1.
Take on new challenges.
My
friend/cousin Eileen taught me how to knit using some scrap acrylic
yarn and chopsticks. And after some fits and starts, I became the
scarf queen. But I limited myself to rectangular objects until I met
my neighbor, Sarah. I told her I wasn't able to take on more
complicated projects and she said, "Bullsh*t." (maybe she
said it nicer, but I don't recall) and proceeded to make me knit
socks. I knit a few pairs of socks and suddenly there wasn’t any
project I wasn’t willing to take a shot at. And life is like that;
you can limit yourself to what you know, but it's more fun to take a
risk and push yourself, and the rewards are greater (and prettier).
2.
Don't be afraid to re-do it.
It
is a bit of sport for my church small group to make fun of how many
times I'll knit something, take it apart, and then re-knit it. Maybe
three times or more. But that's the beauty of yarn: you can use and
re-use it until you're happy with the end result. As Sarah has
reminded me, you're the boss of the yarn, it's not the boss of you.
So if something is not quite the way you want it, do something about
it. Don't be afraid to start from the beginning if you have to.
3.
Sometimes, though, you gotta let it go.
On
the flip side, this ability to rip stuff apart has to be weighed
against what you're giving up. I recently completed a complicated
cable-knit shawl. Then I noticed a dropped stitch. My small group
friends would assume I'd just rip it out and start again, but I have
to weigh this against a few other criteria: how noticeable is this
flaw? Is it really that big a deal or is it my pride? Is there
another project I need/want to move onto? Sometimes you need to make
dramatic changes in life, and sometimes you need to let it go and
move on.
Where's Waldo?!? |
4.
Don't rush it.
A
recent piece I worked on called for repeating a pattern 28 times. By
the fifth repetition, I was ready to be done. Kind of like raising my
kids, I wanted to rush through the high maintenance baby-age but, in
doing so, I think I missed a few things. And boy-howdy, I'd like time
to slow down now that they're older. If I could be like Madame DeFarge (the knitting information into my project, not the hell-bent on revenge part), I'd knit Galatians 6:9
into my next project, because patience and perseverance makes for a
nicer piece.
5.
Long and boring can result in beauty.
And
speaking of patience, just because something is long and boring,
doesn't mean the results will be the same. I've knit some pretty
complicated stuff. You know what gets the most compliments? You know
the piece I use most? A cowl I made that repeated a shell stitch
1,306 times. No fancy cables, no luxurious merino wool, no cool hand
dying, just a tube with a repetitive pattern.
6.
Don't forget the finish work.
It's
tempting to finish a piece and not want to do the finish work of
weaving in the ends and blocking. I mean, I just finished knitting a
stitch some gazillion times in a row, can't someone else do the
tidying up for me? But like any task in life, you need to see things
through to the end. No one can do the finish work for you because
they all have projects of their own to finish.
A warm bath and rest remedies a lot of problems |
7.
Share the beauty.
There's
only so many shawls I can wear. And half the reason I knit is for the
challenge of the project (the other half is to justify the
binge-watching). So what to do with the many items produced? Spread
the love.
Dragonwing Shawl for the '16 Junior League of RI Knit a Thon |
Dr Who shawl |
Infinity shawl |
p.s. If you want to support my yarn habit hobby, check out my Etsy store.
p.p.s. If you want to knit for charity, here's a few.
p.p.p.s. The Junior League of RI Knit-a-Thon is coming up soon. Expect to hear from me!