Sensational Koigu Socks
Finished
July 2007
August 2007

Sensational Koigu Socks

Project info
Four-Stitch Reticulated Patterns by Charlene Schurch
Knitting
Feet / LegsSocksMid-calf
Jinjifore
Adult
Needles & yarn
US 1½ - 2.5 mm
19 stitches and 21 rows = 2 inches
in Patterned stockinette
525 yards
Koigu Painter's Palette Premium Merino (KPPPM)
1 skein = 175.0 yards (160.0 meters), 50 grams
Green
Angel Hair Yarn Co. in Nashville, Tennessee
Koigu Premium Merino (KPM)
2 skeins = 350.0 yards (320.0 meters), 100 grams
Purple
Angel Hair Yarn Co. in Nashville, Tennessee
Notes

There were two things that I’d wanted to do for a long time: Try Koigu, and knit some patterned socks. This project from Sensational Knitted Socks was just the thing to satisfy both desires. I love purple and green, and the moment I spotted these two colors I knew what I wanted to do with them. This was my first experience with Koigu, and I understand now why people rave about it. It’s lovely to knit with, soft and springy, and even the solids in plain stockinette create all manner of interesting textures. It was a joy to work with, and I was sorry to reach the end of the project.

As always with any technique I’ve not tried before, these were a learning experience. I’d done stranded work, so the knitting part wasn’t difficult. But I’d never done colorwork with a variegated yarn before and I made a basic mistake when I picked my colors, namely that the variegated yarn contained some colors that were as dark as the main solid. This meant that part of the pattern would be lost when the contrast yarn matched the solid yarn. I considered choosing another color, but I really liked the way the green and purple looked together and decided that I could live with some pattern blurring. It turned out to a be a good decision. Yes, some of the pattern fades into the background, and it’s not an effect that everyone would find pleasing, but I love the two yarns together so much that I find that I don’t really care.

The second learning experience involved the heel turning. Because of the colorwork, the entire sock is knitted with two strands of yarn, with the exception of the heel turning and the toe. I didn’t really think about it while I was turning the heel, but once I started on the foot I realized that the bottom of the heel, knitted with only one color and one strand, was a very different thickness and texture than the rest of the sock. Since this isn’t an area that typically wears out on my socks, I decided I wouldn’t worry about it, but when I got to the toe I simply dropped the contrast yarn and picked up a second strand of the solid, working the toe by alternating the two yarns as in two-end/tvaandstickning. I was very pleased with the result. Although it’s still a solid color, the toes match the rest of the sock in texture and thickness.

Speaking of toes, I also ran into a bit of a toe problem with the first sock. In the pictures, you can see the first sock as I originally finished it, worked with decreases every other round. For every other sock I’ve ever made, decreasing every other round has made a perfect toe. For some reason, though, my row gauge was considerably larger than I’m used to, and by the time the toe was more than long enough, I still had about twice as many stitches as I wanted. I went ahead and finished it, figuring I could knit the second sock while I was considering whether or not to alter the toe. I decided rather quickly that I didn’t like the wide toe, so for the second sock I decreased every round. It came out perfect, so I cut the tip off the first toe, ripped it back, and re-knitted it the same way as the second.

The little cards in the pictures are my mini-pattern. I realized very quickly that I didn’t want to haul around the entire book, or even a sheet of paper for two teeny little charts. So I copied out the charts and heel instructions on a piece of notebook paper and reinforced it with packing tape. I tied it to my sock as I worked, and thus always had my pattern to hand.

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Finished
July 2007
August 2007
About this pattern
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About this yarn
by Koigu
Fingering
100% Merino
175 yards / 50 grams

44101 projects

stashed 48846 times

Jinjifore's star rating
About this yarn
by Koigu
Fingering
100% Merino
175 yards / 50 grams

12117 projects

stashed 13155 times

Jinjifore's star rating
  • Project created: August 28, 2007
  • Finished: August 28, 2007
  • Updated: November 3, 2018