#needleworkmonday WiP challenge | Can you guess what it is? Win tokens for comments (lots of clues inside) 😁

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We have lots of weather today in Leicester, in the Middle Lands of England. It has been cool, overcast and dreary, with darkness alleviated only by rain. Yesterday, I had to put the heating on - in midsummer 😱.

Well, today @needleworkmonday has set us a challenge - give a sneak preview of a work in progress (WiP) today, Monday 28 June, and show the finished masterpiece next week, Monday 5 July, as creatively as you can. 😡!

Win Hive-Engine Tokens for comments

I'm adding to the fun with a little side challenge to see if you can guess what my finished masterpiece is going to be. I've included some clues below (marked: CLUE πŸ˜‚) to help you. All the comments will go into the Wheel of Names, and some lucky winners will be chosen at random.

Here it is: the Magical Mystery Tour!

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Middle: I was recommended some cotton yarn - so much cooler for these items in the summer (CLUE).
Right: I was a bit worried by the tension and the messy edges in the swatch, but it is okay as I am going to be knitting in the round (CLUE).
Left: I loved the patterns on the wrong side of the fabric. I think the change in fabric thickness is going to help with the shaping and a better fit to help these items stay up when you are wearing them (CLUE).
I got the idea from @mariannewest's post last week (CLUE).

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Here's the finished and blocked swatch. Can you guess what I am knitting yet? Check the clues above and leave your answer in the comments below for a chance to win some tokens.

Swatching

I really enjoyed swatching for this item. I was making a swatch to check that the tension matched the pattern tension over stocking stitch and over the charted pattern that appears on part of the so item (I almost gave it away there)!

I got in a terrible muddle with the two different colours and the cable on the circular needles I was using (just look at the bird's nest under the swatch in the right hand picture in the photo collage above). At one point, one of the yarns was held tight and I couldn't pull enough through to make a stitch.

I was wondering if I was doing it correctly, or if there was just an easier way to control the different strands of yarn. That's when I started to research and came across two things that were new to me. One was yarn-hand and the other was yarn dominance.

Yarn-hand refers to how you control the two (or more) different colours as you knit across a row. There are many different methods, including holding both colours in your right or left hand, or one colour in each hand. Or you can do what I did, pick up and drop each colour as you want to make a stitch with it.

The last method is completely okay. I was worried that it would affect the tension, but in fact it doesn't. You can see from the finished swatch that the centre piece with the pattern is narrower, but this is to do with distortions to the shape of the stitch (it becomes taller and more square compared to knitting with a single colour), rather than tension.

However, it is a very slow and laborious method, so I am doing some more swatching to learn how to hold the yarn in the other three ways as well - so I can choose whichever method I want. This will mean learning what is known in England as "continental or "German" knitting (it is neither, but that's the traditional naming here).

Yarn dominance refers to which colour looks more dominant in the knitted pattern. Yarn dominance happens because the dominant stitches are slightly larger than the non-dominant stitches. It has nothing to do with whether the colour is light or dark.

When you do two or more colour work, strands or "floats" of yarn are carried at the back of the knitting until you want to use them again to make a stitch. How you manage these strands or floats at the back creates the different effects on the front or right side of the knitting, and determines which colour will dominate.

On the back or wrong side of my sample (left hand picture in the photo collage), you can see the strands floating across the back of the fabric. I've used parallel floats - each strand runs in a straight line, but I didn't check which colour was the bottom float in each row, so sometimes it's the background colour and sometimes it's the pattern colour.

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Source In this sample by Roxanne Richardson, you can see three different effects in the single column colours. At the bottom, red was the bottom float and dominates. At the top, grey was the bottom float and dominates. In the middle, Roxanne has used a different method of carrying the floats where the strands are rotated between colour changes, so neither colour dominates.

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Source Here, Roxanne is showing the back or wrong side of a sample. Where her fingers are, you can see an example of rotating floats or strands. In the section below you can see an example of parallel floats or strands.

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Source Here's the front or right side of Roxanne's swatch, where she has labelled each section with the technique she has used. It's very subtle, a bit like when you have your eyes tested and they ask whether the green or the red is more dominant ... or are they both the same ...πŸ€—

You can find out more about multi-colour knitting in these three videos by Roxanne Richardson:
1. Stranded Colour Work 101 tension and yarn hand
2. Parallel and Rotating Floats
3. Trapping Floats

Did you guess what I'm knitting for the big reveal next week? Remember to leave me a comment with your answer below πŸ™‚.

Saturday Savers Club
I run a savings club every Saturday over on the @eddie-earner account. We're aiming to save Β£670 ($800) by the end of the year using the 365 day savings challenge. You can join any time of the year and set your own goals and plans (some people are saving Hive, others Bitcoin, some their local currency). We share savings tips and there's a free giveaway every week.

Three things newbies should do in their first week and, for most things, forever afterwards!

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40 comments
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hah! I guessed it must be socks on Marianne's post cause she is always knitting socks and I was right :D

But, I am guessing you are knitting, leg warmers

I love the patterns and colours by the way

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Hello @kaerpediem, how are you? So long since I've seen you (my fault, I'm sure) 😍.

Ha, so you had background information! But let's keep it under our hat for now πŸ˜‚.

Thank you for playing along!

!ENGAGE 20

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From "stay up" I am going to guess socks. And thanks for the illustrations of color dominance. I carry one yarn in each hand when I do color work and remember which color goes with which hand. !BBH

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Hello @fiberfrau how are you? Thank you for coming by.
Good guess! But shh! let's keep it quiet for now.

I thought the colour dominance was fascinating - the video also had some examples of where colour dominance had changed, perhaps by mistake, and it really stood out. Great if you want that effect.

Good plan for holding one yarn in each hand, I'm looking forward to trying that.

!ENGAGE 20

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Now I need to swatch and see which color dominates when I knit--the left or right-hand color. Knowledge I can use in future projects!

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Because this is such an awesome post, here is a BBH Tip for you. . Keep up the fantastic work

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Based on the hints and the commments made so far I'd have to say socks.lol

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Hello @bearmol, good guess, tune in next week to see if you are right 😍

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Hi, the figure pattern is looking beautiful on you. I would love to learn it. I am very curious to see your finished project.

On the other hand I think you are knitting some mittens.

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Hello @tibaire ... I guess they are a kind of mittens 😁.
The pattern is lovely, isn't it? I'm not showing the full chart here, I only practised part of it. I will post a link to the pattern next week, then you can try it, if you want to.

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Hello @shanibeer

I think you would make something you could wear and would make you warm. Is it a turtle neck sweater?

Can't wait to see your next week article :)

Please check mine too :)
Thanks

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Is it a turtle neck sweater?

It could be ... all the clues would match 😁.

Let's see next week 😍.

I will look at your entry, thank you for inviting me.

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You are knitting a cardigan!!! Absolutely and totally sure a cardigan :-DDDDDD No, joking, it only can be socks. And I kind of am in awe about the colorwork. THis looks super complicated, I get sweaty hands by only looking at the color changes. I find it very tough to work with several yarns at the same time, makes me super nervous. On the other hand is colorwork so beautiful…. The only time I tried it I held both yarns in the left hand, but to learn to hold it in both hands is fascinating, like learning to write with the left (for me, as I am right handed) hand. Perhaps I one day will try it again.
The yarn dominance/floating order is new to me and I would have never guessed that the difference is so visible - wow.
And at last: the weather…. In Germany we are a lot warmer but not nicer. We have what we call Unwetter (not weather). It is super warm (30 degrees C) and humid and then it is even getting warmer and wetter until after some days we have thunderstorms and so much rain, but without the air getting cooler. To be honest I would like to change with you, better putting on the heater than drenched in sweat - but this is only my preference :-D

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You are knitting a cardigan!!!

How did you know????????????? 😁

Mmm, you know I would never have attempted colourwork of my own volition, but I loved the pattern so much when I saw it last week that I had to try. But I was soooooooooooooo slow swatching. I am not a fast knitter anyway, and I like the calming effect of when you (I) have to knit slowly, but this was slower than paint drying. I had to find out how to do it more quickly, otherwise the project would not be finished this year, never mind this week!

I don't think colourwork is a project for when you are tired or perhaps under the weather. I can imagine that you have to concentrate ... or perhaps once you know what you are doing, you slip into automatic knitting. I am on the last sleeve of the cardigan and I notice that my knitting has speeded up after completing so much of it.

The yarn dominance/floating order is new to me and I would have never guessed that the difference is so visible - wow.

You know I have an idea to write text or slogans within cardigans? I thought about it when it was the 100th anniversary of women's suffrage here. THe picture at the top has the suffrage colours - green, purple and white. I don't know their symbolism, other than they are not red,white and blue! Anyway, I have had the idea to learn colourwork, but not uppermost in my mind.

Humid ... 😡. I feel you!

I tried the crochet cast on for the swatch, too. I was so funny, my fingers could not organise themselves πŸ˜‚, but eventually I had them under control!

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Me encantΓ³ la combinaciΓ³n de colores y los diseΓ±os, a juzgar por la foto 2 creo que es un guante, espero el prΓ³ximo lunes para verlo terminado.

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Un guante es una buena suposiciΓ³n ... Β‘es una especie de guante, supongo!
Gracias por venir, Β‘nos vemos la semana que viene para la gran revelaciΓ³n!

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I love all the guessing! I’m just going to look forward to your reveal next week. However, I do want to say the obvious is socks or leg warmers for next Fall but I have a feeling you are going to surprise us all with what your items really are (I know it’s more than one 😁).

I love the pattern you have knitted, it looks like a tribal one.

Thanks so much for entering ~

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Could be drawers! πŸ˜›πŸ˜³πŸ€— x
The pattern is what caught my attention last week - the full pattern is very beautiful. I'll post the link next week, too.
It's a great challenge, everyone has got excited! 😍

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πŸ˜†πŸ˜†πŸ˜†

Yes it’s great to see everyone having fun, so excited and anticipating next week's reveal!!

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I love how you create jacquard knitting patterns, if they are not socks they could be warmers or maybe a scarf
Hugs <3

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Hello @irenenavarroart, thank you for coming by.
The patterns are very beautiful, aren't they? I'm enjoying learning about them.
They are defintely "warmers" of some kind, and I guess they could be used as a scarf 😍.

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So.. socks? :D I love your swatching and your yarn colour choices. It looks really neat. I can imagine how fun it is to see the patterns come alive as you work them and you would want to keep working to reveal the pattern :)

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So.. socks?

πŸ€·β€β™€ - can it be? 😍

you would want to keep working to reveal the pattern

midnight ... one o clock ... two o clock ... πŸ˜‚

Mr P keeps asking me what I am doing!

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Oooo.. tease tease, our hearts and eyes will be :D
Poor Mr P!! But he'll have to wait hehe :D

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Ooooooooooooooooh a sweater maybe.

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a sweater

I must knit very fast!!! How are you @afrikablr, so good to see you? 😍

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Okay so I guess socks! But also "lots of weather" made me giggle. We went from using the heater, to 100F, back to cool weather. Meanwhile the Pacific NW is having a major heatwave when normally they are cool and rainy like y'all!
!LUV

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I guess socks!

Socks? You think? πŸ€” Could be, I guess 😍

All the women in the generations before me would be truly shocked at using heating in midsummer - I would be advised to put a vest on πŸ˜‚. It certainly is strange weather: last week on the news it reported there had been a tornado east London. We don't really do tornadoes in England, we're far too sedate.

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(Edited)

I can just imagine some proper English lady like the Dowager Countess of Grantham stepping outside her home and fixing the tornado with a glare, saying, "We do not do that here!" and the tornado just peters out... πŸ˜‚

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Great! it looks like a refined work...I already want to see what it is. I'm guessing it's a cold weather sweater.

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Hello @chacald.dcymt how nice to meet you 😍.
Hmm, a cold weather sweater ... a good guess, come back on Monday to find out!

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Mmmmmm ... another project that I have no idea. I'm at a disadvantage with knitting. It puzzles me that it is summer, anything I can think of is for winter ... so I will risk saying that they are socks too, but in summer ?? I'll have to wait for Monday to find out πŸ˜ƒ.

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(Edited)

Hello @lauramica, summer knitting does seem strange, doesn't it? 😁
We can have very warm days here in the summer, but sometimes, and it is true this year, some summer days can be very chilly and you need several layers to keep you warm πŸ‘•.

I'll have to wait for Monday to find out πŸ˜ƒ

Hehe, it's quite hard, isn't it?!

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Nice choice of colours, I love the pattern you are going with. From the clues gives I guess it could be a socks or a neck warmer, something within that sphere.

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