Earlier this summer I completed repairs on a commercial sweater. One of my students had a friend whose favorite sweater looked like an alligator had chewed on the cuffs. I suspect a backstory but I don't know it. I didn't take a lot of pictures of the sweater. I probably should have. One of the challenges was the sleeves were worked cuff up (bottom up) rather than top down. This meant repairing the damaged sleeves included recreating the cast-on, re-knitting the damaged fabric, and grafting the hole closed in pattern. If the sleeves had been worked in the other direction, it would have been a much simpler repair involving ripping back and re-knitting. The repair was further complicated by the stranded construction of the sweater. I was using similar but not identical yarn. I eventually figured out I needed to pull some plies off the replacement black yarn to bring it down to match in girth. This also meant all the knitting and grafting used multiple...
Yesterday's post was about how to make a caftan. Today's post is about how to make a poncho. After I made my summer silk caftan, I realized it did sometimes get a little chilly, especially with air conditioning. Wouldn't it be nice to have a matching cover up? Materials & Tools: two 35 by 84-inch silk veils or appropriate-sized fabric silk thread straight pins sewing needle scissors ruler There are two steps to make the poncho — sleeve seams and cuff seams. Sleeve seams: Start with two large silk scarves. Lay them wrong-sides together. Find the center line at the long end and place a pin through one layer. Measure the head circumference of the intended wearer. Place pins centered a little more than half that distance apart. Place more pins across the long edge all the way to the sides. Try poncho on. Adjust pins until poncho slides easily over head. Take poncho off. Sew sleeve ...