#vs fiber arts tag

LIVE

knottybliss:

flyingyarn:

The bee shawl, but finished.

Ooooh!

mrknaogan:

Hand for scale.

flintandpyrite:

Nantucket whaling museum: very cool. Particularly loved this exhibit of scrimshaw (whale ivory carving) crafting tools. Can you imagine how much they must have loved their wives to make the 100+ little pieces of a folding swift? I’m .

Okay my love bought me a swift and let me tell you, it was so romantic. I felt so loved. She got it for me cuz prior to owning a swift I just had a second person help me, but she didn’t want me to have to wait for help to wind my yarn, so she got me the swift so I could be a little more independent and now I can wind yarn whenever I want. It was so sweet and romantic.

10/10 gift, can confirm

ll-again:

Me, waiting for pakidge, standing in the window in a wispy dress like the ghost of a woman from a gothic drama, peeling back the curtains and flinging myself against the glass in despair:

When will my ChiaoGoos come?

To anyone intimidated by my lace habits: i just thoroughly confused myself because I somehow managed to forget BOTH yo’s on either side of my centered double decrease and I’m in a lot of pain so nothing was making sense and I almost put the project in time out. Figured it out tho. Go me.

weeberc3:

roboticchibitan:

I have been BETRAYED by my most beloved Chiaigoos interchangables. Now I have to salvage all these stitches DX

Nooooooo oOoOO

Your yarn looks fuzzy, hopefully that held the stitches together some!

It’s mohair/silk blend! And it did help, actually! I managed to get most of the stitches back without too much trouble

ebearcrochet:

ravenofsilver:

Whoop whoop! Another one done!

I’ve been trying to finish one shawl a month. Technically was a day late on this one (finished May 1st) buuuuuttttt we’re gonna count it anyways. Close enough.

Pattern is the Kassiani Shawl by Dee O’Keefe. I absolutely loved it. Simple but lovely. An absolute joy to knit. It’s a good one for lace beginners since you get to try a few common motifs and the pattern is so clearly written. It’s also a nice knit for more advanced lace knitters because you can just zone out and go easily.

The yarn is Moondrake CO’s Soft Shawl MCN in “Orion”. It’s one of my favorite yarns and I already miss squishing it in my stash. Plus! I got to meet the dyer in person last year and she’s a delight. She’s a fellow OK resident, and all her color ways are just so so pretty.

This is such a wild goal!! And this shawl looks amazing the yarn suits the pattern perfectly

I have been BETRAYED by my most beloved Chiaigoos interchangables. Now I have to salvage all these stitches DX

Fixing mistakes in lace

So you are knitting your first lace project, and you’ve got the wrong number of stitches and you’re stuck and you don’t want to frog. I’m here to help. But! My advice depends on you being able to read your stitches on the last patterned row (whether that’s every row or every other row depends on the pattern). If you don’t know how to do that, try knitting a swatch and putting in some decreases, double decreases, yarn overs, etc and then look at your work to locate those stitches and see how they look.

First advice: if your pattern is repeating, put a stitch marker in between each repeat. It’s possible these stitch markers will move, but you need to know which repeat(s) you’ve made a mistake on and this makes that much easier because you’ll realize you made a mistake when you get to the end of the repeat instead of the end of the row. I know not everyone does this, but I’ve been knitting 15 years and I see no shame in taking all the help you can get. All the advice here assumes you are doing this.

So after you’ve separated out all your repeats, and you get to the end of a repeat and are missing a stitch! What to do? Missing stitches are usually either 1) forgot a yarn over somewhere 2) dropped a stitch.

Forgotten yarn overs are an easy fix if you can find where the yarn over was SUPPOSED to be. Tink (un-knit, knit spelled backwards, means to undo your stitches one at a time as opposed to just ripping them all out.) back to the stitch before the missing yarn over (YO). If the missing YO is in the row you’re knitting, simply add the YO and keep going. If it’s in the row before (or second row before if every other row is plain), tink back to right before the missing YO, and insert the left needle into the bar between stitches as if to do a make one increase (there’s YouTube tutorials out there). Knit the stitch without twisting it. This is your new Jerry riggedYO.

If your missing stitch is NOT a missing yarn over, it’s time to start looking for dropped stitches. Sometimes these are just impossible to find because they rip down to whatever YO they came from and that can be really difficult to spot. If your pattern is symmetrical, look for missing symmetry. If it isn’t, look for differences between this repeat and other repeats of the pattern.

Now, finding these missing stitches and then knowing what to do with them are two different things. Ask yourself: if I use a crochet hook and go slowly, can I fix this? If the answer is no, please don’t give up. Let me tell you a secret. I make. So. Many. Mistakes. When I knit. And sometimes you just have to fudge. Pick a spot that works best for the pattern and just add another stitch. I prefer knit front and back (kfb) but you can also make 1 left or right (m1L/m1R). I promise it’ll be hard for anyone besides you to spot.

But what if we have an extra stitch? These either come from missing decreases, forgetting part of a double double decrease, or an extra yo hanging out where it has no business hanging out.

Go back and read your work. First look for any extra YOs. If you notice an extra YO, tink back to it and just drop it. It’ll mess with your tension but that’s what blocking is for.

Once that’s ruled out, look at any double decreases you have. If you are doing a decrease where you slip stitches and pass them over other stitches and off the needle (pass slipped stitch over or psso), did you remember to do the psso part? I forget this sometimes even tho all I knit is lace.

This is my personal most frequent decrease mistake. If you made that mistake on your current row, tink back and pass the stitch like it’s supposed to go. If it was a previous row, tink back to where you made that mistake, and either knit two together (k2tog, right leaning decrease) or slip slip knit (ssk, left leaning decrease), whichever leans the correct way.

So there’s no extra YOs and your double decreases are good? Time to look at your normal decreases. Do you have any decreases that you missed? Tink back and do them. If they were missed on the current row, just knit as instructed. If they were a row ago, you might have to do some analyzing to figure out where the right place is, but go back and decrease as close to where it was supposed to be as possible.

I cannot begin to tell you how forgiving lace is of mistakes. Hell. I spent 18 months knitting this

And when I got it all laid out, IT HAD TWO HOLES IN IT. I’m still mad about it but I fixed them well enough that I could block it aggressively. Can you see where I missed stitches, my tension was weird, I had extra stitches for some fucking reason, etc? No! You can’t! This is what blocking is for.

Blocking is the heavenly primordial being who wipes away all your mistakes and knitting sins and says “You worked hard on this, and it looks heavenly, good job.” You should block everything, not just lace. It evens your tension and can give you a little leeway if something is just a little bit too small. Got a sweater with two slightly different sized sleeves? Blocking.

And if you really don’t believe me that blocking fixes almost anything, take a look at this:

You can’t see the beads in this photo, but this shawl has somewhere around 1500 beads. I decided right off the batt I wasn’t going to be frogging beads. So this became a YOLO project. I gave myself permission to make mistakes and just fudge the solutions. Can you see my dozens (literally dozens) of mistakes? No!!

So don’t be afraid that your lace isn’t going to turn out right. Cuz only you can see that spot where you dropped a stitch completely or that double decrease you forgot to do or whatever other mistakes you may have made. Blocking will fix a lot. And even if there’s still a glaringly obvious hole somewhere (I have one that drives me nuts in the white shawl but no one else can spot it), I promise it’s not glaringly obvious to anyone else and also everyone here on knitblr doesn’t care and if someone gives you a hard time tag me and I’ll scold them for you.

In conclusion

mrknaogan:

Hand for scale.

@biotic-boshtet

You should. You should try it I know a place to get cobweb yarn :D

loading