Tag Archives: scarf

finished objects knitting

Another FO: Staggered Rib Scarf

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Staggered Rib Scarf on MishaToday, I present to you my version of Suzie Blackman’s Staggered Rib Scarf. When I was at Michael’s during one of their yarn sales, I came across this particular shade of Bernat’s Softee Chunky yarn that was going to be perfect for my man. He confessed to me, when he picked up a pair of fingerless gloves striped with black and this particular shade of puky greenish-yellow in Camden market in London last June, his love for the colour. Additionally, I recently bought him a wicked magenta and black snowboarding jacket by Orage (from a few seasons ago – which meant it was heavily discounted – w007!), and figured this colour would work perfectly with the magenta shade in his jacket.

And, I was right. Remarkably, it also perfectly matches a tiny splash of that colour in his blue hat, which he wears everywhere in winter because it’s so warm (also pictured here). I do need to replace it, as it’s getting a little worn, but now I’m not certain what to do – the hat paired with the scarf look so good together, but then the blue doesn’t match the jacket, so… perhaps a black and green striped hat to match his fingerless gloves is in order.

Staggered Rib Scarf on MishaIn any case, the project itself went pretty well. It took me approximately two weeks of knitting, mostly during class whilst listening to my profs lecture (I’ve discovered it’s a far better way of concentrating on what my teachers are saying – I find I have to keep busy during lecture, or else my mind wanders, causing me to miss half the content). I wrapped it up the night after Valentine’s Day, so in a sense, this is my late Valentine’s gift to him. He wore it for the first time last night, and my girlfriends very kindly complimented him on it :)

The only modification I made to the pattern was to add one extra set of stitches to make it slightly wider than the pattern originally called for. I figured this would be appropriate, as he’s so tall, and therefore probably larger than the average person (in bone structure, certainly not in girth – if anything, he’s barely heavier than I – which can be a source of some troubling self-criticism, on my worst of days).

The project page for this scarf is here, on Ravelry.

Staggered Rib Scarf in Bernat Softee Chunky GrassI did have one little issue with the yarn, however. I’m not certain how it came about, but for some reason there were chunks of dark brown, straight hair tightly woven around some parts of the yarn. That’s right – tightly woven *around* the yarn, not spun in with it. I was able to cut most of it off after the scarf was completed, very carefully with a pair of extremely sharp, small knitting scissors I won off a blog contest once. But the dark brown strands trouble me. What are they? Are they human hair, as I suspect? Why would human hair be wrapped around strands of factory-made yarn? It brings to mind the horrific stories from Fast Food Nation: The Dark Side of the All-American Meal. My active imagination called up a story in which a woman working the yarn-spinning machines, loses the bun in her hair and some of it spills into the machine, being sucked in to wrap around the yarn at some stage during the process. But this is all my imagination – I have no idea how factory yarn is made, who operates the machines, where it’s made, whether hair can possibly fall in or be torn off someone’s scalp, or what… I suppose I would like to know where this yarn came from, or perhaps be reassured that that’s not what this was.

What do you think? Have you ever bought yarn that had something suspiciously like human hair wrapped around it? What did you do – return the yarn, contact the manufacturer, cut it off and ignore the questions I’m sure came to mind when you encountered this? Perhaps it’s a normal occurrence and this is merely my first experience with it. I simply don’t know.

Anyway, enough of my drama-inducing musings. The scarf looks great on my man, and the photos turned out nice too. Onward, to my next project!

knitting

Flores Dandy Scarf

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Wearing my Dandy Scarf

Wearing my Dandy Scarf

So, after lamenting how long it takes to begin a new project, I finally came across what I figured would be the perfect pattern for the yarn featured in my previous post, Lang Yarns Flores in purple.

I had picked up 2 skeins on sale at Casa Lana, in Cologne (Cologne yarn shops post to come!), and I wanted to make a decorative neck piece for it. So I scoured the Ravelry database until I came across the Dandy Scarf pattern, by Alexandra Tinsley.

I noted that it’s easily customisable and figured I’d have enough yarn to bang this out pretty quickly. Considering my recent failure with the Gisela pattern (another post to come), I wanted something to help boost my confidence back up. The Greek wrap definitely helped with that, but I needed more than just one successful project to motivate me to the point where I could pick up Gisela again and fix my mistakes on it.

I quickly bought the pattern, and Alexandra was very timely in emailing it to me after my purchase through Etsy (you can sometimes wait quite a bit of time to hear from sellers on there). I began the scarf, and after only one small hitch (a few edge stitches fell off my needle one evening), I was able to backtrack only 10 rows and pick up from there to finish up – yesterday! I did have to return to Cologne to buy another skein of the yarn, as I didn’t follow the instructions and begin the second half when I ran out of the first ball – and I wanted to include tassles anyway, which I wouldn’t have had enough for even if I had followed those instructions.

Dandy Scarf in Flores

Dandy Scarf in Flores

I have yet to block, as I need a considerable area to lay the scarf flat and possibly iron it, or at the very least pin it out when it’s wet, and I don’t have any tools to do that here. It’s too heavy to wear in Greece, or even here in Bonn as there seems to be a pocket of tropical weather visiting us this week (we’re uncertain how long it will last – usually it’s only a couple of days at a time, followed by 2-3 weeks of chilly, rainy weather), so I’m not missing out on any wearing opportunities. And best of all, I have some of the yarn left, so if my tassles ever destroy themselves, I can make more – or consider making some other type of hanging decoration. All in all, I’m quite pleased with the results of this one.

You can check out my Dandy Scarf on Ravelry.