Was lovely Gigi.
Ive had my radiant sleeve on upside down a time or two myself.
felt moved by your story
: I'm knitting a sweater for my
: granddaughter. The start for the
: body went well. When I started a
: sleeve, using 4 double point
: needles, I would get about an inch
: along and have to start over
: because I kept goofing up on one
: thing or other. I started over
: probably 8 or 9 times on that
: sleeve. (I'm thinking maybe I
: should be using an easier
: pattern.) Finally, re-reading the
: instructions, I got the hang of it
: and finished that sleeve. The
: other sleeve was much easier to
: do.
: Then I started putting the body and
: the sleeves all on one circular
: needle and began a new color of
: yarn. It was all going well until
: I realized I had more stitches in
: one place than the directions said
: I should have and less stitches in
: another place. So I had to back up
: one row and re-knit till the
: stitch count was right.
: By now I have two hundred eighty
: stitches on a circular needle and
: I'm zooming along thinking how
: great it looks. I held it up to
: admire it and realized I had one
: sleeve on upside down!
: Oh shoot!! (Well, I used a different
: expletive....)
: Only one thing to do - unravel back
: to the sleeve and put it on right
: side up. Unraveling is very
: dangerous. There's a huge risk of
: too much coming unraveled,
: dropping stitches, ending up with
: the wrong stitch count, and
: generally making a big fat mess.
: It's a delicate process. So I
: gingerly started taking it apart,
: one stitch at a time, being as
: careful as possible to not end up
: with a shapeless blob of yarn.
: Now I'm almost back to the point I
: was at when I found the sleeve
: upside down and I'm sure I'll goof
: up again before the sweater is
: finished. The process is sometimes
: painful and awkward but I'm not
: giving up. I know the finished
: product will be beautiful and I'll
: see my granddaughter wearing it
: and hope she knows a little bit of
: how much I love her.
: Gigi