FO: Ithacowl

This photo is a bit dark, since it was 7:30 p.m. when it was taken.

Pattern: My own, detailed below.

Yarn: 1 skein Nashua Handknits Creative Focus Worsted, 75% wool, 25% alpaca, color: natural heather. $9 from Homespun, in Ithaca, NY.

Needles: 16″ bamboo Clovers, size 7

Gauge: 22 stitches per 4″, unstretched in pattern stitch

Project began/ended: I started this on February 16, and finished yesterday, March 31, while watching, of all things, an episode of Girlfriends about how knitting made you old. The funniest line was when Diana Ross’s daughter (in real life; not on the show), who is kind of the nerd of the group and is angry because she had been dragged out to a club to recapture her youth, says, “I would have been halfway through that headwrap if you had let me stay home and knit.”

How to make it:

1. Find some yarn. This yarn is 220 yards, and a quarter alpaca, so it has some drape and fuzz. If you want drape and no fuzz, go with something that has some silk or something slinky in it. Find a 16″ circular needle that goes with your yarn.

2. I don’t think gauge is very important in this project. Use a long-tail cast on to cast on some multiple of 4 stitches. I’m pretty sure I cast on 108 stitches. Cast on more or less based on your own experience with hats and gauge.

3. Join into a circle. Don’t twist. Though actually, I think this might have worked nicer as a moebius cowl, so if you want that, twist.

4. Place marker at beginning of round. (I actually found it helpful to place markers every 10 stitches until the pattern was established. If doing so, make sure the marker that identifies the beginning of the round is different than the others.)

5. Mistake rib:

Round 1: *K2, p2; repeat from *
Round 2: K1 *p2, k2; repeat from *, until you have 3 stitches left, then p2, k1.

By the way, I found it helpful to think of the pattern as a column of knits and a column of purls, each bordered with columns of alternating knits and purls. This is what gives the stitch such a raised and sunken surface, unlike regular ribbing.

6. Keep repeating these two rounds until you run out of yarn.

7. Bind off with Elizabeth Zimmerman’s Sewn Bind-Off.

8. No need to block. Wear dramatically.

Download the pattern: The Ithacowl [pdf]

Posted in Finished Objects 2008, patterns, Scarves, Uncategorized at March 31st, 2008. Trackback URI: trackback

6 Responses to “FO: Ithacowl”

  1. April 2nd, 2008 at 5:27 pm #Melissa

    I love this! And since I’m obsessed with cowls lately, this is perfect for me! Thanks for posting the pattern!!

  2. April 3rd, 2008 at 12:59 pm #michele

    beautiful. just beautiful. i’ve been thinking about cowls lately and have some alpaca that would be perfect for this. now just need some time. your yarn shows off this mistaken rib stitch so well.

  3. April 16th, 2008 at 11:00 am #Debra

    I really love the texture of your cowl. Thanks for posting.

  4. November 23rd, 2009 at 7:29 pm #rose

    i saw your pattern for the ithacowl and started working it up
    just noticed that i seem to have twisted it by mistake
    do you think i should rip it out or leave it
    thanxs

  5. November 24th, 2009 at 10:11 am #Claire

    @Rose, it’s up to you. If you haven’t done a lot, rip it out–most people seem to prefer it un-twisted.

  6. January 6th, 2011 at 8:53 pm #Barbara from Nova Scotia

    I love mistake rib. Makes a great cowl.
    Found you through Passing Down Crazy.