Thursday, March 27, 2008

Liberate your laceweight...the campaign continues

Every time anyone sees me working on my Longterm Laceweight tube scarf, jaws drop and at least one person says something like, "I want to do this!" But I haven't seen any evidence that people are actually cracking open their pet skeins of laceweight and casting on...until last night.

Emily was at Lettuce Knit last night, wearing her first completed Liberated Laceweight project -- a beautiful, insanely simple [the bang yourself on your forehead simple in its perfect brilliance] shawl. Laceweight, knit in eye of partridge. What a brilliant way to show off variegated yarn without having to fight a complex lace pattern. And Emily assures me it was nearly as mindless as my stockinette tube with faux seams. Here's another post with more in-progress pictures and her reason for jumping on my tiny bandwagon.

Here. Look at the gorgeousness:


Freaking gorgeous, Emily.

Now come on. I know you've got at least one skein of laceweight just sitting there, gathering dust, in your stash. You bought it because it was beautiful but maybe you don't knit so much superfine lace. Well, it's time to crack that skein open and start knitting something perfectly fine-gauge, mindless, and sense-pleasing. Trust me. It'll make you feel good.



[and if you do, take the button and tell me about it. i'll tell you i have at least 2 more skeins in the queue for when this one is finished.]

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p.s. yes, I think fingering counts too. If you bought it cause it's pretty but aren't casting on for the more-complex project you intended to make with it [even if it was socks], then come on down!

does anyone have a suggestion for Balletmommy -- something mindless with creamy cashmere laceweight?

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Pithy instructions [:-)] for the stockinette tube scarf, as requested

once i found the correct needle size to give the fabric i wanted, i chose the shortest circular needle i could find (in this case, a knitpicks 16” in size 0 – i would have preferred addi turbo lace, but they don’t go that small).

i then cast on just enough stitches to go comfortably around the circular without having to force it. divide that number of stitches in half and place a marker on each side. then choose some sort of faux seam treatment. i am doing p1, k1, p1, after each marker, and all the rest is straight knit.

keeping it simplel.

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Comments:
This is a lovely shawl! Thanks, Amy, for bringing it to our attention!
 
Hm...no lace weight on hand to liberate, but I've got a bag of fingering weight that has been relegated to the knitter's equivalent of Siberia for over a year, and it would be perfect for this shawl. Does that count? :)
 
What a beautiful shawl! I've got some laceweight that has been sitting in a box for longer than i'd care to admit. This may be just the right project for it. thanks again, amy!
 
i'd say fingering counts!

welcome aboard!

(and regina -- send me a pic of your kitty! i love little kitties!)
 
I DO have some laceweight just waiting for me to liberate it. But it's solid cream colored (cashmere!) that I'd love to do something pretty with that doesn't take lots of pattern watching. Any ideas?
 
I'm definitely getting on your bandwagon (eventually!)... I have some handspun laceweight that immediately sprang to mind when you mentioned your project. Haven't been in the same room with US 0 16" needles yet to make it happen, though. :)
 
OK. You've convinced me...i need a super simple, non-sock, project for the commute, so i'm going to use the bright pink laceweight that i have in my stash & make my own scarf. I've been considering it for a while & I know a bright pink scarf will get WAY more wear than the shawl i originally got the yarn for.
 
I came to the Knitty Yarn Roundtable last week but I didn't get to show you my liberated laceweight. I made a skein of Schaefer Anne into a Clapotis Scarf. It was totally inspired by you and I love it. I'm grabbing a button for my blog and possibly setting aside more laceweight for simple stuff in the future.
 
Thanks for the compliments, Amy! *blushes* You've totally broken my blogs stats :) I love being on the tiny bandwagon -- here's to more liberated lace-weight!
 
I'm with you on the lightweight love Amy! I'm doing the Woodland shawl in a fingering weight alpaca. Pics on Ravelry and on the blog.
 
I love the liberated laceweight movement! I'm curious what's your recipe or pattern for the knitted tube scarf you are making for yourself. I'd love to knit this with some of my laceweight collection, erm, stash. Can you provide some guidance? Thanks.
 
I love your lacy tube! I love lace weight, but also love knitting and knitting and knitting in the round, so this is perfect! You've inspired me to knit a tube like lace yarn shrug! Thanks for the inspiration
 
thanks so much for showing Emily's eye of partridge shawl... it's working great for the skein of Claudia's handpainted silk I'm using as a gift for my soon-to-be sister-in-law! woo-hoo!
Jen
 
I liberated some yummy Malabrigo laceweight and also used your button. I have to say...I prefer a nice worsted.
 
I've also done a Clapotis scarf in handspun laceweight, you can see it in my Ravelry:

http://www.ravelry.com/projects/Lloer/clapotis

BalletMommy could knit a simple stocking stitch cowl perhaps?
 
I was just thinking about your scarf the other week Amy! I have some lace weight that I don't know what to do with, and remembered your scarf. I favorited it on ravelry so I'd remember. Only have 400yds though, so I might have a much shorter/smaller scarf...
 
I just finished a scarf like this with my Wollmeise! I called it KISS (keep it simple stupid) Love it. Love yours!
 
Beautiful! I LOVE this idea. Great ideas always come from AMY!
 
Could you please start a Ravelry group with this mission? I couldn't believe it when I searched and there wasn't one... how else are we all to share our progress? :)

Thanks for the super idea and the motivation.

Cristina
 
This is such an awesome idea! I've been following the story of that gorgeous laceweight yarn of yours (I'm green with envy for that shade of blue-gray) and I think it's going to be fabulous.

Question: why the faux seam(s)? Do they serve a function or is it purely decorative?

I am definitely going to join this liberation front.
 
I jumped on the bandwagon too! :)
 
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