Colette Cowl

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"Some [projects] are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested." With apologies to Francis Bacon, this cowl was absolutely the latter. This is probably one of the most challenging knitting projects I've tackled and took nearly 3 years to complete. I'm a big fan of the FO and my mom (to whom I gifted it) was thrilled, but I'm not sure if I'll be making another any time soon.

Pattern: Colette cowl knit in Lux Adorna artists palette. Used size 7 16" circular needle.

New skills: Kitchener stitch

Lessons: Save learning two-handed fair isle for smaller projects like hats. I knit just over half the cowl knitting two-handed, but getting correct tension while learning continental was so hard and I wasn't having fun. I frogged the part of the checked section I was working on (I was already done the hearts), and restarted using English only and switching my working yarn. Much faster / more comfortable.

A tail 4x the circumference of the cowl left just enough to Kitchener stitch all the way around.

Using some vinegar while blocking works to prevent the dye from bleeding.

By thoughtfully sewing in ends (pulling the tail away from the previously knit section, and taking care to sew into colored blocks instead of white ones) the gaps around the seam stabilized and looked very clean on the FO.

What I'd do differently: Something weird happened at where I'd joined my round while Kitchener stitching. I did my best to clean it up, but it's still a little wonky. I want to spend more time practicing this technique. Otherwise, I'm very happy with the changes I made midway through the project – they saved a lot of pain and regret down the line.

Inspira Cowl

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My mom and I live in crafting symbiosis: she buys yarn, and I turn it into cozy things for her.* After their last trip to the Maritimes, she brought back a haul of treasures from The Mariner’s Daughter in Lunenburg, NS. Still working through the stash (it was, uh, formidable) until I can stow away on their next trip and visit in person...
*She's also well-versed in the care and keeping of handknits, so there's no anxiety about accidental tumble drying. (I feel like every knitter has a horror story about one of their FOs getting dryerized.)

Pattern: Inspira Cowl by Graphica; made in Noro Silk Garden

Lessons: My new fave, the sewn bind off, isn't well-suited to Noro yarn. I ended up with some splitting and had to spit graft the sewn end a couple times before I was done.

Instead of knitting 2-handed like I usually do for colorwork, on this project I knit full English and just swapped which color I was throwing. The finished fabric seemed to have more even tension between the 2 colors, and it (counter-intuitively) felt faster then 2-handed knitting. I still feel like I should just suck it up and learn to knit Continental for real.

What I'd do differently: Maybe plan my color transitions a little more? I feel like I got lucky this time.