I’m glad to say that I’ve finally finished the charting book. It’s been a long haul, and I can only hope that you will learn a small fraction of what I learned in writing the book.
Use the link in the top menu bar to get to the download page.
I’m glad to say that I’ve finally finished the charting book. It’s been a long haul, and I can only hope that you will learn a small fraction of what I learned in writing the book.
Use the link in the top menu bar to get to the download page.
After sleeping on it for several days, I decided to change a few minor things from my initial planning for the yoke of this second sweater adventure.
First, I needed to do an actual correction to my provisional CO stitch count. Since I’m working in the round, I won’t, after all, lose a stitch when I remove the PCO to work the neck ribbing in the opposite direction, so I did my PCO with only 140 sts, not the 141 I had originally planned.
I’m doing a trial run of the top half of the yoke in a spare colorway of my project yarn, just because there are so many things going on that I want to feel the freedom to experiment by using yarn I don’t care about. I don’t like frogging anymore than anybody else, and while I don’t think the first project colorway would be damaged by frogging and reworking, why take that chance when I have a colorway that won’t otherwise be used?
Since I’m going to do a waste provisional cast-on and start immediately with the stockinette main fabric of the sweater, I want to leave a long-enough tail so that when I remove the PCO to work the neck ribbing, I have sufficient yarn right there, already attached and long enough to do the entire final trim.
Just as I did with the first sweater in this series, I’m going to make a multi-column table in my word processor and use my knitting font to show every stitch, including the cast-on and bound-off stitches, of the sweater.
The sleeves and body will be split on round 85. I need to figure out how each part will be worked.
Whichever of the sleeves or body I work first, I’ll do a provisional cast-on with waste yarn for the underarm stitches. Then when I want to do the other part, I’ll remove the PCO and capture those live sts on the needle along with that part’s held sts from the yoke. Note that because I’ll have one less stitch when I remove the PCO, I’ll do a yarnover right in the middle, to add the stitch on which I’ll do the same afterthought phony seams as on the U-Neck. {add link to that post}