Wednesday, August 22, 2012
Monday, August 20, 2012
Not quite
Well, once again, I didn't quite finish my Olympic project before closing ceremonies. I was trying to make my dad Basic Cardigan: Two Ways by Bruce Weinstein from the book Knits Men Want. My dad picked out the pattern and bought the book so that I could make it for him. Mom bought the yarn. My contribution was the knitting.
I made this my Olympic project so that I would be done in time for my dad's birthday on the 11th. The lawyer in me wants to point out that I did finish all the knitting and really I said I would knit a sweater for the Olympics, not necessarily piece or finish a sweater. Another party of me realizes that this sort of loop-hole finding is part of what's wrong with the world. I'd call it a bronze medal effort.
A few days of seaming and zipper installation after the ceremonies concluded and I had this:
I made this my Olympic project so that I would be done in time for my dad's birthday on the 11th. The lawyer in me wants to point out that I did finish all the knitting and really I said I would knit a sweater for the Olympics, not necessarily piece or finish a sweater. Another party of me realizes that this sort of loop-hole finding is part of what's wrong with the world. I'd call it a bronze medal effort.
A few days of seaming and zipper installation after the ceremonies concluded and I had this:
Ryan took on the role of model for me, isn't he handsome? I think so. As you can see, the sweater is a bit big on him, but my dad is about 5 inches taller so I think it will fit perfectly.
The sweater is very plain. It's composed entirely of panels of stockinette and reverse stockinette. Perfect for watching lots of Olympics. But now I'm ready for a nice intricate lace pattern or some colorwork, or cables... something not so incredibly plain.
The yarn was lovely. I used Berroco Ultra Alpaca which is a very sturdy worsted weight yarn. It is 50% wool 50% alpaca. The wool gives it stability and the alpaca gives it lots of warmth and a bit of drape.
I was very nervous about installing the zipper because I've heard horror stories about how hard it is to install a zipper in knit fabric and seen some really bad projects on Ravelry to back up the stories. The problem is that zippers are not at all stretchy and knit fabric is very stretchy. If you accidentally stretch the knit fabric when sewing in the zipper, you end up with that weird ripply sweater front that looks pretty bad. I followed this tutorial and it worked perfectly! You're welcome.
I love the double-thick collar. I think it is the perfect neck edge. The pattern was a bit vague in places. I think the designer sacrificed some clarity to get the layout to fit on the page better. Nothing too terrible, but I always get annoyed when designers sacrifice the pattern instructions for aesthetic concerns. I mean, the pattern is all anyone cares about, not how pretty the page is. I will take a well written pattern over a pretty page every time.
I'm going down to visit my dad in about a week and a half and I'll deliver the sweater then. I'm sure it won't get any wear until at least November, but at least he'll get it relatively close to his birthday.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)