I agree with Sumi. I have done this, and been happy with the results.
Yay, socks! I am having heel issues on my Latter Day Socks, so they've been sitting on my shelf for over a year.
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls, The Inside and Drive), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath. Oh, and help us get Terriers dvds!
I agree with Sumi. I have done this, and been happy with the results.
Yay, socks! I am having heel issues on my Latter Day Socks, so they've been sitting on my shelf for over a year.
My problem with my abandoned first sweater project is that the yarn is crappy too. I bought it before I knew anything about anything, and it's miserable on the fingers to work with, and it's also clear my gauge was wrong and the sweater is not going to fit me, and is a dorky style for anyone not me. I mean, it's dorky for me too, but I can rock out dorky, especially stripey dorky.
But yeah, I should frog it anyway. I'm trying to finish the hat I started last spring, to go with my new coat. And then I need to do some dishcloths, which will wokr out because I'm trying to teach myself to switch over from English to combination.
But I really still am having string tension issues. I just don't hold the yarn right, I think.
What I actually want to do is frog my favorite store sweater, which has a hole in the shoulder, but in such a way that I think I can salvage most of the yarn, which is fabulous and looks great and doesn't hold dog hair. But I'm askeered. Although really, I'm not wearing it anymore, so there's very little risk.
But yeah, I should frog it anyway.
You should take it to Goodwill and let someone else frog it if they have a use for the yarn. It doesn't sound like stuff you'd want to use again anyway.
I am not a knitter but I kind of love the term frog. What does it mean, to unravel the pattern? I wonder where the term comes from.
Oo, I should check Wordnik, shouldn't I?
Yeah, Liese, if you're not using the sweater, there's not a good reason to not frog it.
I do agree with brenda, though, if you have no use for the yarn, don't put in the work to frog the WIP.
Burrell, yeah, to "frog" is to unravel a piece of knitting entirely. It comes from the sound frogs make: "Rippit Rippit"
You may also enjoy the term "tink," which is to undo stitches one at a time (you know, knit backward)
Thanks DebetEsse
Liese- are you going to left thumb purl? I have been trying to switch to that, but it is hard to unlearn my method, which I taught myself and is continental on the knit, and a really crazy unknown method on the purl.
What is really weird is that my mom tried to teach me to kniw (I learned when I was about 4) and she knits English style, but I just made up my way, and it turned out it was continental!
Ack!
Whew, link snafu, lemme try again.
I dunno, I may finish the original sweater just for sentimentality's sake, and who knows, now that I'm losing weight it may eventually fit!
The commercial one I'll definitely frog.
I didn't know the term "tink" but I do that a lot! I'm timid ripping stuff back, because I often put it on the needle wrong. So I happily knit backwards a lot to get to an unnoticed error.
Liese- are you going to left thumb purl?
I dunno! Here's the relevant videos: Combination knit. Combination purl. I want to learn because it's so much faster, but I'm not sure, maybe I should just learn straight Continental? It seems more complicated to interpret patterns this way, something I'm already not good at.
Heads up - American Horror Story has gone the supremely annoying Survivor route of retitling for the new season, so if you have a season pass set for American Horror Story it will not pick up American Horror Story: Asylum tonight.