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It’s the process…

It’s the process…

Designing a shawl is a many step process.  I’m going to be speaking at my local knitting guild in the fall about how I’ve been learning to be a designer and so I’ve been thinking a lot about the steps.

Not all the photos come out exactly as I expect.

Mayil is my most recent shawl and it started out as being the “wings” (the two triangular sides) of a center panel shawl that I spent weeks working on, and ended up shelving because it wasn’t coming out the way that I wanted.  The center panel and the wings, just didn’t work together when I started knitting it so I decided to let it go for a while.

But then I got some yarn for my birthday which I thought would look great with the wing pattern, so I pulled it out, revised it some more and Mayil was born.

It took about four weeks for me to get it knitted in between all my family and part time work responsibilities. Then another week or two to write up the pattern and get pictures taken.  And then I sent it to a tech editor who was swamped and took a couple of weeks to get to finding my typos.

Small errors, but I’m glad to have a second pair of eyes to look at it all!

Now it’s being test knit by the amazing volunteers on Ravelry who have until the end of April to finish.  The final step will be to release the pattern on Ravelry.  And wait.  Wondering.  Will anyone buy it?

Tierra Shawl Joins the Independent Designer Program at Knit Picks

Tierra Shawl Joins the Independent Designer Program at Knit Picks

I’m very pleased to say that my Tierra Shawl, which was made with Knit Picks Diadem Fingering Yarn, is now part of the Knit Picks Independent Designer Program.  You can view the pattern here on the Knit Picks website.

Diadem yarn is one of my favorites, and this is the second shawl I’ve designed using it.  It is a silk and alpaca blend so it is amazingly soft and has almost an inner glow to it.  I have two more colors in my stash waiting for the right shawl design.

First Pattern for Sale: The Tierra Shawl

First Pattern for Sale: The Tierra Shawl

I’d like to introduce my friend Rebecca, who graciously agreed to model the Tierra Shawl for me.

The Tierra Shawl is a bottom up shawl with a ruffled border followed by gently bending flower buds.

Short rows create the crescent shape and the top border is made up of smaller bobbles that echo the flowers.

And you can buy it now on Ravelry!

Quick Holiday Project Fun

Quick Holiday Project Fun

As I work on my new shawl design, I keep taking one day or one afternoon breaks to make quick knit or crochet projects for the holidays.  These are things that just take an hour or three but you get the buzz of accomplishment.  Here are some of the ones I’ve done so far:

A manly cowl adapted from the 1-Hour Herringbone Cowl.  This one took more than an hour but still I finished it in an afternoon.

Gecko bookmarks for the Homeless Garden Project store.  I did two in two hours, while chatting, so they are pretty fast.   I did these at a charity stitching event.  (All the other items were made by other stitchers at the charity event!)

Infinity cowl— this one took a few hours, but once you do the set up round, it’s mindless and easy!

Simple headscarf, slightly adapted from Calorimetry,  I did this in about three hours.

And finally more charity stitching goodness from our group.  I made one of the stockings (two hours with chatting), the two massaging soap holders (right hand side, about an hour each) and the crocheted cuffs/bracelets (about an hour each).

Logo

Logo

Yesterday, I submitted my first proposal for a knitting design to a company.  I thought I probably needed a logo for my designs and came up with this:


Heddi Craft Designs Logo.png



What do you think?

New Day, New Design

New Day, New Design

I was having trouble getting starting on a new project of any size and decided that the raspberry shawl was still bugging me.  So I did a few more swatches and I think I’ve come up with some good border bits, though I’m still thinking on it.  But while I was doing that, I found two patterns that could combine to make what I thought would be a really lovely border.  So now I’m working frantically on this brand new thing and the raspberry shawl is languishing again.

A Tale of Two Curling Edges

A Tale of Two Curling Edges

This curly mess is a new shawl/cowl that I’ve been working on instead of reworking the Raspberry shawl.  It’s called Verdu and is worked in the round with my last skein of the now discontinued semi-solid Daidem yarn from Knit Picks.  I was imagining a sort of stretchy, deep cowl that I could pull round my shoulder like a shawl, but even before I cast on, I realized I only had enough yarn to make a cowl.  No problem, I thought, maybe it would still make a skinny thing to go around my neck and I can test the pattern for a deeper one later.  Plus, as I started in I got the stripes I was so surprised about last time I used this yarn.  It looks just mottled on the skein and in a ball, but when you start to knit, distinct lines of color show up.  The first few color changes were at ideal points, the next few, not so much.

I noticed the bottom edge was curling as I knit up, but things got quite shocking when I cast off, as you can see.  I couldn’t even put the thing around my shoulders because the curl was so pronounced.

I went online wondering why the mad curling had happened and found my exact situation on the ever-wonderful TechKnitting blog (here quoted at length):

The chain of logic behind non-curling stitch bands is this: the garment designer notices, correctly, that stockinette stitch curls like mad, but that garter stitch (seed stitch, ribbing etc.) does not curl or flip. “Ah ha!” says the designer, “I will put a garter stitch band on this stockinette item I am designing, and then the stockinette fabric will be tamed, and the garment edge will not flip or curl.”  

This is a logical conclusion, and, in fact, garment edge itself will not curl up. However, that does not mean that the GARMENT will not curl up. As disappointed knitters in knitting forums all over the internet can testify, the most likely result of a garter stitch band on a stockinette stitch garment is that the bands either flip up, or the whole garment continues to curl, taking the “non curling edge” right along with it.

Solutions: Reworking the pattern edges, blocking the heck out of it (in progress as I write), and careful application of steam, heat, and/or pressure.  (For other types of garments there are a few more, but these are the ones that would work for my project.  Find the full discussion on TechKnitting.)

Moral:  The more I learn, the more I need to learn.

Updated:  Aggressive blocking does seem to minimize the curl but I think it will return while wearing.  Another possible fix is adding garter stitch ridges before and after the ripple sections in the design itself.

Making Knitting Charts in Google Sheets

Making Knitting Charts in Google Sheets

I’ve been using a program to make charts on my iPad using an app that is no longer available, so even though it’s still on my iPad, I’ve been looking at other options for how to make knitting charts.  I work primarily with an iPad and with a Chromebook, so Windows software for charting isn’t really an option and neither is a graphics program like Illustrator.  I came across some articles like this one about how to use Excel to make charts.  Well, I don’t have Excel either, but I do have Google Sheets.

The first step was making the grid in Google Sheets into even squares.  It turns out if you click on the box in the upper left hand corner you can manipulate the size of all the rows or columns at once.  However, you are just doing it by eye.  There was no way I found to specify how to change all the rows to a specific size at the same time.

So after adjusting back and forth a bit, I would back out and select one row or column and check how many pixels wide or tall it was by two finger tapping on the column and then picking the “Resize column (or row)…” option on the menu that pops up.  That would tell me the current size of the column or row and then I would go back and adjust until they were the same pixel height and width.  With everything still selected, I went to “Format– Align” and made sure the alignment was centered left to right and top to bottom.

Next problem, no special symbols menu in Google Sheets.   I opened a regular Google Document and went to “Insert– Special Characters…” and picked symbols for the common stitches I use in charts.  I copied and pasted those in a row across the top of my grid paper spreadsheet.  I can copy and paste them onto the squares as needed.

Here is a copy of what I did that you can use to get started.  Just click on the link and the sheet will open up.  You can make a copy to edit it.

So now I can more quickly make charts from written patterns because in a spreadsheet I can copy and paste repeats and rows and motifs.  You can see an example below.  This is a chart of the Pendants pattern from the Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns by Barbara Walker.  You can see the little arrows I used to mark the beginning of the repeats.  The charts could be transferred to a pattern by taking a screenshot and editing in a web based program like Pixlr.

Balance?

Balance?

I’m about 25 rows into knitting the raspberry shawl and I’m starting to feel worried about the balance of open space from the center panel to the wings.  It’s a little hard to judge unblocked.

However, the transitions I created for the wings get more airy before they get less airy, so it’s just going to get more open.  One problem in creating charts is that on paper, more symbols look “heavier” and less symbols look “lighter” when, in fact, with lace the opposite is often true.  
I really like how the center panel has been designed and I’m excited about the short row point.  In fact, I even love my transitions between three related patterns for the wings.  They might very well make a great shawl on their own, without a center panel.  But I’m beginning to think the two don’t fit together well.  I’ve become rather brutal about frogging things that aren’t working for me in yarn.  I have a rather large bin of half finished quilting projects that will probably never see the light of day because they stopped working at some point.  It’s empowering somehow when working with yarn that you can reclaim your fiber!

Center Panel Shawl Update: Not as easy as I hoped

Center Panel Shawl Update: Not as easy as I hoped

Five techniques later from The Principles of Knitting, and I was no closer to finding a short row method that made a nice point for my next shawl.  So off to the next resource, the internet, where I found this lovely gem:
The Fleegle Symmetrical Short Row–No Wraps, No Holes, No Hassles

And now I have a sample that looks like this:

This swatch is basically the very bottom tip of the shawl with only a portion of the
center panel design, two tiny corners of the wings of the shawl, and a bit of border.
Fleegle’s system creates a bit of a change of direction of the stitches along the point, but no unsightly holes and no major disruption on the front or the back.  It has a tricky bit where you knit or purl into the stitch below, but I think it’s worth the effort.  
Now the next question, do I like where the center panel design ends or would I rather it be pushed now into the point a bit more?  Basically that’s a question of would the eye like a balance amount of white space (or raspberry heather space, in the case of this yarn) or would the extra fabric near the point pull your eye down in a pleasing way?