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LAST LEGS (OR IN THIS CASE, ARMS)

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What is this wadded, folded red object?

red-pull-03

The red top-down pullover, of course. I’ve finished both sleeve caps.  They were worked onto the body rather than seamed on later, and were done both using the short-row method described in the pattern.  More or less.  There was some fudging and work-arounds to maintain the lacy rib pattern, and I ended up having to do an extra row after pick-up because try as I might, I could not pick up as few stitches as were specified without leaving unsightly gaps and puckering.  So, I picked up an appropriate number (mid way between my chosen size and the next one up), then worked an additional row of strategically placed decreases to slim the count down to the pattern’s number.  That means my lacy rib starts one row after the seam instead of butted up against it, but unless I point that out, it’s not noticeable.  (Oops.  I just did.)

Why is it all folded up?  Because now that I’m in the post sleeve cap arm section, I am knitting both sleeves at the same time, using the two-circ method.  This will guarantee that they are both the same length and configuration. 

I often do the same thing for socks, mittens, or other things that come in identical or mirrored pairs.  I even knit cardigan fronts side by side when working flat, for the same reason.  You can barely see a pink stitch marker attaching the two sleeves together in the center, just above the working needles.  This is a small trick I stumbled on that has eliminated hours of grief for both two-circ and flat production of side by side pieces.  Securing the two pieces together in a fixed orientation helps me keep on track, knitting both items in the same direction and minimizing the “Drat! I just loaded everything onto the same needle” mistake.



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