Sunday, November 16, 2008

Intarsia Wins Seed Stitch Match

Lesson learned: the 'purl bump' is actually created from the st in the previous row, not the st currently being purled. It's the top of the loop of that st.

This makes it physically impossible to introduce a new color with a purl bump of that color. When knitting in a new color, on the other hand, the top of the loop of the old color st lands on the WS of the fabric, giving the appearance that the new color really does start there.

So my red seed st heart on black St st background is impossible to knit in the way I planned it. I don't think altering the placement of the 'seeds' will be a good work around for this--already on both sides of the heart are many places where the first/last red st are knit... which would make them purls if I altered the seeding and then I'd be in the same predicament.

I think it may be plausible to introduce the red in the row below and then purl with it to get a red bump, but I'm not 100% sure that will work out the way I picture it.

Either way, I've decided to knit the entire chart in St st. This wasn't supposed to be a very challenging project, just a way of getting familiar with the very basics of intarsia.

Lauren v. Intarsia: Round 1 - Seed St

I want to make a pair of arm warmers for a friend. She'd like cables on a contrasting background, i.e., via intarsia.

I've never done any sort of stranded knitting before, merely horizontal stripes. The latter nearly drove me crazy by the end of a 7" x 9" illusion-knit block so I couldn't imagine that dealing with multiple colors (and tangling strands) would be much easier. Of course, I was the one who suggested one-colored cables on a different-colored background, knowing full-well I'd need intarsia (moreover, at that time I'd planned on doing them up in the round; I've since given up on that idea and am most grateful that the pattern is already written for back-and-forth knitting).

I like pushing my limits, but I'm not one to begin on the hardest difficulty setting without first testing out the skills required--especially when someone else is the intended recipient so I'm striving for perfection more than normal. After the initial sighting, I've seen a few "monthly necessities" bags and decided to make one of those with a simple heart pattern on the front in a CC.

Shortly after beginning it entirely in stockinette, I frogged it and made 3 rows if seed st as the base to keep it from curling as much. From there, I thought, "it'd also seem prudent to knit the closing flap in seed st to stabalize that as well," which took me down a slippery slope to, "so long as I have that much seed st on the back, why not include some in the front, too? I'll do the heart in seed st!"

So now I'm faced with making my first-ever intarsia st as a purl on a knit background. My usual resources fails me ...well, they don't fail me completely (new mantra: "old over new") but they don't hold my hand through non-stockinette intarsia. As much as I hate to admit it, that's kind of what I need right now.

The best I've found from Google so far is this post on garter intarsia. It doesn't have anything about purls, of course, but it was encouraging to see the process someone else used to get creative with this method. She (He?) had to deal with strands being on opposite sides, which is kind of close to my predicament.

I've already tried a few times and either get the MC mixed with the CC or no purl bump, but I'm still determined to do this. Once I get that purl bump cleanly on the RS (and get it to stay there unlike that time it mysteriously disappeared after switching back to MC) I'm not going to be too picky about whether the strands were properly linked. It's one st and immediately going back to MC after that so any hole really wouldn't be that noticeable. In fact, it may even be remedied while weaving in the ends.

For now, I've frogged and ranted enough for one night. Tomorrow's another day.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Elbac is officially frogged

I took a photo before ripping it out last night:

It just wasn't fun for me. I was cabling too tightly making it difficult to knit, and I kept losing my place.

Don't get me wrong--I think reversible cables are awesome and I want to use them whenever the wrong side might show, but after learning the magic behind the trick this scarf wasn't as interesting.

I'll come back to reversible cables another day with a new project and nicer yarn.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Digital + Film

Wouldn't it be really neat (if really expensive) to combine film and digital into one camera? You'd have the best of both worlds immediately available at your fingertips. My favorite application for this: practicing in digital, then flipping a switch capture the moment with the already-confirmed-the-looks-good settings on film. I love film and I love developing it myself, but it's frustrating to spend so much on it + developing and then discovering that it's just a bit off from what you were going for.