Sunday, November 18, 2007

How About You?



A friend was recently lamenting how she was having to frog the lace she was working on. I wrote back the following, explaining all the steps and fall-backs I use to make sure I'm following the chart correctly, in order to cut down on the amount of frogging I have to do:

I bought one of those magnetic boards to mark my rows (Post-It's eventually lost their "stick"), and I also made some Excel spreadsheets to check off when I completed a row (or a chart portion of a row - that was a bit of overkill, but works well for Aran sweaters).

I found I couldn't depend on just the spreadsheet or just the row marker on the chart. I also figured out how many stitches I should have between stitch markers (remember it could change with each row). I made sure to count the number of stitches as soon as I completed a row. Sometimes more than once just to be sure. Every once in awhile, I'd also go back and read the chart to make sure what I had on the needles is what the chart said I should have. Lastly, I'd hold up the knitting, looking at both sides for any mistakes. I frogged stitch by stitch as I found just ripping back made it impossible to recreate all those yarn-overs and decreases!

It sounds like a lot of trouble, but eventually it did cut down on the amount of frogging I had to do. I'd rather count stitches than undo a "Sl1, K2tog, PSSO"!


I found that running a lifeline was too much trouble. (Maybe I wasn't doing THAT right!) Then again, a row had only a hundred or so stitches, not several hundred. I might rethink a lifeline in that case. Maybe with more experience knitting lace, I won't have to go through so much trouble.

What do you do to keep track of your patterns or charts?

Monday, November 12, 2007

It's About Time!



I've been a reader of knitting blogs for some time now, but until now, I hadn't gotten around to starting one of my own. I though I'd perhaps be boring, because I don't always get to knit every day, so progress can be a bit slow.

I have felt quite out of it, though, as every knitter in the known world seems to have a blog these days! Even Ravelry mocks me by telling me it's not yet picking up my blog. I'm excluded from contests where I could have been winning fabulous yarns and having fun!

So, today I've taken the plunge. I'm currently too busy to do any knitting, but I guess I'm not too busy to be wasting time writing about it...

I do want to mention the last item I did knit and finished just last week - a Leda's Dream stole designed by Melanie Gibbons aka Pink Lemon Twist. It was my first lace project, and what a joy to knit! Beautiful pattern, which didn't get boring for a second, and I finally got to experience the magic of lace coming off the blocking pins!

It was knitted for a charity sale in support of the Bubel/Aiken Foundation. A group of on-line friends (bloggers and non-bloggers alike) have been knitting, crocheting and crafting for months, in order to sell items and donate the proceeds to Bubel/Aiken. The stole sold within a few hours of being listed! (Thanks again to Melanie, who graciously allowed me to make her stole to be sold for charity, and to the buyer of the stole.)

As of today, we've raised over $600! Way to go, Sirens!

If you have a minute, please check out the Striped Sock Siren's blog, which will lead you to the charity sale. (I've posted once there, so I'm not a *complete* blogging newbie!)