Sunday, January 02, 2011

Done!


The last stitches were completed on The Victoria, AKA the purple shawl of death, within the past week. Did you hear my primal scream??

This was an interminable project. It sat idle for months at a time, and at one point I wondered how I'd ever summon the fortitude to make it around the perimeter with that devilish border. The answer was to take a few cleansing breaths and get down to business. That happened this fall.

My window of opportunity for lace knitting (before I get tired and prone to stupid mistakes) is about one border repeat per evening. So slow and steady--as many evenings as I could, I knocked off one border. Enough evenings, and voila--a completed shawl. You know the Days of Our Lives line about sands through the hourglass? Well, here are the days of my life, all laid out in yarnovers and DOUBLE yarnovers of purple Kidsilk Haze.

Ends have been woven in, and all that remains is the blocking.

I get impatient with the blocking process. (The knitting is done and now this s..l..o..w process has to be done too? ) Don't we all want instant gratification? (Instant? I've been knitting on this thing since March of 2009!!) But of course it only makes sense to take the time to do it right. Blocking magically changes the character of the piece.

I first dunked the shawl in cold water; it's amazing how it soaked up the water. I let it soak for 15 minutes or so--wanted to make sure it was saturated.

A couple years ago, I invested in a set of blocking wires, which are worth every penny. Anyone thinking of knitting a shawl--bite the bullet; buy the blocking wires. I think these cost about $40 US.


The set has wires of two sizes. These are the shorter ones.


You can weave the wires along an edge and the edge will dry straight and true. Without the wires, pins are needed every half inch or more and the edge would still no doubt end up with wiggles. With the wires, only occasional pins are set to hold things square and straight.



This shawl's border has points. I stretched each point out and pinned it.



Here's the whole thing laid out on the floor on beach towels--hence the odd colors floating up from underneath. I sprayed the whole shawl with water when it was all pinned--just to make sure none of the points had begun to dry.


Now just to wait a couple days till it's all dry.

15 comments:

be*mused jan said...

I bow to anyone who knits anything in Kidsilk Haze!
Lovely shawl, well worth your stick-to-it-iveness!

Kim said...

GORGEOUS GORGEOUS GORGEOUS Kathie! I have yet to delve into any sort of lace knitting, but I see it on the horizon. Nothing of this magnitude though! But will definitely invest in blocking wire. This is stunning and love that color! Congrats on the finish!

Sidney said...

oh wow: this is stunning! Perseverance pays off in a HUGE way!

Potpourri said...

Wonderful Kathie, you certainly persisted and completed a wonderful shawl. I have an Aran sweater and A Fair Isle pullover that are both nearly completed, for the past few years, perhaps I`ll have to follow your example.
Happy New Year from NS.
Jane

ellen said...

The magic of blocking! This will be wonderful to wear - it even looks cozy and warm.

paula, the quilter said...

I love my blocking wires! lovely shawl, and nice that it is done. I can only knit lace when there is no music, no tv and no talking. I have a problem concentrating when there is background noise. So I don't knit lace.

Quilts And Pieces said...

absolutely STUNNING!

sue said...

You have done it! Its simply stunning. This is something that will look chic with whatever you wear it with. Job well done!
sue

Janet said...

It's really beautiful, I couldn't imagine the patience required to get it done unless you loved Knitting more than me.

domesticat said...

Love it. I am envying your ability to finish big projects. With Jeff still in the ICU after 4.5 weeks, my concentration's pretty shot. I'm slooowly working on the socks I started after he was admitted.

I'd been working on a big quilt prior to his accident, but it was one that required me to lay out lots of pieces (4 pieces tall * width of the king-sized quilt) before I could really sew, and right now? Not enough mental energy.

I totally grok that "one repeat and then fall into bed" mentality. :)

Lorraine said...

My shawls dry in a couple of hours. I agree that blocking wires are wonderful.

Janet said...

that is absolutely stunning!!!

jovaliquilts said...

I did sense a disturbance in the Force this week, perhaps that was your primal scream. But wow, from the depths of pain to dizzying heights of glory -- that shawl is absolutely spectacular! Really, really gorgeous.

Joy said...

Kathie, I am a quilter from Anchorage, AK and have been an admirer of your blog for some time. Love you work! Hope all is well and that you'll post again soon.

Meggie said...

Feel very proud of your wonderful creation!! It is utterly beautiful.
XX