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Posted by Wooly on May 2, 2006, 8:36 am
spewed forth :
>I have a question for all you experts. I just started getting a
>catalogue from a company called KnitPicks, and I love their Andean
>Treasure Sampler Vest. It's designed for sport weight yarn and size 3
>and 5 needles, using 12 colors in various Fair Isle patterns. I would
>love to try it, but I can't use such small needles - anything smaller
>than about a 10 makes my hands hurt (as well as trying my patience).
>Do you think it would work to adapt the pattern to a larger gauge -
>say, use two strands of yarn together and size 10 needles, and,
>obviously, cut down on the number of rows and stitches per row to
>attain the same size pieces? Or am I out of my mind? Or does someone
>have a Fair Isle, multi-color vest pattern to reccommend that is
>already written for heavier yarn and larger needles? Thanks for any
>advice you can offer.
The short answer is: pretty much anything is possible if you're
willing to spend the time figuring out how to do it.
The idea behind the original FI designs was to use odd bits of wool.
A Fair Isle sweater is, by definition, tightly knit with fine yarns on
small needles; they're warm, they're weatherproof, and they're
coincidentally amazing to gaze upon when well-executed.
You certainly can substitute your yarn/gauge into the KP pattern but
the end result will be radically different from the original.
Consider also that yarn big enough to be knitted on #10 needles
(60-6.5mm) won't lend itself to stranded knitting so you'll end up
doing slip-stitch or stripes, further altering the appearance of the
FO from the original.
There was actually a pattern for a stranded sweater in, I think,
Knitters, within the last couple of years that used Brown Sheep Lamb's
Pride Bulky. I was horrified for any number of reasons, not least
being that I had just finished two cardigans using this yarn. They're
bullet-proof as I knitted them (6.5mm needles, 2-3spi), I can't
imagine STRANDING the stuff and then expecting someone to wear the
result, though I suppose if I lived in Siberia I might very well want
a sweater of that caliber.
Hah, there goes my opinion peeking through :D
Wooly
Who f00bered the armhole steeks of a sweater. Good thing I realized
the error of my ways before applying scissors! Now I have to rip
three days' of knitting and reknit the yoke/shoulders :P
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This practice has cut my spam by more than 95%.
Of course, I did have to abandon a perfectly good email account...
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