Archive for May, 2008

Yesterday, I showed you this:

This is some gorgeous local alpaca (comes from the San Juans…it’s hard to get a more local alpaca!) that I picked up at the Weaving Works just before Christmas, when I bought sock yarn for making gifts. I had so many socks to knit that I put it aside for later. It’s been burning a hole in my stash ever since. I think its time has come. The only problem is, I’m not really sure what to do with it. I have 4 little cakes (50g?), probably 150 yds each. Enough for a wide scarf, perhaps? Two more would get me a smallish stole, but I’m not sure I can squeeze one out of the 4 balls that I have. But then, I was really surprised by the last stole; I bought two 700 yd skeins of the DIC Baby, and used a little less than one skein. I couldn’t believe that I got that much area out of 700 yds! It’s probably tempting fate to hope for the same thing twice. Either way, I still don’t know what kind of stitch pattern to use. I’ve been through the Walker books so many times in the past few days, and nothing is jumping out at me. And so, it sits, waiting for the perfect plan.

It amuses me that this is the second yarn in a row that matches my rug. At least it matches my decor while it’s sitting in the knitting basket! It probably also means that I should branch out a little bit with the color selection…did I mention that I have a thing for reds and purples lately?

Now that the stole is finished, I really can’t put off deciding about writing it up much longer. The problem is that I can’t decide what my motivation would be for writing it up. I am a big fan of open source and free sharing of knowledge. This makes me tend toward writing it up as a free pattern. After all, I looked in a book, took three patterns I liked, knit them one after the other, and called it a project. Is this really a “design”? Somehow, that descriptor doesn’t seem to fit. There was nothing complicated to figure out; I just assembled a few small pieces into one big piece.

On the other hand, by that criteria, most patterns out there aren’t really designs, either. I don’t usually buy patterns, and the ones that I do buy tend to be the more complex kind, that involve much more than choosing a stitch pattern. But I don’t have a problem with someone selling a pattern for a simple shawl or scarf. And I know that these patterns are usually quite popular, so people must find them worth buying.

I don’t want to undervalue my work, and I don’t want to undercut the value of other’s work by making something available for free that they would charge for. And yet, craft has always seemed to me to be something that should be shared freely. If these skills had not been passed down openly through generations, where would handknitters be today? Someone invented the stitch patterns that I used; they came to me through a book that assembled hundreds such patterns without name or recognition for the people that invented them (except in the rare cases that the patterns were submitted to Walker’s collection from a specific person). The inventor is gone and long forgotten, but the pattern lives on. Is this so horrible? Is it wrong of me now to profit from someone else’s genius in deriving a stitch pattern I’d never have imagined?

Intellectual property is such a huge issue in our society. From music to academic papers and right on down to knitting patterns, it seems that one can’t get away from the litigious nature of thought in the modern world. I understand that ideas are important, and I understand wanting credit for things that we have done. I would be annoyed if someone took “my” design and claimed that it was their own (particularly if they attempted to profit from it). And yet, I think that a person would be fully justified in seeing my stole, liking it, and deciding to copy it. And then, if they accomplish this without a pattern that I’ve authored, have they copied, or used my stole for inspiration? It’s a fine line, and one that people draw in different places. The problem is, I’m not sure where I want to draw mine. And it seems that one should be pretty darned sure of where one stands on this topic before releasing anything out into the world to be subject to all of the acrimonious IP discussion.

Fleegle has done a beautiful job of summarizing her stance on the issue, and I do tend to agree with her conclusions. I don’t need the money (though who can’t use more knitting funds)? I don’t want to prevent people from knitting something they like simply because they don’t have the $5 to spare (and I think we all know someone in that situation). Knitting is a craft, a hobby. As such, I don’t think that it should be something you have to buy into for every project. I happen to be fortunate enough that I can afford to buy patterns and yarns that I like, but there have also been times in my life where I had $25 a week for groceries, and $5 is just too much when you’re in that situation.

On the other hand, writing up this pattern will take me a fair amount of time, if I want to do it right. (And I have a sometimes unfortunate tendency to believe that something that is worth doing is worth doing the right way.) Time is a precious thing in my life (I’d really like to meet someone for whom time is not precious…), and it’s hard to say that I want to write up a pattern more than I want to knit. That’s the tradeoff; I have no spare time to put into writing. I use it all knitting. If something takes time to do, it’s my knitting that stops. This makes it seem that perhaps one should be compensated for such sacrifices.

There are lots of people out there trying to make a living selling knitting patterns. If I give one away free, am I making it harder for them to make a living? Perhaps. I’ve heard the argument stated that way, at least. I’m not sure if this is the strongest argument I’ve ever heard, but it’s another thing to consider. I gladly buy patterns that I like, usually from independent designers. Since I buy so few, it’s important to me that I buy from the people doing the designing. When I want a project, I look to those people first to see if they have something that will fit. It’s the same as going to a LYS or an independent dyer instead of eBay when I need yarn; I choose to support the businesses that mean something to me, even if it costs a little more. I consider it part of being in the community; I read the designers’ blogs, I enjoy their wit and humor, and when it suits me I buy their patterns. But not everyone shops this way. Many people look for something free first, even if they can afford the pattern; cheap is often the bottom line. There’s nothing wrong with this; everyone has a right to choose how, where, and why they spend their money. But I can see how an abundance of free patterns makes it harder to be an independent designer, and I certainly wouldn’t want to see them go away for lack of business. I can see how generating one more free pattern helps to reinforce the expectation that patterns should be free, and could in some ways erode the value of a design.

Maybe I just overthink things. I can see both sides of the argument, and I’m torn. The simplest thing to do is to just not write the pattern, staying conveniently out of the whole murky situation. And yet there’s the sharing thing; isn’t that why we blog in the first place? To share what we’re doing?

Enough existential angst for today. I will continue to ponder. If you have opinions, I’d be happy to hear them. Now, in the interests of full disclosure, I should show you the other reason that I’m not rushing to write up the pattern:

As this post is already quite long, I think I will put off the full telling of that tale for another day. But we couldn’t have a blog post without some yarn, now could we?

Let’s skip right to the eye candy, shall we?

I was a little worried that the stole wouldn’t be big enough, it was only 10.5 x 51.5″ when it came off the needles. As you can see, it grew a bit after its bath.

I love the openness of this lace:

And it makes a pretty scalloped edge, too:

And the center join is pretty, too:

The fountains are flowing elegantly:

The perspective is pretty:

It’s even prettier in the light:

Jocelyn asked if I am considering writing this pattern up. I am doing just that…considering. More on that later…

I mentioned on Friday that I was taking my lace traveling. Four days and four planes later, we are home again. Why the sudden trip? I mentioned a couple of months ago that my grandmother was in the hospital for unknown reasons. Two weeks ago they arrived at a diagnosis, and she won’t be coming home from the hospital. She has a fatal disease which usually takes about 4 months to run its course. This meant that it was time to go back to Massachusetts, and sooner rather than later. We left Friday afternoon, and arrived back last night after a rather whirlwind trip. It is a strange thing to visit someone for the last time, knowing that it is the last time. When you live close to someone that is ill, you always hope for one more visit, and you can put off the finality of goodbye with the belief that there will be a next time. Things get harder when you live 3500 miles away, and when time left is counted in weeks rather than months. And yet, how many people say that they would give anything for just one more day? We are lucky to have had the chance to visit, with the mixed blessing of knowing just how momentous a visit it was.

All of the travel and all of the time spent thinking (and decidedly not sleeping) means that there has been much knitting. I was surprised to finish the center panel of the stole before we even got to our plane transfer last night.

I now have three pieces ready for grafting, which I’ll probably manage to finish tonight.

Tomorrow is group meeting, but I will try to have blocking photos Thursday or Friday. I can’t wait to see how it looks blocked!

I like to have knitting in my bag. I don’t like it when my balls of yarn get caught on things in my bag and the loops on the outside of the ball all come off and tangle themselves. For socks, the solution is easy; knit toe up, and once the socks are long enough, stick the ball inside the sock. Balls don’t get lost, yarn doesn’t twist when you use the two circs, and balls stay intact in bag. Socks, therefore, are perfect travel knitting, in my opinion.

Lace, however, is not. First of all, I like to knit from an open skein whenever possible (no balling involved), and lace is one of the few projects where I tend to stay in just one spot and knit. It requires enough focus that it tends to be a project that stays in one place and only gets picked up when I have some time to devote to it. But sometimes I want to bring my lace with me.

This morning, I gave in and balled the end of the skein for the current lace. It was sad to have to do this, but the skein had been twisted from the beginning, and it was starting to tangle a little bit. Since I wanted to take it along anyway, I decided that a little pre-emptive balling was in order. But that left me with the ball unwinding in my bag problem.

It occurred to me that I should make some little drawstring bags for just such occasions. While the bag is probably a very good idea, whipping out the sewing machine when you’re trying to go somewhere isn’t really so brilliant. No, little sewn bags would require planning and foresight, which I appear to be lacking in this case. I sat back in my knitting chair to weigh the risks vs. benefits of carrying unprotected laceweight in a purse. And then my eyes fell on this:

Hmmm. 5 minutes, a couple of feet of yarn, and a crochet hook turned it into this:

It’s a little bit hard to see, but my swatch is now a tiny little drawstring bag, just the right size to fit the ball of yarn and the lace. Perfect!

Maybe this will encourage me to make bigger swatches; each project could have its own little swatch bag. Maybe. (This is the part where the practical side of my brain needs a good elbow in the side for laughing so loud…)

Oh, I also wanted to say that I am reading your comments, though I haven’t had time to respond as I usually do. I will try to get back on that. I don’t know how Anne manages to answer each of her many, many comments (and usually in less than an hour, too!), but I am just not at that level of blogging sophistication yet. I do appreciate them, though.