"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication."- Leonardo da Vinci

4.14.2013

"Inversion Cardigan", a project 6 months in the making


I have never been great at multi-tasking, at least not when it comes to my personal projects.  I have never been the one to read several books in parallel, or work on several knit-projects at the same time. 

You may think that it’s maybe a good thing, but this, can back-fire. Case in point, the project I want to show you today. I started the cardigan last fall, October according to the notes I added to Ravelry. And it was only finished recently. 

There were times, I never thought I’d finish. Why? Because except for the borders, this is all stockinette stitch. And that is in the shape of a rectangle, so no shaping whatsoever. Even though I knit as a form of therapy, I still need a little more excitement then what stockinette can offer.

But I stuck by it, and slowly the pieces came together.




Details: Inversion Cardigan Pattern by Jared Flood
Yarn: Berroco Ultra Alpaca in Pea Soup Mix
 Project details on my Ravelry page

If you are planning on knitting this for yourself, the most important tool to have on hand, besides patience is blocking wires. They are essential! How do I know? I don’t own any, and boy, did I regret that. Once the pattern is knitted, in order to put it together properly and to have the right shape you need to block the pieces very precisely, the 2 mirroring pieces need to be the exact same size, and the third has to match. To my surprise my knitting stretched by 7 inches once blocked, so I was grateful that the instructions mentioned not binding off until the pieces were blocked, and even more grateful that I actually followed these instructions.

Then, came the fun part! Grafting the border to the stockinette portion and then using kitchner stitch to seam the mirroring pieces together. It took me 3 evenings to finish this step of the process. Granted, I'd never used the kitchener before, so this pert was especially slow, but I did it right, and in the end, I believe it looks quite good.

I am extremely happy with the end-result, and I have worn the cardigan a few times already. It's been admired by both knitters and non-knitters alike.

All in all, this is another amazing Jared Flood pattern!

10 comments:

  1. Wow! I would be intimidated by the finishing you describe, but it is a very elegant cardigan. I bet all the effort makes you even more proud of the result.

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    1. It reallydoes! And the finishing was just long, notcomicated, but Io e wearing it, thank you Michelle

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  2. I think you did an amazing job .. woooooooohoooooooooo .. kudos on completing this challenging project!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Vicki :)

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    1. Thank you Vicki! Quite satisfying, I must say!!

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  3. You've made me want to take another look at this pattern. It must feel great to have it done and be wearing it at last. Lovely job!

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    1. You will not regret it. And the Berroco is a good yarn for it as well.

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  4. wow! you have done a beatuiful job! good for you for sticking to it. those are the projects i think that we treasure most, because of how attached we become ;) xo

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    1. Thank you Becca. And yes I agree with you, this is the kind of project I tend to become attached to...

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  5. Amazing cardi. Cozy cozy and stylin!

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  6. i wanted to knit this one but i am already struggling with quill... so need a break from boring stitches/repeats!

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