FO: The yarn that was supposed to be Tempest is now something else!

Tappan Zee

Pattern: Tappan Zee by Amy King
Yarn: Yarn School Corriedale Cross, ~675 yds.
Needles: US 5/3.75 mm bamboo circulars
Start/finish: 26 March - 26 April 2010
Gauge: 20 sts/32 rows in 4 inches
Comments/modifications: What a lovely and quick (despite my time line) knit! A top down circular yoke is not a sweater style I've knit before, but it was really fun. The lace pattern in the yoke keeps it from getting too monotonous, and the yarn colors helped with the monotany on the body. I made one major modification: instead of binding off the sleeve stitches when I got to them, I put them on holders. My thinking was that I wanted to put sleeves on when I was done with the body, and make them as long as the yarn held out. Once I was done with the body, I decided to keep the cap sleeves for the moment, so I bound off in knit from the wrong side. That way, in the fall when it starts getting cooler, I can pick out that bound off edge and knit the sleeves down.

Tappan Zee arm

I love the diamond detail at the bottom,

Tappan Zee hem detail

which matches the diamonds in the yoke.

Tappan Zee yoke

Now for the yarn. I blogged about the spinning last spring/summer, but discovered when I started swatching, that the yarn need a bit of TLC. As you can see,

TZ swatch pre-adjustment

I was a wee bit tense when I did the plying. Perhaps I was a bit overplied myself, what with the move and all, but there is some serious skew in that stockinette. Add to that the fact that the yarn was not so pleasant to knit with (read: wiry, stiff and scratchy) and I decided that I needed to do something to take out some of the plying twist.

I took the three skeins I'd planned to use for the sweater (based on relatively similar grists) and ran them back through the wheel to take out some of the plying twist. I basically put the brake band on tightly, and re-plied the yarn with the wheel spinning in the same direction as when I spun the singles. I more or less let the yarn run onto the bobbin with only a little bit of tension, but if I came across a section that was really over-plied I held on a bit longer. Reskeined, rewashed, redried, and reswatched.

TZ swatch post-adjustment

Much softer, much less noticeable bias, much more pleasant to work with. I've gotten a wee bit obsessed with grist recently, so I noted what these skeins came in at: 253 yds at 1094 ypp, 285 yds at 1140 ypp and 225 yds at 973 ypp. I started with the heaviest grist on the top, since the skein I have left for the arms is also around 975 ypp, and I wanted the lighter fluffier stuff in the body.

So all in all a great success. I desperately need to find the right buttons for it, but that may have to wait for a bit, since we've now entered The Month of Nonstop Houseguests. We currently have four parents and four girl children, aged five and under, in our house. As soon as the extra parents and children leave, we get an old friend from Tucson and his SO for a few days, and then a couple weeks later, Nana arrives. So forgive me if the blogging is a bit hit or miss for the next few weeks. Maybe I'll be able to get back here regularly when we finally have a functioning government!

Wiktory!

I know the standard is "pix or it didn't happen", but it's almost midnight and pictures will have to wait until tomorrow. But let the record show that at 11:32 pm GMT on 24 April, 2010, I finished spinning a veritable marathon of purple singles. Hooray!

In a week or so, I'll start the UltraMarathon of 2 stage plying. But for the moment, I think I'll celebrate by spinning something completely different.

Or maybe I'll knit something...

Almost there!

Here's the progression of my spinning week:

Monday night,

What's left, 20 April

By Thursday night,

What's left, 22 April

As of right now (6:00 pm GMT on Friday):

What's left, 23 April

This is all that's left.

What's left, 23 April

I am ahead of schedule, and I'm finishing tomorrow if it kills me.

ETA: I forgot to put in this picture of where I was spinning today:

Spinning on the porch

Countdown

OK, started off with 4.5 oz of purple fiber for my Vine Yoke cardigan left on Monday afternoon.

Monday night: 3.8 oz (watched Fantastic Four, which was ok)

Tuesday night: 3.1 oz (watched FF sequel, which was rubbish)

So, at the rate of 0.7 oz/2 hours, I should be down to 2.4 oz or less tonight, and 1.7 oz tomorrow night. Friday night is off because Himself and I are going on a date for the second time in eight days (!) and will be at a wine tasting. So saturday night I'll be down to 1 oz to go, which means I should be able to bust out the last ounce on Sunday. And that would set me up for starting to ply the next weekend, but we'll be out of town for part of it, so I'll aim for starting to ply on Bank Holiday Monday (aka May 3rd). I'm hoping that the plying will go a bit faster then the spinning, because four months is already too long to spend on one spinning project. Seriously!

Growing

There are definitely lots of things growing around here at the moment. Camellias,

Camellia, Isabella Plantation

Magnolias,

Magnolia, Isabella Plantation

Tulips,

Tulips

Laptop bags,

Pre-icord and felting

Cherry blossoms,

Incipient cherry blossoms

Pitcher plants,

Pitcher plant, Isabella Plantation

Handspun sweaters,

Tappen Zee in progress

and children.




Given the last, I'm embarking on another craft for a few days - sewing new summer dresses for the girls.

Summer dresses for girls

You'll be glad to know, however, that there are some things that are shrinking around here, i.e. my massive ball of purple top.

What's left, 19 April

I'm now down to only 4.5 ounces to go. And since I'm imposing a moratorium on knitting for the next few days (my wrist is acting up again), I'm hoping against hope that it will get finished this week. Then I'll take a week or so before embarking on Neverending Plying.