September 20, 2007

Hems and stubborn Cast On edges


On the continuing saga that is my sweater...
Last night I ripped back the neck. Using good old knittinghelp.com I stuck a few dpns a few rows below the hem turn. Picking out my previous basting was fairly easy and it frogged quite nicely to the row that my dpns were sitting in. Ahh, I love when knitting works out perfectly. I then proceeded to put my turn in right away so the neck would be a bit shorter than before, and then I knit about 3/4 of an inch for the hem. Haven't basted yet, though.

Inserting my needles into a 'target' row were really easy so I decided it was time to tackle the bottom of the body... the dreaded Cast On edge. I picked up stitches two rows above the ribbing. Once everything was secure I pulled out my tiny little embroidery scissors and just began cutting off the the CO. I figured I didn't need to be careful so I probably cut into a row or two as well. In my head it all made sense; I'd find a row that was still in tact and pull the yarn and it would all unravel... but in reality this did not happen.
"That's odd", I thought to myself. So, I cut off another row... still no luck. I figured I could just wiggle all the stitches and make them drop to my destination row. This was working but, for some crazy reason only every other stitch was drop-able.
At this point I started freaking out. I was pulling, madly, at the cut up ribbing, violently dropping any stitches that were willing. It suddenly dawned on me that maybe cutting my sweater wasn't such a good idea.


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walking in a spider web


About half an hour later all possible unraveling was done. I was left with this crazy spider web of yarn that did not want to undo itself. And here I've been for the past year and a half thinking my scarf would fall apart into a tangle of yarn on a whim if I didn't weave in my Cast On tail well enough. Trust me, it will not fall apart.
I finally realized that I would have to spend the rest of the night undoing each stitch individually until I hit my destination row, so, I set about that horrible, horrible task.

After more than 2 hours the task was complete. There was much snipping and untangling but, I reached my previously inserted needle with no stitches lost. I counted all 200 of them twice. =)


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On the left, with the wooden dpns, is the neck which ripped back oh-so-smoothly. On the right is my Boye interchangeable circular holding on to the stitches that were hell.
I plan to reknit the bottom 2 inches tonight, turn, and add an orange hem. If I'm not tired I'll baste and then tomorrow I'll weave in all the ends hiding in the body. And finally, I'll be done.

Actually, I'll have to block the sweater and then I'll be really done. Speaking of blocking, after a previous disaster with laundry detergent and Malabrigo, I decided to invest in some Soak wool wash.


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I considered buying Eucalan but these looked so much more hip. Packaging definitely affects my shopping. I'm happy about the scents, they're not too strong and none of them smell excessively fake or chemical-based. They're surprisingly sophisticated. Well, maybe not the citrus flavor... hahaha, I totally get dish soap from it.

Here's to even stitches. ^_^
Knit hard!

4 comments:

Shadkitty said...

Oh dear! That is frightening. :( I've never had to undo my CO rows...but I will learn my lesson and not cut it if I ever do. Still, the sweater is looking good. And you will be so much more happy with it! Soak is very pretty, I have some little tiny ones I bought in California on vacation. I can hardly bring myself to use it.

sko_G knits said...

wow, what a daunting task!! kudos for pulling through it. i still have yet to fix the vest that won't fit over my head. i tried to un-seam it to unravel down to re-knit the neck opening, but after 10 minutes of it not cooperating, i tore it which caused random stitches to rip out. i threw it in the back of the closet in frustration and it has not seen the light of day since.

Unknown said...

Let me know how Soak wash holds up. I bought Eucalan and used it, but I did not like the smell of the product immediately after. However, when the blocked piece dried, the smell disappeared. Despite this, the medicine-y smell was very off-putting and disconcerting.

Charles said...

I know! It soooo fightening~~ Dickie!

I away think about thats the ways we learn about new method,and make a mistake and fix it!
People told me thats the Zen of Knitting, because you learn your mistake and rip it out and reknitted!