Monday, October 09, 2006

Difficulty question.

A newish knitter, bless their heart, wants to try the knit-along and asked what skills were involved, so here you go:

- knitting in the round with two colors, stranded
- purling - there will be two-color purling, but not until the very end of the sweater and you'll be invincible by then (the shoulder straps are worked back and forth on less than 20 stitches)
- steeking - doesn't take skill, just nerve
- provisional cast-on - you can do just about any cast-on and pick it back out again
- grafted hems
- picking up stitches
- button holes (mine are pretty lameass, so don't feel intimidated)
- two color knitting on double-points (or two circulars, or magic loop) for the cuffs; IMHO this is the most difficult part, and it's not that hard

One of the reasons we're doing this knit-along is because people wanted the pattern for the brown-and-red jacket and I couldn't figure out how to do it in less than ten thousand words and sixty photos. There are some interesting techniques involved and I'll lead you by the hand through them - that's why I suggested this in the first place. Personally, I think if you can learn to do stranded color by January, you should go for it. You'll learn a lot and probably never be afraid of a new pattern or new technique again.

If cost is an issue (nobody wants to trash $500 of cashmere on an experiment, I understand completely), scoot on over to Elann.com and buy the Highland wool. I'm knitting a swatch with it right now (for the husbeast's Christmas sweater) and it's yummy. And really low priced. (And with this loooong lead-in, you can order it in three weeks and have it shipped and still have it in time!)

And now I must go murder my child, who has figured out the fastest way to get attention is to mess up Mumum's stuff. Grrrrr.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank you for offering to make the jacket steeking open to the blogless, now imagine me on friday night, casting on 120 stitches on the shortest circular I own, in a desperate attempt to teach myself to knit with more than one colour at a time...

Hey, it doesn't actually have bulges and odd kinks and tucks when you do it with a circular - is this what I've been doing wrong all these years?!

Louiz.

PS, if you want more crochet cotton for your collection I have several balls of black hanging about that I'd be happy to send to anyone!

Bells said...

god I am so tempted to join up - but again I say January in Australia is not the time for working with such wool. I will watch in breathless amazement as you all progress though. I will be cheering from the sidelines and wishing I could play.