Monday, January 21, 2013

The Ubiquity of Jane (i.e. Selfish Knitting, Part 3)

Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl (3)
I think I may have talked once or twice before about my enduring love of Heather Ordover's Craftlit podcast  - it's like going back to school with the coolest English teacher ever, and getting all sorts of cool background and context and detail that is so important to really understanding and appreciating some of the greatest works of literature ever. Over the past three years or so that I've been listening, I've "read" a bunch of books I managed to avoid (or never got exposed to) in school. Books like The Scarlet Letter, Gulliver's Travels, Wuthering Heights, Flatland, Woman in White, A Tale of Two Cities, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, Turn of the Screw, Little Women...the list goes on and on. And then there are the books that she's covered that I have read: Pride and Prejudice, Tristan and Isolde, A Christmas Carol and the current book-in-progress: Jane Eyre.
Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl
Heather is also the creative power behind a series of books with patterns inspired by characters inspired by classic literature, What Would Madame Defarge Knit? And when she started Jane Eyre on the podcast in November, she also started a KAL for Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl by Erica Hernandez. This shawl is amazing, with a specific reference from the book for each of the four sections.
Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl (1)
You may have noticed, if you've been reading here for a while, that I tend to make things more complicated then necessary when it comes to these knitting projects. Not content to search through my stash for approximately 1300 yds of DK yarn, I decided to spin my own.
Minerals Shetland
I choose to spin up some Hello Yarn Fiber Club fiber*, Shetland in the "Minerals" colorway. I only had 8 oz, so I traded for three more bags. I ended up with just over 1300 yds for the 20 oz I spun up. I did a 2-ply, and it ended up being somewhere between DK and worsted weight.
JUS in progress
The shawl starts from the center out, and I used a little i-cord trick to do the starting cast on. If you're interested in the details, I talked about it in the KAL thread on Ravelry. I made it through the first 2 sections with my first skein of yarn (~560 yds), then through the trinity stitch section and part of the border with the second skein (488 yds), and I've probably got 50-70 yds left from the last skein.
Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl (7)
Details ad nauseum:
Pattern: Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl by Erica Hernandez (Ravelry links)
Yarn: ~1300 yds of handspun Shetland, Hello Yarn Fiber Club, colorway "Minerals", DK- to worsted weight. Final "shawl"** was 54 inches square.
Needles: US 7/4.5 mm needles
Start/finish: 8 Nov 2012 - 19 Jan 2013 (actual blocking day)
Comments/mods: only modification was using handspun rather then commercial yarn. The pattern has a couple of errata that have been posted on the KAL thread, but other then those, it was well written and easy to follow. I loved Erica's exploration of the role that shawls play throughout the book, and how she used inspiration from the different stages of Jane's story for the different sections of the shawl. It doesn't hurt that the finished project is gorgeous...***
Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl (9)
So, from here on I have some deadline projects: one secret from everyone, one semi-secret wee person present, and one handspun sweater for barter for a sooper seekrit exciting project that Alli and I are working on. So from here on out, things may be a bit sparse on shareable knitting content. But I do have some more handspun yarn coming up, fresh off the miniSpinner!
Jane's Ubiquitous Shawl (2)

* You're shocked, I know...
** It's a shawl, but really it's going to be used as a blanket. So. Big.
*** And many thanks to the weather gods on Friday for providing an appropriately seasonal backdrop for the photo shoot!

4 comments:

yokohamamama said...

Lovely handspun, lovely finished Jane! Love that last pic, too--adorable:-) And to anybody else reading this-- that icord trick really works! I started late on Jane, and a good thing, too, as I was able to take advantage of Porpoise's nifty trick. I would add that it also helps to leave the beginning stitches on just two needles until you have about 24 stitches, and *then* put them onto 4 needles.

This is my first-ever center-out shawl-- I only hope it ends up looking as fab as yours! Still on Chart B, though (*sigh*)... eventually.

Heather said...

iCORD TRICK!
OMG OMG OMG OMG you have ROCKED my world!!! Can I tell everyone on the podcast if I send them to this post?
pleeeeeeeeeeease?

And your spinning is gorgeous. And your gift packages are gorgeouser! And your shawl would totally make Jane proud.

I'm still on the verrrrryyyyy lassssstttttt section... but we might have snow this Friday which just MIGHT inspire me to finish.

For now I'll just drool on my keyboard.

Amy R Singer said...

I know both of you, Heather and Rachel, and you guys would SO get along. Maybe one day we can get the three of us in the same room and the world will explode!

porpoise said...

Heather, you are more then welcome to tell the podcast - I'm a serious glutton for more readers, so direct away! And I'm so glad the fiber-y goodness got to you safely.

Amy - the stars almost aligned so that Heather and I could meet in person over the holidays, but she was sadly stricken with the Evil Flu of Doom and had to back out. Clearly we need to drag her to P3 at some point in the very near future...although maybe Brenda won't like a vast thermonuclear crater in her part of Wales?