More Comfort Knitting

I haven’t knit a shawl in a while, lace or otherwise – well, I’m still plugging along on my Water shawl, but it’s not a very fun knit at this point. I don’t think it counts anymore. 🙂

A LYS had Freia Handpaints yarns on sale, and I simply can’t resist gradient dyed yarns. I ordered some and cast on.

I chose a pattern by BooKnits. I wanted to knit a lace shawl with some beads and I had The Close to You Collection of patterns already. (That’s a Ravelry link.) I had knit Snow Angel from this pattern collection, also in Freia Handpaints yarn, but in their Wool/Nylon Lace which is discontinued. The colourway was Autumn Rose.

Here’s my Ravelry project page for the project.

And here’s that Snow Angel shawl:

Snow Angel by Boo Knits knit by Deborah Cooke in Freia Ombre Wool/Nylon Lace

There’s a blog post for it, which is right here.

This time, I’ve chosen the pattern Heaven Scent, which is in that same collection but also available on its own. (That’s a Ravelry link.) I’m knitting the smallest size, with the stockinette stitch top.

This yarn is Freia Handpaints Ombré Shawl Ball Merino. The colourway is Vamp. Here’s the Ravelry yarn page.

Here’s my progress so far:

Heaven Scent shawl by BooKnits knit by Deborah Cooke in Freia Handpaints Ombré Shawl Ball Merino

The camera is really emphasizing that hot pink. The colourway ends in a bright red.

Of course, it’s curled on the circular needle in the opposite direction of its shape – the shawl will be a crescent curved the other way when it’s off the needles and blocked. (Much like Snow Angel, shown above.)

The yarn is a loose single ply. It’s very soft but tougher than expected – there is the usual thick-and-thin of single ply yarns but it hasn’t been splitty to knit and it hasn’t broken.

And here’s a detail view. I’m using 6/0 purple Czech glass beads in dark purple, which match the beginning of the gradient pretty well.

Heaven Scent shawl by BooKnits knit by Deborah Cooke in Freia Handpaints Ombré Shawl Ball Merino

I did make a slight change to the pattern. The shawl grows quickly in width because you add four stitches on every right side row and two on every wrong side row. The additions are at the beginning and the end of each row, and the pattern uses make-one (slanting left or right). I found that two M1s with just a knit stitch between them, then another M1 on the purl side pretty close by made for a tight edge. I switched out the two M1s on the purl side for YO’s, then the outer M1 on the right side rows to YO’s as well. I’m curious to see how this blocks out. It feels better to me.

I’m almost halfway through the second repeat of the main chart, then have the border chart to knit. I’m thinking I might run out of yarn (the pattern notes that 400m is close) so if I do, I’ll have to find something matchy to finish.

Irtfa’a Shawl

This shawl has been on my needles for what seems like half of forever. It can’t really have been that long, because I bought the yarn in 2009 at Little Knits in Seattle – I was attending the Emerald City conference and Pam and I did a yarn trawl. The pattern is Irtfa’a by Anne Hanson.irtfa'a faroese lace shawl by Anne Hanson knit in Fly Designs Dovely by Deborah CookeThis is a Faroese shawl, which means it has a distinctive shape. A Faroese shawl has a vertical band down the centre back – you can see it still scrunched on the needles here – then each side extends like a wing. The border along the hem is knitted on last, which is what I’m in the middle of doing right now. Even though the shawl isn’t blocked, you can already see the shape of it, at least on this left side. The shape is even more clear in the shot on Anne’s website, because that shawl is finished and blocked. (Here’s the link again.)

Here’s a closer look:irtfa'a faroese lace shawl by Anne Hanson knit in Fly Designs Dovely by Deborah CookeI knit this following the pattern instructions until I got to the hem. First of all, I added some rows to the hem of the shawl to make the last set of points finish out in diamonds. That’s hard to see here, but will be more clear once it’s blocked. (I like it a lot.) I added some beads (of course!) too. I also changed out the border pattern. Of course, I ended up with a wider one so it’s taking me a while to finish, but it’s a pattern I memorized quickly. (It’s a modified version of a border included in the end matter of Victorian Lace Today.) Here’s my Ravelry project page with a more in depth description of my mods.

I’m hoping to have this one finished soon, so I can cast on my Fire Dance Circle Shawl.

Peacock Feathers Shawl

I finished a shawl this weekend and am not sure how much I like it.

Last summer, at the RWA National convention in San Francisco, Pam and I went on a bit of a yarn crawl. We had searched online before going and had a list of potential shops to visit, and at one, I bought a skein of Aurora Yarns’ Whisper. It’s a 100% merino laceweight that is handpainted in northern CA – this skein was shades of fuschia, red, burgundy and purple. Very pretty. Very soft. The colours are incredibly rich, and there was 1250 m on the skein.

Once home, I had to figure out what to knit with it! I ultimately decided on a pattern from Fiddlesticks Knitting called the Peacock Feathers Shawl. And I decided to put some beads around each “eye” of the peacock feather. Here it is:Peacock Feathers Shawl knit by Deborah CookeIt’s ENORMOUS, so hard to photograph. It has been blocked, and relaxed a bit when released. The first image (of the whole shawl) shows the actual colour best.

Peacock Feathers shawl knit by Deborah CookeHere’s a detail shot of the corner:

It looks better in the photos, but I still think the lace is too open. Mr. C. says it looks delicate, which is another way of looking at the same issue. Since this yarn was so fine – much finer than the Zephyr specified in the pattern (now it specifies Exquisite) – I dropped 3 needle sizes, from 3.75mm to 3.0mm.

Peacock Feathers Shawl knit by Deborah CookeI think I should have gone to 2.5mm. I was worried about it being too small if I did that, but the finished shawl blocked to 80″ across the top. (The pattern has a finished size of 88″ across the top.) So, I could have gone smaller with the needles and still had a shawl plenty big enough.

But I’m not going to frog it!

What do you think?