a descent into poetry insanity |
fifty-eight stitches in green— dark green cotton, with just enough acrylic to make a sock. I don’t make socks. I make lace out of sock yarn beginning once and ripping back to trim the tail. beginning twice— three rows in, recount and there are only fifty-six loops hanging over my needles, and a gap where they laddered down and off the end of the fabric. knitting forgives many things. not that. not when beginning again is easier than trying to salvage an edge. beginning three times, the pattern is eight rows long, twelve stitches wide. it marches on with mathematical precision. knit three together, knit four, yarn over, knit one, yarn over, knit four—repeat. two ways to unknit: first) tink— knitting backwards, unknitting each stitch while keeping each backward movement on the needle— so that when the error is mended knitting can continue second) frogging— taking out the needles and ripping back in joyous abandon— some knitters can recatch their loops and continue. I can’t. at thirty rows in— a stitch ladders down into a decrease more than a pattern back. after an hour, I give up and frog: rip it. rip it. rip it. beginning four times, I insert a lifeline every sixteen lines— veins of white that catch fifty-eight stitches so that if I have to rip, I can stop there and not go back to begin again, again. I love working with lace, but trying to fix an error is sometimes more trouble than it's worth, as I have discovered to my cost. Ah well. Ripping out means that I get to knit a pattern again. |