sleeve_one.jpgSo, between reading and writing and getting ready to present a paper and all of the other stuff that goes with graduate life, I’ve been remiss in posting actual photos of the pattern project I’m working on.

I’m not about to change that….

No, seriously, folks, this cardigan has been killing me. I thought for a while that I only had 3 skeins of yarn left, which is not enough to finish two sleeves, and the mental anguish that yarn shortage causes just wasn’t something I could deal with. Instead of facing it head on and actually doing the knitting to see how things might progress, I let the project hang out on top of my knitting pile for more than a week, taunting me. I think the taunting was so drawn out because I had a deal with chemgrrl that I wouldn’t finish this spring/fall cardigan until she was done with her ill-timed winter mittens.

I’m happy to report, however, that the taunting was ultimately unsuccessful and I held up my end of the deal. I do, in fact, have enough yarn (a 4th skein was hiding behind, well, the other 3 skeins), and this photo documents the completion of the first third of the first sleeve of the second version of Suspension Cardi (full photos and revised pattern forthcoming).

The original was knit in a bulky cotton yarn (Blue Sky Organic Cotton, 3.5 sts to the inch) but I wasn’t happy with how the yarn held up (lo, the shredding and pilling!), so I reknit it in an easier-to-come-by alpaca/silk/merino worsted blend (KnitPicks Andean Silk, 4.5 sts to the inch). I’m still trying to decide if I’m going to include both gauges in the final pattern or just the worsted.

In other news, KnitPicks now has a lace-weight version of their merino/silk blend Gloss. Just in time for summer lace knitting. Woohoo!

armhole1.jpgYay! I’ve gotten to one armhole and the short rows are lurvely.It remains to be seen whether or not the armhole will fit, but that’s beside the point. (In all seriousness, I think the armhole will be fine, it’s just that there’s less curvature than I’d normally put in an armhole because of how I did the calculations.)

droppedsts.jpgIĀ am a total moron. I dropped the wrong stitch in this drop-stitch patternĀ during the three-needle bind-off process. In my own stupid pattern. You’d think I’d have seen it when I did it, but nooooooooo. It’s fixed now, but I’m soured on the project and have moved on to something more soul sucking: grading.

Does it ever strike you that the academic world is really more like a Wes Anderson movie than the other way around? Although I do have to admit that Bill Murray and Angelica Houston very rarely appear in my day-to-day life….