Showing posts with label EPAA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EPAA. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2014

Craft Time! EPAA Square 2: Barbara Selesnick

DSCN0133
It's a Chain of Hearts! There's a song in there somewhere.


The second block from the afghan is the Barbara Selesnick square,  I think I may have actually done this one as my fifth or sixth square because it is also a bit on the small side and I know if I had seen that happen twice in a row I would have begun to default to knitting everything a needle size up.  This one though, is definately on the recommended needle size of 8, which is also about the largest needle size I would ever use with Cascade 220 superwash.  The square as it measures at the moment is about ten inches tall and 11 inches wide. So it should be fine in the afghan itself once there are other squares to hold it in place. 

As  far as knitting this one goes, I don't remember any real issues. The charts are an every other row, 4 row and 20 row repeat so it isn't difficult to figure out where you were when you left off. I think sometimes people over think stringing charts together.  The only row numbers I bother to really track (if I track them at all) are the main motif rows. The others just cue off of that.  Is the row I'm on even and a multiple of four? Great then I'm on row four of Chart B, even but not? then I'm on row two. You really only need the if/then statements if you are lost: which in this one wouldn't really happen because it's pictorial. 

Speaking of being pictorial, I'd like to talk about the overall design theory of this block because it's one of the two main types of designs you will find in the afghan. I call them the "snapshot" and the "picture frame" block theories.  In the "snapshot" blocks, we get multiple repeats of a vertical design that could easily be used for a strip afghan.  In the "picture frame" blocks we normally get a centered, closed, single motif.

I will admit that I think every block I omitted is in the latter category, as I think with those blocks you either really love them or really hate them. 

Monday, June 9, 2014

Craft Time! EPAA Square 1: Carol Adams

EPAA Carol Adams
See the introduction to the Epic Pink Aran Afghan here.

This was not the first square I completed, but since I didn't really write down the order in which I had done my squares and only vaguely recollect which were early as opposed to more recent, I figured I would use the order the squares are being worked in the Knit Along for this afghan in the JimmyBeansWool group on Ravelry.

I actually remember the process for knitting this one pretty well since it was the first time I had done a reversible cable.  I wish the center was something more interesting than simple lace diamonds, but hey, given how busy the rest of the afghan is, it works anyway.

I used the recommended needle size of US6 (4mm) and my square is a bit small at about 10.5 inches square. It stretches to the full 12" just fine though so I'm not worried about it going into the afghan.  All of my squares are knit with Cascade 220 superwash, which is a bit thinner than regular cascade 220.  I'm not sure I would really call it a worsted so if you are using a true worsted the size of the square would likely come out more true.  This is a very easy square with only basic increases and decreases and even though it's reversible, a simple cable.

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Craft time! The Epic Pink Aran Afghan

The beginning was so long ago....
I am a knitter.  I'm just going to throw that out there now because I'm pretty sure that it will be impossible to keep the knitting from bleeding into the other areas of the blog from time to time.  It isn't the craft that I've been doing the longest: that would be cross stitch, which my Daddy taught me when I was around 8. Then came sewing, which I still love and do. But knitting, which I taught myself as I was moving here to Iowa seven years ago, seems to be my one true crafting companion.  It's portable in ways that both embroidery and sewing are not, it's a bit more mindless for those moments when you just need to move your hands, and it's cheaper per hour of entertainment than sewing is by a long shot.

I will admit, I'm not the fastest knitter and I have a lot to improve when it comes to technique.  Knitting teachers would cringe if they could see the way that I still drop the yarn frequently rather than tensioning it properly between my fingers. I'm also not the most persistent knitter when it comes to finishing projects either. Hence, the Epic Pink Aran Afghan.  The pattern is the Great American Aran Afghan, which began as an afghan square contest in Knitter's magazine. It's a 20 block cable and bobble fest with lots of interesting techniques and novel constructions. I've been working on my project for about 5 1/2 years.

It isn't that the afghan is particularly difficult as most of the squares are just cabling and a couple of lace bits, it more that it's modular and well....pink. It was started in a wish for spring and that's mostly when I work on it, averaging maybe 3-4 squares a season before I get called to less wooly pursuits. The squares are too handy a stopping point and offer that sense of having "completed something" when you haven't really completed anything at all. At this point, I'm 17 squares in and with the end in sight, I'm hoping to actually finish this beast some time this year.

To keep me motivated, I thought I would post some of the individual squares and talk about the process of knitting them and walk down knitter's memory lane.