Sunday, November 26, 2017

Plum Colored Sweater

I finished knitting my sweater, today:

Sweater Front


The back of the sweater is plain:

Sweater Back (should have pulled it down a bit!)

I am not entirely happy with how the ribbing around the neckline turned out, but I don't know if I want to unpick it and redo it, at this point.  

I had four skeins of yarn (and bought two balls of black yarn, to mix and match in case they weren't enough).  Well, I had JUST enough of the yarn to make this sweater:

All the yarn that is left!
It took me just over two weeks to knit this sweater, which isn't too bad when one considers all the unpicking and reknitting I did to get the pattern and the sleeves, right.  Even now, the sleeves are a bit too big, but that's OK.  The sweater is nice and warm and that's what matters. 

On to the grey sweater!




18 comments:

  1. It's lovely! And it's a gorgeous colour. You must have been on edge completing the last row, hoping the yarn would last out. X

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    1. Thank you, Jules. I was! LOL. If necessary, I would have finished the cuff in black, unpicked the other cuff and done the same to match. I have 5 balls of the grey wool, so I don't have to worry as much.

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  2. Beautiful sweater! That is a lot of knitting! Andrea

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  3. Your plum sweater is lovely. Once you start a project you are very determined to get it done. You clearly have a strong work ethic. Will the black wool be made into the same pattern?

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    1. Thank you, Sandy. What I have found is, if I don't keep at it till it is done, I end up with an unfinished project that just sits there for years! I have at least two other knitted tops I have started, which aren't finished!

      I'm knitting the grey sweater now (started on it, yesterday), and the pattern will be a little different. The back and sleeves will have an all-over pattern (called "Little Birds") and the front will have a panel of cables, I think (haven't decided, yet).

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  4. Wow, that's beautiful. I really like the front pattern. Two weeks is a very fast time as far as I'm concerned. Even if my knitting skills were up to the complicated pattern, that's about a year project for me.

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    1. Thank you, Live and Learn. I have a couple of knitting projects that have been in the works for more than a year, myself. It all depends on how focused I am on the project at hand!

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  5. Congratulations on finishing the lovely sweater. The pattern looks great. I'm still working on the front of my pink sweater and I have just begun the armhole shaping. I did have one setback the other day when I discovered a dropped stitch an inch down and I had knitted past it and so it wasn't something I could pick up with a crochet hook. So it took a little longer to get to where I am now. I'm betting you will even have your grey sweater finished before I finish mine!

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    1. Thank you, Bushlady. Don't you hate having to unpick to reach a dropped stitch?

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  6. Beautiful...
    The plum color is so pretty, and wow..........you knitted that really quick..

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    1. Thank you, Judy. 2-3 weeks is usually what I take to knit a sweater. Longer if it is a cardigan or has complicated cables, etc.

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  7. I am with live and learn and amazed at your time line. It take me two weeks to knit a very plain scarf.

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    1. Thank you, Anne. It does mean a lot of sitting and knitting, but 2-3 weeks is about my average for a sweater.

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  8. Just lovely! You are definitely fast. If you're not quite happy with the neck, you might try knitting a cowl in a contrasting yarn to go with the sweater. That would disguise the neck a bit. Chris M

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    1. Thank you, Chris. That is a very good suggestion.

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  9. Both the colour and pattern of the sweater are beautiful Bless. I don't mind knitting sweater and cardigans but I'm not very good at sewing them up so tend not to bother. That was a close call with the wool - I think I heard your sigh of relief over the pond :) xx

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    1. Thank you, Suzanne. Yes, I was keeping my fingers and toes crossed on the yarn! LOL. The sewing of the seams tends to be a bit tedious, doesn't it? Some people knit on circular needles to minimize the seams, but I haven't been able to knit on circular needles. I always knit with straight needles.

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