The raglan rant - knitting a sweater bottom up
Sometimes things are really simple, but your over complicated thinking process leads you away from the solution. Far away, like into a deep forest were wild boars try to eat your toes and squirrels throw nuts at your head. While I still admired moss and leaves and tree-trunks, my fibre friend @muscara already found the way out: try the d*** thing on!
Dear reader I am writing about my knitted raglan sweater. After concentrating for weeks on sewing, with my still unfinished Mimi blouse and my ill-fitting pajama pants, I wanted to feel accomplished. In my mind I already imagined you writing wonderful comments full of compliments like „wow, the sweater fits you perfectly“, „the bottom up raglan construction is so interesting, I never tried this myself, „you really are my knitting inspiration“, „please, can you send me an autograph“… sorry, deviating, I accidentally wrote my fantasy of crafting omnipotence down.
For some weeks I worked on this bottom up raglan sweater from „Vogue knitting. Very easy sweaters“. And truly, easy it is. Back and front are the same. You start with a ribbing and than knit the short body in stockinette. The raglan lines are very deep, so that the sweater has super wide sleeves which I love. Also, the raglan decreases are accentuated by one purled stitch in front and after the decreases. Simple and effective. The sleeves are done in the same manner, only I omitted the ribbing as I was unsure about length and fit. The original pattern shows ¾ sleeves which are super wide at the cuff. I find this beautiful to look at but not very practical. As I am freezing fast, I prefer sweater with long sleeves. Besides I am so into balloon and puff shapes, that I still ponder to later knit the cuffs very small, to get a balloon sleeve.
But as easy as it should be, I somehow made a mistake. I finished the second sleeve two weeks ago and till then it is waiting for surgery – because it is much wider than the first. And I have no clue why. I always write down the rows while knitting and my notes tell me, that I have knitted two exactly similar sleeves. But look at the photo, the first sleeve has 14 stitches at the last row, the second one 23 stitches. WHYYYYY??!
I grumbled over this problem for the last days and I still have no idea how this happened. And I had no idea how to proceed before talking to @muscara. I was unsure if I should make the first sleeve wider oder the second smaller. I was trapped in a loop of if‘s and when‘s.
But she had such an incredible advice (remember, me lost in the forest, eaten toes and things):
Pin the sweater together and try it on.
Why didn’t I think of this? I was so paralyzed by my incomprehensible mistake, that I needed the fresh ideas of a fellow #needleworkmonday crafter to exit my own tangled up thoughts.
(Dear @justinsun please don’t let this platform die, or I forever must wear ill-fitting handmade garments – I really need the @needelworkmonday community)
So, here you can see me wearing the unruly sweater. I used clips instead of needles to pin everything into a wearable garment and to avoid being stabbed by my own needlework. After wearing the sweater, I guess both sleeve shapes would work, the smaller and the wider one. And as it is easier for me to make the second sleeve smaller, I will go for this solution. I will unravel the last 20 rows and insert triple decreases to get a stitch count of 14 stitches.
As I told you at the beginning of this post, sometimes things are really simple. 😂😂🤪
And again, an addendum: Although I now have a solution how to fix my knitting mistake, I am no longer motivated to work on the sweater as I find it looks unflattering on the front. The view from the sides and back is ok for me… but at the front it looks bulky and stiff 💩💩💩 I will sleep over over this and you will be the first to know if I unravel or wear it.
Thank you @crosheille for initiating and @muscara, @shanibeer, @marblely for hosting the #needleworkmonday. If you want to see more beautiful projects with yarn, fabric and most of all needles, follow @needleworkmonday. Or even better grab your needles and keyboard and join the #needleworkmonday community.
Ohhh, if you don't have a steemit account and want to comment then hop to my Wordpressblog Bliss and Blisters and write me there.
I applaud your dedication to knitting even when problems present themselves. I will often abandon projects that present a problem for a long time (years) before I go back to tackle them. Kudos to you!
Well... There is a bag deep in my yarn wardrobe containing a "nearly finished" sweater. I think one reason I haven't frogged it is that it's knitted with two yarns hold together and unraveling that would be horrible. So it's (and will remain) a UFO ;)
Don’t applaud too early :-DDDD The sweater is still waiting in my box of shame and I cannot motivate myself to undo the sleeve, because the overall fit is not to my liking. I already pulled out an unfinished sock to distract me from the seater problem :-DD
But thank you for your kind words and I will try to be the person you think I am <3
First let me tell you the secret of knitting identical arms for sweater: 2aat - knit both at the same time, on the same circular needle.
Regarding the front of the sweater: The fabric seems to be a bit stiff, perhaps a bigger sized needle would have helped. And a lot of sweaters work with short rows at the bust area, which is not difficult per se but easier if you knit a sweater in one piece and from above.
Sigh.... I have read several times about this technique of knitting two sleeves at once, but I am so lazy in trying out new things in knitting. But the next time... I have to do it! (There is this cardigan which is waiting for years in a box, which needs sleeves, it could be a good opportunity to try it out)
And with the front: yes, stiff. Strangely... as I knit so loose. I made tension squares, but I guess the fabric behaves differently in a bigger chunk of knitting. Or the yarn is simply not good (it has a big acrylic part)
And also yes to the top down method, but but... You remember I knit continental combined and you cannot do this in the round. When knitting in the round I must use the „standard“ method and this hurts my fingers very fast. One reason why I seldom knit socks. I like the fit of raglan sweaters, so I wanted to try out how this works in a bottom up construction (although I prefer top down - but mostly for cardigans or in crochet). When knitting in parts I can use combination knitting.
I like your sweater ... and your pant color caught my eyes! I'm knitting a raglan sweater now too. Let's see how our raglan works turn out :) :)
Thank you <3 I also love these pants, the color is so funny. And I was able to alter them, so that they fit at my waist and bottom which is a huge plus for me. And i had this pants in mind while knitting the sweater (an a wide jeans skirt with a higher waist which I thought would look nice with this sweater) Hopefully i can motivate myself to finish it....
I think the front part of the sleeve reduce stitches from the neck would fit better,same with the body part.
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I am not sure if I understood you correctly, but you think I should make the sleeve smaller and perhaps should also alter the front part of the sweater and make it smaller? If this is your recommendation than it is a very good one <3 Right now it feels much too wide at the front. I hope I can motivate myself to change it :-D
THank you for the tip <3
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