One and a half repeats, half-width swatch of the pattern for my eldest goddaughter’s Yule gift, a convertible wrap/scarf/capelet/hood, knit with the Navajo-plied sample of my own handspun yarn:

Notes for the record (because my journal is mostly for my reference, after all): Swatch measures 6.25 inches wide by 3.75 inches high, pinned out (4 x 6 unpinned). There’s a bit of variation in the thickness of the yarn used, which is understandable; this is the first fibre I’ve spun of this type, and the n-plying was a bit tricky to get used to. But the pattern forgives a lot of the variation. Overall the yarn is pretty even, nice and solid, and knits decently. It’s not as soft as I wanted it to be; I suspect the two-ply will be softer once knit (it’s certainly softer to the touch in the skein), and that may end up being the element that decides two-ply vs. n-ply in the end. I want it to feel soft against her throat. If it’s beautiful but a bit scritchy, she’s not going to want to wear it. As for the pattern, easy-peasy. The hardest thing is going to be remembering which row I’m on of which repeat. I will make a list and check off every row as it’s completed.
(Gentle readers, you’ll have to bear with me as I publicly natter and keep notes about this project for the next two months. I can’t write about the other Yule gifts I’m making since the recipients read the journal. Someday my goddaughter will be old enough to read it, too, and then we won’t be able to squee about the cool stuff we think up for her any more. Speaking of which, I could have sworn we capered about in words and photographs regarding the truly stunning wand HRH made for her this last spring, complete with stunning storage box, but I can’t find it anywhere. Hrm.)
Okay, I have to admit, this particular swatching was a total spinning geek thing. Most knitters hate swatching, especially because swatches aren’t one hundred percent reliable (it also slows you down, because everyone wants to jump right into the Exciting Making Of Things!, and knitting a swatch is the equivalent of checking your materials and measurements sixish times before starting [needle size correct? yarn weight correct? yarn composition correct? affected by washing? stretch? definition?] and of looking both ways fourteen billion times before you cross the street). But swatching a handspun to make sure it behaves the way you need it to (before you spin/ply it all up and discover that it’s useless for the purpose for which it was intended)? Crucial. Because otherwise you not only waste your knitting time, you waste the fibre you’ve spun and the time used to spin it. Also, I’ve never knit with (a) a handspun yarn, let alone (b) a handspun yarn I produced myself. So yes, this was a total spinning geek thing.
I’ve been spinning with the wheel since I got in a third week of September, but the fibre has been for experimental purposes only, or for other people. It wasn’t until I couldn’t find the right yarn with which to knit my goddaughter’s Yule gift and realised that I could spin the yarn I wanted to knit with that I really, truly understood how spinning and knitting were going to work together for me.
I don’t think of myself as a knitter. I’ve finished all of nine things in the past year since I began knitting, mostly hats (two) and scarves (three). Things beyond simple knit stitch scare me. I’ve only just mastered yarn overs and k2tog. I can’t purl to save my life unless I do a bunch of them in a row; alternating purl and knit breaks my brain. Ribbing makes me suicidal or homicidal, depending on the day.
But spinning? Love it. The problem with spinning is you end up with yarn, and you have to figure out some way to use it up. Offloading it to friends once it’s good enough is one way. (Gods bless Ceri, who cheerfully supports this method; so much so that she buys me fluff to spin up so she gets yarn at the end of the process. If anyone else wants in on this, let me know; I am not kidding. Fully serious. You want handspun yarn? Ask; we can work something out where everyone benefits.) The other logical way is to use it up by knitting with it myself.
This was always going to be a problem for me, because as I pointed out above, I don’t think of myself as a knitter. Someone needs a hat or a scarf, so I make one. My office is cold, so I make a lap blanket. I need slippers, so I knit a pair. The boy falls in love with Star Wars, so I knit a lightsabre. (Just work with me on this one, okay?) I don’t stash yarn the way other knitters do; I go out and buy what I need when I need it.
So yes, it took me this long to figure out that I could actually spin a specific yarn for a knitting project I wanted to undertake. Because for me, it’s primarily about the spinning, not the knitting.
(Except in this case, where I decided to make something special for my goddaughter because I remember how I felt when one of my relatives gifted me with something grown-up around this age. I decided to knit a beautiful wrap for her, but I couldn’t find the perfect yarn for the project. Enter spinning as the solution. In this instance, I worked backwards: a knit project needed a handspun yarn, instead of a handspun yarn needing a knit project.)
Anyway, despite my thick skull and amusingly slow connecting of the dots, I here demonstrate my first knitted handspun sample. I’m really extremely proud of it, and I think I have every right to be. Because I not only knitted that swatch, I spun the yarn with which it was knitted. And it acts like real yarn. I can’t get over that bit.
Of course, swatches lie like lying things, so I can’t trust it fully. But I can admire it, even before washing and blocking it. And I invite you to admire it, too, if you like. Really. I’m horrible with compliments, but I’m so thrilled about this particular accomplishment that if you want to compliment it or me, I won’t stop you or duck it, I promise.
Next up: Knitting the same sample with the two-ply made from the same handspun singles I did the n-ply with. Ceri has confirmed that the two-ply is softer to touch and the colours seem brighter, so we’ll see how it behaves when knitted with the same needles in the same pattern. I suspect it will be a bit splittier, but the way it feels may make up for that.
WOW! The swatch looks great, and she’s one lucky little girl to get a gift as neat as that. :)
I’m not much of a knitter, either – I took knitting back up when I started spinning for the same reason. Oddly enough, I haven’t used a lot of my handspun in my knitting projects – I haven’t found the right yarn for the right project yet. Oh well. :)
Yes, but you’ve come up with an excellent solution: sell the handspun in your Etsy shop! I love the Mossy Glen and Walden yarns you recently posted.
Speaking of which, people, the Feeling Sheepish shop URL is http://www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=6770543 and the website/blog URL is http://feelingsheepish.com/blog/. Her stuff is glorious, both the hand-dyed fibre and the handspun. I’m awaiting the day I can afford to indulge in it.
It’s gorgeous! I can’t wait to see the second swatch!
Also, if you need to borrow the blocking pins/wires for the day, you’re welcome to.
I may take you up on that offer once the actual wrap is finished and washed, but for a quick look at the actual pattern, dressmaking pins in my desktop worked just fine. It gave the pattern a tiny bit more space to be defined against the white background.
I can’t get over how fibre as bright as this colourway muted so much in the spinning. It’s so understated now.
The advantage of the blocking wires is that they give you a straight edge so you don’t drive yourself crazy trying to get rid of all the little scallops the pins create.
I’m really surprised with how it’s changed, too. I thought spinning brightened things up, but I guess I was wrong?
Not necessarily. Think about predrafting, when you slide the staples past one another to open it up before spinning? Now think of doing that with fibre pattern-dyed as closely as this was. The colours don’t draft evenly; some of the blue pulls past the pink, the green gets pulled into the pink, and so forth. So they blend in the spinning, which calms the colour down. The interaction between the original colours side by side as well as the half and quarter tones produced by the blending create the new effect. A longer colour repeat would preserve the original colours more, especially if you n-ply it.
Although I suspect the kind of wool/fibre used would have a large effect on whether the colour is intensified or muted in the spinning, too. Something with a shine like milk or seacell or silk would have a brighter feel to it. This was what, an unidentified domestic wool blend? Not much to it at all.
You can compare dyed fibre with spun yarn in the Feeling Sheepish Ravelry group: http://www.ravelry.com/discuss/feeling-sheepish/527993/1-25 . I think Autumn Sunset is a really good example of how things blend. Someone’s posted the yarn they spun from the Granite colourway too, which is one of my favourites, but you can only see the original in the Etsy listing (caution, Etsy!) here: http://www.etsy.com/view_transaction.php?transaction_id=16700463
yes yes yes! i want handspun yarn and I would love to make you something with it using ribbing and/or alternating knit and purl stitches =) I love intricate patterns. If you like the scarflet I’m doing on Ravelry, I can make you one of those in a weekend.
the yarn swatch is gorgeous!
I knit..well. Knit and purl. That’s all I’m up to. But handspun yarn sounds fun. Maybe we can chat over it?
Oh, gosh, I didn’t mean to suggest making something for *me* with the handspun – I’m all about spreading the handspun love around so everyone can enjoy something made from it. But I won’t say no, WE! You’ll have to tell me what kind of handspun you want for yourself, too. Hurrah, a trade!
Roo: Yes, we will talk. :)
It’s turning out so beautifully! Devon is, indeed, a lucky girl!
As for the wand and case of last year, Jeff and I capered about in words and photos about it in our blogs, so maybe that’s what you’re remembering?
(I only wish, as always, that I could be as crafty/creative when it comes to my godson’s yule gift!)
xox