In exchange for my sister painting the kit for the swap baby I did in October, I told her I'd knit her an R2D2 hat with earflaps.
Have you ever had a project that it seemed that everything and anything that could go wrong, would? Well, this was one of those projects!
I figured out the graph (which took several revisions to get it right) and then did a test run-though of the pattern to figure out the approximate size he'd end up. I bought the yarn and then did the cast on. My cable came off of the needle in the middle of casting on, so I had to start over! I knit about 10 rows and realized it was ending up way too big, so I pulled it all back out and started over with only 5 pattern repeats instead of 6. After I was knitting awhile, my cable broke, so I had to rescue my stitches and switch to a different needle! I was 3/4 of the way done and I wasn't liking how it was looking. The stitches looked pucker-y. So I ripped it back about 20 rows and restarted. Next came time to figure out the earflaps. I had my sister try on the hat and see where the flaps needed to be, but after I got them both done, they didn't seem quite right, so I had her try it on again. Sure enough, they weren't wide enough after all! So I ripped them out again! I still had to figure out the fleece for the lining and it went semi-well! In the end, I think it turned out okay, although I really wasn't 100% happy with the top of the hat!
That hat sure did give you a lot of hassles. It is a very nice hat now though.
ReplyDeleteI must say, that's pretty impressive!
ReplyDeleteWow, Becky, I am totally impressed! I'm impressed with the end product, and with your stick-to-it-tiveness! It looks way too hard to accomplish, yet you did it!! Huge gentle pats on your back!!! You have a right to be proud of your project!
ReplyDeleteLove, AM