Lava Flow Cowl.

A new sample is decorating our walls: here’s a Lava Flow Cowl.

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This Lava Flow Cowl was made by Amy, who’s teaching an upcoming class on the subject. It’s full of interesting techniques, like a provisional cast-on, reversible cables, and kitchener stitch in a ribbed pattern. If these techniques are new to you, consider taking the class and reap the benefits of Amy’s guidance, as well as the camaraderie of other knitters. The pattern is available as a free download from Ravelry, and is a perfect garment to showcase a special yarn in a dk or light worsted weight. Amy’s sample is made in Mirasol K’acha, a light worsted weight blend of merino wool, alpaca, and silk.

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Come by the shop to try it on for size, and see if you’d like to make one yourself!

Snow day.

The shop was closed most of Friday and all day Saturday because of the mix of sleet and snow that covered the Triangle, making for dangerous driving. It wasn’t much snow, to be sure, but the threat of slippery, icy roads was enough for us; better safe than sorry, better to stay home and enjoy one of the pleasures of a Southern winter: a snow day. No surprise, I did a lot of knitting. What better use could there be for an unexpected day at home? I worked on Burrard, a cabled cardigan that has kept me company this past month or so. Thanks to a class I took at TNNA in June and to the oh-so-useful Charts Made Simple, I finally feel confident knitting from charts. It’s exciting to watch the cable patterns emerge, row by row, and to be liberated from written instructions.

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I hope you all had the chance to spend some time playing with yarn this weekend, staying safe and warm. If you missed us on Friday or Saturday, come by soon and show us what you’ve been working on. We’re back open today, Sunday the 27th, at our regular business hours. See you there!

On learning something new.

This morning, I attended a class on Celtic cables taught by Melissa Leapman, knitwear designer and author of Cables Untangled, Continuous Cables, Stashbuster Knits, and Mastering Color Knitting, among many others. I’ve knit a cabled sweater or two, made a couple of pairs of Fetchings, but always working from patterns with written instructions rather than charts. I’ve never really wrestled with the logic of how cables function, never played with them much, instead filing them away under “techniques to learn some other time.” The time came this morning.

In this class, Leapman focused on larger, self-contained cable motifs rather than the vertical patterns we usually think of as cables. She taught us how to read her charts, which I was relieved to find somewhat intuitive, rather than mind-boggling, as charts sometimes are. There were unfamiliar increases and decreases to learn, as well, dramatic increases and decreases that created or got rid of many stitches at a time. These quickly increased and decreased stitches allow the cables to pull in, as cables do, without affecting the overall width of the knitted fabric. Soon I had a Celtic knot, sitting nicely on top of a reverse stockinette background: a very pleasing sight.

I left class ready to tackle a third Celtic cable, a full-page, 45 row chart that had looked rather frightening when I first paged through the handout. Now I can make (some) sense of it, all because I sat down with a group of knitters and swatched and practiced, asked questions and swatched some more. I’m so pleased to be learning something new, and to be reminded that in knitting, there is always something new to learn. Tomorrow, I’ll take another class and look forward to seeing all the vendors. Til then, I’ll swatch, and look forward to hearing about Anne and Rosi’s classes and all that they learned.