Apr 12, 2012

Close That Gap!

I've been faithfully working on my WIPs and have really enjoyed knitting my Mothed Pullover. When I finished knitting the body portion, I breathed a sigh of relief as the sizing looked great. I put the live arm hole stitches back on my needle to begin knitting the sleeves and after the first round, I saw this!


I was not happy.  This happens to me sometimes -- I choose a pattern, knit happily along, but then come across an issue that isn't addressed in the instructions. I wish all designers would include little hints and tips that would help make the FO more polished, but I suppose I'll know these little tips myself as I gain more experience.

Luckily, I came across this great tutorial for the exact problem I was having. I'm a follower of Stacey's and love how clear and simple her video tutorials are. 


After one viewing, I was able to frog back and close that gap! Simple, clear, to the point.


The pullover is designed to have long sleeves; in fact, the mothed part of the pullover's design is in the sleeves, but as I knitted this during the spring, I decided to keep the sleeves short. A happy FO, indeed!







15 comments:

  1. It happens with me too, I frog back and knit again, no problems.
    We can learn more and more with this little problems, can't we?
    And the sweater is very beatiful!

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  2. Very nice! Does Miranda get to keep it?

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  3. Doesn't Staci [VeryPink.com] have the best video tutorials ! !

    This is a perfect for your very lovely model! ! !

    Just lucious, Evelyn.

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  4. Ah it looks perfect, simply perfect! I love the purple. It also looks like it was a blast to knit up too. Also, thank you, thank you for that video. I've run into a similar problem before with the holes, but never quite figured out a better solution.

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  5. I absolutely love this pullover. The color is perfect and the fit is as well. I am adding that to my list of sweaters I love that I'll probably never make. But anyways, this is gorgeous!

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  6. The pullover is lovely! It looks wonderful on your daughter. Great job finding a solution to the gap problem (which is a very common one with top down sweaters).

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  7. The sweater looks fantastic. I love the short sleeves. And what a great video too :)

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  8. VeryPink has a great tutorial on socks; it's because of her that I realized I was knitting backwards = fumbling on Susan's Jelly Bean sock pattern.
    When I was working on my Sequoia cardi it told me to pick up so many sts for the underarm area. It felt in places I needed more but an experienced knitter that picking up more could make the underarm hang more than I want. So she gave me a great tip to pick up yarn through two sts together so I would still have four picked up ones in the end.
    I love the short arms on your Mothed Pullover. It came out very nicely.

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  9. Congratulations! It looks great! You were very conscientious frogging back. Normally, I simply mattress stitch or graft the gap together afterwards. ;-)

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  10. It looks great, and good save on the gap! I think it's really hard to cover off all the potential things that might cause a problem with a knit, but thank goodness for the internet- I love being able to google a how to video at a moment's notice, it's really upped my knitting game.

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  11. I had the same problem, and found the same solution, and wondered why the designer hadn't included this instruction -- or even simply mentioned that there would be such a problem that needed to be solved somehow, as I'm sure there are other solutions -- in the pattern instructions. I know it's impossible for a designer to cover every potential issue, but this seems like a nearly inevitable issue for a raglan, so why not at least mention it?

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