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Friday, May 15, 2009

Free pattern - Circle towel

I picked up some inexpensive linen yarn while I was on vacation earlier this summer, and I had grand visions of making it into some sort of hand towel.  All of the patterns I could find seemed to involve rather a lot of mindnumbingly boring stockinette stitch, so I decided to modify a cool sock pattern to see if I could make a towel that had a nice texture and a pattern that was fairly easy to memorize.  
The modification was a little challenging since the sock is worked in the round and the towel is back-and-forth, but I managed to get my head around it all right. As a bonus, the back side is nice and uniform and looks presentable enough that it won't be horrible when it's seen during use.
Don't be freaked out by the 20-row pattern repeat ... it's actually just 10 rows with a slight jog over to make the second 10 rows, and there's a lot of "do the same thing, only K instead of P" in there, too.  Trust me - once you've gone through it once or twice, you won't need to look at the instructions for the rest of the towel.

So, without further ado, here's how to duplicate my Circle Towel:

Lazy Mama's Circle Towel:

Finished size - 17" wide x 12" tall before washing and blocking; size after blocking will be added once this makes it through the wash :)

Yarn - light worsted weight or DK weight linen or cotton yarn.  I used every bit of 100 grams of Euroflax Athens by Louet Sales, which is approximately 200 yards.

Needle - whatever gives you a nice medium-firm fabric in stockinette stitch.  You need it to be a bit loose to comfortably carry the slipped stitches up seven rows in the pattern.  I used a US 2.

Gauge - not important.  Just make sure you're not making a super-lacy cloth, or it won't hold up to actually drying your hands.

Pattern stitch (multiple of 8 stitches):
Row 1 - Purl across
Row 2 - Knit across
Row 3 - Purl across
Row 4 - (P3, sl 2 st with yarn at front, P3) across
Row 5-  (K3, sl 2 st with yarn at back, K3) across
Row 6 -(P3, sl 2 st with yarn at front, P3) across
Row 7 - (K3, sl 2 st with yarn at back, K3) across
Row 8 - (P3, sl 2 st with yarn at front, P3) across
Row 9 - (K3, sl 2 st with yarn at back, K3) across
Row 10 - (P3, sl 2 st with yarn at front, P3) across
Row 11 - Purl across
Row 12 - Knit across
Row 13 - Purl across
Row 14 - (sl 1 st with yarn at front, P6, sl 1 st with yarn at front) across
Row 15 - (sl 1 st with yarn at back, K6, sl 1 st with yarn at back) across
Row 16 - (sl 1 st with yarn at front, P6, sl 1 st with yarn at front) across
Row 17 - (sl 1 st with yarn at back, K6, sl 1 st with yarn at back) across
Row 18 - (sl 1 st with yarn at front, P6, sl 1 st with yarn at front) across
Row 19 - (sl 1 st with yarn at back, K6, sl 1 st with yarn at back) across
Row 20 - (sl 1 st with yarn at front, P6, sl 1 st with yarn at front) across

Note: after your first pattern repeat, the first row of circles may look a bit flat on the cast-on side.  This is normal, and will not occur in any of the subsequent repeats of the pattern.

Actual instructions:
  • Cast on 80 stitches.
  • Knit two rows of garter stitch (knit each row).
  • Begin pattern instructions, KNITTING FOUR EXTRA STITCHES AT THE BEGINNING AND END OF EACH ROW TO MAKE A GARTER STITCH BORDER.
  • Repeat pattern instructions a total of five times (100 rows in pattern).  If you are using a larger skein of yarn than I did, you may wish to keep repeating until you're almost out of yarn.  Just make sure you end on row 10 or 20 before you finish the rest of the towel.
  • Knit two rows of garter stitch (knit each row).
  • Cast off all stitches.
If you decide to make one of these, please share it with me on Ravelry!  Thanks!

Monday, May 11, 2009

Yeah, that was a disaster. Look! Pretty scarf!

Okay, so apparently ugly + ugly = "oh my god, it burns!  it burns!" ugly.  The socks have been frogged, the yarn thrown out, and then the whole mess set fire to, for good measure.  I am done wasting time on that.

But let's not dwell on failures, shall we?  Especially when I have such pretty pretties to show!
Yep, I've jumped on the Noro Striped Scarf bandwagon, this time with Taiyo, a cotton/silk blend from Noro that's ohh soooooo soffffffffft and smooooooooooooooooshy.  And did I mention the colors?

Oh Taiyo, I am so glad I have enough of you left over to make a matching hat ...  which I will not allow anywhere near any washing machine that is set to "hot," I swear!