Monthly Archives: September 2019

Faking It?

It’s football season once again, so if you hear yelling, that’s probably me and the Big Guy!!!

As I was watching a college game this past Saturday, whose participants shall remain nameless but whose team colors are navy/gold and red/black, the navy/gold team would occasionally have a defensive player fall to the ground, at which point the referees would stop the clock for an injury. Continue reading...

Sweater Adventure #3: Three Colorways Done

First three colorways complete

I’ve finished the first three colorways, which means I did my crochet cast-on at the underarm and have finished the V-neck increases.

I knew I was playing a bit of yarn chicken with colorway 2, trying to get to the same row number on the back and both fronts. As it turns out, I lost by about 40 stitches! I had started with the back, so that if I ran short, I would have to frog only the first front I worked on, rather than the entire width of the back. And don’t tell anyone, but I left the back worked through row 86 while the two fronts are only worked through row 85. That’ll just be our little secret!!! You won’t tell on me, will you??? Continue reading...

Sweater Adventure #3: Finished the First Colorway

Fronts and back in first colorway

Holding the yarns doubled looks like a good option. Well, it does for the first colorway at least.

I have markers

  • right on the needles separating the edgings from the stockinette
  • counting every ten rows (the gold pins through the fabric)
  • showing the two most-recent rows with V-neck increases (the light-bulb markers through the fabric)

Since I was watching college football while working this first colorway, the on-needle markers reminded me, most of the time, at least, to switch from one stitch pattern to the other. Yes, I did still have to tink in a couple of places. 🙂 Continue reading...

Sweater Adventure #3: Working the Hawthorne Vest

Since the full chart from the previous post is, shall we say, a bit unwieldy to work from, I stripped it down to its bare essentials before I cast on the back at the tops of the shoulders. This chart preserves all the key information while fitting on a single piece of paper with the stitch symbols at 12 points, which is important for my aging eyeballs. Continue reading...