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Just in Time – a personal pair of socks.

Today the weather is grey and foggy – it is not raining, but it is close.  I’m supposed to get a bike ride in, because I’m not sure what the rest of the week will bring, and I’m doing everything in my power to avoid it – including the final edits on Lights Burn Blue, the last pattern I’ll be releasing in this year.  All I have left is the yardage calculations, which I hate.

Yardage calculations are hard. Overestimate, and people are unhappy because they didn’t use the extra ball. Underestimate, and it’s really bad.  And hitting it just right – well, there’s a reason that yardage estimates are normally prefaced with, approximately or about… because it’s really hard to get right.  How long of a tail do you use? How much wiggle room do you build in?

This time around, I’m working with a new-to-me tech editor, who has been great.  She’s super detail oriented, which is good. Sometimes I can let the details slide.  In the moment, the little details drive me bonkers. But it’s the same reason my good editors in college drove me crazy – because they cared enough to sweat the details.  Which are important, when people are going to be working your patterns.

On a more personal front, last night I got back from knit night (where I showed off my finished socks).  I finished the socks while we ran our party on Saturday, and in a fit of productivity, wove in the ends quickly, so I could slip them on.  I’ve named them Just in Time, as I made them out of Father Time yarn that was in my stash.  In a sprint to the end of the year, I’m trying to work through a bit of my stash yarn in limited colorways, as it’s not suited to design in… because it isn’t widely available.  I have a bunch of Three Irish Girls from many years ago in my stash, so I’m working through that.

I used Cat Bordhi’s Sweet Tomato Heel, which I’ve only ever worked on samples to teach from.  I didn’t want to work the heel over 1/3 of the stitches like the pattern calls for, (because I didn’t want to do the math to figure out how to make that work in pattern), so instead I made a mini gusset, adding 10 sts, which brought my sole count up so that I ended up working the heel over 2 sts shy of 2/3 the total sts.  I worked 3 wedges, and I like how they look.  It seems to work well. It’s a bit less “huggy” in the heel than I’m used to, but that’s because the heel added a bit more length to the sock than I was expecting.  It may also be because I added a gusset and Cat didn’t call for one.  I don’t regret adding the gusset, but I might make the heel a bit less deep next time.  I’m thinking the first time I wash them they might “tighten up” a bit, which I wouldn’t be upset about.  May run them through the dryer once to tighten them up.  Not quite sure.

The stitch pattern is a simple k1, sl 1 in front every 3rd row, and ofset by one.  It’s quickly becoming my go-to pattern for my own personal socks, the same pattern I used for Crayon Box (you remember, the socks that were beautiful, then bled all over, and now I have a rather ambivalent relationship with, but still wear anyway?  Yeah, those).  Which probably means I need to get around to writing them up as a pattern.  They’re simple enough that I keep wondering if it’d be a good idea to write them up with different heel styles, which would be fun, but a lot of work.  And every time I decide that I’ll just keep them in my own personal stash.

Anyway, the pattern creates a bit of waffle-like texture, which remind me of the texture of my long underwear, and thus, make me think that the pattern has special warming properties.  I actually think that they are warm because of the content of the yarn, but still, I like them.

If you do like the pattern, let me know in the comments!  I’d be much more likely to write this one up (and work it in a more sell-able yarn), if I knew there was interest, and perhaps some test knitters.

And in case I don’t get another blog post in before Christmas, Merry Christmas to those of you who celebrate.

I’ll be having the family over, so it will be wonderful chaos.

Isis Wings

by Jennifer Raymond

Published by: Three Irish Girls
Craft: Knitting
Category: Feet / Legs → Socks → Mid-calf
Published: September 2013
Yarns suggested: Three Irish Girls Glenhaven CashMerino Sock
Yarn weight: Fingering / 4 ply (14 wpi)
Gauge: 9 stitches and 14 rows = 1 inch in stockinette or lacework
Needle size: US 1 – 2.25 mm
Yardage: 350 – 420 yards (320 – 384 m)
Sizes available: Women’s Small (3-6), Medium (6-9), Large (8-12)

This pattern is available for download for $5.95.

Isis Wings was created almost three years ago, on a porch in North Carolina. It was summer, which was sock time, and I wanted a pattern that was easily memorize-able while still being interesting. Isis Wings is the result. The socks are worked toe-up with an afterthought heel– one of my favorite ways to work socks. The little fun challenge lies in the yarn overs. Instead of working them like the rest of the stitches, whenever you come across a yarn over from the previous row, you knit it through the back loop, creating a twisted stitch. This pattern is written using the magic loop, though it could easily be worked with dpns or two circular needles.

For More Information, Go Here