I'd been wanting to knit something from the new men's knitting magazine Rib since it came out, and issue #2 had a pattern that caught my eye -- the River Rocks Scarf.
I liked the graphic pattern, and it used a technique which seems quite popular these days, but which I'd never used - brioche stitch. Brioche is a type of double-knitting, using two strands of yarn that are knitted separately row by row, yet intertwined in such a way as to make a very dense fabric. It creates many pockets of air surrounded by wool, perfect for garments that benefit wearers through trapping warm air near the skin, such as scarves and hats.
This scarf pattern uses two colors to create a reversible pattern that looks quite different on either side. The dark side contains the "river rocks" motif, which uses increases and decreases to create tiny circles that mimic rocks which appear to be breaking up a current. The lighter side, which I prefer, is more linear and graphic. I wanted a contrast, which is why I went with dark (Porter) and light (Gale) tones of gray Brooklyn Tweed Arbor yarn here, though I imagine the river rocks would have shown more if the two colors weren't in the same family. But this guy just needs knit with gray yarn every so often.
The pattern calls for 18 repeats of a 24-row motif, with increasing/decreasing business going on in one out of four rows. Because I had the yarn for it and wanted just a few more inches, I did 19 repeats. It wasn't too complicated, but keeping one's place in the repeat was essential. I messed up more than once, putting a pebble in the stream where it didn't belong, and had to rip back three separate times. A lifeline helped in that regard, although for the last one I was able to rip back just a few rows and get everything back on the needles correctly. Brioche stitches are hard to backwards engineer when trying to fix mistakes. Having contrasting colors helped. If this had been one solid color, fixing in such a way would have been nearly impossible.
I'm not entirely sure I got the two-color Italian cast-on executed correctly. That edge flares in a strange way. But I did figure out the sewn two-color Italian bind off and it looks pretty neat and tidy. The final thing is about 72 inches long and between 7 and 8 inches wide, since the edges ripple. The instructions said to block it, but I don't think I'm going to just yet. I'll wait until the first time I wash it. Looking forward to wearing it in Colorado this winter!
What's next? Another baby blanket, because babies keeping popping up all around. And a sweater for Jeff because he asked, and I learned long ago to not question these rare requests. More on those later.
Gorgeous! I'm still working on my brioche shawl, although the end (of the brioche section) is in sight!
ReplyDeleteIt was really tricky for a long time, then I sort of got into the zone. By the end, though, I was ready to be done!
DeleteI love this so much - especially the portrait shot!
ReplyDeleteI want to hear more about Jeff's sweater request. Are there details?
All credit for the photo is Jeff's. I just bossed him around.
DeleteI've only seen pictures. Have you seen the cover of the upcoming issue of Rib magazine? Jeff saw it and said, "I want that in those colors." I said, "It will be expensive." He shrugged. Don't have to ask me twice!
That sweater on the cover of Rib 3 is pretty cool, tell Jeff it's a good choice. Love your River Rocks scarf, I hope you get some cool evenings and mornings so you can wear it often. Our Winter has hung around for ever but now have first glimpses of Spring.
DeleteAlso (as Janelle said) great photo of you!
ps: I just signed up for a subscription to Rib Managzine, you've inspired me!
DeleteFabulous!
ReplyDelete