I finished the Haruni shawl for my little brother’s wedding! With time to spare, actually.
My Blue Haruni (rav it!)
Pattern: Haruni, by Emily Ross
Yarn: Ella Rae Lace Merino, 1 skein, 460 yds. I think the colorway had a number, but it was a soft cobalt color Royal Blue, #10!
Needle: US 4
Started: um, I forget
Finished: April 11 with the knitting, April 25 with the blocking
For: me! To wear! In my little brother’s wedding!
Unfortunately, at this point there is scant evidence that I did wear it at the wedding. I found one picture of me in it, kind of in the background. But in most of the pictures I wasn’t wearing it, since I didn’t want to look that different from the other bridesmaids, you know? So you’ll have to take my word for it–it looked faboo with my dress.
Anyway, deets. I shall sum it up poetically: To knit, a dream. To block, a nightmare.
First, the knitting.
LOVE love loved this pattern. It was really well written, and pretty easy to follow. Until that last chart, the lovely edging, which was confusing as all get out. I found myself actually using the written instructions for that part, something I never ever do. But, all was okay. The pattern is pretty intuitive, once you get going on it. Emily put scads and scads of pattern notes on there, which were kind of chatty but in a nice friendly way. And they were helpful. I think the most helpful of all was this line–”Please note that due to the rapid rate of increase in Chart B [that's the edging part] it will consume roughly half your entire yardage.”
Holy crapola am I glad she put that in there. I was toying with the idea of making the shawl a bit bigger, but I slapped the remaining yarn on my scale after I was done with the main shawl part and whaddya know–I had 46 g left of what I thought was a 100 g skein. (It actually turned out to be only 95 g. Boo! Hiss! Well, not a big deal really, it worked out fine in the end.)
So off to the edging I went.
The edge does increase quite quickly, and gives the shawl a distinctive crescent shape, which was purdy but a pain in the arse-bucket to block. I had 6 g of yarn left after I finished that part.
Then there was the crochet bindoff thing. You work it by knitting 3tog with a crochet hook (please don’t bind me by semantics–it worked, okay?), then chaining 6 and doing a k3tog again. It took awhile, and a lot of yarn (3 g!) but I think it was worf it.
So, to recap yarn usage:
49 g for main part of shawl
40 g for edging
3 g for bindoff
=
92 g total.
IF we can believe the yarn label and 100 g really is 460 yards, then it’s 4.6 yards per gram and I used 423.2 yards total. (I did not swatch. Dear knitting gods, please do not smite me.)
And so to block.
I had to redo this three effing times. Gaa, it just didn’t look right. First I tried blocking it out as a triangle, since that was the easiest with my blocking wires. Bleh. It just looked wrong. The ends were stretched out all weird. Then I made it into a crescent shape, but I made it too deep and it looked all narrow and gimpy. So then I pulled it out width-wise and monkeyed with it awhile, and then it was just right. Yay! Stupid thing. The tip was especially a PITA.
But *I* like it, even though the blub said it looks like a giant lacy Star Trek emblem (but pretty). And you can wear it so many different ways!
The Traditional!
The Lobster Bib! (It’s still a bit deep in front.)
The Sexy Babushka!
The Coy Peeky Through the Thing, um, way
And the blub’s favorite….To Infinity! And Beyond!
Yeah. All that being said, I don’t think I’m going to get much wear out of it. And speaking of not wearing things again, anyone interested in a slightly used David’s Bridal dress in Marine Blue, size 6? I dig the cut, but I don’t see that one coming off the hanger again anytime soon.
*”I did it!” is my niece Hanna’s latest catch phrase. As in, “Did you go to school today, Hanna?” “I did! I did it!”














15 comments
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May 10, 2010 at 6:54 pm
turtlegirl76
Oooh that’s so pretty!
May 10, 2010 at 8:18 pm
kelly-ann (on ravelry)
Your shawl is stunning – the last few photos are so funny. I have knit some shawls, but still struggle with the wearing of the shawls in everyday life. Thank goodness for knitting meetings/fiber fairs…a good reason to break out the shawl. Honestly, I think I would get less stares if I wore the shawl as a babushka than I do when wearing a shawl to look “put together”.
May 10, 2010 at 9:12 pm
Zonda
Oh, it’s gorgeous!! Haha you crack me up, love your poses!
May 11, 2010 at 1:57 am
Jennifer
That turned out beautiful! And I really dig the color.
May 11, 2010 at 2:12 am
Andi
It turned out beautiful. I didn’t even see the Star Trek emblem until you mentioned it. I hope you figure out a way to get some wear out of it! Or maybe you could just stick it up on a wall to show off your knitting skillz.
May 11, 2010 at 2:50 am
Joanna
It’s lovely! I have it on my list. I have the pattern printed and have the yarn. This may be the extra inspiration push I needed to get going.
May 11, 2010 at 5:00 am
Peri
I love it. Gorgeous. Have added it to my queue.
May 11, 2010 at 10:41 am
Jennifer
It’s beautiful! (Love the glamour shots, too.) I blocked mine with pins… lots and lots of pins. Ergh. Worth it in the end, but oh man.
May 11, 2010 at 12:13 pm
weezalana
That is absolutely beautimous! I’m with Blub, me likes that last pose best. ;)
May 11, 2010 at 12:21 pm
orata
wow, it is so purty! I like the Sexy Babushka but also the name of “The Coy Peeky Through the Thing, um, way”, which should really be in those “how to tie your scarf” handouts at the Tie Rack stores in the airport.
May 14, 2010 at 5:19 pm
…and, a year later… « the eye of the beholder
[...] is absolutely awesome, is a free download from Ravelry. (If you don’t have a Ravelry account Chemgrrl has a picture up on her [...]
May 14, 2010 at 5:23 pm
efbq
Really beautiful. I needed a non-Ravelry picture to link to from my blog, hope you don’t mind.
(About to cast on and feeling a tad nervous about it – wish me luck!)
May 15, 2010 at 10:43 am
Kyle Kunnecke
it’s really pretty! I love the way lace looks but have yet to dive into the making of it… I’m not sure why… but your piece makes me want to try it! :) – I LOVE the beautiful yarn color too! congrats on such a wonderful FO
May 19, 2010 at 7:39 pm
Nell
Be-you-tee-ful!!!
June 13, 2010 at 6:42 am
Batty
Wow, Haruni came out stunning.