I’ve been making a lot lately for my girls instead of for myself, so my count of finished projects for myself is pretty low this year. I lost a bit of my making mojo this year, thanks to a lot of projects that made me say “hmmm”. The girls have helped me to recover a bit of that, so over the next few posts, we’ll have a look at a few of those stalled projects. Coming back to them with a fresh eye has given me some ideas.
First up, the knee socks.
I’m not sure why knee socks intrigue me so much. They’re a lot (a LOT) of knitting and I seldom wear them once they’re done. All the same, I can’t resist them. It’s inexplicable.
For example, I made these in 2009 and have never worn them. Not even once. I take them out of the drawer and look at them sometimes, though. I do like that they exist.
The current choice of knee socks is Quail, designed by Martin Storey to be knit in Rowan Fine Art. Those are Ravelry links, as the yarn is (naturally) discontinued. I’ve been eyeballing these since I bought the book when it was first released in 2013.
The pattern is in this book for Rowan Fine Art: Fine Art Collection. It should be available for sale individually, but Rowan’s buy links from Ravelry are a trainwreck since they updated their website (and didn’t update the links.)
Here’s Rowan’s pic of the socks from the book. Of course, it’s a lovely photograph as is always the case with Rowan, but one that doesn’t let you see the detail in the socks very well.
It turns out that they have bobbles, which I’m leaving out since I hate bobbles. I hate knitting them and I hate that they look like warts when they’re done. No bobbles for me.
This should mean that I need less yarn and I hope that’s true. The pattern calls for three skeins of Fine Art, which has 400m per skein. That’s a lot of yardage for socks, even for knee socks – usually you need 350 – 400m for socks and double that for knee socks, with lots leftover for knitting for the girls – even with a light fingering like this one. I have two skeins of Fine Art in a plummy colour, so right from my cast-on, I’m playing yarn chicken.
The colourway is called Rowan. (That’s a Ravelry stash link, because I think it’s fun to see pictures of a specific yarn in a whole bunch of knitters’ stashes.)
I’m knitting them in the round on 2.0mm needles. Here’s where I stalled:
The top looks huge, which is always the way with knee socks. What made me go “hmmm” was the pooling. On the cuff, it made a nice little stripe, but once the stitches were added for the cables, it made a big moving pool. I’ve started the decreases and you can see that the width of the pool is decreasing. It’ll spiral down to a narrow stripe again by the ankle. I’d rather have stripes or cables, but not both at the same time.
I made another pair of socks in this yarn, in another colourway, and they did a similar striping, just in short plain socks. Here they are:
I’m not wildly in love with this pooling, but I can live with it since the socks are just in plain rib.
Here’s the shawl I made in this same yarn, which also pooled:

The thing is that I like the pattern of the pooling in the shawl, even with the lace stitch. I think it’s because it falls into a regular stripe that doesn’t vary over the length of the shawl. It’s the changing width of the stripes that I find distracting in the socks.
So, these socks are going to Frog Pond, and the yarn is returning to the stash. I’ll use it on a shawl, I guess, or another project that has the same number of stitches per row.
Maybe one pair of knee socks to admire is enough. 🙂





You mentioned a pet peeve of mine: Photos that are moody and appealing, but don’t do a thing to showcase the actual garment in question in any way (or enough) detail. Rowan is famous for that, as is Starmore. Drives me nuts and even though we have Ravelry now and can go there to see the final product, often modeled on various different people, it irks me and I tend to just avoid making anything that’s marketed to customers that way.
I always wore knee socks under jeans, so how they looked was the least concern of mine. Staying up was #1. But your socks, your call!
Yes, Rowan’s pix seldom show the garment well. They also tend to take them all from the same angle, so even when there are multiple (moody) images of the same garment, they all provide the same information. When I used to get the magazine, I was often muttering away “but what’s the back like? Show me the back!” LOL
I do like socks but knee highs are either too loose or too tight at the top. I’m not a knitter so don’t know what pooling means, but green ones are pretty
Like the striping at the top. Your multicolored ones are nice as well.
Purple crew socks instead?
Pooling means that a repeating color in a pattern-dyed yarn gathers together – in a pool, like the dark purple Z in these socks. This happens more with machine-dyed yarn, which puts the color at regular intervals, than hand painted yarn, which may be (deliberately) more erratic. There are people who choose a stitch count to make pooling form a specific pattern. It usually makes a kind of plaid and is called planned pooling. Here’s a post about it, with a heavier weight of this same yarn.
https://www.dayanaknits.com/2014/01/RowanFineArtAranPlannedPooling.html
I think the purple yarn will probably become a rectangular shawl…
Thank you. Very informative. Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
Sometimes just making and having a thing is enough. I’m like this with shawls. Wear them rarely but love to browse the patterns!
Yes, shawls are definitely like that! I have mine all stacked away. I was telling someone recently that they’re more about process than product. I like making them but don’t much care what happens to them later. They exist and that’s enough. 🙂
Which reminds me that I should work on that Fire Dance shawl kit. Ravelry tells me I cast on in 2017, so it’s been waiting on me for a while.
I had a five year crochet blanket that got finished last year (year before? Time is weird). Sometimes they need to go in time out.
I’m genuinely considering gifting my Wingspan shawl but I’ll give it a chance to see if I do wear it. I’d rather it be worn than sit in my cupboard!
Your Wingspan is gorgeous! I have one in the cupboard, too. 🙂
Mine is silvery, as well:
The Wingspan Shawl
😁
Totally agree I hate bobbles. Will clearly label a garment as from the ’20s so I don’t believe bobbles will be “a classic”.
Bobbles say “80s” to me. I remember them on mohair sweaters with huge shoulders.