Waiting for Yarn…

So, as I wait for my yarn to arrive from whatever alternate dimension it’s in, I’ve started a project using the forlorn greenish yarn purchased in a fit of “let’s make a shawl for this lady who likes green.” The yarn’s been sitting (three large balls of it) for about a year. We’ve cast it onto various things, and given up because it turns out to be a bit of a pain to work with: it’s cotton, and seems to be made up of a series of loosely associated strings, rather than anything so wholesome as a yarn.

So, it’s sitting there, and it looked to be the best of the bunch, as far as the leftovers go (still sulking about the expense, yes).

I cast it onto a set of single-point size 4 needles, intending to work something flat-ish like a shawl or a shrug or whatever the “in” term is for something you throw over your shoulders to keep warm. I cast and cast, up to 134 stitches. So, the thing will end up being about 36 inches wide if you don’t stretch it out at all. A goodly width.

I’m working as follows:

  1. s1, k1, *k*, k2
  2. s1, k1, *k2tog*, k2
  3. s1, k1, *k into front and back of each stitch*, k2
  4. s1, k1, *p*, k2

Or, translated into something more reasonably understood:

To give ourselves a nice edging, we’re going to use 4 extra stitches (called a selvage). These first and last two stitches on each row will be treated the same, no matter what row we’re on. They’re worked like this: slip the first stitch of the row, as if to knit. Knit the second stitch. Do whatever you’ve got to do with the row, all the way up to the last two stitches. Knit these last two stitches.
Apart from the selvage, we’re going to:

  1. Knit a row
  2. Knit two stitches together, across the entire row
  3. Knit into front and back of each stitch before slipping it off the needle, across the entire row
  4. Purl the whole row
  5. Repeat

Now is also the time to realize that at the speed you knit and with the number of stitches you’ve cast on you’re doing about an inch every two hours; at this rate, you will have to knit for about 72 hours in order to get something just square-shaped.

I hope that I will get faster. I’ve read Elizabeth Zimmermann’s Knitting Without Tears, and thought I had taken her advice to heart: I gave up holding the yarn in my right hand & switched to the left, and I knit very loosely. Now I’m beginning to see the wisdom in another of her pieces of advice: unless you like fussing over a piece forever, knit using huge yarn. If I’d used nice chunky yarn, I’d have an afghan by now. Instead, I have a lovely horizontally-ridged, lacy piece … of about 4 inches in length.

But, I must say that I do enjoy just being able to zone out until the last couple of stitches of a row. It’d be easier if the yarn weren’t so multi-stranded-string-like, but it’s still much more relaxing than the Aran-esque sweater project which is awaiting the next installment of yarn. Perhaps not as rewarding, and definitely more boring, but … more of a sedative. As The Yarn Harlot says, “Knitting has this reliable rhythm that comforts a freaked out obsessive compulsive….

3 Replies to “Waiting for Yarn…”

  1. I can’t believe that this teensy piece is more ‘relaxing’ than the sweater. Chunky yarn and a feeling of progress would seem much more relaxing to me… It’s like rewriting my novel in the guise of an edit … far too much like knitting a teensy piece with tiny needles and having four inches after a whole week to show for it.

  2. btw, that selvage is really, really nice… and why don’t YOU write the knitting books? Then they’d be in English, and maybe I could actually do it…

  3. I only cast on Friday Evening! Remember? We stayed up ’til 1:00 when we knew we had to sing early Saturday morning? So, I got out about two inches Friday, an Inch and a half Saturday, and another inch today … nothing near a week.

    My aim is to have some sort of a translation of the knitting gibberish sometime soon. I’m afraid, though, that so much of knitting is about seeing it done & then doing it, that translating the gibberish is difficult. I frequently end up going to somewhere on the order of 6 or 7 sites to try and figure out how something was done … and truly? The best source has been the freaky Readers’ Digest book on how to do anything with yarn / string / scraps of material / rope….

    I really want you to knit, though! Truly!

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