What I did discover though was a reminder that blocking does strange and nearly magical things to a shawl... and one of my old projects the Vortex is not an exception to that.
Since it came off the needles my 'Plum Paisley' colored Vortex has been largely used and abused as a small cover for nursing and baby snuggles, and then ended up living on the floor of my husbands truck for a while where it slurped up part of a small coffee spill. ((embarrassed cough goes here.))
Anyway since he decided to clean out the truck, it came inside, and I decided to be nice to the thing, and dropped it in the tub for a wash and block. Cleaned carefully and pinned out, the shawl that wouldn't even sit decently around my shoulders has become ENORMOUS. And I. Mean. ENORMOUS.
I'm quite excited to see it actually come off the blocking mats now and maybe get someone to help me take pictures (which won't make the color look any better on me but would still be cool to have) because it's just... I mean WOW it's big.
This is it pinned out on my uh "Blocking Mats" ((by which I mean colorful rubber mats designed for kids I am using instead of buying mats dedicated to pinning things to. Because they work.))
That mitten is mine, not the kids. Just sayin'. |
This is the most information on knitting that I have ever received.
ReplyDeleteSo basically I've bored you into a coma? ;)
ReplyDeleteBlocking is also used to help shape regular knit objects, but for Lace it can make the most significant difference since it helps bring it out to full size and really shows off the stitches. Or in this case, makes it into a theoretically useful object.
That being said this was still the most mindless lace I have ever knit and I'm not sure I could do it again without being really, really, really bored and wanting to use up an ridiculous amount of yarn.