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The Poolside Knitting Table (note obligatory gin!) |
Because let's face it, the last week in Portugal has been a bit of a scorcher. But having a beautiful pool on hand to cool down, and a week of serious relaxing without any pressure to do hectic sightseeing, it looks like the next CalKnits project is well underway.
Introducing Michelle - cause of the first ever CalKnits kit (the Textured Stripe Cushion).
Now two years on Michelle wants a cable knit cushion, in blue, so it was game on, time to get the charts out...
On the design brief; lots of texture, traditional pattern formation, interesting stitches, but "doable" for a beginner cabler. In my mind, an envelope style knitted all in one (to minimise sewing up), beginning and ending in 2x2 rib with a buttonhole overlap, so that the front of the cushion has a full aran panel, and the back has a row of buttons about a third of the way down (or the front, because let's face it, it's Michelle's cushion and she can have it whichever way round she wants!)
And the problems so far: getting a 2x2 rib to merge nicely into the vertical lines of the cable design, given that the cable panel needs 10 extra stitches to make the right width; finding a way of getting the pattern repeats to fit in to an overall repeating pattern so that the chart doesn't have to be gazillions of rows long, and keeping on top of the maths on what is meant, after all, to be a holiday, with all of the obligatory holiday distractions (pool, kids in pool, lots of food, more pool, and gin - hic!)
Anyway, almost there, and whilst I'm sure there will be a few hiccups before the pattern is fully written up, here's a sneak preview of the design so far. As you can see I'm working it in a rather beautiful browny purple shade called "Damson", which is 90% wool / 10% silk (all those little flecks), and just goes to show that if the patterns are bold enough they show up well even in a darker coloured yarn. It combines trinity stitch (all those little bobbles to either side), plain cables, diagonally travelling stitch, moss stitch, and a really rather pleasing stocking stitch / moss stitch combo I found in Lesley Stanfield's Knitting Stitch Manual as the centre piece.
The finished cushion will be slightly bigger than the other CalKnits designs; a snuggly 20 inches square to give enough room for all the patterns.
Spot the wooden knitting needles - which successfully passed through hand luggage enabling me to keep knitting on the plane. Unlike my metal cable needle, which I packed into hold luggage just to be on the safe side, leaving a serious space for improvisation in working cables whilst airborne. And I can now state with some authority that the inner of a ballpoint pen is not very good at all, and a hairgrip is just about workable, but only just! So a set of wooden cable needles is high on my priority list for future high altitude excursions!