Oct. 6th, 2012

knittingbanshee: (Default)
As I mentioned in a previous post, I recently acquired a copy of "The Knitters Handy Book Of Top Down Sweaters" by Ann Budd, and decided to make the Unisex Zip modified drop shoulder for my partner. 

So, I started this quite a while ago. September 21st, actually. But it took a while to settle on the right needle/size combination for the yarn I’m using, but eventually settled for a size smaller than the measurement suggests (38” instead of 40”) and three needle sizes down (4mm instead of 5.5). With that, I’m getting the right shoulder width, which is promising. 

The book is very cleverly written, with lots of tables given you stitch counts and row counts and "knit until piece measures X" from" measurements so you can adjust to any size, gauge and yarn. It comes with a section on techniques, so you don't have to google any terms you may not be familiar with. As a "recipe book", it's great. 

The pattern examples, like the one I'm following, are a specific example of a jumper type, knitted at a specific gauge. The Unisex Zip is very well written, but I suspect it may be a bit daunting for knitters who expect very detailed, specific instructions. Fear not, the pattern might look sparse at times, but it only takes a bit of thinking! Just take it one row at a time :-)

So far, I've managed to make the first part of the back, and picked up the beginning of the front of the jumper. It's going to be a zip-at-the-top, jumper after that, so I've already shaped the neck but I'm still knitting the front in two pieces, to allow for the zip. It shouldn't be long until I can join the two pieces, and the front and back sections. 

All in all, very happy with the pattern. And the yarn is fantastic! It's KnitPicks City Tweed DK, in Brocade, a very dark purple. It's soft and bouncy, and has the flakes of white add just the right tweedy-ness. It also has a certain sparkle when the sun catches on it, which I wasn't expecting, but I'm very happy with. It knits like a dream, and can handle being knitted and frogged repeatedly (thankfully!) so all the false starts I had haven't resulted in wasted yarn. 

I'm wondering if, now that I'm knitting at a different gauge, I might have enough yarn left over to make something for myself. I don't usually like tweedy yarns, but this one is winning me over. 



Profile

knittingbanshee: (Default)
knittingbanshee

September 2020

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
202122232425 26
27282930   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 9th, 2025 07:07 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios