Saturday, March 25, 2017

Knitting Done!

Yup, one of those "more knitting posts to come" :)
 
This one is another one-skein wonder with a skein from a Yarn Crawl: Stormcloud Shawlette (I call it my Stormy Greys shawl).

Knitting
 
The yarn:

Mini Mochi, colorway 307, which looks in my pictures like a lot of relatively uniform dark gray, almost a solid color.  It's not; it was just bad lighting.  The color is really several shades of grays, including some teal-greys and burgundy-greys.  It's really pretty!  You can see it a little more clearly on the color card at Crystal Palace, but even there it's only a glimpse.  The picture where my shawlette is blocking is probably the closest you come to seeing the stripes. 
 
Mini Mochi  Mini Mochi

This stuff is soooooooo soft!  I loved working with it.  Some people have mixed opinions on Mini Mochi, but I really like it.  The biggest complaints are knots (but Crystal Palace has a pretty good exchange policy) and that it's a rather loosely-spun single-ply yarn.  That might make a difference for socks and how they wear, but since I don't really make socks (and even less so, now that I live in Hawaii), the single-ply is just fine for scarves and shawls.  Yes, I do still wear those living here - I work in a notoriously AC-ed environment after all.  Humidity is bad for books, not just for curls!
 
The pattern:

Stormcloud Shawlette by Hanna Breetz.  It's a free pattern available on Ravelry or at the designer's blog, Ever Green Knits.  It's a semi-circle of extended garter stitch (one row, k1 yo; second row, drop the yarn overs) with a bit of a ruffle at the edge.  Nice and basic, and a perfect one-skein project - just keep on going until you run out of yarn!

who me?

The shawl is fluttery and drapey and makes a nice warm little scarf at the size I made.  You can see in the pictures, it's just a little flip-around-the-neck sort of shawlette.  The single ball of Mini Mochi yielded 74 rows of knitting, just barely past the last increase row (the one where you need to knit straight across).  So, I have a teeny-tiny little ruffle.  If you have a bigger skein, you will have a bigger ruffle and a bigger shawl overall.  Like I said, it's one of those patterns that you can just keep going til you run out of yarn. 
 
Notes, Adjustments, Overall Opinion:

A nice, easy, mindless pattern that's been perfect for binge-watching Netflix.  I made this one as we were watching old Law & Order episodes (seasons 1-8 available were on Netflix - we missed the window when they had more seasons to stream). 

No adjustments, really.  To get a gauge I liked, I used size 8 needles with the sock-weight Mini Mochi, and then size 10 needles to bind off.  I also used a lace bind off (k2tog, slide stitch back to first needle, k2tog, all the way across).  You want the bind-off as loose as possible so that the ruffle doesn't pucker up oddly.  Remember: loose, ruffly, drapey!
 
And here's a clearer shot of the stripes, though it still kinda blends into my grey blocking mats.  And as you can also see, I block aggressively.  With a loose stitch pattern like this one, that actually worked very well,  The resulting scarf feels very light and airy, but being Mini Mochi (i.e. wool sock  yarn) is still nice and warm.

stormcloud stripes

My project is raveled here.
 
Knitting

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