Wednesday, March 22, 2006

WIPs and Chains

Cable chains, that is. More on those later.

This last week has been an exciting one for stash development but a slow one for accomplishment. I got a couple more yarns in the mail - yes, I am on a buying spree and must stop soon - and the amazing Folk Socks by Nancy Bush. Over the weekend I realized I did not finish any knitting projects in February, and here we are past the Ides of March and still none. I haven't gone this long without finishing a project since I started knitting last year! After feeling a little down about it, I realized that all my Works In Progress are in laceweight or fingering yarns. I put the seaman's scarf down to start a lace bed jacket for the Knitting Olympics, and then put that project down when I realized I couldn't possibly finish on time. I felt too dejected to look at it for a while, I guess. So I started another pair of socks. Nothing sane like going back to the seaman's scarf for me, oh no. I need a pretty pair of socks for Easter, don't I? Three projects, thinner yarns, more stitches - no wonder I haven't finished anything! So I'm working on the socks these days - I really do plan on wearing them on Easter. I am using a Russian sock yarn I bought off eBay - not the softest but it'll do, and the colors just scream Springtime. I started with the Crusoe socks at knitty.com, but lost interest quickly. I want to know what the designer was smoking when she calculated her gauge. 6 stitches of Koigu to the inch? For socks?!? Please. So I am using the basic pattern found at cometosilver.com and doing the leg and instep in the stranded stitch of Crusoe. I even kept Crusoe's rolled hem, but that's all. My yarn is similar to Koigu in thickness, and I am using four size 1 metal dpns to get 9 stitches per inch in stockinette. So, it's slow and steady work, but I love the results.

Just to satisfy my pressing urge for quicker completion of something, I started the Irish Hiking Scarf in SWTC's Karaoke yarn in the #278 (Mermaid) colorway. I cannot fully describe the beauty of this yarn! It is a worsted weight wool and soy silk blend with a lovely hand. Also, the colors gradually blend into each other over long sections, rather than changing suddenly in stark stripes. This is also my first cable work, so I am very pleased to find that it is an easy knit. And fast, too. This might be done by the end of the week. I am using size 6 metal needles and my scarf is five and a half inches wide.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the pic of the Irish Hiking scarf ... I'll have to look up SWTC's Karaoke yarn ... is that SouthWest Trading Company?

BTW, (enabler here), did you see that Knitpicks has some of their sock yarn 25% off? Hollyberry is one of them.

Catherine said...

Yup - it's from the Southwest Trading Company. I'd love to make a sweater out of this yarn in the Copper colorway, it just feels so yummy, but I'm afraid it's cost prohibitive for me right now. And get this -- I bought lots of KnitPicks sock yarns just a few days before they went on sale :( Oh well. Hollyberry was in my order, and I just might get some more before they run out.....

Anonymous said...

I really like the yarn you used SWTC Karaoke yarn in the "#278 colorway. I tried to find this yarn online but was unsuccessful. Could you please let me know where you bought it. It is so beautiful and I reall like te cable pattern you made with it!

Elizabeth Gloor
egloor@sbcglobal.net

Catherine said...

Thanks, Elizabeth! I had originally gotten a few skeins off eBay from an independent
seller, just destashing. However, when I ran out of yarn -- first time
cables for me and I didn't realize how much cables eat up yardage -- I
ordered online from the Yarn Grove. I received the order quickly, their
price was the cheapest I found at the time and there was free shipping, and
they even sent me samples of their yarns, so I was impressed. I checked
and they still have it, the # is 278 but the "name" is Mermaid Mix:
http://www.theyarngrove.com/catalog/item/2845814/2340580.htm