A tale of two socks

My oh my, Socktoberfest is over, but I am yet to show you any completed socks. Well, the good news is, I have completed a pair of socks in October! The bad news is, well, they’re not a matching pair.

Two Socks

On the left, is the Oak Ribbed Sock from Knitting Vintage Socks by Nancy Bush, and on the right is Child’s First Sock from the same book.

When I started out with Socktoberfest, the main thing I wanted to learn more about was the different construction techniques. I picked the Oak Ribbed Sock pattern because the combination of the french heel and the round toe seemed interesting and unusual. Well, I guess having never knitted top-down socks before, any heel/toe combination would be pretty unusual to me. The other reason I picked this one at the time, was because I wanted a project where I can just do some mindless knitting. Well, I can report that this pattern served well in the mindless knitting department. Just some ribbing, except for when I was doing the heel and toes, of course. But after days with the ribbing pattern, I got rather bored with it and wanted to do another sock pattern before returning to do its mate. Hence the non-matching pair you see here.

The french heel fits me quite well (just as well as my first sock which has short row heel). The Nancy Bush book showcases a number of different types of heels — french heel (aka classic round heel), dutch heel, welsh heel, german heel — all of which use heel flaps. I wonder, those people who like to knit socks with heel flaps, which type of heel do you mean when you say “sock with heel flaps”? Or do different sock patterns use different types of heel?

The round toe, I feel, is not so round, but more ‘pointy’. Well, I guess it’s kind of round, as in, the decreases are spread evenly around the toe instead of just at the sides, making the toe rounder, like the top of a hat. It also seems longer than the average sock’s toe, and is started earlier in the foot. I still think it looks rather pointy though, and rather narrow. If you have pointy toes, this type of toe construction would fit you well. As it is, my toes are rather wide, and this feels rather tight to me.

Overall, it’s a well written pattern. I’m not actually sure whether I’ll go back and do its mate, though, maybe I’ll just try out the other sock patterns with different heels/toes.

The second sock, Child’s First Sock, I picked because I was smitten with this. I had a single ball of Grignasco Bambi, and I wondered if I could make a pair of socks with just this one ball. The yarn has a very good yardage (225m / 50g), but I know it wouldn’t be enough if I make the sock as written in the pattern. So I decided to make these into short socks. I wear lots of short socks, so I know I’ll like it. And it really is an enjoyable knit. After finishing this one, I wasted no time in casting on for its mate. In fact I’m almost done with that one too. So I’ll write more about that when it’s done. Enough rambling for now 🙂

Crafter’s Companion

Oh look what came in the mail!!! The book has arrived!

Crafter's Companion

I pre-ordered it, and ever since the book’s release I had been waiting for it. I knew it would take some time to travel from UK all the way to Australia. I checked my mail box everyday, but no book. A week passed, still no book. Then I decided to do a Google blog search to see if anybody has blogged about receiving the book. Some bloggers had received it, but they’re the ones who live in the UK. So I thought the book would probably take another week to get here. So I didn’t check the mail box for a few days. Then yesterday, I checked again, and lo and behold, the book was there!! I’m super excited because, you see, I live in an apartment, and the standard procedure for package deliveries (anything that wouldn’t fit in a mail box) here is that the postman does not actually bring the deliveries here to my building, but instead leaves the packages in the post office and just leaving me a note in my mailbox so that I can go to the post office to pick it up. It’s always such a bother because in the post office the queue is usually very long. But this book was already here in my mail box! What a bonus!! (I’m easily amused, aren’t I? 🙂 )

I’m yet to give the book a proper read, but so far, the book is fantastic! I love the projects. And I also love the profiles on the various crafters — some already in my regular blogroll, and some new ones to discover — about why they craft, what inspires them, and a peek at their workspace. It’s a great look into the question of why we bother making things by hand. Because, really, I’m surrounded by people who ask me the same question.

Next post, sock news!

And a scarf

Lace Rib Scarf

This is the lace rib scarf, aka the Cashmere Scarf from the Australian Creative Knitting issue 17. I used just 1 ball (plus a tiny bit) of Filatura Di Crosa Zara yarn, leftover from a previous project.

I finished it a couple of weeks ago, and had been gifted for a friend’s birthday since. Unfortunately, this is the only photo I managed to take before being gifted, so no modelled shot. When I just finished the scarf, it looked kind of short, but you’ve got to love blocking lace. After blocking, the scarf stretched to about 145cm (57 inches), which I’m happy with.

This is also a quick knit, and I love how the scarf is reversible. The pattern is the same each row, but somehow it didn’t get boring.

Btw, if you haven’t seen yet, the Knitty calendar contest winners have been announced. No I didn’t win, and I can see why, the photos of the winners really are amazing! I love them all, they’re very creative indeed!

Another Sock

Here’s a riddle for you. What can wear a sock, even though it has no feet at all?

An iPod! Hahaha! (Bad joke, sorry…)

iPod sock

iPod sock

One of hubby’s brothers asked me to knit him an iPod sock for his iPod Nano. I hardly ever have anyone ask me to knit something for them (hubby himself doesn’t want me to knit anything for him), so I’m happy to oblige. (Plus, we’re on Socktoberfest, so what better thing to knit than a sock?) So this is my version of the sock. Oh, and he wants a scarf too. But that’s for later.

This one is very quick to whip up, just a simple tube with 1×1 ribbing on 3.25mm DPNs and then finished with three needles bind off. I used small amounts of Jo Sharp DK Wool in ‘Winter’ (dark grey), ‘Silk’ (cream/light brown), and Elle Pure New Wool DK in light blue. Well that ought to keep the iPod nice and warm!

A rocky beginning

At the moment I’m finding myself in a very rare situation where I really love all the WIPs that I’m working on right now, and I want to work on all of them all the time! Hmm, odd, huh? If only I had the time to knit all the time… So I’ve been trying to rotate my WIPs so that I get to work on a bit of each of them. But even so, I think Serrano is my favourite at the moment. When I’m working on it, I find it really hard to put it down.

I debated with myself whether I should do a swatch first or not. Thoughts running through my head like this: “I want to start RIGHT NOW!” “But what if your gauge is way off? It could be too baggy, or doesn’t fit at all!” “But, but, it’s lace. I’ll have to block it anyway, I can block it to measurements…” “Still, what if it’s all wrong, you’ll have to frog like 200 stitches!!”

And then, light bulb moment! I’ll start with the sleeve! And since Serrano has a split cuff, each half knitted separately before being joined, it’s only half a cuff to start with. I can call that a swatch!!

And so I did, and good thing I did that, too, because it turned out that I made horrible mistakes in the process of making that “swatch”. First was because I didn’t pay attention to the pattern instruction that says “When there are not enough stitches to complete both a yo and its paired decrease, work these stitches in stockinette stitch.” and did the yarn-over anyway, only to discover 12 rows later, that I had 6 stitches too many. Frog, frog. Then not long after I had to frog again, this time because I decided to compare my little swatch to the pattern designer’s stitch pattern close up on the website, and discovered this:

D'oh!

Left: Mine (not fully stretched yet), Right: How it’s meant to be.

See how in my swatch on the left, the pattern repeats are further apart from each other, compared to how it’s meant to be? Well, turned out that I misread the chart. You see, in the chart, the pattern repeat is 7 stitches, plus 4 stitches extra. The 7 stitches repeat is outlined in red. But as it happened, I printed out the pattern with my black and white printer, and didn’t see the red outline. So I happily knitted and knitted, thinking that the pattern repeat is 11 stitches wide, and the result is what you saw above. Sigh.

Thankfully after that it was quite smooth sailing, and I think my gauge is ok too. Here’s what the sleeve looks like now. This is not stretched out to full capacity yet, only stretched a bit so that you can see the lace pattern.

Halfway through a sleeve