Forgive the blurry picture. Cell phones 15 years ago weren’t as clear.A more color-accurate pic
Sometimes, you can let the yarn do the work for you. A gradient yarn can turn even a simple ten stitch garter pattern into something that looks super complicated and pretty.
I liked doing the single Ten Stitch Blanket pattern (seen in the picture to the right) so much that I’m currently working on a Double Ten Stitch Blanket for myself (below) with yarn I got when Joann’s went out of business (RIP). It’s mostly the same pattern, except I’m running one skein from the outside and one from the inside at the same time. I’m getting close to done with the first 2 skeins. I have about 10 more left (I went a little nuts at the sale), so I’ll stop when I feel “done,” but I definitely still have a long way to go. The all knit pattern is generally mindless except for trying not to tangle the 2 strands when I turn it and when I get to corners and have to pay attention. Otherwise, it’s great tv watching knitting.
But sometimes, you want to make that gradient really shine. In those cases, you can pair it with a solid, like I did in this double knit Hönkä that I made for Mike. I’m not sure my 2015 cell phone camera does this one any justice either. The “in progress” pictures are more color-accurate, but the finished one gives a better overall look.
Some other random gradient projects, since I’m a sucker for this kind of yarn. I don’t have finished pics of either one, but they were some of my favorites to work on. As you get close to the color change, it gets motivating. “Let me just get to the next one” is a worthy goal, and probably why these tend to end up complete instead of abandoned.
I do occasionally finish projects. They don’t all live in the WIP (Work in Progress) graveyard for eternity. And sometimes, I even use some stash yarn to make them!
Enter this project. This past December, many of you know we went to visit friends in England. We were thinking about gifts and I wanted to make something for our friend Suzi. She’s always cold and has some arthritis in her hands — so when Mike and I talked about what to do, we wanted something with some silk content in it, and figured handwarmers were something I could probably finish before Christmas. Mind you — this conversation was happening the night before we left, on Dec 13.
So, I went stash diving. I found about 4 different skeins that I had inherited from my grandmother that were wool/silk blends. Mike picked the color he felt was best of those 4, and I packed a little knitting bag with needles, stitch markers, and yarn and tossed it in my carry-on to possibly start on the flight over. I failed to consider that on overnight flights, they turn off the lights. While I did take it out, cast on (started), and did about 2 rounds in the dark, I didn’t love how it looked when I saw it in the light — so I actually frogged it (rip it!) and started over once we were settled into our vacation home.
The first mitt went otherwise without incident, and I was doing okay time-wise to get them done. I finished it around the 21st – leaving me about 3.5 days to do the 2nd one — and we had fewer plans, so more knitting time.
So, I immediately cast on the second one. I’m working away on it, and go to rearrange some stitches, and I pulled the cable out of my circular needle on the night of the 22nd. That basically makes them useless. I had to find a knitting shop – and hope it would be open! — the next morning to have any hope of finishing to either get a replacement cable, or a new set of needles — and a yarn needle to weave in the ends, because I had forgotten to pack one of those.
As luck would have it, there were 2 shops within walking distance of our rental, and both were still open before the holiday! I went to the closer one, and while they had some needles that I liked, I didn’t love their yarn selection (because local hand-dyed yarn is always a great souvenir!), and more importantly, they didn’t take credit cards. We rarely carry cash anywhere, and even less likely in foreign countries. So I thanked the lady and went to the other shop.
Luckily, this shop also had needles close enough to the size I needed. Brits apparently don’t use the exact size I had been working with very often — but they had some wood double pointed that were a hair smaller, so I could work with that. Pro tip: when you are used to working with metal needles that slide easily and swap to wood, you can go down a size because you’ll need to loosen your tension to get the stitches to slide.
And they had some fantastic locally dyed yarn, so yes, some souvenir yarn came home with me. If you are ever in the area, check out Little Shop of Hobbies in Morecambe.
So, I get the project swapped over to the new needles, and keep plugging away. Side note: Double pointed needles make projects look very scary!
After continuing to plug away, I finished the project before they arrived for gift giving time on Christmas! I’d been working on them right in front of her a few times and she had no idea they were for her. She either loved them, or is very polite — because she used them a few times on the rest of our trip.