Jennifer and I are happy to host the Fall Cable KAL again this year. This year, the KAL will start September 23 and end March 20th.
If you are interested in posting to the blog, please e-mail us at fallcable at gmail dot com and we will add you on! We will also have a Ravelry group, so if you are on Ravelry, please add us to your listing.
Before you start posting, please check out the KAL business label for guidelines regarding the blog.
Thanks everyone and as always, we look forward to your beautiful work!
Finally, a shot of a finished front piece. The sleeve has reached the point where I can't really work on it at random, so it's moving more slowly now, but still, I'm getting there. (And I finally made it onto Ravelry, hurray!)
wow you are fast! It's beautiful. I love the popcorns centered in the cables, however I hate making popcorns. Yours look so perfect, do you have a favored method for making them?
Thanks to both of you!! The bobble instructions are slightly different than what I'm used to - I've usually seen KPKPK into a single stitch, but this one is knit into the front/back/front/back/front of the stitch instead. My first couple are a little wonky, but once I started making sure that on the last knit I don't stretch out the original stitch, they come out really nicely. And then I tighten the surrounding stitches on that row and the next pretty severely. (Plus I realized a few in that I was twisting, so they were inside out, but that wasn't a big deal, I just had to rotate them on the base stitch and stick my finger in to pop it out the right way.)
3 comments:
wow you are fast! It's beautiful. I love the popcorns centered in the cables, however I hate making popcorns. Yours look so perfect, do you have a favored method for making them?
I don't usually care for bobbles, but I really like these. It's looking wonderful!
Thanks to both of you!!
The bobble instructions are slightly different than what I'm used to - I've usually seen KPKPK into a single stitch, but this one is knit into the front/back/front/back/front of the stitch instead. My first couple are a little wonky, but once I started making sure that on the last knit I don't stretch out the original stitch, they come out really nicely. And then I tighten the surrounding stitches on that row and the next pretty severely. (Plus I realized a few in that I was twisting, so they were inside out, but that wasn't a big deal, I just had to rotate them on the base stitch and stick my finger in to pop it out the right way.)
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