I have not had much weaving time for the last few days, and I needed some portable projects, so I started some knitting.
First it was Connie Delaney's Wrap Around Shawl pattern. This is not yet listed on Ravelry under her name as a designer, nor does it come up with a search on the name. It is apparently available now as a download, however. The pattern is similar visually to Elizabeth Zimmerman's Pie R Square shawl, I think, but I have not made EZ's pattern so I don't know if they are similar in execution. I am making the Wrap Around Shawl using a "knit front & back" increase, and I am not doing the lace rows. This yarn (KFI Albina) is so fuzzy that any lace rows wouldn't show anyway.
This shawl project has stood me in good stead during a long car-buying session. I really hate the car-buying process; most dealerships make it such an ordeal. We did, however, recently trade one of our Ford C-Max cars (we had two; love them! Hybrid car, awesome gas mileage, and incredible headroom. They can fit both my 6'7" hubby and my 6'5" son, with me driving, along with the grandson in a carseat.) for a Ford Transit Connect van. They seem to be fairly scarce as passenger vans, although they're fairly ubiquitous as cargo vans. We waited a long time (close to 6 months) for one with the right options - mainly a split rear door instead of a liftgate. (My extra-tall guys would not fit under a liftgate. Now I'll have room for my bicycle for trips and group rides, for spinning wheels and looms, even hay runs or animal transport if needed.
I also decided it was a very good idea to have knitting at hand when I go drop off and pick up the grandson at school. Most of the time I just surf on my phone, but I think I'd rather be doing something that at least feels more productive. I had come across an abandoned project in my craft room, and decided to get back to work on that.
I had three skeins of LB Collection Angora Merino (in the color Parchment - it's a little more tan than the picture shows). It started as a mistake rib scarf on 35 stitches or so. I pulled it out, and started over with 51 stitches and larger needles. I wasn't happy with that so I hunted through my pattern collection on Ravelry and decided to try the Besotted Scarf - pretty cables, a fairly easy pattern, and free! I'm only a couple of pattern repeats into it, and it looks like it's working out well in this yarn.
Either one would work for a "spend the day at hubby's work" pattern as well. The cabled scarf requires a little more attention than the just-keep-knitting shawl (4 increases every other row at this point) but not by much.



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