For those of you who are fascinated by details of my life, I am currently in London and will be here for the next few months. I'm studying abroad! Learning the culture, and what not. It's been marvelous so far, but I have yet to visit a yarn store. Soon, I suspect.
Well, here's a Christmas wrap up:
As you can imagine, I didn't finish half the things on my list. I DID however, finish a couple of scarves: one for my dad and one for my uncle. Because I was in a rush to send them off, there are no good photos, so I'll spare you the ones with terrible lighting.
I did, however, manage to finish the one thing that had a hard deadline: a shawl for a former teacher's wedding.
Something Blue
pattern: Kiri from All Tangled Up [ravelry]
yarn: Rowan Kidsilk Haze in Heavenly
needles: US 6 (4.00 mm) 32" Addi Turbos
It turned out quite lovely.
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It was, however, more time consuming than I had imagined. I started this shawl sometime in November, but it was quickly pushed to the corner of my desk when other more pressing projects presented themselves. I told myself I'd finish it after Christmas.
Things were going along swimmingly but it seems I forgot one crucial detail: Kiri is a TRIANGULAR shawl... which means EACH ROW GETS LONGER.
I completely underestimated the amount of time it would take me to finish. I literally stayed up all night.
But finish I did:
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Time was ticking. I hurriedly bound off (as hurriedly as I could anyway... took at least 15 minutes... all those stitches!) and drew up a quick soak for it. I grabbed it out of the sink, wrapped it in a towel, jumped on the towel a few times, and pinned it out.
It looks quite pretty.
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Kidsilk, for all its drawbacks (fuzzy, sticky, impossible to frog), is one of my favourites. I love how finished products in Kidsilk look. Even garter stitch in Kidsilk is quite glorious.
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The pattern is, as everyone else has said, very simple. If you have yet to knit lace, I recommend this pattern. It is very well-written with many clear notes, and the finished product is lovely.
That said, it was, I must admit, one of the most boring knits I've ever done. It just was not enjoyable for me. The shawl turned out lovely (if I do say so myself), and I'm always a fan of products knit in Kidsilk, but the pattern was just unbearable for me. I literally had to grit my teeth and force myself to knit row after row.
Seeing my teacher's reaction though made it all worth it.
2 comments:
You did a beautiful job on Kiri! What a lovely, thoughtful gift.
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