Tuesday, January 15, 2013

There's Always Tomorrow...

As it's now January 15 and I've only just cast on the 180 stitches needed for my very first sweater, I've come to a realization: knitting a sweater is remarkably like going to the gym or going for a run.

Hear me out.

I'm going to go for a run.  Really.  There is a beautiful reservoir that overlooks my apartment complex that conveniently has a wide, paved walkway that is 1.25 miles long with distance markers spray painted directly onto the path every quarter mile.  It takes me about three minutes to walk from my door up the well worn doggy path up to the path.  It's even unseasonably warm and the sun is shining, the perfect day to start running.  I have my spiffy running shoes and I've even invested in a very serious sports bra and seamless athletic shirt (to prevent chaffing, you know).

But I've got a headache, so I'll just go tomorrow.

Yesterday, I was tired.

Sunday, I had papers to grade and it was my sweetheart's birthday.

Saturday I was so exhausted from a long week of student teaching that I just really needed to focus on Sherlock and Benedict Cumberbatch's cheekbones.

Coincidentally, these are also some of the reasons why I hadn't started my first sweater for the 12 in 12 until today.  At first I had a legitimate excuse: The yarn didn't arrive until the 8th.  Since then?  Yeah, just being a bum.

Today was the day, however, that I rolled up a skein and cast on 180 whole stitches!  And, if I work at least 30 rows a day from now on, it should be finished by the end of the month!




1 skein, 19 rows, and 12 hours later...





Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Sweater Shavers

Due to a combination of poor planning and switching up my sweater order last minute, the yarn I ordered for my first sweater has not yet arrived and thus I can't start.  Things I have learned from this: don't order yarn 3 days before it's time to start the project; If you have yarn for something you should probably do that first.

SO needless to say I've been pacing around my apartment frantically looking for things to do to distract me from the fact that it's January 1st and I am not working on my first sweater for the 12 in 12.  A good way to start out the new year?  I think not.

And then it happened - I stumbled upon a hat that I had knit for my boyfriend just over a year ago.  This was the second hat that I'd knit for him and is by far his favorite (probably because it actually fit him, unlike the first hat).  I feel in love with the pattern, Shilling by Chris Terramane, and ever since have used it as my go-to man-hat pattern.

Unfortunately, after a fall and two winter's worth of wear, this hat didn't exactly look like new.  It was fuzzy with the kind of love that blurs stitches just as well as it blurs minor flaws in your sweetheart.  Unlike minor flaws, however, I really much prefer my stitches to be well defined.  The problem: fuzzy stitches.  The solution: my sweater shaver.

About a month ago I ordered a sweater shaver along with a bunch of books on Amazon, following the logic that I'm a broke graduate student who can't run off and buy a ton of sparkly new sweaters every fall/winter and that if I'm already spending x amount on books, another $8 certainly isn't going to feel like that much more.  So, it arrived and I dutifully removed the little pills from my favorite teaching sweaters and I threw it in a drawer so it wouldn't be in my way until next fall.

At any rate, I took this little device to my sweetheart's hat and, like magic, it looked like it did the day after I bound off the stitches and weaved in the ends.


Before (lighting isn't so great for color, but you can see the fuzzies)
After (OMG look at all of those stitches!!!!!)
The hat is red, despite what the first picture might like you to believe.  The sweater shaver didn't magically change the color, I'm just not very good at pictures.

In short, for those looking to keep their lovingly knit items looking new, I really suggest investing in a sweater shaver.  I use a little handheld Remington, and I really can't speak for any other models or the long-term effects of sweater shavers, but I thought I'd share my positive experience.

Now, back to pacing...