Just finished this shawl and it feels so soft and cozy. Too bad it's getting too warm in North Carolina to get much wear in the coming months.
The pattern calls for casting on 401 stitches using the long-tail cast on method. While I love the appearance of this method, it's a pain in the neck to figure out how much yarn you'll need to allow for. Too much and you waste yarn with an extra-long tail; too little and you don't have enough stitches and have to start all over again. This seems to be a common conundrum among knitters so I turned to my copy of Cast On, Bind Off by Cap Sease (Martingale, 2012) for help. Sease presented several ways to calculate the length needed and I chose this one: "wrap the yarn around the needle once for every stitch. Holding the yarn at the last wrap, pull out the needle and add a few extra inches before making the slipknot." This worked almost too well -- I ended up with about a 4-inch tail...not much yarn waste, but maybe shorter than I would have liked for some projects. Next time I use this method, I'll be a bit more generous with those extra inches.
I finished with an I-cord bind off that wasn't called for in the pattern. From knitting previous shawls that called for this type of bind off, I knew I would like the effect better. When a pattern, such as this one, calls for binding off loosely, I find that I still bind off too tightly even when I use a size larger needle. The too-tight bind off doesn't give the shawl's top edge enough stretchiness which keeps the piece from draping well. It also puts some strain on that last row of knitting which can lead to broken stitches, especially in thinner yarns. But when I use the I-cord bind off the edge stays stretchy enough plus I like the finished look that this bind off method gives the piece.
Wet blocking the shawl:
Closeup of the pattern:
1 comment:
love the way you blocked it out and very nice stitching
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