Finished Object: Harry
Pattern: Harry by Martin Storey from Jaeger Handknits JB29
Size: 6-9 mo. (20" chest)
Yarn: Knit Picks Telemark (100 percent Peruvian highland wool; 103 yds per 50 g ball) in Lichen, Colonial Blue, Delft Heather, Squirrel Heather, Icicle, and Deep Navy; Henry’s Attic Kona Superwash DK, undyed
Yardage: Unknown quantity of leftovers
Sources: Knit Picks; Catnip Yarns
Needles: US 3 (3.25 mm) and 4 (3.5 mm) straight needles
Gauge: About 25 stitches and 32 rows = 4" in stockinette stitch
Notes: This little sweater is so satisfyingly cute that it makes up for the lengthy finishing stage, which involved sewing up all the pieces, knitting up the button bands and seaming them on, knitting on the collar, and weaving in far more ends than I could possibly have produced in the process of knitting the sweater.
I decided to knit Harry in the first place because I had a bunch of leftover Telemark yarn in search of a project. Unfortunately, I didn’t know exactly how much I had of anything, so I had to make some educated guesses about how many stripes I could manage of each color, and I did run out of navy blue at the end — as I ran out of just about every color. This made the decision about what color to make the collar quite simple: the collar had to be gray, because that was the only color I had left in sufficient quantity. And then I ran out of gray, so the collar is a bit on the short side. I decided to finish it off in navy to help make it match the rest of the sweater. Necessity is the mother of invention.
While looking through one of my grandma’s photo albums yesterday, I saw a picture of a sweater she made me for Christmas when I was about ten. I had forgotten all about this sweater, and I was surprised to find that it uses the exact same pattern as the Harry sweater (horizontal stripes with a few rows of "teeth" at each transition) and pretty much the same colors (several shades of blue with white on top). How delightful!
I’m visiting my parents this week, so I’m trying to get my mother’s second sock done while I’m here. Next up will probably be a sweater from the Woobu yarn that I showed in my last post. I knit a swatch that I’m very happy with; I have to see what the intended recipient thinks. The Woobu knits up like a dream, and it has a really impressive shine that somehow manages not to be garish. I’m looking forward to working with it.
This entry was posted on Monday, June 16th, 2008 at 7:46 am and is filed under Finished Objects, Projects in Progress, Swatch-o-Rama. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.



June 16th, 2008 at 10:37 am
The Harry jumper is gorgeous and how lovely to find that photo. Will make it a special garment
June 16th, 2008 at 1:01 pm
I love how those little “teeth” of color look! What a clever way to jazz up a striped sweater.
And I love reading stories about serendipity–especially where knitting is concerned. The blue-edged gray collar looks fabulous.
June 16th, 2008 at 9:14 pm
I don’t envy you the end-weaving, but Harry is adorable. Excellent job. Way to use up some stash! I can’t wait to see more of Neiman…
June 17th, 2008 at 11:42 am
Love the way it turned out once the collar was on. The collar and cuff treatment, both in color and stitch chosen, is especially artful — looks really great all on its own, and then bounces with the body pattern and color for an especially nice end result!
June 21st, 2008 at 8:44 am
Harry is adorable. I love the colors of the Woobu yarn for the Neiman sweater. That sweater really caught my eye when I first saw it on Knitty. And it still looked good after a closer look. But with three jillion items yet to knit, I don’t know.
June 22nd, 2008 at 6:46 pm
What an adorable sweater (though I can’t imagine all those ends!) - your little sweater from your grandmother must have been waiting in your subconscious all those years - how wonderful that the two are so much alike.
Have a great visit with your folks - and that Neiman will be lovely - what a pretty, shiny swatch!