Monday, August 07, 2006

As the sands through the Hourglass...

I finished up the body of Hourglass Sweater over the weekend. I toyed with the idea of adding a bit to the length, but I ran into a weird tape measure paradox. I'm hoping to wear this at least early in the fall, so I made a larger size, and I was thinking I might want it to be longer to serve as an interim maternity kind of sweater. The body length is written as 15 3/4". When I measured from my armpit to where I thought I wanted the sweater to end, I got something ridiculous like 18". But when I got the bright idea to measure a sweater that has about the same length as I'd like for this one, I got 15" from armpit to the bottom. huh. So I just went with the original length. Here it is so far:

Here's a closeup of the increase/decrease "seam." It's kind of bugging me. I did the increases and decreases as stated in the pattern (ssk/k2tog and kf&b), and I feel like it looks unspeakably sloppy. This might be my execution, or I might prefer less visible increases. I don't feel that the decreases look as bad. I guess this is where a seam would be on a not-in-the-round sweater, so it probably doesn't matter. Any thoughts?


I like this pattern. I am a bit nervous about the sweater's fit, since the book includes a great photo of the sweater laying flat on something, but not one of someone actually WEARING the sweater. (Knitting book pet peeve #427: Skip the artsy crap and show someone wearing the sweater so I can see the length, hang, ease, etc.) We'll see. I'm excited to be using up quite a bit of my impulse sale-buy tan yarn, with the added bonus of getting a sweater at the end.

Annie, that's really interesting! I'll let you know Sept. 1 :)

Reading: Mansfield Park. Rachel, I haven't read Anne of Green Gables in ages! I have to dig out my copy.

Writing: Revision this week.

Cooking: I made the Doughnut Muffins yesterday. Mmmmmmmm.... They are pretty easy to make and just fantastic. Tender crumb, lightly spiced, and the cinnamon sugar really makes you feel like you're eating a doughnut. I'm curious how these would be made in mini muffin pans. Maybe even more doughnutty. Anyway, Matt loved them. He's used to my whole grain-fruity-reduced fat muffins, which he likes okay, but he thought these were delicious. They are particularly nice with a cup of coffee. Notes: I only got 21 muffins out of this, not 24, using a 1/2 cup measure. I originally got 18, but did some batter reorganization and managed to create 3 more. Also, I was a little mad that I had over 1/2 cup of melted butter left at the end. What do they do in the original recipe, soak the muffins in butter? I brushed pretty liberally and didn't even use half. I would definitely only melt one stick of butter next time, and probably reduce the cinnamon sugar by 1/3 or so as well.

6 comments:

Holly said...

You can try this website to see if there are pictures of anyone wearing the finished sweater:

http://hourglass-knit-a-long.blogspot.com/

Yours looks great! I agree with you about the "seam". My sweater looks the same way. And there's a little section where I got careless with pulling the yarn as tight so I have a tiny part of the seam that is a little loose. But since I'm not one to frog back. And I figure, whose going to be looking at my side?

I'm at a standstill again. I got tried to get a 12" circular to do the arms and the store near me had to order it. I got the dpns but but I'm not too excited about using them when I know if I just wait, the circular will be MUCH easier and more fun to use.

Wow, I'm really rambling today! :-)

YarnThrower said...

I think your sweater looks very nice, and I wouldn't worry too much about your underarm "seam". I find that a M1 increase can be less visible, and can also be "paired" -- there is a version which slants to the right, and a version which slants to the left, so that is what I often use when I have paired increases which I want to be hidden.....

Those muffins sound soooo yummy! I always find something interesting when I read your posts!

Annie said...

Really makes you wonder, right?!? hee hee hee. The pictures of your cats always crack me up. Hooray for personalities!

Rain said...

You won't see the in/dec seam once it's on so I wouldn't worry too much. I tend to do paired M1 increases too rather than kfb which can look a little neater. knittinghelp.com has a really good section on increases and shows the different types and their mirrored version.

Margaret said...

I'm making the hourglass right now too, and yep, my increases look exactly the same (I'm actually glad to see yours, I was worried I was messing things up :) Yours looks beautiful!

String Bean said...

I like my shaping to be invisible, too. I only use k-f/b when I want that little purl stitch for decoration. I think I would have changed it to a m1.