Not very long ago, I attended the Stitches West fiber-art show in San Carlos. Besides coveting just about everything and subsequently spending way too much money on beautiful but random yarn I haven't even thought of projects for, I was lucky to finally pick up something I'd wanted for a while. One of my lovely acquaintances, Tina of
Freia Fibers, handpaints her own yarn in striking and unusual color combinations. I got a couple of different balls in lace weight, wanting to turn it into some pretty lace.
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Freia Fibers: Flux lace in the color Tapestry |
I then scoured Ravelry for a suitable pattern and found
this free one for a shawl by Mia Rinde called Fylleryd. In my hands, it turned into something like this:
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The resulting rainbow shawl! |
Estonian lace is characterized by the presence of "nupps," or little balls in the knitting created by wrapping your yarn around the needle. They look gorgeous, but they are full of treachery! Let me tell you: if you ever try this technique, please for the love of all that is holy, look up how to do nupps on YouToob first. It will save you literally days worth of frustration and feelings of inadequacy from trying to figure it out on your own.
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The beautiful, but unholy nupps. |
The good news is, once you have the technique down, they're actually not that bad. Pleasant, even. Knitting the shawl did take a while, because of how many times I had to rip and redo the first few rows containing nupps, and also because I only had fragmented time to fit knitting in. I also had to fidget with the pattern because I didn't have enough yardage to make the full shawl, but I wanted to maximize the pretty edge. I did some quick calculations of how to fit it all in, but in the end I was just a little short. That brown color you see around the short edges is actually from a different-palette ball, because I had run out of yarn a few rows before finishing.
With knitting in general, and lace specifically, it is usually "blocked," or soaked and stretched to final dimensions. It comes off the needles a little scrunched up and needs to be cajoled into unfurling in all its glory.
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Fylleryd before and after stretching |
However, I'd never blocked lace weight yarn before! And since it was a small shawl, I wanted to stretch it as much as possible, so that it could be as large of a garment as possible for all the time I spent on it. So, I applied all of my canvas-stretching skills to pinning it as tight as I could to the mat. Turns out lace yarn isn't as strong as canvas, and somewhere in the middle of my creation, the yarn broke and made a hole. Luckily, I noticed it in time to carefully mend it before it started a run.
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Before and after mending. Not perfect, but no one will ever know. |
I learned a couple of things from this project. It being my very first triangle shawl, I learned how to do the fiddly provisional cast-on used for such things (ask me if you want me to show you!). Also, as I already said, I vow to always look up complicated stitches before trying them, even if the written description doesn't sound that difficult. The cast-off stitch I did was inferior, and the edge rolls in a little as a result. I got lazy and instead of following the pattern directions, did a simple cast-off, which didn't turn out to be stretchy enough for the edge. If I have time and feel perfectionist, I will redo the cast-off and re-block the shawl. That way, I can get the pretty drippy edge you can see in the original pattern. And, finally, I learned that color-changing yarn is beautiful, and so is complicated lace. However, when you put the two together, you can sometimes lose the pattern of the stitches when the colors don't line up favorably, and when using pre-dyed yarn, it's a game of chance. In the future, I think I'll stick to knitting lace from solid or semi-solid colors, and keep the pretty color-changing yarn for simpler stitches, so that the colors can be shown off to the best advantage.
For all that, though, it came out great! The colors are so versatile, I can match it with almost anything in my wardrobe, while also adding a splash of color.
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Unapologetic photoshopping! |
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