Thu 20 Aug 2009
There was also a slightly green color on my fingers. Anyone else had this problem with Addi needles? I’m still knitting with them, because I love my addi lace needles and Inox are just not the same. I’m just trying to minimize contact between the needles and the yarn while storing them. I rub the needles down when I start, and I’m hoping that the color will just wash out at the end. If it doesn’t, it won’t be the end of the world, as I was thinking of dyeing the final product anyway. I’m still not terribly pleased. In other news, I am horribly behind in telling you what’s going on with this project. This processy-blogging works great on a daily schedule, but on a non-daily schedule it kinda drags things out a bit. So, despite the fact that I haven’t knit in four days (don’t know what came over me), I am still ahead of the blog posting. This is kind of a new thing for me. I can’t say that I hate it. So today, you get two posts in one. Tarnished fingers, and awkward joins. Part of the reason that I am playing with the maple leaf stitch pattern is that I wanted to see how lace patterns worked, from the inside out. I wanted to know this so that I could figure out how to put them together seamlessly. I didn’t really think about the join between the rick rib and the waving lace when I first knit the join in the alpaca stole. Or rather, I thought about it, decided that it was hard and I was tired, and just kept going. That gave me this: And so, I pulled back. Stitch by stitch, very carefully. Have I mentioned that alpaca handspun felts to itself while you knit? Very soft yarn, very fuzzy. I think understand why people complain about knitting with mohair. Every single stitch was tinked. No pulling. (Because pulling leads to felted knots, run stitches, and broken yarn. Ask me how I know.) But, I made it back. This time, I put some thought into the join. A lot of thought, actually. I removed a half repeat of the waving lace panel, partly to center it and partly because it was stretching more than my swatch said it would. I took care to make sure that the vertical columns in the rick rib continued into the faggoting columns in the waving lace without awkward jogs. I’ll show you what’s wrong with it (and why) next time. But for now? Look at that join!
As I was knitting on the edging for the first half of the alpaca stole, I noticed a slightly green color in the yarn.
And then I remembered noticing this once before, when I was knitting a stole last year on these needles. The yarn was dark, and I didn’t think much of it. But now, the yarn is creamy white, and the grayish-green of tarnished brass does not add to the finished piece.
It’s not horrible, but there’s a definite join between those two patterns. They don’t flow into one another; they collide.
It’s not perfect, but it’s a lot better.

Oh, yes. Very very nice. And much better. Now you've got to tell me what's wrong? Because I don't think I'm seeing it right off the top…
It's not just *handspun* alpaca that sticks…I do NOT undo any alpaca laceweight if I can help it! The second version definitely looks much better, though.
I use Addi's almost exclusively any more, and I've never had that problem, although it's been a long time since I've knit with white or cream. Something to look out for.
The second one definitely looks better. The lines flow nicely into the next stitch pattern. I also don't see what is wrong. Your hard work is paying off, it is beginning to look quite beautiful.
Yes, better. Could it be improved? Yes, I still see a line. Much more flow than before and this would be accepted by 99.9% of all knitters. If there were a way to make the tips of the motifs come to a join right at one of the lines in the faggoting, it would be awesome. If the half motifs could extend a hair more and come to a point… Oh, you'll have me designing lace before too long!