A Sweater, Unraveled (Part 1) - Its First Form
the giant 500g hank of yarn from the Naturally Colored Wool Growers Assoc. of Vic.
I bought this yarn for $40AUD at the Bendigo Sheep and Wool Show in 2015. I spent that weekend with Nan Bray after an out-of-the-blue email I sent introducing myself to her. We talked about “the co-ops” at UC Berkeley, our shared memories of a university campus some 30 odd years apart. I learned what a “sweater quantity” of wool was, and learned that day 3 is the day you’ll find more of the neutral toned yarns at a big 3-day yarn festival. The memories I have of this weekend are so precious to me, friendships kindled, time spent alone on trains, all the silly and practical knowledge gathered about yarn.
I bought this yarn and a few other precious skeins - a couple of hanks of Tarndie yarn (the birthplace of the sheep breed, Polworth) that became hats for friends - trades for Close Knit’s logo (thank you, edie) and trades for beeswax-treated canvas bags, a bright yellow naturally-dyed beanie I wore happily for ages & eventually passed on to a 4 year old (I have a small head). But this giant hank - I’d never seen anything like it before - came as a single 500g unit. It traveled with me from Bendigo to Sydney, to Hobart, then via the post back to California - from Oakland, to Carmel Valley, to LA and back again.
the yarns I bought from Bendigo, in their various forms as beanies for friends and my first knitting pattern I sold online.
In late 2018 (early Nov, it appears, from my camera roll), I finally decided on a sweater to make it into for myself - a Vanilla Heirloom by Verena Cohrs - a simple raglan with a nice twisted rib. I downloaded the free pattern after subscribing to her newsletter, excited that my yarn and needles just so happened to achieve gauge right away.
11/14/2018
11/20/2018
11/24/2018
The time I spent knitting that sweater was dotted with periods of intense anxiety and doubt, the bulk of the body I knit during a weekend trip with a former partner that left me feeling worn down and sad. My parents came to visit the day after to celebrate my birthday - I cried into my mother’s chest as she held me.
11/28/2018
12/06/2018
12/11/2018
01/09/2019
About a month after I finished the sweater, I went through a breakup. The sweater fit, it looked nice, even, but I found that I rarely wore it. I wonder now if I was distancing myself from this object that was so deeply intertwined with the memory of that relationship.
In 2019, I knitted the leftover parts of the yarn (somehow my “sweater quantity” produced a sweater + more! I was delighted with my purchase) into various things-I-am-making-for-no-baby-in-particular. Wool soakers for imagined cloth diapers, wooly overalls to cover wee legs. They sat in amongst the other baby clothes I am keeping safe (hoarding?). It all just sat for all of 2019 and most of 2020, lavender satchets guarding them from moths.
01-28-2019
09-20-2019
One of the things that got me interested in knitting was something I read in an interview Rachel Rutt did with Wool and the Gang in 2013ish - she recalled a family friend unraveling her handknit sweaters and making them anew as her children outgrew them. Something about the simplistic genius of that really struck me, and still does. Such a brilliantly thrifty, hopeful, and care-laden act. This property of wool, it’s elasticity, its resiliency is one of the things that drew me in (and still does).
I haven’t knit all that many sweaters in my life- maybe 1-2 a year for the last 5 years, a few of which I sold when I moved to California to lighten my load. I don’t need to be knitting myself very many sweaters, but it is such a joyful act of devotion and care to oneself, I just like to do it every so often. And because I am very particular and I also don’t like buying more yarn when I have good yarn in my home, I thought that unraveling it to make something new made the most sense. After all, everything else in my life changed since I started it (I fell in love, moved three times, started a different job) why not the sweater, too?
(see the unraveling, pt 2 - a new sweater here)