Friday, February 11, 2011

This May Take Longer Than I Thought....

I said I was going to knit...and knit, I have!  My approach to this project was the same as when I've had other "good" ideas...like, removing tile from the bathroom walls, or reupholstering the dining room chairs, or redesigning a room...unbridled enthusiasm and a teeny tiny bit of "know how".   My enthusiasm regularly outweighs my ability in almost every arena.  For this knitting project, I dusted off my handy dandy "teach yourself to knit" book, consulted a few knitting pals...heck, I even looked up a website (ravelry.com).  So, as I read the pattern, I smiled and nodded along as if I understood...I asked a few questions and smiled and nodded, murmured an "mmm-hmmm" here and there.  Yes, yes!  Of course I understand "gauge" and "worsted" and "cast off"!  I mean, who doesn't???  Ha!

As I started this soon-to-be blanket, it became clear to me that I was knee deep in bulky yarn and circular needles and I was going to sink!  The pattern was to knit 10, pearl 10, knit 10, so on and so on with a certain gauge...but every time I got started, a nurse or a doctor or a janitor or a food service person would knock on the door and I'd immediately lose count.  My yarn of choice is too thick for my untrained eye to see where I left off or count backward...I think I lost a stitch here and there...just ignore that hole right there!  Oh well!  I gave up on the pattern, but since I had the yarn already and the time (Trey can sometimes take up to 2 hours to fall asleep while at the hospital!)...I forged ahead, simply using a knit stitch for the whole thing.  It keeps my hands busy and I can easily keep one eye on Trey as he tries to bust out of his cell...er...crib.  I have no idea how long it will take to finish...or what size it will be, but at least I'll be able to say that I made it!

5 comments:

Katy said...

first of all, that looks lovely! when you pick a pretty enough yarn, almost anything looks good. I maintain that the first thing you knit is SUPPOSED to look like crap. you should see my first scarf--filled with holes, raggedy, awful and lumpy. but then, by the end of your monstrosity, you know what you're doing, you understand how the stitches work together, and you have a feel for the yarn. give yourself another foot of blanket and you'll be a professional!

Katy said...

also, is that lion brand boucle? that yarn makes it really hard to tell knits from purls and to count stitches because of all the bumps. don't beat yourself up--i still can't tell what i've done with that kind of yarn.

Crafty P said...

"My enthusiasm regularly outweighs my ability in almost every arena"---
If I had a quarter for everytime THAT phrase has rung true in MY life, I could buy you a ROOM full of yarn. sigh.

that is beautiful yarn and you may have bitten off more than you can chew for a beginning piece, but I say bravo!
In the words of a very wise fish, named Dory, "just keep swimming"! or knitting in this instance.

Lindsey said...

It looks really good Rachel! I love it.

Niki Adams said...

The blanket looks nice, plus the type of yarn and colorway make it harder to detect mistakes. A hint for finding repeats or pattern changes is to use stitch markers, it makes things more meditative and less "was I on 8? or 10?" I make mine with an abundance of beading supplies so if you need some, let me know the needle size and I can get some to you :) Happy knitting.