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What Do You Do When You Are Out Of Yarn?

I never cease to be amazed by the ways in which people convince themselves that something that is clearly not right is actually okay or even good.

You might think that this is a very successful knitting project in the works for a very sweet young man.

Sweetollie

But you would be wrong.

I spent the better part of the week not knitting on this sweater, while telling myself I had plenty of yarn to finish the sleeves and the ribbing at the bottom.  Briefly, I entertained the possibility of finishing out the sweater with a solid gray yarn — a moment of deep practicality.  Then I pushed the notion aside and reminded myself I still had three partial balls of yarn and everything would be, well, okay.  Or even good.

Last weekend I hedged my bets by starting in on the sleeves early.  I knitted the body of the sweater just far enough to do the last button hole, leaving a couple of inches of ribbing at the bottom to be done.  I started one sleeve, and then I told myself that just to be sure, I would start the second one.  At this point I had three circular needles and three balls of yarn attached to the sweater, and knitting the third sleeve was an interesting dance of needles and tangling balls of yarn.

And then this happened:

Shortsleeves

Two partial sleeves.  Two rapidly diminishing balls of yarn in ziploc bags.

I can "catch up" the shorter sleeve on the left to the length of its mate is on the right with the remaining yarn.  But that is about it, as you can plainly see.

Ball1

Ball2

Really, I knew.  I knew this day was coming.  After I exhaust these two little stubs of yarn, I'm going to have to bring out the gray — I have some lovely Alpaca — and pray that I can get gauge.  And that it doesn't looks stupid, a sort of a "hey, I ran out of yarn but I'm trying my best" sweater.  I'm hoping I can embrace the mistake and that it will look like an intentional design element or at least that it won't look like a total disaster and become the kind of sweater all children fear their mother may knit them some day.  In the future, I will try to keep myself from ignoring the impending train wreck, or maybe just recognizing that when the math on yardage is a little bit tight at the outset of a project, it likely won't improve with time.

Despite all of this, I am oddly delighted with this sweater.  I like the bulky Elliebelly Talia Merino yarn and I love how the colors play together.  The Ragman pattern is simple, but a joy to knit and not in any way boring.  So I'm going to suck it up, start knitting with the gray yarn, hope for the best, and trust that  another solution will present itself if the gray yarn doesn't work out.

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Knitting Drama — What To Do When The Yarn Runs Out

I should be ashamed.  Really.  I knew, I knew in my heart, that I was going to be short on yarn for Ollie's Ragman.  But I thought it would only be a bit at the end and I would compensate by shortening the sweater a bit.

What I didn't count on was that my gauge would be off and the sweater would eat more yarn than anticipated.  I'm here.

Onesleeve

And this is a bad place to be with less than one full ball of yarn left.  I realized I was in trouble last night, and started knitting the sleeves before finishing the body, thinking I would just make it with a slightly shortened measurement.  (And yes, I'm annoyed that the sleeve patterning is inconsistent with the body, but I haven't decided yet if I'm going to rip it out and see if I can play with the number of stitches to "fix" that.)

I'm now accepting that I am, in the vernacular, screwed.

I once knit Ollie a cute little hat with this same weight yarn and striped it with this yarn in gray, an effect I really liked.  I think something like that, at the bottom of the sweater, is my only option.

image from images4.ravelrycache.com

I don't have any of that particular yarn left and I do wish I had planned better and knit the collar in trim, but unless I want to rip the whole sweater out and start over with the trim collar, my only option is to  squeeze out as much of the sleeves as I can and then use trim for an oversized cuff there  at the bottom of the body.

It doesn't help that it's my own fault and I should have planned better.  I've sulked and I've pretended it wasn't so, but like all drama, ultimately the only thing to do is confront it and move forward.  *Sigh*

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Knitting & Knitting

The Elliebelly Knit Along is taking shape nicely!

The sweater I'm knitting for Ollie is coming along (although I'm getting a little bit edgey about the yardage and hoping I won't run out).

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Some other Knitters are blogging too!  You can read about Jen P. and Plath's knitting and see some great pictures.

Other knitters have finished their projects already.  These people scare me!

There is lots of pretty knitting in the works, and I'm going to try to feature as much of it as possible on my blog over the next few weeks.  Seeing it has inspired me to organize my yarn and my knitting plans for the fall.

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Studio Saturday

It's a lazy Saturday here.  We dropped Grandma off at the airport for her trip back home, which is always a sad sort of thing, so we decided to do nothing of any consequence for the entire morning.  We have succeeded admirably.

It's been a studio day.  I set out to do some straightening up, and instead, immediately picked up my first experiment at knitting with silkworm handkerchiefs and decided to knit some more on it, instead of sorting out the room.  It's such a pretty color — if the hankies hold out, I think I'll try to get a scarf out of this piece.

Hankies

I also stopped to press a scarf I dyed earlier this week.  The fabric is a Wool/Silk blend.  I'm very pleased with it.

Scarf

I never made it back to cleaning up, because Ollie showed up, wanting to college.

Olliefierce

He is always fun to watch because of his fierce concentration, but he seemed happy with his work.

Ollie

Just about the time he finished, Ellie showed up, wanting to make a card for a friend.

Ellie

And really, I realized it was absolutely hopeless.  There was no chance of organizing yarn because the basket had been taken over by a very contented Hermione.

Yarnhermie

I was not about to be the person to disturb her, so we've called it a morning and our contentedly lazing our way into lunch. 

I think we could all use a lazy studio Saturday every once in a while.  I'm very happy to be having one today!

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A Special Day, Both Knitting And Otherwise

It was a special day today.

It was the first day of school.

1stday

Grandma Claire (who is visiting) and Teddy both got haircuts.  Teddy hasn't had one in at least six months.  I had almost forgotten how handsome he is.

Troika

One fringe benefit of the start of the school year is the extraordinarily long wait in the carpool line.  It stretches down 4-5 city blocks and it can be a 20 minute wait if you are really lucky and manage to hit it just right.  Extra knitting time!  The carpool line is one of my most favorite-ist things.

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I am really pleased that the sweater seems to be knitting up enough on the large side that he should be able to wear it for a couple of years.

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Apparently Ollie thought the day was pretty special too.  Although he was less than happy about putting on a wool sweater in 100` heat, he seemed to enjoy himself a lot.  Maybe too much.

3little

It's very nice to have such a appreciative little guy to knit for.

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Knit Along Progress

I have made great progress with Ollie's Sweater, having finished the raglan increases, put the sleeve stitches aside on waste yarn, and joined the body to knit down in one piece.

Sofar

Patterning

But my progress is not the knitting story of the day.  That story belongs to Ellie, who made this totally amazing hat in two and a half days.

Blythe

Isn't she a wonderful next generation knitter?

Rabbit

Now you will have to indulge me and ooh and ahh over the pictures of her knitting.  I think it is the most incredible experience in the world to have lucked into a knitting child. (This is actually my second knitter, my first is here.)  Isn't she wonderful?

Best

Almostdone

Readyfordpns