Saturday, April 9, 2011

Branched Out into an Annis

So as you all have heard by now - I have rejoined the Saint Louis Knitting Guild. Yes I know I have sworn in the past "NEVER AGAIN" - but we will all now admit that when we say never...well that doesn't exactly mean never! I rejoined so I had a chance to see some friends that I never get to see. Like most woman my friends have families and jobs, responsibilities and obligations. And like most woman if I don't make a concerted effort - my bonds with my sistafriends are some of the first that end up getting sacrificed on the altar of daily turmoil. So...

The Pres calls and says there's this meeting of the education committee and why don't I come. And since I haven't seen her in over a month I say Sure - one things leads to another and I found myself doing a class on the "Branching Out" scarf. But with a twist - see if you can "branch it out" into a shawl for an intermediate group of knitters. I does love me a challenge so this is what I came up with...
I combined the Branching Out (sort of) with the Annis (shaping...sort of). So here's my recipe without stepping on copyright infringement...

cast on...I used some Blackberry-Ridge lace weight and a size 8 needle to cast on using a long tail cast on and some stash beads. I turned to page 312 of A Second Treasury of Knitting Patterns by Barbara G. Walker - there it sits "Leaf Shadows" - this is a simplified version of the Branching Out Scarf - the difference is it uses a centered double decrease (slip the next two stitches together as if knitting, knit the next stitch, pass the two slipped stitches together over the stitch just knit) this makes for a much easier to remember lace pattern...

That means that I have a 19 stitch pattern and since I wanted it to look as familiar as possible I added a 3 stitch garter ridge. So I knit my swatch which turns out to be about 4 inches...which if you do the math means that my 19 repeats of 22 stitches plus 3 end stitches will yield a piece of knitting about 76 inches long. So I cast on using some stash beads on a size 8 needle, dropped down to a size 6 immediately after casting on - knit 3 ridges of garter (boring) and started knitting the lacy bits! Then life stepped in and my rectangle needed to be finished ASAP, so I'm panicked - yikers - I know I've knit an Annis before - why not use the short row shaping and get this thing done!!! But even that wasn't going to save me so before I started the shaping I kindda fudged...I needed to get rid of a bunch of stitches so...you know those 3 stitch garter bands between the lacy bits well I did a centered decrease which took it down to 1 stitch and then you know the centered decrease in the middle of the pattern well I threw in a centered decrease there too... so there went 76 stitches - which felt really good - so I did it again poof there went a total of 152 stitches all hidden in 3 ridges of garter stitch I did before starting the shaping...I was pressed for time and did a short cut - so sue me! Now take a look at the shaping of the freebie pattern called Annis over on Knitty - knit to the center of your shawl and begin the shaping. I'm not going to spell this out - the Annis pattern is not mine to publish or quote - but you know how to short row and I'm guessing you've passed math so go forth and knit! And to finish everything off I used an I-cord bind off!

Before blocking I gave my shawl a bath in some Pantene For Dry Hair shampoo (it's sheep hair people) and followed the lather, rinse, repeat instructions faithfully (just an aside - it does not say to complete this task in a washing machine - I took this as a hint and did my laundering in the kitchen sink) I then followed it up with some Pantene Conditioner - filled the sink 1/2 full of water, dissolved about 1/4 cup of conditioner in the water, plopped in the shawl and watched All My Children (time for some new writers - please - Rev Ricky - really?). Then rinsed the shawl in cool water - threw it in a salad spinner to get rid of the excess water and pinned it out to the bed. And since I was in a rush hit it was a fan - cause I needed to teach the next afternoon.

And as a final note - well kids - this same recipe/shawl will work with whatever stitch tickles your fancy - take out a stitch book and sub in something you like! Impress me - I double dog dare you!!!