Sun 5 Jan 2014
At the beginning of every year, I try to stop and take stock of the projects I’ve done and I make a list of the things I’d like to try in the coming months.
This year, I have no list. There are no long lines of projects waiting, no techniques dying to be explored. This year, my goal is simply this: to knit.
2013 has been a long and difficult year, with old health problems cropping up in new ways and lots of challenges at work. Most nights, I am simply too tired to knit even plain stockinette.
I swatched for a sweater just before Thanksgiving. The stitch pattern was chosen, I knew which needle size I wanted, and all I had to do was cast on at the neck. Somehow, even casting on for a simple raglan was too much to think about.
Instead, I knit a hat. Since the hat was the only project I had on the needles and I didn’t have the brainpower to come up with another, I stretched the knitting out over several weeks, a row here and a row there. I finished it while we were visiting with friends a couple of days after Christmas, which left my needles empty.
In the lull between the holidays and heading back into preparations for the new semester, I picked up that swatch again. It took about 10 minutes to cast on, and about 5 days to knit the sweater.
The yarn is Briggs and Little Heritage, the yarn I picked up this past summer when I was on PEI. It’s a heavy weight, 2-ply wool, spun in a small woolen mill in New Brunswick and lightly heathered. The main body color is called Seafoam, and there are 4 other accent colors, too (I seem to have lost the labels for most of them, but one is green heather and one is natural white. Looking at their color card, I think the others must be fern and light blue or peacock).
The knitting was fast, at about 4 sts/in on a size 5 needle. I switched up to a size 6 for the shoulder color pattern, since it’s a slip stitch pattern and I wanted to make sure it wouldn’t pull in. The narrower bands near the cuff and hem use 2 of the more subtle accent colors to help balance the visual weight of the yoke.
Yesterday, I found the perfect buttons in my button box:
And with that, the first sweater of the new year is done.
(Of course, now I need to come up with a new project to cast on…)
It’s a beautiful sweater! I love how some projects just need the right moment, and –woosh!–they’re done!
The sweater is gorgeous!! Slip-stitch knitting is one of my favorite types as it looks like you did a lot more work than you did!! I could have not finished that in 5 days.
What a lovely sweater to enter the new year with! I love the color combination.
I didn’t knit nearly as much as I would like last year as I frequently was too tired in evenings as we’ll to knit. Hopefully 2014 will be a better year for both of us!
That sweater is stunning! The colors work beautifully together. Happy New Year! My goal for this year is actually to sew more. It seems I do a lot of knitting because it travels better. So next year I am going to try to organize some portable hand-sewing projects. We’ll see how that goes.
It’s beautiful, Erica!
Wow! I really love that sweater. The colors are (you’ll be surprised to hear this) right up my alley, and I particularly like the negative space between the colorwork and the actual end of the garment at the neck and sleeves. I also like the five day timeline (she says, endlessly knitting stockinette for the Bohus)
Gorgeous. And yes, those buttons are perfect. As was the sweater for the open brain space and knitting space of those 5 days. Simply fantastic!