Stringing Beads and EtsyFAST July Challenge

I don’t know how many beads I strung last night, but here’s hoping I strung enough. I don’t think I realized how tedious a simple, little task could be. I even tried to bribe my husband into it. He just laughed at my pain. Although in his defense, he did bring me a glass of port.

The good news: I am ready to cast on and begin the Alpacas at White Horse Farm shawl. I suppose it was worth it. Well, two hours of stringing beads does seem a steep toll, but the memory is already fading as I write this. Why I might even trick myself and become excited the next time I have to string beads, assuming that I don’t try it for another year.

Once I had all the beading I could take, which in fact ended sooner than it ought to have with the alpaca wool objecting & snapping to the strain of so many beads being yanked onto it, I started the EtsyFAST’s July Challenge. This month the challenge allows much more artistic freedom than last month’s challenge (Create an ACEO). The only guildelines are for EtsyFAST members to submit merchandise with a Flower & Garden theme. I decided to make a vase cozie.

It is halfway completed. I will be submitting both the finished product and the knitting pattern via my Etsy store. Although I haven’t finished writing up the pattern (much is being written as I knit – my favorite way to design), I am fairly confident that the pattern’s recommended skill level will be at Easy. The technique used to knit the cozie, woven ribbing, and the shaping required for it to fit the vase snugly will keep it from being at the beginner’s level. I hope to have everything completed by Monday of next week.

Revision to AWHF Shawl

What a difference one stitch makes in a design.

I altered all the Yarn Overs in the Alpacas at White Horse Farm shawl to Double Yarn Overs.

Original Design:

Altered design with the Double Yarn Overs (minus the beadwork):

Note that the new version was done in a darker yarn. I didn’t want to waste anymore of the alpaca wool that will be used to knit the shawl.

You’ll have to use your imagination, but suppose the original version has the lace work of the new version. Would it look better?

Alpacas at White Horse Farm Shawl Idea #1

Remember how excited I was about the Barbie shawl? The Barbie shawl was going to be knit up into an adult version, right?

Wrong. It’s been frogged. It was miserable to knit. It was difficult to keep track of where I was. I couldn’t imagine trying to write a pattern for it. The chart would have been hundreds of lines long with changes on every line. So I made an executive decision and into the frog pile it went.

Onto hopefully better ideas.

Here are pictures of my latest shawl design. This will not end up in the frog pile for complexity, that’s for sure. It may find its way there for a million other reasons, but not that.

Pros of this shawl:

  • Easy pattern: only 2 stitch patterns to learn
  • Repeating pattern: just add more ‘v’ sections as the shawl gets wider
  • Quick to knit
  • Simple, yet elegant: can go from the office to the local tavern
  • Uses beads

Cons of this shawl:

  • Design may be too easy, which in effect may render it boring
  • Not your typical, fancy shawl … again, the word boring comes to mind
  • Uses beads (some people aren’t comfortable using beads in their knitting)

So what is the verdict?

Off to the frog pile or into my list of KIP (Knits in Progress)s?

What do you think? Constructive criticism wanted!