Bairn Throw

This blanket is a love letter to practice and mastery. My first Bairn blanket required meticulous row tracking & squinting at cable charts. The process of making it was interesting but not enjoyable per say, and by the end I was grateful I'd chosen to make the smaller size. A glutton for punishment, I decided to make one more larger throw for myself (I mean, the cable work *is* lovely). Turns out all that struggle had quietly translated into rote memory, and I could happily abandon my charts and instead enjoy the process of reading the work itself.

Pattern: Bairn Blanket by Brooklyn Tweed; KnitPicks Swish Worsted

Lessons: Be mindful and read patterns carefully, especially when repeating a project. I missed the repeats on the setup rows, which I realized while working the finishing rows.

Cables knit in the wrong direction can be salvaged by taking out the offending stitches and using a crochet hook, cable needle, and optimism to rework them.

If you're working on a large project and using small skeins, buy one more than you think you need. I was short a half skein, but thankfully had some leftovers from another project and KnitPicks dye lots are very consistent. Could've been a whole lot worse.

Knitting full size blankets is wonderful because you can use them for their intended purpose while making them.

Pro tip: I found cabling to be a pain for a long time because I couldn't find a cable needle that worked well for me. Hooked cable needles were a godsend.

Chunky Slipper Socks

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Whipped up some slippers for my wide duckling feet. Next up will be adding leather soles for extended wearability & a little more grip.

Pattern: Chunky Slipper Socks by Churchmouse Yarns; Brooklyn Tweed Shelter in Narwhal

Heel: Knit 22 rows to get 3.5 inches (23 counting the pick up and knit row)

Foot: Knit 23 rows until 6.75 inches long

New skills: Practicing sock construction

Lessons: Holding two strands of worsted yarn (BT Shelter) creates a reasonable approximation of bulky yarn.

How to finally pick up and knit on a heel flap; the key being picking up stitches from the knit stitches and not the turned edge stitches.

If the pattern specifies lengths (e.g. knit until 2"), keeping track of rows makes sure both slippers are identical. They'll stretch, so when the instructions say to make them a 1/2" shorter than your actual foot length, pay attention. :)

What I'd do differently: This is a bit of a cheat because I actually frogged my first slipper which used the instructions for wide feet (too wide). I'm glad I did, because the the fit on attempt #2 is pretty perfect.