Joanna, CKO big UX, little knitter, chief knitting officer, under construction

19 June 2009

Finish-more, sleeve-less

Filed under: Knitting — Tags: , , , , — Joanna @ 7:40 pm

I’ve been knitting many things lately. But, they’re all small projects that I’ve been able to complete fairly quickly because they have no arms. These two are from Stephanie Japel.

Back-to-School u-neck vestThe first Stephanie Japel pattern is the Back-to-School u-neck vest from Fitted Knits.

This yarn started out in a completely different project about a year ago.  While I was in Toronto, I was desperate to knit something – anything.  I bought some Dream in Colour handpainted (Chinatown Apple) superwash yarn from Lettuce Knits.  And, I started to make a sweater with short sleeves, knit in the round – without a pattern.  The knitting gods weren’t on my side and my Lantern Moon needles exploded mid-project.  The needles were part of a recall, and you can get a free replacement if you have exploding Lantern Moon needles.  It was for the best because it made me undo all my work.  I started on this pattern a couple months ago.  It fits perfectly – even if I’m not going back to school.

I really love Stephanie’s book.  I also love what seems to be her philosophy of simple patterns that are easy to knit in the round with little finishing.

Coquette Lace Tube TopWhen I went on the Puget Sound yarn store crawl with Veronica, I found a fantastic deal on some Laines du Nord Cashsilk (50% unshrinkable merino, 25% silk, 25% cashmere).  Yes, 25% cashmere for $5 a ball.

I bought all nine balls that they had remaining thinking that I could make the Swan Lake cardigan from Interweave.  I just didn’t have enough.  Flipping through Fitted Knits, I realized I could make the Coquette Lace Tube Top.

And, I was so excited.  I started knitting.  But, two repeats into the fairly basic lace pattern, things just weren’t looking right.  Because I kept ending up with one extra stitch, I discovered that the book had a correction about the pattern.  Before I ripped back, I tried knitting a yarn-over through the back of the loop to see what it would look like.  So, it was at that moment that I discovered that I have been knitting yarn-overs wrong, well, since I’ve been knitting yarn-overs.

The shaping in the pattern starts with smaller needles at the top and really helps the tube top stay up.  I was worried that I’d need to add straps or figure out how to make crochet chains.  But, it stays up.  And, after consulting my knitting counsel, it’s staying as-is.

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