The photo shoot with Maizy is a wrap, so now I can share my review of this pattern (as modified from women’s size to child’s) and the final product.
Original pattern: More Fun Than Cables Socks by Marguerite Byrne, available for free at Stitches of Violet (Ravelry link)
My modified pattern: More Fun Than Cables Socks (children’s knee-highs); mini-me version to fit 3- to 4-year old feet (Ravelry link to project notes)
Yarn: Valley Yarns Huntington (machine washable wool) in colorway 4150
Needle: US 3 circular (I routinely use the 2-at-a-Time method for socks on one circular, but pattern is written for use on two circulars; could be used with traditional dpn method)
Finished dimensions: calf circumference = 4.25 inches (unstretched), knee to heel top = 11 inches, back of heel to end of toe = nearly 7 inches
In reducing the overall number of stitches to fit the foot size of a 3- to 4-year old, I needed to make some adjustments to the pseudo-cable pattern that repeats, and to accommodate a knee-high fit, I also modified the length. You can review my adjustments via this modified pattern link in PDF format (also above) or through my Patterns link on the sidebar to the right.
I’m really happy with how these turned out: I mean, come on, is Maizy not adorable in the bright-red knee-highs? And tell me the fingernails in the picture above aren’t the cutest thing you’ve ever seen. I love my niece, I really do. She is so stylin’.
They come up right to her knees - bingo, right on target - and appear to fit her very well; tight enough around the calf to stay up. I made sure to shoot on the long side for foot length so that she can wear these puppies for close to a year (assuming they hold up!).
Sissy B tells me that she’s enjoyed wearing them several times already, tying them in with outfits of all colors, including some (like hot pink) that grown women might not normally pair with red. That’s my girl: fashion-forward.
Sizing-wise, if you would like to make any further tweaks to size slightly up or down in age, I used a couple of resources in determining foot length for children of various ages, among other dimensions (length from knee to ankle, calf circumference…this second link is a lot of data, but I’m a nerd, as you’ve already heard on this subject). If your wee recipient isn’t within reach to do the measurements in person, this info might come in handy.
I like the Huntington yarn (by Valley Yarns, procured from WEBS). Soft yet sturdy, smoothly sliding down my non-Addi Turbo cheapo needles. Not splitty at all - very easy to work with. I’ve already drooled all over the perfect shade of red.
My research prior to ordering the yarn indicated that the yarn could be both machine-washed and tumble-dried (although the latter isn’t on the label).
I’ll ask Sissy B how the fabric stands up over time. Although machine-washing will probably be her choice moving forward, she said she hand-washed after Maizy road-tested them for the first time (getting them nice and dirty, like a good girl should). Maizy modeled the socks for the photos here after that wash. I noticed a bit of white fuzz clinging at this point, but not pilling.
These nearly made it entirely out of one skein. You can see here how close to the toe ends my last bit of first skein stopped (in the 2-at-a-Time method, I pull from both the middle yarn and the outside strand to knit each sock on a different portion of the circular needle at the same time).
I used only 10-15 yards of my second skein in order to finish up with the foot length I wanted. In fact, so eager was I to manage to crank these out from just the one skein (even though the second one was sitting right there) that I finished these socks once with a shorter length (around 6.25 inches instead of closer to 7). And these would have fit Maizy now, on the tighter side…but given that the foot length is the dimension that will change the most for her in the next year, I wanted room to grow. Plus there might be some shrinkage in the laundry. You know.
So I ripped back re-did them to add that extra 3/4 inch. Worth it. Happy I did.
Overall, two thumbs up for both pattern and yarn. Comment away with any questions.
More soon on other progress, which I’m happy to report has actually occurred. Sheer Poncho was off the needles, as in off off, but a stretchier bind-off is needed…so it’s back on the needles. Heavens to Betsy, if I don’t have it ready for mailing to Kymber by the end of the weekend I’m gonna be in my own dog house.
Tags: cables, dryer, Huntington, knee-high, machine, Maizy, More Fun Than Cables Socks, red, socks, superwash, tumble, Valley Yarns, WEBS, wool
Well, well – somebody’s been absent from blogworld for a while.
And by absent I mean floating adrift in a real pisser of a month. I feel like I’ve been dog-paddling along in the wake of life as it’s plunging forward, mightily, without so much as a glance back in my direction. I’ve been struggling in spectacular fashion, but today is when I pull myself up by the bootstraps.
Help me up, girls - I’ll emerge from this yet.
Finished my Curlicue blanket for Kymber’s baby girl – what was it, two weeks ago? Just needs blocking. Little K is actually past due, so my shocking pink creation will need to hit the mail any day. Somewhere in Holland that baby could be entering the world right now.
I’ve been waiting on the blocking because I haven’t wanted to give it my usual (still-frosh) effort: a quick, 30-second soak in the sink followed by a roll-up in a towel to suck out the excess water, and then a layout flat to shape.
My soak in the sink has always included a few drops of Downy (standard April Fresh, thank you) in the water. No soap - just Downy.
I know – not really a lot of thought about the possibility of my beloved Downy leaving any waxy fabric-softener residue on my little treaure of fine fibers, freshly knitted.
You’d think I’d put more time into thinking it through, given the time spent on the knitting part.
I’ve never put much thought into cleaning my clothes beyond the following:
- Toss it all in the washing machine.
- Toss it all in the dryer - unless it’s “delicate” (meaning “might shrink” and make it look like I’ve put on weight). If delicate, [sigh] air-dry.
- God forbid it doesn’t fall into one of these categories, which is rare, it goes to the dry cleaners.
It makes sense that I don’t have a good feel for the care of fine fibers, since I’ve not had the luxury of being a person who lines my closet with cashmere sweaters (awww, poor Amy). Even if I did, they’d probably fall into category 3 above.

Pictured here with its
new-fangled labeling
I have a vague recollection of Woolite being on Mom’s laundry shelf. I don’t recall seeing it used, but I think I may have inquired once what it was (”but why do we need extra soap when we’ve got the magic of Tide?”).
This curiosity arrived around about the time I reached that plateau of womanhood at which first-ever pairs of pantyhose and the dowdiest of rubber-heeled pumps are bestowed upon thrilled-beyond-words pre-pubescent girls.
For me, I’m pretty sure this occasion coincided with some type of after-school event in sixth grade that involved – oh, dear heavens – square-dancing.
Emphasis on the square.
I grew up in the Midwest, what can I say? This is what we did in gym class when we weren’t pelting each other (in my case, being pelted) with surprisingly painful rubber balls.
As I recall, I made it through one wearing of the stockings, miraculously, without any (super-obvious) runs or ladders that required retiring them to the bin. Hence the onetime use of Woolite to wash my delicate, delicate, $1.99 Leggs pantyhose before they were trotted out for the next later-embarrassing grade school social event.
After that I promptly forgot about Woolite or anything resembling it.
So you get the picture – I’m not well-versed in the blocking or washing or even rinsing of delicates.
But now that I’m a knitter and all, I probably should be.
It’s been on my list to order up some wool wash of some kind. I remember reading about Kookaburra first on somone’s blog - darned if I can remember whose - and then on another and another. Something about making your wool super-soft and super-supple. Super-supple! Gotta get me some of that.
Then, recently, when the plan to order some Kookaburra was near the top of my mind, SouleMama made a loving reference to Eucalan, of which I had also heard rumblings. It seemed compelling enough to give me pause about my choice (probably her fantastic photography added to the delicious appeal of her choice), and this put me all in a jumble.
It dawned on me, as if it were a surprise this would happen, that a decision between more than one option would be required, which would necessitate (possibly months and months of) analysis.
You know, since I’m me, and I can’t just pick one without going through the analysis. Or just buy freaking both of them in small quantities to try - because doing that would be wasteful.
Oy.
Suffice it to say that after a bit of Googling, I forced myself to stop with this review, which was scientific enough to whet my OCD appetite as well as lead me to a conclusion. In a nutshell: both leading brands are great. No perceivable differences in method of use or in the look and feel of finished garment. Both environmentally friendly, both contain lanolin, both excellent washes for any natural fiber.
By this account, only variations in scent seem to separate the choices (and perhaps a slightly different potential for repelling moths, which wasn’t at the top of my concerns list). Although I’m as picky as the next girl with smell, I couldn’t tell over the internet which I preferred (I’d already contacted my LYS about whether they carried wool wash – ah, no).
Ultimately it was personal preference, and by all accounts I’d read, each of the multiple scents available was very nice. Subtle, in every case, which helps.
Could have gone with unscented – but what’s the fun in that, pray you? This recovering Downy Girl needs some kind of scent to remind her that this garment has been pampered in some special way, just like Mom would have done.
So I flipped a virtual coin – something that is very hard for me to do, even virtually.
I went with Eucalan. Original eucalyptus scent.
I ordered it from Webs, along with some new blocking equipment, since I don’t have any. I’d purchased some T-pins a few months ago whilst whisking through Jo-Ann’s for something, but alas, T-pins don’t do much good without something like the soft surface of a blocking board in which to stick them.
Yes, I know I could get creative and use a pile of towels, a spare bedspread, even part of an ironing board. Yeah, that hasn’t happened.
I sprung for a blocking board, the big one, deciding that I’ve waited long enough - and if I’m going to get a blocking board, get a blocking board, you know?
Of course then Webs e-mailed me to tell me it was out of stock and would have to be shipped later.
Oh well.
Good thing I had one other goodie in the shopping basket, besides the aforementioned Eucalan wash, which is en route to me now: Fiber Fantasy Sweater Blockers.
Sounds exotic, and I’m expecting to be impressed.
While researching all things blocking that I had been missing out on, I discovered the existence of these little guys. It’s a set of blocking needles that can be used for more than just your mama’s sweaters.
“Great for scalloped edges”, I read – hey, my Curlicue blanket has scalloped edges! – so I read on.
Twelve of the fourteen needle thingies are used for standard straight-edge blocking (8 are 36″, 4 are 18″); the other two are flexible (but not permanently bendable into a new shape). Thus, these later two are touted as a nice solution for blocking the curve of the top of a sleeve or, better yet, stretching out and holding an edge pattern by winding wires through the ends of your knitting, locking the design in place during blocking.
There’s a great review of these here, which is where I also found this photo. [Note to Angelika at yarn-store.com, from whom I also considered purchasing the blocking board: the extra $20+ in shipping for the board couldn't compete with the free holiday shipping offered by Webs, but now that I've found your store, you are on my list of vendors!]
Not rocket science, this bendy wire idea, but since the concept hadn’t occurred to me, it felt like it.
My previous attempts to get scalloped edges to lay flat (for Maizy’s and E-dot’s Little Girl’s Shrugs) involved the traditional approach of pinning the fabric down flat and then steam-ironing the heck out of it – and this did not result in what I’d call a success. Stubborn, those scallops.
The memory of that challenge made me click on “buy” without much further delay – mercifully, I spared myself further research.
So - it took me all that to fill you in on where I stand with Curlicue. Final pics once the blocking is done.
Sheer Poncho is moving sssslowwwwly in the midst of tumultuous life lately, but over the weekend I finally got my booty into the LYS to procure some US 5 Addi Turbos. The cashmere stockinette is looking lovely, but with only a fat inch or so on the needles, my cheapo Michael’s circulars weren’t cutting the mustard.
In my frustration to just Turbo it already, earlier last week I’d swung into another yarn shop (off the beaten path from my usual LYS; I might add that stepping into Someone Else’s LYS and passing it off as my own with the sales lady was seductively naughty, especially since it was such a cute shop) for this purpose.
I was tacking on the quest for these needles to a list of already annoying errands and trying to cram it all in to not enough time (shocker).
I arrived at SELYS four minutes before closing, breathless yet triumphant that I’d actually located this place before it closed.
No standard US 5 Turbos on the shelf – curses! – only the Lace Turbos. I’d thought about whether to Lace or not to Lace my Turbos before walking into the store. I’d pretty much decided not to Lace. Worried that they’d be too slow for simple stockinette; that the previously appreciated fine drag wouldn’t be appropriate for this project or this fiber.
But with only the Lace variety available, and time ticking away – oh, I couldn’t wait – I just went for it.
Shifted the stitches from the cheapos to the Lace Turbos that night, gagging for a few quick rounds of Sheer Poncho before beddy-byes.
Oh, poopy pants - too slow. Not an improvement, even in all their pretty gold shininess. Drag not appreciated, cashmere too clingy. Darn.
But. Now I’m all set with the right ones - straight up, slick as all get-out, standard Addi circulars. I’ll be non-Lace Turboing it up for the rest of the week.
Thanks for sticking with my blog and with my writing-lots-of-words-makes-me-happy ways. I’ve missed you.
Curlicue Glamour Shots coming soon.
Tags: Addi, blockers, blocking, board, Curlicue, delicate, Downy, dryer, Eucalan, fabric, Fiber Fantasy, flexible, Kookaburra, lace, laundry, needles, scalloped, Sheer Poncho, softener, square dancing, sweater, T-pins, Tide, Turbo, wash, washing machine, WEBS, wires, wool, Woolite