The
reason for this blanket was the next yarn in line in my spreadsheet
of yarn acquisitions. I was looking for a nice easy quick pattern,
and I found or devised this broken rib pattern. It is very easy –
row 1 knit row 2 knit 1 purl 1. Repeat.
The
yarn was Jaeger Luxury Spun Double Knitting with Alpaca. I had found
a pack of 10 balls more than ten years ago. I knew the yarn well,
having knitted a sweater in the 4 ply version in the same brown shade
many years earlier. I decided that if I had hung on to it for so
many years without finding a better purpose it may as well become a
blanket. The alpaca content was 10%.
I then looked for a second double knitting yarn to go with it. The black Rowan DK yarn that I had in mind didn't seem good enough quality to go with it. Perhaps it was one of the earlier Rowan yarns, and I think at one time they did a light DK yarn. So instead I used the Christian de Falbe pink Chandos yarn because of my difficulties with bright pink. A good opportunity to get rid of it. I had 370 grams. The label said 80% lambswool 20% merino. I once knitted a favourite cardigan from this brand in a shetland wool plied with a metallic yarn. It worked well.
Thirdly
for softness I was going to look through my store of Rowan Kidsilk
Haze, but first I came across some pink Wendy Air – 70% mohair 30%
nylon – that I had forgotten about. The colour suited very well.
There were five 25 gram balls.
I
could work out that I needed to supplement the pink wool so I found
two balls of Patons Pure Wool DK in a dark red shade, for borders.
I thought putting the three yarns together would make a thick loose fabric, and it did, on 9 mm needles, and it became soft and slinky. Nice for a blanket. The knitting was quick, but I didn't enjoy it much. I prefer knitting with thinner needles. I stopped when I ran out of the pink DK, and finished with the second ball of Patons DK. It is not large enough for a standard blanket but it would be nice for a throw.
I
should have foreseen that I would run out of the Wendy Air, so I had
to add some Uppingham mohair in red. I hope it looks as if it was
the intention from the start.
I cast on with Pony circular needles and it was hard going. I have previously had problems with Pony needles, so I avoid them, but it was what came to hand. I realised why it was difficult. The tip was tapering on the part where I formed the stitch so pushing the stitches along was difficult as the tip got thicker. I found some metal circulars and the knitting went much more smoothly on them. Does this mean that I will have problems with lace needles as well? The yarn shop assured me they would work as well as ordinary circulars.
Broken
rib blanket C32
Pattern:
my own
Yarn:
Jaeger Luxury Spun DK with Alpaca
Christine
de Falbe Chandos DK
Patons
Pure Wool DK
Wendy
Air
Uppingham
Lace Mohair
Needles:
9 mm
Size:
135 cm by 120 cm
Weight:
975 gr
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