Delicious Dilemma

A surprisingly challenging thing I find about designing handknits is how often I have the urge to backseat drive, where yarn colors are concerned.  Yarnmakers have mad skills that I can only dream about, and the colors they offer or don't offer are as much a part of their art as my designs are part of mine.  But sometimes, try though I might not to, I formulate an opinion of what sort of yarn I want, and then set about trying to find it.

Having the cart and horse in this unnatural order nearly always leads to disappointment.  It turns out that my ability to imagine a yarn in no way impacts the yarn manufacturers' desire to make one.

No, it's far better for me to see the available yarn choices first, and then concoct a design to go with them. 

So imagine my dread when I made this swell handspun yarn, and then was persuaded by a friend to go searching for a companion for it.  I knew exactly what I thought it needed, and despaired of ever actually finding it.  And then this shade card came!

Behold the choices!  Almost any of them would work beautifully!  In fact, there are not one, but three contenders:

Choice "A" is a deep, moody merlot.  Neither purple nor red, it floats in the netherworld in between.  "A" reads Dostoyevsky, listens to Chopin, and nearly always remembers its mother's birthday.

Choice "B" is a pure periwinkle, descended directly from Vinca Minor.  "B" is fashionably late to parties, has far too many friends, and a weakness for pulp fiction.  "B" wears cultured pearls to the dentist.

Choice "C" is the sour apple that makes your jaw ache before you've even tasted it.  "C" cares not a whit for the opinions of others, wakes up appallingly early, and once lost an entire weeks' wages betting on the ponies.  "C" knows which fork to use, but usually goes for the spoon.

Which of these is your favorite, Gentle readers? Which would you take out for coffee?  Which would you introduce to your mother?  Which would you trust with a secret?  Thank you for weighing in!

 

All's Well That Ends

All of my sniveling to the contrary, I really do love deadlines.  The thing is, once a deadline arrives, you're done.  Either you have achieved the goal of getting so much work done in so much time, or you have not.  Either way, things are going to change.  Either you get your life back, or there's a new deadline (and perhaps some extra grief).  A deadline is a day you can look forward to with the certainty that come what may, the stress of having anticipated it will be over.

Today I finished the Project-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named.  I put it in a box, and told the Smallies that although we will never see this sweater again, it will be returned to us, in the form of Back-To-School money.  Lindsay played along: "You mean the sweater will magically transform into three-ring binders and sparkly sneakers?"  "Yes,'" I told her. "Yes, it will."  It's the Magic of Knitting.

And then, on the advice of a dear one who has really done some heavy lifting in seeing me through this particular journey, I did something very Un-Knitting.  I taught one of my kids (I could only catch one, so far, but I have plans to expose the other one, as well) how to hand quilt.

A few weeks ago we cleaned out the linen closet, and Lindsay asked me why we never use this quilt.  "Because it's not finished.  It's actually not really a quilt at all, yet."  On closer examination, we determined that I had completed about half of the quilting before I wadded it into the linen closet (okay, it was more like three linen closets ago).  Lindsay takes its unfinished state as a personal challenge (don't know where she gets these notions).  Her goal is to help (force) me to finish it before the end of winter.  She feels it's wrong that we both need a quilt to snuggle under, and that we have one which isn't finished.  She also kinda digs that you have to sit under it to work on it - kid is a hard-core snuggler.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but did I just get another deadline?

 

Disasters Come in Sets of Three

There I was, careening toward my deadline for the Sweater-Which-Shall-Not-Be-Named.  Ponytails akimbo.  Heart pounding.  Cuff problem sort of, possibly, intellectually solved.

That's when I noticed Problem #2.  I'm calling it Problem #2, but it could just as well have been Problem #1, had it not been eclipsed by the obviousness of the Cuff Thing:  My sleeves weren't growing wider fast enough.  By which I mean that a cuff which begins with too few stitches in it will, by definition, beget a sleeve which has also not got enough stitches in it.  Even if you are doggedly and predictably increasing it every few rows.  That's right, Gentle Readers.  Sleeves which are too narrow to start with, it turns out, tend to stay too narrow, in spite of the maker's regular increases, time spent trying, and delusions to the contrary.  Crap.

I was standing in line at the bank, working on the conjoined sleeve tube, cogitating on these and other mysteries.  The guy behind me said "I think you're next".  I thought, "Brother, you don't know the half of it," before I realized he was indicating the available teller window ahead of me.  I startled like a lobster smelling melted butter and lurched forward, embarrassed at having held up the line.  My still-knitting hands were on autopilot, and missed the memo from my startled brain and forward-moving legs.  In what can only be described as a collision between a fugue-state and consciousness, my hands attempted to move the knitting forward on my circular needle at exactly the same time as my feet stepped gingerly around the velvet rope in front of me, at exactly the same time as my brain was trying to process the fact that it was time to interact with other life forms and I had no memory of what I was supposed to be doing here. 

The snapping sensation between the fingers of my right hand was both unmistakable and sickening.  The delicate size 2 wooden needle I had been using buckled under the pressure.  Poor wee size 2.  We hardly knew ye.

The bank teller looked at me with a sympathy that could only be worn by a knitter.  "I do that all the time," she said, compassionately.  "I've even managed to snap plastic knitting needles before."  I knew there was a reason I love this bank.  Who would have expected to find understanding like that at a teller's window?

My banking (mercifully - there was math involved) concluded, I headed directly home to replace the needle and see what could be done.  In spite of the misfortune, I was feeling a bit smug.  See, in an extremely uncharacteristic fit of forethought last week, I realized that I might be headed for trouble, because I knew I would be asking a lot of my favorite skinny little wooden knitting needles in the next few days.  I actually imagined what would happen if I managed to break my only size 2 needle, and quickly ordered a new one as insurance.  So sure was I that this was going to happen, I even ordered a corresponding needle in metal, just to be sure.  Good thinking, no?  Imagine someone as impulsive as I am, actually predicting the demise of my favorite needle and planning for the eventuality!  Pleased with myself?  A bit.

Or at least I was, until I understood that the new backup needles were the wrong length.  That's right.  Water, water, everywhere, and not a drop to drink.  I had assumed that the needle I would break would be the long one I used for the body.  The one I actually snapped was the shorter, sleeve-size version.

I tried it all, man.  Magic loop.  Two circulars.  Even, bizarrely, a collection of 8 DPNs, just to see what would happen.  Not Good.  I tried the too-long, the too-short. the too narrow by .25mm.  Everything failed, and failed again.  Nothing was comfortable, and nothing allowed me to get any speed.  So I just kept changing back and forth between different imperfect tools, all the while imagining different solutions to the cuff problem, the too-narrow sleeve problem, and the all-needles-wrong problem.

This went on for no less than three days and three nights. I ate sleeve problems.  I drank sleeve problems.  I collapsed  in a fetal pile and dreamt, what else? Sleeve Problems.  At one very low point, I dreamed that the solution was to reverse the hypotenuse of the sleeve increases to the top of the arm, leave the cuff too small and let it lay open, as a decorative slot over the wrist.  It even seemed plausible, until I regained consciousness sufficiently to realize that while I could probably knit that, I doubted sincerely my ability to write directions for it that anyone could follow.

Somewhere in the sleep-deprived sleeve knitting, a very simple notion presented itself to me.  Since my conjoined-sleeve tube (appearances to the contrary) was getting bigger as I worked, If I kept knitting until the big end was big enough, maybe I could cut off the too-small end of the tube at the bottom!

And that's exactly what I did.  Some ideas are just crazy enough to work.

While the sleeves are drying, I'm taking a break.  From sleeves.  From math. And from being awake.  Deadline's still coming, but I'm hoping that the Knitting Gods are as tired of this particular episode as I am.  Gentle Readers, place your bets.