a test knit for Tanja Luescher (Knitted in Switzerland Designs) and then wrestled with it to get it blocked. Tomorrow I'll unpin it and see how well I've done. It was an interesting knit. I'd done a previous test knit for Tanja which used a skein and not quite a half of a second skein of laceweight yarn. This shawl used a combination of fingering weight and laceweight - and provided the perfect opportunity to use up that part skein.
The other test knit was Arcobaleno:
A modelled shot can be found here. Thanks, Shauna!
This is the shawl that provided the leftover laceweight shawl. We'll see how long it takes me to come back here and post a picture! But for now, good night!
I have yet to get a modelled shot but I did fold it so that the stripes are on the inside:
Not quite sure what I will do with it -- but it's another skein of stash yarn that has been converted into a Finished Object!
I moved on to another shawl by the same designer. The shawl is called Rocky Mountaineer and I couldn't resist it since last fall I travelled on the Rocky Mountaineer train through the Canadian Rockies. I chose my yarn with great care, and wound up with a reminder of the glacial lakes as well as my travels through the mountains.
A friend very obligingly modelled it for me:
It seems to me that this is the perfect shawl for those places that are over airconditioned.
Tonight I finished a test knit for Tanja Luescher (Knitted in Switzerland Designs) and then wrestled with it to get it blocked. Tomorrow I'll unpin it and see how well I've done. It was an interesting knit. I'd done a previous test knit for Tanja which used a skein and not quite a half of a second skein of laceweight yarn. This shawl used a combination of fingering weight and laceweight - and provided the perfect opportunity to use up that part skein.
The other test knit was Arcobaleno:
A modelled shot can be found here. Thanks, Shauna!
This is the shawl that provided the leftover laceweight shawl. We'll see how long it takes me to come back here and post a picture! But for now, good night!
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
It WAS Enough!
My shawl is still blocking/drying, but I wanted to say that not only was it enough yarn, but that is was more than enough. I have about 10 grams that I can use in the sock yarn blanket I am crocheting (more like NOT crocheting ...)
My Every Life Needs Symmetry shawl blocking:
I'm hoping to get a modelled shot tomorrow. At the very least I'll be able to pose it so that the two sides can be compared.
My Every Life Needs Symmetry shawl blocking:
I'm hoping to get a modelled shot tomorrow. At the very least I'll be able to pose it so that the two sides can be compared.
Monday, May 25, 2015
Still Here!
Well, after a long absence I thought I'd check in to say that I'm still here, and still knitting!
Right now I've ventured into the realm of a designer who is new to me, and who uses a different approach to construction, which intrigues me.
So, right now, on my needles I have a shawl called Supersymmetry
Susan Ashcroft is the designer in question and I have more than 2/3 of this shawl completed.
First, you knit one section
In case you are wondering, the reverse stockinette side is the right side, which means that the fact that this yarn is self-striping (I had no idea!) does not detract from the design, which it might if the other side was used.
Then you knit a second section which is a mirror image of the first
And then, you join them together
Susan's instructions are quite precise, and she uses percentages and yarn weights, so this should work out really well. But this is my first time, and I look at the amount of yarn left, and the gap I have yet to fill (Plus the shaping after both sections are joined) and I feel a mild sense of panic. So I am doing what all good knitters do in such a situation -- knit faster!
So, please excuse me, I'm off to see if I can finish this shawl before I run out of yarn!
Right now I've ventured into the realm of a designer who is new to me, and who uses a different approach to construction, which intrigues me.
So, right now, on my needles I have a shawl called Supersymmetry
Susan Ashcroft is the designer in question and I have more than 2/3 of this shawl completed.
First, you knit one section
In case you are wondering, the reverse stockinette side is the right side, which means that the fact that this yarn is self-striping (I had no idea!) does not detract from the design, which it might if the other side was used.
Then you knit a second section which is a mirror image of the first
And then, you join them together
Susan's instructions are quite precise, and she uses percentages and yarn weights, so this should work out really well. But this is my first time, and I look at the amount of yarn left, and the gap I have yet to fill (Plus the shaping after both sections are joined) and I feel a mild sense of panic. So I am doing what all good knitters do in such a situation -- knit faster!
So, please excuse me, I'm off to see if I can finish this shawl before I run out of yarn!
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