Yarn and more yarn

Rebekka Seale in hat knitted from her handspun

I’m back home and mostly recovered from my whirlwind 7-day, 2-city tour. In case you’re wondering, I did do some knitting — although shockingly little. In the air between Phoenix and Indianapolis, I knitted a hat. (Ok, 7/8 of a hat.) Rebekka Seale had sent me some of her gorgeous handspun alpaca and this adorable baby hat pattern. After knitting a good chunk of the seed stitch for the hat, I didn’t feel like it was the best showcase for the black and white marl. So before I left, I downloaded the Caldwell Garter Cap pattern instead, which is plain enough to let the yarn shine. Because bulky 100% alpaca is heavy, I cut down on the number of crown rows to make a shorter hat, but I wish I’d also gone down a needle size. In any case, it’s lovely — and how great does it look on Rebekka, who I had the pleasure of meeting while in Nashville.

#knittingforhimalong sleeves in progress

I picked up the yarn for Bob’s Fort upon my arrival in Indianapolis, and despite spending three late nights surrounded by knitters, I only managed to cast on one sleeve and knit a few rounds of ribbing. But between a pleasant evening knitting outdoors with Nashville friends and the flight from Nashville to Las Vegas, I finally started making some progress on a sleeve. Unfortunately, I made it a little too small so I’m sizing up the second one and making sure it’s right before redoing the first. I was brain-dead enough to welcome the stockinette on the return trip, but I have to say, the increases and that rib detail running up the inside of the sleeve are just enough to keep it from being too monotonous. (Don’t forget to keep an eye on the #knittingforhimalong tag in Instagram — projects are just getting started.)

My TNNA haul

Of course, a little bit of yarn also followed me home from Indianapolis. It was a yarn trade show, after all. There’s a little retail event on the first night of the show, where I bought the two skeins of Cestari cotton-wool sock yarn (for $5!) and the denim-blue skein of Swans Island’s new American-made rambouillet-alpaca. Then during the course of the show, I was given the hot pinky bulky from Made in America Yarns; the two skeins of chunky, undyed, Italian-spun, Tibetan yak down from mYak (the most delicious shade of brown nature ever thought up); and the new Knightsbridge from The Fibre Company in a sagey brown-grey. I don’t know if you’ve seen any of the previews of the pattern collection Kelbourne did for this yarn — releasing in a couple of weeks (and you’ll definitely be hearing about it here) — but it is magnificent, and the yarn itself came as such a surprise to me. It’s baby llama, merino and silk, and feels so marshmallowy soft in the skein I would never have believed it would offer any kind of stitch definition. But the patterns are all manner of textured and cabled goodness, and the yarn pulls it off magnificently. I can’t wait to knit with it, and the same goes for that yak.

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How to start knitting a sweater

How to knit a sweater that fits

Today is the kickoff of the aforementioned #knittingforhimalong on Instagram — and/or wherever else you’d like it to be. (By all means, comment here, blog about it, whatever works for you! The important thing is to knit.) The previous Bob swatch having been rejected as too textural, I re-swatched in stockinette to make sure we both loved the fabric before ordering the yarn. Which is to say, I don’t have my yarn yet. I ordered it on Monday and am picking it up at the trade show in Indianapolis this weekend. (Thank you, Jocelyn!) But that’s ok, because as we all learn — either the easy way or the hard way — there’s work to be done before the actual knitting begins. So I thought I’d post a little bit* about sweater knitting best practices — and my practices, which are not necessarily the same! — in case anyone finds it useful.

So here we go!

The quickest way to begin a sweater is to look at the various chest sizes noted in the pattern information along with the recommended ease (that is, how much bigger or smaller it is than your own chest measurement), pick the size that suits you, and cast on. Certainly if you do that, and follow the pattern exactly as written, you will end up with a sweater. But will it fit you the way you expect it to? I’m sorry to say, not likely. And there are two main reasons or possibilities why not:

1. You didn’t knit a swatch and don’t know how your gauge compares to the pattern-maker’s gauge. Therefore your finished dimensions won’t be the same as the ones you picked out at the beginning. If your stitches are bigger (fewer of them per inch), your sweater will be bigger, and vice versa. If your rows are bigger, your sweater will be longer. Etc.

2. You’re not the same shape as the imaginary person the sweater was written for. If a person is writing a pattern for oneself, they can write it to their own shape and dimensions. But patterns written for untold numbers of unknown people have to make a lot of assumptions. Me, I have a fairly flat chest, broad shoulders but a narrow torso, plus a waist and arms that are long for my height. If I follow a pattern blindly, choosing the size based on my chest, I’ll end up with a sweater that’s too small across the shoulders and too short in the sleeves and body. My handsome husband has a narrow waist and hips but is a little bit barrel-chested, and has long legs for his height, which means a shorter torso.  I’m betting you, too, do not match any stock template of a human shape.

We’re each unique in our own way. The beauty of knitting our own sweaters is that we can account for these differences amongst us, as long as we know four things: our gauge, the pattern measurements (all of them, not just the chest), our own measurements (ditto), and how we like things to fit. All of which are easy to come by! So here are what I would call the 5 Steps for Starting a Sweater that Will Actually Fit:

STEP 1: CALCULATE YOUR GAUGE

Gauge is figured by knitting a swatch — a large one — with the actual yarn and needles you’ll be working with, either worked flat or in the round depending on how the bulk of the sweater is worked, then measuring it, blocking it, and measuring it again. If you only measure it before blocking, it could shrink or grow and then your perfect-fitting sweater will no longer fit. If you only measure it after you block it, you won’t know if it shrank or grew, or how to compensate for that. Once you’ve got your gauge, compare it to the pattern gauge. (Unless stated otherwise, assume the gauge given is after blocking.) If they match, the rest of this will be simpler. If they don’t match, though, that doesn’t mean you can’t proceed. It just means you need to do a little more thinking and calculating than if they did.

For example, the pattern gauge for Fort, which I’m about to knit for Bob, is 20 stitches and 35 rounds per 4 inches, in the checkerboard stitch pattern. I’m knitting it in stockinette, and I like the fabric I’m getting on US6’s, for which my gauge is 19 stitches and 27 rounds. So my stitches are a little bigger than the pattern (only 4.75 per inch instead of 5), and my rows are quite a lot bigger (6.75 per inch instead of 8.75). So I can’t just use the stitch counts in the pattern and expect it to come out to the corresponding size. I’m more concerned about liking the fabric than matching the pattern gauge, but there’s always the option of re-swatching with different needle sizes until you match pattern gauge.

STEP 2: STUDY THE SCHEMATIC

While the pre-purchase pattern info typically only tells you the chest measurements, the schematic (if it’s worth its salt) contains vastly more information: measurements for cuff, hem and upper arm circumference, yoke/armhole depth, back-of-neck width, body length (hem to underarm), etc. Every one of them is relevant to how the sweater will fit you, and pretty much every one of them is negotiable, if you know how to negotiate.

STEP 3: MEASURE THYSELF

If you don’t already know all of the same measurements for yourself as are given for the pattern — back-of-neck width, bust size, arm length, and so on — take the time to take those measurements. At the bare minimum, you should know your bust measurement. Don’t actually take it yourself or it won’t be accurate. Stand with your arms hanging naturally at your sides and have someone you love measure around the widest part of your chest with a fabric tape measure, while you wear nothing but the bra you’ll wear with your sweater.

STEP 4: FIND A BENCHMARK (OR TWO)

Raise your hand if you’ve ever gone shopping with the idea that you’d like to find a sweater with +4 inches of ease, or -1 inch of ease. “I’m in the market for something with a 14.5 inch sleeve,” is not a thing anyone has ever said. But “I wish this fit more like my purple sweater” or “that grey sweatshirt is the only thing that’s ever been the right length on me” is. The best way I know (the only way, really) to figure out how we like things to fit is to measure the clothes in our closet and compare them to each other and to … the schematic!

STEP 5: ADD IT ALL UP

So here’s how it all comes together. My gauge is different then the Fort gauge, and some of Fort’s measurements are different from Bob’s preferred sweater dimensions. I know this because we measured all his sweaters. See that little drawing in the bottom corner of the pattern page above? That’s my crude schematic of Bob’s ideal sweater. He has sweaters he likes that are anywhere from 43 to 45 inches in the chest, but this being a worsted-weight sweater — and my wanting him to not look like he’s swimming in it — I’m aiming for the lower end of that range. The pattern sizes are 38 (41.25, 44.5, …), which means our goal is right between the second and third sizes, EXCEPT those dimensions are based on the pattern gauge, which is different than mine. So let’s look at it this way:

43 (inches) x 4.75 (stitches per inch) = 204.25 (stitches)

Reading into the pattern for the point where the back is divided into front and back — i.e. the widest part of the chest and bottom of the armhole — the stitch counts are 190 (206, 222 …). See that size two number? 206! At my gauge (206 divided by 4.75) that will give me a chest dimension of 43.4 inches — close enough! So I’ll base everything else off of that second size.

The cuff sizes are all bigger than Bob likes. His wrist is 6.5 inches and his favorite sweaters have 7-8 inch cuffs. The smallest of Fort’s cuff sizes, according to the schematic, is 10 inches. If I used the stitch count for size two, at my gauge, it would be 11.4 inches! So I’ll calculate my own cast-on count and plan to do more increase rounds than the pattern calls for. But looking at the final stitch count for the upper arm (i.e., before the sleeve cap shaping begins), at my gauge it would be 15.5 inches, and both because of Bob’s preferred sizing and because I don’t want the upper arm to be out of proportion to the armhole it seams into, I’ll aim for an upper arm that’s the same dimension (rather than the same stitch count) as the pattern size.

The body length and sleeve length are both given in inches, not rows, so I don’t need to worry about the difference in my row gauge causing any problems there. I’ll just knit to Bob’s desired lengths rather than the pattern lengths. The only place row gauge might get me into trouble is with the increases in the arms. Because my row gauge is bigger, it’ll take me fewer rows to reach the desired length, which means not as many rows to distribute those increases between. So I really need to take a minute and calculate how many rows and how many increases I’ll be working with.

(If you aren’t familiar with how to calculate and distribute increases and decreases, see part 5 of my top-down sweater tutorial, sweater math. The logic is the same whether you’re working from the top or bottom. Don’t worry — it’s grade-school math! And it’s possibly the most important and empowering thing a knitter can know.)

I’ve mentioned this before, but one of the key things to scrutinize in the schematic is armhole depth, or yoke depth — especially if you’re working from the bottom up. Where your sleeve hits you is a function of sleeve length plus armhole depth. If you attach an 18″ sleeve to a 10″ yoke, that sleeve will hang lower than if you attach the same 18″ sleeve to an 8″ yoke. So measuring your favorite sleeves or looking at the sleeve length in the schematic is not enough — it’s the combination of those two lengths that matters. I’ll be aiming for an 8.25″ armhole depth plus a 19″ sleeve.

If you’ve never tried to customize a sweater before, your head may be spinning. But trust me — next time you start a sweater (whether today or any day), sit down with your swatch and your schematic and this post, and think it through. And if you’ve never knitted a sweater and want some recommendations, take a look at Pullovers for first-timers.

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*Ok, that didn’t turn out to be so little!

 

Swatching for Bob

Swatching for Bob

Ok, I’m on the brink of casting on my first sweater for my husband. Let’s recap my concerns/criteria for this project:

1. He has to love it and wear it, which means
2. it has to fit perfectly and
3. not be too hot (i.e. not 100% wool) while
4. being washable and durable. But also,
5. I have to enjoy the knitting or I’ll never finish it.

We had decided Fort would be interesting enough for me to knit but not too interesting for him to wear, and to my surprise, he even wants the elbow patches. I believe I’ve narrowed the yarn down to O-Wool Balance, which has some nice heather to it, not too far from the look of the Shelter that Fort is designed for, but is a washable merino/cotton blend. I ordered two shades of green to have a good look at (along with a hefty load of charcoal for myself) and we both love this Emerald one, which is really a sort of earthy Blue Spruce hue (not a jewel tone) that looks awesome with his blue eyes. So far so good!

But given how daunting this feels — and also because I’m thinking of using all that charcoal for my Channel Cardigan — I’m being more diligent than ever about getting to know the yarn. I knitted this big ol’ swatch so we could get a feel for the fabric and the stitch pattern. I washed it, abused it a little bit, even threw it in the dryer, which it totally shrugged off. LOVE YOU BALANCE! But as for this stitch pattern, it’s been blackballed. Bob thinks it’s too chunky looking, and I can see his point. And as much as I think it’s more interesting than stockinette as a fabric, and I do love him enough to put myself through an entire sweater’s worth of k2/p2 if his heart desired it, I can’t say I’m sorry not to be doing that. So it looks like we’re going to stick with Fort and all its other nice details, just doing it in stockinette instead of this waffle texture.

And here’s the thing I really want to mention. It turns out there are quite a few people on Instagram who are about to embark on a sweater for their husbands (all firsts, I think!), so we’re doing a knit-along. A very loose one: all that’s been declared is that we’re knitting for dudes and starting on or about May 1. I don’t think we’ve picked out a hashtag yet, but keep an eye on my @karentempler feed or @byannieclaire, who is the ring-leader on this, and we’ll make sure it’s known when we have one. [UPDATE: It’s #knittingforhimalong.] Do join in!

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p.s. I also cast on another sweater this weekend. So much for small palate cleansers! Or is that what the swatch was?