Felted Fishtrap
I would very, very much like to see Sarah / Blue Garter's Fishtrap (Tuesday, March 06, 2007), but try as I might I can't get her pictures to load. (It must be my @#$% dial-up connection. Ugh.)
Until I read Sarah's post, I didn't know that the Fishtrap January sweater was "the spark for the whole Zimmermania project." So I am thankful to it for that. I am also personally attached to the pattern because it was my second sweater ever, my first Aran sweater and my first EZ project.
But I have a sad tale to tell.
In knitting the Fishtrap, I learned much: my first twisted stitches, my first knitting in the round, the first (and only?) time I CUT knitting.
I finished at last and wore the sweater proudly--until I got lipstick on the neckband.
As a newbie knitter, I really didn't understand wool. I tossed that Fishtrap in a washing machine (on cold/delicate), and blithely let her go.
And what came out was not what went in.
It was thicker and smaller and very, very felted.
(I hope I am not the only one to have ever done this to a beloved piece of knitting.)
I couldn't bear to throw it out.
It sat in my closet for years--until the trend of closer-fitting tops and my low-carb diet made it possible for me to wear it again.
So I can and do wear it now--but only in certain conditions. This felted Fishtrap is such a WARM garment that I can only wear it when I will be spending time outside on a cool day--on a walk in the woods or in a barn. Otherwise, it sits on the shelf, a reminder that I must ALWAYS handwash. (Thank God for Eucalan!)
Until I read Sarah's post, I didn't know that the Fishtrap January sweater was "the spark for the whole Zimmermania project." So I am thankful to it for that. I am also personally attached to the pattern because it was my second sweater ever, my first Aran sweater and my first EZ project.
But I have a sad tale to tell.
In knitting the Fishtrap, I learned much: my first twisted stitches, my first knitting in the round, the first (and only?) time I CUT knitting.
I finished at last and wore the sweater proudly--until I got lipstick on the neckband.
As a newbie knitter, I really didn't understand wool. I tossed that Fishtrap in a washing machine (on cold/delicate), and blithely let her go.
And what came out was not what went in.
It was thicker and smaller and very, very felted.
(I hope I am not the only one to have ever done this to a beloved piece of knitting.)
I couldn't bear to throw it out.
It sat in my closet for years--until the trend of closer-fitting tops and my low-carb diet made it possible for me to wear it again.
So I can and do wear it now--but only in certain conditions. This felted Fishtrap is such a WARM garment that I can only wear it when I will be spending time outside on a cool day--on a walk in the woods or in a barn. Otherwise, it sits on the shelf, a reminder that I must ALWAYS handwash. (Thank God for Eucalan!)
14 Comments:
What a treasure and a lot of wonderful firsts. A felted EZ fishtrap sweater -- with lipstick no less! It still looks quite lovely. I'm sure Madame EZ would appreciate this tale!
By Glaistig, at 11:02 PM
oh no but it is pretty anyway. oh i did a lovely aran sweater once. my own design and something was wrong with the yarn so the item grew and grew. and later i spilled some tea on it. but it went to live with a friend who actually wore it and who was so little and cute that everything suited her....
By knititch, at 12:42 AM
oh dear....but oh yes, I can relate to the felting bit, and only recently too! Doh! Still what cam out of my washing machine fitted a special friend. The time taen to knit that jumper must have been immense...beautiful work!
By picperfic, at 12:55 AM
I bought a woollen jumper in a charity shop to do just that with it. It was a size enormous and I'm not, so as I really liked it, I washed it at 40% and you're right. I't SO hot!
Anyhow yours is beautiful, regardless of how felted it is.
By Anonymous, at 12:55 AM
I'll confess, I've done it too. Tried to get the knitted body of a cardigan (I think it was the white one in the green mountain spinnery book) to shrink JUST A LITTLE, and I got distracted and now have a vest of sorts, but it won't fit me. I'm thinking it might look great on someone who LARPs or is into SCA.
By Anonymous, at 5:55 AM
I actually did that on purpose once to an old cabled sweater I knit and never wore. It has a new life! I bet your felty Fishtrap repels water outdoors--I'd say you win!
By Cirilia, at 6:21 AM
Don't make me print my frustration at Blogger for continuing to lose the pictures - they're back up, for now! Your version is gorgeous, and looks so warm. You just need to move to Alaska and then you can wear it all the time!
By Sarah / Blue Garter, at 7:30 AM
It wasn't handknitted, but I'd found the most beautiful red sweater; I loved it and I wore it all the time. I'd machine washed it without any problems, but I thought it was an acrylic blend sweater-- and stuck it in the DRYER.
And it came out too small for me... and too small for my 9 year old niece. Yours is still beautiful, though!
By krisluvswool, at 10:30 AM
That is beautiful. What a tragedy about the felting!
By Anonymous, at 10:33 AM
Dear Femminista, Several knitters have told me that they successfully UNfelted sweaters by using undiluted fabric softener... soak the sweater in it; the fibers relax, un-stick and you can reblock to (almost) original size... worth a try...?
If it works, please tell us all.
Knit on, Meg
By Anonymous, at 12:15 PM
Don't feel bad, I handspun all the yarn for my first EZ seamless sweater, gave it to my 13y/o daughter and sure enough, it wound up fitting her 4 year old sister.
By Snarled Yarns, at 4:48 PM
Thanks for all the comments!
Glad to know I'm not the only one.
Cirilia, I never thought of the water repellent advantage--like a sheep! Bahhh. :)
Meg/baycomercio, I've never heard of that! I must say I'm a skeptic, but perhaps I should try.
snarled yarns--OMG--handspun?! Ouch. I am so glad it fit one of your daughters in the end!
I have to say that this experience did get me into felting, which I now do on purpose with some regularity for slippers and bowls....
By Elizabeth, at 6:44 PM
Girl, I just did the same thing about a month ago! I cried. The bad thing is that I have been knitting since I was 7. I should have known better.
Every knitter has gone through this...trust me!!
By BertandFelix, at 6:06 PM
Ouch! Thanks so much for sharing your cautionary tale. I've accidentally felted sweaters but never hand-knit. Fingers crossed...
By Anonymous, at 6:33 AM
Post a Comment
<< Home