[Nfb-krafters-korner] My paratransit afghan (long)

Deborah Armstrong debee at jfcl.com
Sat Jul 30 00:32:03 UTC 2016


The water bottle holder is nothing.

Knit three, purl one.  It's nothing a real fine knitter would want to be 
seen carrying. It's stretchy and you do it in the round or straight and 
just sew the sides together.


See my other post on Amazing.


--Debee






On 7/29/2016 3:38 PM, Terry Powers via Nfb-krafters-korner wrote:
> Hi Deb;
> Thanks for a great story!
> I am making a baby blanket with almost the same patern.
> I tried to get on the site, but could not get any imfo about the yarn.  All
> I found was the stitch count but no color imfo.  Are these all solids or
> verigated.  It sounds like a great idea for solids.
> How about teaching the water bottle holder, please.
>
> Terry P.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Nfb-krafters-korner [mailto:nfb-krafters-korner-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
> Behalf Of Deborah Armstrong via Nfb-krafters-korner
> Sent: Friday, July 29, 2016 5:44 PM
> To: List for blind crafters and artists <nfb-krafters-korner at nfbnet.org>
> Cc: Deborah Armstrong <debee at jfcl.com>
> Subject: [Nfb-krafters-korner] My paratransit afghan (long)
>
> Someone asked me off-list about the paratransit afghan. I will explain it
> here, since there's nothing about this that needs to bee off-list!
>
> First, a bit of scene setting. The transportation happens in cargo vans,
> modified Ford 350s that are designed for holding stuff, not people. they
> don't have good shocks, so even minor bumpy rides feel like mild roller
> coasters. Most passengers are in heavy power chairs or scooters, strapped to
> the floor with things that resemble seatbelts. This is Silicon valley where
> everyone drives, so it's not a mecca for the visually impaired!
>
> My job is on a main route to V.A. hospital so I'm mostly riding with older
> folks with respirators or on kidney dialysis, or who have suffered strokes.
> These are a chatty lot, and though especially after a long day at work, I
> often want to read a good mystery, or just think quiet thoughts, that luxury
> seldom occurs. Instead I learn all about everyone's dog, grandson, aches,
> doctors and opinions. I mean no disrespect for the elderly; I'm just cooped
> up with them for long periods and don't like being rude. A typical one-way
> ride with multiple stops is about 90 minutes.
>
> So I decided I needed an activity that would keep me awake, willing to
> listen and would handle the frequent stops and the roughness of the ride.
> My guide dog sleeps through it but I cannot.
>
> I taught myself to knit on circulars, which was liberating because when the
> driver wanted me to hop out quick to squeeze another wheelchair in, I could
> jam the whole thing in to my purse, and be off the van in 15 seconds. Also
> if my phone rings, I can set it aside.
>
> I carry my yarn in a ball in a heavy ziplock with a tiny hole punched in the
> bottom to feed the tip of the yarn out. If I'm doing colors, it's two
> ziplocks of different textures. I keep a rubber band around my wrist to wrap
> around the tips of the needles at a moment's notice and I have a small
> drawstring bag to stuff everything in to rapidly. I also occasionally carry
> a cup holder, one of those that fits between the window gap, and use it if I
> have a large ball of yarn. These are for the 20-ounce size of soft drink and
> cost a dollar on Amazon. I find them too flimsy for a real drink but they
> are perfect for feeding and containing yarn while traveling.
>
> I knit circular things like hats and water bottle holders, but I also knit
> as if I were using straight needles; the circulars are just more convenient.
> Before I learned to use circulars I was always dropping straight needles. I
> find metal is really slippery if you knit on a ride, but plastic and bamboo
> have more friction. You can get cheap Clover Takoomi bamboo needles on
> Amazon but I've come to really love the plastic interchangeable set from
> Knit Denise, around $45 on Amazon. The Knit Denise youtube channel is here:
>
>
>       https://www.youtube.com/user/KnitDenise
>
>
> and she does a great job of describing how to use them, almost as if she
> knows some viewers are visually impaired.
>
>
> One delightful advantage I found riding with all those seniors was they
> would, if I asked freely offer opinions about the yarn and its color.  I
> didn't have to go seeking sighted people to comment on the work or
> materials and it was a lot more fun than hearing about how someone's son
> is in jail!  Knitting helped me stop resenting and start appreciating
> the people I rode with!
>
>
> For the afghan, I wanted something pretty, but I couldn't count stitches
> with Mrs. Smith yacking about politics or back pain in my ear. So I
> decided to make it this way:
> Cast on three stitches.
> On each row, knit 1, do a yarn over, and knit the rest of the row.
> You get a lacy triangle with tiny holes around the edges. Measure it
> until it's the size you want, then start each row by knitting the first
> two stitches together. Follow with a yarn over, then knit two more
> stitches together to keep the decrease going. Eventually you get down to
> three stitches and you bind off.
>
> For beginners, a yarn over or YO is simply the tiny hole you get when
> you wrap the yarn around the needle without knitting a stitch. Beginners
> make them by mistake all the time. I was simply making the mistake in
> the correct place!
>
> You now have a square with lacy edges.
>
> Collect all these squares, making them the same size, and sew them
> together. I used Lion Brand's Amazing, which at that time came in 25
> colors. I knitted one square in each color.
>
>
> Amazing is described well by Lion Brand here:
>
> http://www.lionbrand.com/amazing-yarn.html
>
>
> Because this yarn is so variagated, the actual stitch pattern gets
> visually lost. This is why it would be a bit of a waste to use a fancy
> pattern on this kind of yarn.
> People think the results look very advanced, but they aren't. A few
> squares I messed up and had to do again -- no big deal.
>
> I can purl too, but this is the easiest thing to make while others are
> trying to converse with you. It feels even prettier if you purl a solid
> row before starting to decrease by knitting two together at the start of
> each row. Sighted people seem to not notice the purling with the
> colorful yarns. But I think it adds to the tactile aesthetic of the piece!
>
> When I sewed, I tried to keep the slightly thicker edge where I had knit
> two together on the outside.
>
> I finished it off with the chain stitch, using my fingers because I
> don't know how to crochet. I just took black yarn of the same weight
> category and created a chain all around in the loops of the stitches
> along the edges of the afghan.
>
>
> --Debee
>
>
>
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