Posted By Susan

 


Here is the front of my Long Asymmetrical Cardigan, from Andean Inspired Knits by Helen Hamann:

Andean Sweater Front View

My knitting photography skills need some work.  The wrinkles, I am embarassed to say, occurred post-blocking.  I left the sweater in a bag, and now it needs re-blocking. 

Back view:

Andean Sweater Back View

This was a fun pattern to knit.  Each side is knit from the cuff up, then stitches are added on for the front and back, which are knit simultaneously.  Add the front shaping and you have a recipe for fun.  One side color changes in stripes, and the other side multicolor intarsia.  Then there is the [optional!] embroidered piece that is cross-stitched onto aida cloth before being sewn onto the front of the cardigan.  It was optional, sure, but I thought the sweater needed the structure of this piece across the front.  It also provides the third design element in terms of the colorwork.  I very much like the design of the panel.  Lookee:

Andean Placket

What's not to love about that?  The hours of stitching through the aida cloth, perhaps?  But it was worth it to add that design, reminiscent of andean textiles, into the finished piece.  Add a fantastical button:

Andean Button

and you have a sweater.  A finished object:  knitted, pieced, faced, tacked, embroidered, embellished, washed, blocked.  But if you look more closely (which is hard to do because of fuzziness) at the bottom of the shortest cinnamon-colored stripe, against the shortest dark brown stripe -- right at the front-center of the sweater, you might see a little problem.  A dropped stitch.  Dropped.  Front-and-center, dropped.  I couldn't believe it. 

Why oh why did I leave this thing in the bag?  Probably because, just when I thought it was complete there is something to be mended.  And not only the dropped stitch.  There are places - many of them - where the color of the yarn tacking down the facing shows through the sweater.  Yes, again Up Front.  And Center.  

What did Brando say?  "The Horror . . . The Horror!"     

 

 

 

 

 

 
4 Comment(s):
Susan said...
Hi, Ceci. Nope, I'm not a Yarn Harbor Thursday Gal, so I don't think we know each other from there. I often knit at Playing With Yarn (Knife River) on Monday nights. When I first moved here, someone told me there was a knitting group at Yarn Harbor, but it was an invitation-only sort of thing. No, really. This person told me she was waiting to be "let in" to that knitting group. All these years later, I don't believe that was ever true. At the time, though, I was very turned off. And then I visited Playing with Yarn and I was invited to come to the Monday Night Knitting group and was welcomed there, and I've been going up there ever since. I think I've heard Casey (of Kniitingatnight)say she knits at Yarn Harbor on Saturday mornings. And I see in the Ravelry Northwoods Knitting group that there is a group staring to meet at Beaner's on Sundays. Weekends are not great for me to head out to knit, but the knitting-coffee combo at Beaner's has me thinking I might get down there one Sunday soon. Oh, and yes I will be steaming out the wrinkles once I have the troublesome bits cleaned up -- I still haven't picked up that dropped stitch! -- Susan
January 14, 2009 07:29:24
 
Ceci said...
Hi Susan, That sweter is fabulous!!! I love the colors and design. And you did a fantastic job. do I know you from Yarn Harbor? I don't remember your name. Are you one of the Thursday gals? Couldn't you just steam the sweater with a steam iron and get rid of those new wrinkles? Ceci
January 8, 2009 09:03:19
 
Annette said...
WOW! IT'S JUST LIKE JOSEPH'S COAT OF MANY COLORS. I DID NOT KNOW THAT YOU WERE BIBLICAL.
January 6, 2009 02:08:09
 
Katie said...
THIS IS WAY COOL! I LOVE THIS! YOU DOMINATE, IT'S WHAT YOU DO!
January 6, 2009 10:31:33
 
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Susan
susan@knitajourney.com
Duluth, Minnesota, USA

 
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