Socks with Magic Loop
I had a little private lesson with Sarah during the Gig Harbor Retreat on how to use the Magic Loop for socks. As I mentioned, this little lesson has changed my opinion of the magic loop method. Why? Because I was getting ladders at the “turn” and I often would slide the 2 sides together back into a single side. Per Sarah, it was probably because I was using a too short circular (32″ addis). She recommends a 40″ needle. Not that the 32″ doesn’t work, mind you, but that the 40″ is much easier. I hied myself up to the vendor booths and promptly bought a 40″ addi with some Koigu (just twist my arm!).
Then, she taught me her method for doing toe-ups. Yes, it’s just a regular figure-eight cast on, but she made it so much easier. Why? She helped me get over the fear of that sloppy initial row. How? Keep it sloppy! This makes it easier to go back and neaten it up later, after you have a few rows under your belt. Now, you can actually see what stitches need to be tidied up instead of digging around for the correct row.
Whew. 2 fears/dislikes allayed with a single session. Here are pictures of toe up socks.
Mobius
I played hookey from work yesterday afternoon and took Cat’s class on making felted mobius bowls. What a mind blowing experience that was! I’ve been wanting to try a mobius scarf for quite a while, but reading about all the different manipulations one has to go through to get the twist in there correctly so that you can knit it as a single piece (vs. seaming after the fact, like they teach you in grade school with paper strips) was hard to visualize.
I don’t believe I’ve seen the way Cat does it on any of the web sites/patterns. I’ll have to do more research on this to be absolute certain. But what I can say that it is the most fascinating experience. You just can’t believe that what you are doing is going to work, but each “round” that you knit, you are actually traversing the entire single edge.
All I can say is … buy the book (on Mobius knitting: scarves and bowls) when it comes out later this summer. Especially if you are mathematically/scientifically/puzzle minded. You can have endless hours/days of fun with this.
Here’s a picture of the pre-felted bowl. It’s made from Araucania Nature Wool in black. I had some leftover from the skein, so I casted on another mobius for Martin to see (he didn’t believe me). It was just enough to make a little hair band for me. A little Alice in Wonderland. Or is that Alice Through the Looking Glass?
P.S. My new drum carder came in yesterday. More on it later this week.
Grace
Ann,
That is a fascinating little bowl. It has
only 1 surface!
I have read a book describing knitting in
the round that says to be careful when
joining the ends so that you end up with a
cylinder instead of a Moebius strip. It then
continued, you may want to deliberately knit a Moebius strip scarf that way. It might have
been ‘Knitting w/o Tears’ or ‘Knitting in
Plain English’.