Barista

I finished my purple sweater this week. What a quick knit—even though I reknit the sleeves. The pattern is Barista, by Martin Storey, which is in the current Rowan magazine, #60. It’s knit in Big Wool, which I had in my stash in this great purple colour. Here it is!Barista by Martin Storey knit in Rowan Big Wool by Deborah Cooke

Mr. Math photographed it near the end of the day, so there are some dramatic shadows. They show up the stitch pattern quite well, though.

There was a tiny mistake in the pattern, which was no big deal. There’s a chart for the stitch pattern, and the key for the chart showed two blank (identical) boxes. Obviously, the squares with nothing in them are knit on the right side and purled on the wrong side, and the squares with a dot in them should be purled on the right side and knit on the wrong side. I got a Sharpie and made a dot in the right square in the key. Fixed.

In the knitting, I made a couple of small changes. First, I kept a stitch in stockinette at each edge of each piece for easier seaming. You can see the side seams here:Barista by Martin Storey knit in Rowan Big Wool by Deborah Cooke

Second, I cast on four extra stitches for the sleeves, since I found them a bit more snug than I wanted. I followed the instructions for the increases on the sleeves, but did two fewer of them, so I’d have the right number of stitches for the raglan decreases.

And finally, I made the collar deeper. It was a really wide crew neck when I tried it on and I wanted it to be more snuggly, so I knit until I ran out of yarn. Here’s what it looks like folded down. I like having a choice!Barista by Martin Storey knit in Rowan Big Wool by Deborah Cooke

This isn’t the most flattering sweater I’ve ever made in my life, but it’s warm and it’s comfortable and it’s purple. I love it. What do you think?

Barista in Rowan Big Wool

When knitters unravel a piece of knitting, they say they’re “frogging” it. That’s because “rip it rip it” is the sound a frog makes.

Yes, it’s silly but it’s fun.

Another verb for the same process is “tinking”. If you spelling “knit” backwards, you get “tink”, so knitting in reverse is tinking.

Last night, I decided to frog the sleeves of a sweater, but I took a picture of it first to show you why. It’s knit in Rowan Big Wool, in a pattern called Barista. I had some Big Wool in the Wild Berry colourway, which I’d bought for a boxy jacket. I knit that jacket and frogged it when I didn’t wear it.

Because the yarn is thick, ripping it back and reknitting it isn’t that painful. There won’t be a mourning period—in fact, by the time you read this, I’ll probably have reknit most of what I pulled back.

Here’s what the sweater looked like yesterday afternoon: Barista by Martin Storey knit in Rowan Big Wool by Deborah Cooke

It has a great stitch pattern and I really like how it was knitting up. I also love the colour of this yarn. But….I had a funny feeling, so I knit the side seams and basted the sleeve to the underarm, tied the shoulders and tried it on. My funny feeling was right. The body is wide for me, even though I knit my size and got gauge. It has more ease than I expected, but I’m going to leave it. I had wondered while knitting it whether I should make it longer, and I did make it a little bit longer. The length is perfect. The sleeve, though, is quite snug. I like to push up my sleeves, so I need a little more ease in them.

Of course, I was knitting both sleeves at once. :-/

But, rip it rip it. I frogged the sleeves and cast them on again with four more stitches each. I’m excited about this sweater, though, and am charging ahead to get it done. The days are cooler and it should be the perfect weather for this sweater soon. If all goes well, I should finish it up this weekend!

Plum Cordial

This is a quick project that I finished last weekend. In the middle of finishing so many big projects, I needed the encouragement of something that could be knit in a hurry.

The pattern is called Cordial from Rowan magazine, and it’s knit in Rowan Big Wool. Here’s mine:Cordial by Sarah Hatton knit i Rowan Big Wool by Deborah Cooke

I did make one modification to the pattern. You knit the cardi from the front bottom, over the shoulders to the back hem. The only seaming is the underarm seams. As it’s written, the cable runs over the shoulder and down the back, and as it’s written, the back doesn’t mirror the front. In my side, the cable would have ended in the middle of a diamond at the back hem. I knew this would bug me. Also those two little V’s between the diamonds would be upside down on the back. This would also annoy me.

So, I reworked the chart to keep knitting over the shoulder but to have the V’s end up right side up on the back. I also knit to the end of a full diamond at the shoulder, then switched to my upside down chart. The back of my Cordial looks just like the front, and that makes me happy.

It was maybe a little on the loose side when it was done, but not enough to be worth frogging and reknitting. When I washed it to block it, though, it grew and grew and grew. Yikes! I think this might be a merino thing – its springiness uncoils when wet – but it freaked me out a bit. I wrapped it in a towel and pressed out as much moisture as possible, laid it flat and worried about it for a few hours – then I put it in the dryer. I only left it for a couple of minutes at a time and checked it obsessively. It is a little bit felted, which I like, and fits perfectly now.

Ha. I really like it. And now back to finishing those UFO’s…

Incredible Custom Fit Raglan in Big Wool

This is about a sweater I just finished. Despite the title of this post, I really love the sweater – what was breaking my heart was the yarn. Like all heartbreaks, this one is a bit of a saga. Here we go.

I very seldom buy the actual yarn specified for any given pattern. I tend to raid my stash first, then look for sales. So, as much as I love the Rowan patterns and books, I’ve knit very few items designed by Rowan in Rowan yarn. That changed last fall when I fell head over heels for a sweater called Voyager. It called for Rowan Big Wool, which is very thick yarn, much thicker than anything in my stash. I looked around but couldn’t find anything comparable. Fortunately, I discovered that my favourite colour – 28 Bohemian, which is a two-tone red – was discontinued. It was on sale at half price.

Even at half price, 14 balls was a hefty investment. I was a bit stressed about the cost of the sweater before I even received the yarn. But it arrived and I loved it and I cast on immediately. The pattern stitch on the sweater called for a purl 3 together, which was a bit of a challenge, but I persisted and knit it all up. Then I tried it on.

Oops. It looked TERRIBLE on me. I didn’t even sew in the ends – I frogged the sweater immediatel and returned the yarn to the stash.

But I still loved the yarn. And it had been comparatively expensive. I had to use it! I tried a number of other sweater patterns, but nothing worked out. I didn’t get gauge or I didn’t like the look of the stitch or whatever. Finally, I decided to just knit a top down raglan in it. This is a really easy pattern and always results in a sweater that fits. There’s a tiny bit of math to do for the neck, then you knit, and periodically try it on as you go. Easy! I knew I wanted a cardigan that was more like a jacket in length. I knew I wanted a big collar. I knew I liked how the yarn looked in seed stitch and wanted the hems done in that stitch. So, I did my bit of math, and started knitted.

The one thing about knitting with big wool on big needles (9mm!) is that sweaters get done fast.

Here’s the sweater that resulted:Raglan cardigan knit in Rowan Big Wool by Deborah Cooke

What I did for the collar was cast on a lot of stitches – I think it was 80. I knit the edge the same as I’d do the hem (should have done 7 rows instead of 5, but there you go) then worked for several inches. I then decreased down to the neckline, in exactly the same way as I’d increase for the raglans. The really cool thing is that the collar kind of curls up against my neck. I didn’t expect that but I like it a lot.

And here’s a detail of the back:Raglan cardigan knit in Rowan Big Wool by Deborah CookeI added a kind of a pleat at the centre back to add ease of movement. I also added a passamenterie frog back there, to echo the fasteners at the front – these are done in I-cord.

The one complication is the weight of this sweater. It used 12 100g balls of yarn. That means it weighs 1.2 kg or almost 3 pounds. (It is heavy. It was a huge mound on my lap when I was knitting the last rows!) So, I had concerns about the weight of the sweater stretching it down. I added I-cord inside the collar to ensure that the neck keeps its shape. To do this, I picked up all of the purl bumps on the row where the collar becomes the coat, then knit applied I-cord right across, sewing in the ends. I also used anchor buttons behind each of the buttons you can see on the outside. This ensures that the button never rips free of the knitting, or tears the fabric. Either of those things can happen with weight.

I could have made it longer – I have two balls of wool left, which would have given me another 7 or 8″ of length – but I thought I’d be less likely to wear a coat than a jacket. I think I’ll make an earflap hat with the rest of the wool. I need a red one.

What do you think of my heartbreaker? Do you love it as much as I do? Have you had a knitting project that came together when you thought it might not?