I cast on for the other front-side of the kimono sweater last night. Managed to get most of the seed stitch done. I have to check it against the already completed front piece, but was too lazy to pull it out last night :) If there’s any more to do, it’ll only be a couple of rows at most. As I’ve said before, I love the way seed stitch looks, but am not thrilled with the working of it.

Instant panic…
Fortunately, Myria found it, tucked in between a few other things where it couldn’t be immediately seen. She wore it yesterday with her smashing fuschia sweater (which I did not knit).

These are the yarns that I mentioned on Monday.

Ryan (of Mossy Cottage fame) offered this URL in a comment the other day. Go and take a look. The cable in the featured sweater were created with the help of dice. Tossing the die determined when the cables were twisted. I would have thought that the amount of randomness in this exercise would make a chaotic and unattractive garment - and I would have been wrong. It’s a very intriguing idea and definitely worth playing with!
The Dos Amigos haven’t left me alone since I got home.

I have been working on the poncho too but I’ll wait until I’ve started the increases and have something different to show you to post another picture. It’s coming along well though and is simple, simple to work as it’s just knitting around and around and around. Makes really good TV knitting :)
I hope you’re all having a great day. The weekend’s approaching - have faith!
No trackbacks yet.
I’m enjoying watching the kimono sweater come into being! Doesn’t it have a colored band that runs up and down the front and around the neck? What colors are you going to use?
Hey Ryan :)
The original sweater does have a multi-colored band and I like the way it looks but haven’t decided how I’m going to handle it yet. The colors would certainly jazz up the sweater, but I keep wondering if making the band in the same color as the sweater wouldn’t make the garment more versatile?
Hell, girl, you could go out and buy the perfect versatile sweater in a heartbeat. This is about creativity, color, fun, going’ crazy! I say “versatile, shmersatile!”
Yep, still glad to have you back and postin’!
For your three yarns, are you wanting to make a scarf from them? If so, why not try knitting one the long way—cast on 150 stitches or whatever gauge would give you the length you want and then stripe it with those three yarns. Cut the yarns at the end of each row and it will self-fringe. You could make narrower or fatter stripes as it pleased you. Maybe use that dice throwing thing to determine how many row to knit at a time.
Hi Charlotte - Thanks for your suggestion; that’s definitely something to think about :) I get a little shy about casting on a LOT of stitches, but maybe it’s time I got over myself?
Charlotte,
If you still have the three skeins of blue yarn, try knitting one row of each at a time--the right yarn will be at the right end every third row. Laura Bryant and Barry(?) Klein’s latest book features yarns knit this way and they’re beautiful. I tried it wth Berocco’s Glace, Eros (or Binario) and Flash or another Trendsetter eyelash yarn. It’s absolutely beautiful.
Also, your blue yarns might look great knit on the bias, also one each row--that’s my next project.
Peace and grace,
Renee
