This post is part of the Fall Shawl Together, a collaborative project featuring great shawl-related content from designers, bloggers, and podcasters. We’re featuring a new post each week, now – December. You can check out all the posts on the Fall Shawl Together Project Page and show us what you’re working on by tagging your shawl projects! #shawltogether
Many great shawl patterns start with garter tabs.
Unfortunately, this useful technique can be really difficult to interpret from written instructions.
Alex Tinsley of Dull Roar de-mystifies the garter tab in this fun and informative tutorial, taking you through each Step with clear and easy-to-follow instructions.
Alex knits, crochets, spins and designs in southeastern Michigan with her husband and two dogs who like to help by sleeping on the yarn balls. She has a passion for soft wools and semisolid colors, and her hats have their own dedicated dresser. She learned to knit in 2004 and has been making up her own designs pretty much ever since. Follow along with her knit-ventures at dull-roar.com!
This post is part of the Fall Shawl Together, a collaborative project featuring great shawl-related content from designers, bloggers, and podcasters. We’re featuring a new post each week, now – December. You can check out all the posts on the Fall Shawl Together Project Page and show us what you’re working on by tagging your shawl projects! #shawltogether
Yarn Substitution
We all do it. We see a pattern and then choose the yarn, or we choose the yarn, then find a pattern that will work. We have also likely had some less than glorious outcomes. So how do you make a knowledgeable and appropriate yarn substitution?
I think most knitters substitute based on what is readily available to them. They may be looking for a yarn substitution from their stash, or from their favorite yarn purveyor, or they may be looking for a less expensive option.
Suitable Yarn Substitutions
I provide extensive gauge information in my patterns because I feel it is really important that the knitter get the same fabric I used in my original design. But that only works insofar as the yarn is the same as or nearly identical to the yarn I used. I don’t begrudge anyone making a yarn substitution because every knitter needs to make the project they want to make, but without directly comparing to the original yarn, results will vary.
I focused on Remarkables for this post. It is a luscious piece, but the yarn used is quite unique, and relatively expensive, so I was interested in what would happen with other yarns. The photo below is of my unblocked swatches. The top center is Air from Zealana, the original yarn. I knit all of these on the same needle. Hat Box got the bottom trim added which I didn’t do in the others. Helix isn’t pictured here because I had already blocked it.
Yarn Base
If you can get gauge it will work, right? Obviously, you need to keep to the same general yarn weight, and choosing one sock yarn over another might not make a lot of difference, but there are different yarn structures (twist, ply) as well as fiber content differences. I look at yarn from a user’s standpoint, without a lot of regard to subtleties of structure. All of the swatches are in sock-weight yarns. Satchel is a single ply and the rest of my yarns choices are plied. I usually compare weight and yardage too.
Air is a lace yarn, but in this application it is worked at a sock-weight gauge to take full advantage of its halo. Oy. See why substitutions can be tricky? If you don’t know the original yarn it might mean that a bit of crucial information is missing from your equation.
Fiber Content
Air is unique in large part because of its 40% brushtail possum fiber, which is blended with 40% cashmere and 20% mulberry silk. I’m sure Woolyarns could tell us much about its structure, but the possum fiber is the piece that I find makes it most unique from a user standpoint.
Working from the upper left and going clockwise, here is ball-band information. I created 100g equivalents for those yarns that came in different weights.
Not pictured: Helix from Infinite Twist, 100% wool, 67g/200 yds (183m) [100g/300 yds (270m)]
These all got approximately the same gauge, but there is quite a bit of variation in the yardage/weight, so this isn’t a clear path to a great substitution.
Price
You will need the equivalent of three balls of Air to make this piece. Air retails for $25/ball so the yarn for the Shawlette costs $75. Since we can’t really do a direct substitution, I’m going to estimate that we need between 600 and 750 yards.
Sprinkles from Delicious Yarns: $24/100g. Cost $48
Air from Zealana: $25/25g. Cost $75
Hatbox from Mrs. Crosby: $27/100g. Cost $54 to $81
Mimi from Lotus/Trendsetter: $23/50g. Cost $46
Satchel from Mrs. Crosby: $17/100g. Cost $34
Helix from Infinite Twist, $17/201g. Cost $51 to $68
There is a lot of cost variation in this list. The project yarn cost (based on my assumptions) goes from a low of $34 to a high of $81. So why not just buy the least expensive yarn and go for it?
Physical Properties
I knit all these swatches in yarns I assumed would work in this design. I knit the gauge swatch/beginning of the Scarf from the pattern. I varied the cables a bit, and clearly, I got tired of knitting on some of them. I’ve washed the swatches, where noted threw them in the dryer, and blocked the lace sections with my steam iron.
Color ended up playing a key role. Complex stitch design means the yarn color can really compete with the design; this might not be the place to use your beautiful hand-dye.
“This cunning confection of a shawlette rises in delicate tiers . . “ is the part that was the most difficult to replicate.
Sprinkles from Delicious Yarns (dryer): Swatch weighs 14g. This one looks much weightier, and I find the color really distracting. I can’t wait to use this yarn somewhere else.
Air from Zealana (dryer): Swatch weighs 6g. This yarn doesn’t have a lot of memory and flattens out, but the dryer helps bring out the halo and drape. Still love this yarn/design combination. There is a scarf that takes one ball.
Hatbox from Mrs. Crosby (dryer): Swatch weighs 12g without Bottom Trim. I like the stitch definition in this one, but it lacks the weightless look of Air, so it becomes less a confection, but I like it. Also try it for Tuscany, Medallion, and Kintail.
Mimi from Lotus/Trendsetter: Swatch weighs 9g. This is most similar to Air, but it is definitely heavier, so doesn’t feel like a confection. I’d try it for Belon.
Satchel from Mrs. Crosby: Swatch weighs 14g. I loved this swatch before I blocked it. Can’t wait to use this yarn in something else.
Helix from Infinite Twist: Swatch weighs 15g without Bottom Trim. This yarn has a wonderful springy twist to it, which makes it all wrong for Remarkables. Grab Ashland for this one (and a capelette version is being added to the pattern next week!)
There is a shawl for every yarn, and a yarn for every shawl, so take time to make sure you’ve got a great match. You know. Swatch first.
Jill Wolcott is a prolific and talented knitting designer. Check out her designs and her blog on her website.
If you’ve determined that someone is knitworthy (maybe after reading my recent post on the subject), you may still be wondering “What should I knit?”
I think there are 3 major factors you should consider:
What does the recipient like?
What do you enjoy knitting?
How much time do you have available to knit this gift?
Let’s delve a little deeper into each of these.
What does your recipient like?
Ask yourself “What does the recipient like in terms of…”
Colors (always wearing neutrals? enjoys pops of color? wears rainbows every day)
Types of knitwear (wears a knit hat from October- April? would never wear a scarf because her neck is always warm? always has cold hands and is looking for the world’s warmest mittens?)
Now that you’ve thought about what your recipient might enjoy and have jotted down a list of things to consider- really think about what you enjoy knitting. Or perhaps the better question is what do you really not enjoy?
If you hate knitting intarsia then a floral print cowl may not be the best choice even if your recipient would love it. Perhaps a lacy cowl or a shawl with a floral lace motif would suit their taste and yours?
If you hate 2×2 ribbing then knitting ribbed fingerless mitts that go to the elbow may not be wise.
If you hate knitting with black, then men’s size 11 black stockinette socks just may defeat you.
How much time do you have available to knit this gift?
Be realistic. Be practical. While you may love your mom so much you want to knit her a cabled coat, you may just not have time if her birthday or Christmas is 14 days away and you still haven’t found the perfect yarn and pattern combo. Some things to think about:
How much time do you actually spend knitting each day? (not how much time do you WANT to spend knitting each day)
How long did it take you to complete a knit of a similar size (maybe check your Ravelry projects page to see if that last hat really took you 4 days…. or maybe it actually took 2 weeks and the time just felt like it flew by?)
How much time do you want to spend on this? Especially during the holiday season there may be other things that you don’t want to miss out on but once you’re half way through that 700 yard shawl project you may find yourself “forced” to stay home instead of going to the local festival of lights.
Do you need time to wash and block the item after it’s done? Be sure to set yourself a deadline that’s at least 2-3 days before you’ll actually gift the item (ideally a week before you gift it).
As I mentioned in the first post about gift knitting, if you’ve never knit for someone before, you may want to start with a small yardage, small time commitment project so that if the reaction is not all you hoped for, you’ll be a little less hurt.
So now you’ve thought about what they’d like, what you might enjoy crafting and have narrowed it down to something you could actually achieve in the time allotted. Now comes what I think is the most important question:
Do I want to make this?
Even if the recipient would love it, if your answer to this question is NO, it’s probably not worth it. If you have no desire to finish it, it will feel like a chore, instead of a blissful alternative to mall-shopping. You’ll either struggle all the way through, or just stop part way. Then you’ve wasted both your time and your money and you still need to find another gift. Don’t bother. Make sure you’re really going to enjoy making the item before you set your mind to it.
I hope these tips help you plan ahead for your next gift knit!