Monday, December 8, 2014

FO: Trilobita OR Accidental NaKniSweMo

As always, apologies for not posting. I’ve been doing a LOT of crafty things and not allocating myself a lot of time for blogging about them. I have designs on changing that in the new year, but we shall see, I suppose.

I know I promised a photo tutorial of how I made a project bag for my swap partner back in September, and honestly, putting together the photo tutorial is what’s been hanging up my blogging, since I never seem to have time to sit down and actually put that together. I still have plans of doing it someday, but I’m going to try to move forward without it and get it in when I can get it in. Hopefully that’s okay.

I’m going to skip forward in time a bit and then try to remember to backfill you with all the things that went on since September until now as I’m able. I feel like this is slightly more time relevant (although it should have been posted last week) so I’m moving on.
Okay. Now that the administrative work is out of the way, let’s jump in with a story about my first ever participation in NaKniSweMo. It was accidental. It wasn’t challenging. I have knitted myself my FOURTH properly fitting sweater.

Here’s the story:


If you were reading back in May, you might remember that I attended a local fibre festival. While there, I bought some yarn (okay, I bought a lot of yarn), specifically I bought what I referred to then as “beautiful variegated organic wool yarn in just the right colours to finally make myself the Hobbit dress before the third movie premieres in December”. So, round about the end of October I’d finished all the hats I’d committed to (you didn’t hear about those, but hopefully you will later) and I thought . . . if I’m going to get this done by the time I see the Hobbit movie, I’d better start now.

So I wound the yarn and I swatched and the yarn was lovely and all was well. I did the math and cast on for the sweater and was happily knitting my very long rows of reverse stockinette stitch in the flat with zero trouble at all. I knit on it all day during a local podcast retreat I attended on November first and had made about 20 cm of progress on it and all was well. Except that I was nearly out of the first ball of yarn. I had three total balls of yarn. This is supposed to be a knee length cardigan with a hood. And I hadn’t even made it to my hip yet and I was nearly through a third of my yarn. The pattern claims that at the largest I will need 895 yards (818 m of yarn). I had 990 yds (905.3m). Before I even got close to an eighth of the way through the pattern I was out of a third of my yarn. At this point, it became immensely obvious to me  that I did not have enough yarn for this project.

It saddened me, because I’d bought this yarn specifically for this project because the colours reminded me of the Shire and everything was very hobbit and lovely and I was really looking forward to having a new sweater for the movie (I’ve never made myself an item specifically to go see a film before so I wanted to get in on the hype). But! I had this lovely yarn and I didn’t want it to go to waste, so I took to Ravelry. I have many Hobbit and Lord of the Rings inspired patterns in my queue and I tried to match up what I had with one of them, but nothing worked out. So I decided that I could still make myself a sweater out of this yarn and wear it to the film even if it’s not specifically Hobbit themed because the yarn still reminds me of the Shire and it’s lovely and it will still make me happy.

So . . . on November 1, I ripped out all of the knitting I’d done on the Hobbit dress, rewound the yarn, and picked a new pattern. And I felt good about it.

On November 2, I cast on Trilobita by Annamária Ötvös. It’s a beautiful yoked sweater pattern with raglan sleeve increases knit from the top down and it has these cute little details on the neckline and the cuff that look like little trilobite fossils if you look at them close enough and know what to look for. Most of it’s just stockinette in the round with short row shaping for the yoke and decreases and increases for the waistline. The pattern is incredibly well written and comes in a good range of sizes. It was easy to knit yet still interesting. I’m not incredibly proficient at short rows yet, so I had to rip out the short row shaping once because I wasn’t doing the wrap and turns correctly, but I worked it out and continued on.

The yarn is a sport weight Falkland dyed by Dyenamic Duo (who are so indie they don’t have a website I could find). I’ve never knit with Falkland before but I enjoyed it. It’s not a super fine micron like Merino, but it’s also not as scratchy as Shetland. I found it to be just a good, warm, somewhat rustic wool that I loved knitting and I loved wearing. I hope to find myself some more Falkland someday soon and highly recommend it.

It’s a substantial amount of knitting, certainly, and it’s not for beginners, but I had a great time knitting this sweater and completed it within the time frame very easily. Then again, I’m not sure I’m the sort of person for whom an event like this is supposed to be a challenge. You may know by now that I’m a very monogamous knitter. I have a good amount of time to knit and I only work on one thing from start to finish, so even with a few setbacks it’s realistic for me to plan on getting a sweater done in a month.

So, my participation in NaKniSweMo 2014 was EXTREMELY incidental and not challenging in the least, but I did it and I submitted it and I have a sweater I love and the day I wore it three people complimented it and that’s what matters.

Here's a photo taken with the timer feature on my phone in the very terrible lighting of my living room in a grey Minnesota winter.