Yesterday I finished my socks (hooray) and picked up my Pavement Sweater for the first time in a few days. I inspected it, and realised that I was really close to the main section of the body being done. I always have to add extra length to the backs and sleeves of jumpers, so I decided to try the jumper on to assess how much more I had to knit. The jumper currently falls at about t-shirt length and the hem adds another 4 inches, so I was really not far off being done.
But one thing struck me as I glanced in the mirror: the yarn has pooled horribly. The jumper is knitted from Araucania Ranco, a hand-dyed 4-ply yarn, that probably falls into the category 'semi-solid' - a yarn with various shades of the same colour within it. The advice generally given when knitting with hand-dyed yarns is to alternate skeins while knitting to avoid pooling, and I did that throughout the jumper, so I really have been unlucky. I could almost live with the spiralled pooling round the torso, if it had happened for the whole jumper. For no apparent reason the pooling stops in the section nearest the bottom.
So, do I pull the pooled section out (probably the full 15 inches of body that I've knitted so far)? Or live with it? I really wanted to get this done in time to wear to Yarndale (next weekend), but I'm not sure I'm going to love it when it's finished. Answers on a postcard please.
Showing posts with label knitting problems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label knitting problems. Show all posts
Friday, 15 September 2017
Tuesday, 24 January 2017
Slow socks
Just
after Christmas I offered to knit a pair of socks for a friend. She
wants a pair of hand-knitted socks, and while she can knit, she's struggled
to knit socks that fit in the past, and I always have socks on the go
and there are only so many pairs of socks I can wear myself, so I
offered to knit some for her. Simple.
I
chose the yarn, Sirdar Heart and Sole that has been in my stash for a
while, and cast on a pair of toe-up socks. I used my usual pattern and
set to work. But they weren't growing (I hadn't finished the toe increases a whole week after casting on). While I knew they were on the
needles, I wasn't wanting to knit on them, and I wasn't sure why. So
last week I decided that I was going to knit a stripe a day on them to
make sure they get done in time for my friend's birthday in March.
I
got two and a half stripes into the first sock and there was a funny
join in the yarn - a single ply had been knotted, and an end twisted in a
little untidily. I persevered and knitted over the end, which seemed
good and strong, but when I got to the end of that stripe, while I was
looking closely at the join section, I noticed that my sock was getting
larger the further I got from the toe. I thought about it for a bit and
remembered that I'd had similar tension problems last year using the
same needles. So I did the only sensible thing: snipped the yarn and
cast on a new sock on new (and totally different) needles. I'll unravel
the old toe some other time. The needles have gone in the bin (one tip
was bent anyway), and the other pair of needles that are the same will also be
leaving the house. No one wants to battle with their needles while
they're knitting socks!
Since
I swapped needles the sock has grown much faster. I now have a
different problem - the new needles have reopened the small cut in my
finger tip. Argh! I can't wait to get these socks finished... Do you
ever get the impression that some items just don't want to be knitted?
Labels:
knitting problems,
needles,
Sirdar Heart and Sole,
socks
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