After I finished my giant pink brioche cardigan I still had half the yarn left over. Now, the yarn came from an op-shop (thrift store / charity shop) and was new, in it's original plastic packaging
By the time I finished the cardigan it smelt odd. Like moth-balls and something unpleasant. I already knew i didn't want two projects in this marvellous shade of pink, so I decided to overdye it. i wanted to run a light blue of gentle mauve through it. I tested out a couple of colours, and then carefully measured out the blue dye - I have a history of being heavy-handed! I mixed the dye well, and then poured it into the dye pot, mixing it well again, before placing my pre-soaked yarn into the pot.The dye-stock was so light as to be invisible. And then the dye kind of separated and clumped and I got this.Now, I really like it. iIm carrying it along with some mohair for the Wednesday Sweater, and it swatched up beautifully, but I'm still super-confused about how my attempts to create a gentle light purple semi-solid yarn ended up with this rather marvellous, but quite variegated result.
As mentioned, prior to our hiking trip I suddenly, and rather randomly, decided to knit Andrea Morwy's Traveler Shell . It's basically an open fronted rectangle in a knit purl pattern. The pattern is FOURTEEN pages long. Why is the pattern 14 pages long? Because, instead of explaining the ten row repeat and then putting the shaping on top of that (e.g. decrease while continuing to knit in pattern), she writes out the entire ten row knit purl sequence every time something changes. Additionally, most of the time she starts with even number being the right side and wrong numbers being the right side,which is just plain odd. It's confusing and it's like she wants to keep you looking at the pattern for every row, rathe than following the very intuitive stitch pattern, which I had memorised after one repeat. The instructions for the band just say 'pick up x number of stitches'. No ratios, no acjnowledgement that different bits of the band have different ratios. Afte...
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