anne wrote this mid-afternoon:

i’m so embarrassed—there i was, running on about the great progress i made on my second french quarter sock the other day, showing it off in an up-close photo and feeling good. i don’t know how many times i looked at the sock and the photo, but i missed a big boo-boo.
when i sat down to work on it later that night, i realized i had skipped six or eight rows when transitioning from the first pattern repeat to the second. it was missing a row of twining cables in between the bigger garter diamonds. sigh. ri-i-i-iiiipp.
i’ve got that straightened out though, and have moved on to knitting the lower leg portion. it looks much better now.
i even put is aside, once it was fixed, to work a couple of rows on my baby pine and ivy shawlette. in fact, i’ve done that for two nights in a row—stopped my late-night sock knitting to put a few rows on the shawlette just before i head for bed (i know, it sounds like suicide but i can’t help myself).

i just wanted to get it past that very early stage where the new cast-on so annoyingly winds itself around the needle and slows down the work a bit (i bet you never heard that one before).
i’m going to love it in this yarn, too. this is the smallest size—really, a large scarf—which i’m knitting in fibre isle magique. i’m testing one of sylvie’s new colors—this one is called magical twilight, a subtle taupey-plum color. once i get a little more fabric on the needles, the color should show up better.
i just worked on this piece a little bit over the last few days because i’m intent on preserving my late-night knitting slot for socks and my earlier evening knitting time has been devoted exclusively to the medium sized shawl that i’m knitting in my cashmere/silk handspun

the yarn has gradual color changes as i work through it and now we can see the effect of the browns that are closer to the end of the skein (i’ve been waiting for this moment, haha). i wound the yarn so that there would be more variation near the end of the ball, where the yarn is knit into the shoulders. the very long color repeats are at the hem, where the rows are much longer.
i’m not sure exactly how the color runs will play out, but so far i like what i see. i’m halfway through my first repeat of section B and the rows are definitely feeling much shorter—i should be able to make very good time on it from here. i might even get through all the rest of section B tonight.
and what’s that peeking through the background of the photo?

yep, it’s the big-daddy pine and ivy that karolyn knit with woolen rabbit tranquilo in colorway black velvet; i blocked it this morning.

just look at that depth—i love how the thin strands of each yarnover almost disappear to make that hem motif seem to float.

it’s a great red for this piece—not bright at all—it’s a stunningly sophisticated colorway that hits the perfect note.

the gorgeous, soft alpaca has such complex highlights and takes the dye with great depth.

there are the pine cone clusters i love so much, running up the back to connect the hem to the neck.

the complex structures that come together at the hem are echoed at the neck and shoulders as well, where the back panel ends

this is where i made a design change from my very first sample draft, in which i carried the body motif right to the neck

now we have garter stitch triangles in the shoulder section instead. what worked really well in the medium-sized first sample just wouldn’t work with the numbers of the mini and tall size, so a change had to be devised. i think this is a good solution that lends a “period” feel to the design. i can’t wait to see it on the dress form, once the shawl is dry.
now that you’ve seen all the details, wanna see the big picture?

although i am calling this the “tall” size in the pattern, it’s not as large as i have designed for other patterns. i think this is the limit it should be in size—i don’t like the idea of stretching the proportions any more than they are here. i doubt that the hem will hold its own if the body were to be knit any longer.
it’s a smallish shawl and i like it that way . . . i also have a sample from karolyn of the mini shawlette that i need to block, once the red one is dry. so maybe next time we’ll examine that.
it will be a little while longer before this pattern is ready for release; it’s a complicated design and i don’t want to rush any part of the production. i’m thinking that we’ll have it all pulled together before the end of the month, possibly sooner.
so, right now i have just two little shawls and a sock on the needles (and two longjohn socks waiting in the wings to be knit). i’m thinking that in a few days, i might be yearning for some variety . . . maybe some whimsical lacy mitts and a little beret? something light and pretty to wear for spring?
that’s the sort of thing that’s singing me a siren song today

(doesn’t the shadow of my back fence look like a quill edging?)
it’s really warm and beautiful here right now—55 degrees—a temperature we haven’t felt since november or october, i think.
we’ve had a huge swing in the weather since the weekend—it’s simply splendiferous.

the very first crocuses are up and the snow i showed you the other day has almost disappeared, shrinking away like a collapsed meringue.
i think i’ll need to ditch the exercise bike today and get out on the open road . . . see ya later.