Well, my friends - here she is.
Fifi by Kristeen Griffin-Grimes for French Girl Knits (download)
Size: Small, with modifications
Yarn: Rowan Calmer in Tree, 5.75 skeins (with lots of extra length - would have been less than 5 without it; see below)
More pics at my Ravelry post here.
Finished dimensions:
Bust = 29 inches around, unstretched, after blocking (pinned out to 32″)
Length = 27 inches (top of shoulder to bottom cast-off; longer than designed)
Widest part of neckline = 9 inches straight across at top (pinned out to 10″)
Modifications:
Sleeve length (from cap sleeves to short sleeves)
Torso length (from cropped to tuck-in-able)
Verdict: Beautiful pattern, fun to follow, polished-looking result. When knit with Calmer as suggested, the yarn works its magic to deliver the look that the pattern promises.
There are a few corrections to check out, but nothing too extensive. Not much else going on at the French Girl Knits website; best information is on Ravelry.
Only thing I would do differently is bump up a size. I’m taking a less whiny approach to this topic than I did in my last post since I’ve decided it’s not as bad as I made it out to be. The bust fits fairly well; the 29″ finished size as knit (32″ as pinned at blocking) stretches comfortably to hug my not-quite-B cups (~36″, over the sweater).
In choosing the size to knit, I decided to stay small because my boobs are, well, small. Even though my frame, and therefore my abdomen, is not petite in circumference (mistake #1).
I figured the clingy thing from boobs to waist was the whole point. How could this be bad? Sexy fit! But I kind of forgot that clinging to unwanted curves is er, unwanted (mistake #2).
I had a little pout-fest halfway through the torso after trying it on and realizing that I didn’t look as svelte as I wanted to, and I had to put Fifi away where I couldn’t see her for a few days after that.
Then I decided that A) as knit, it’s an encouragement to get back to the gym, and B) probably, blocking will help.
Ultimately, upon trying on my FO again a few weeks after initial blocking (which didn’t help that much – alas, it’s cotton), I decided that wearing this with skirts will improve the look in the short term.
I still have to suck in my gut, which was necessary for modeling here, but the waistline of the skirt is more forgiving since it can ride higher on the waist without looking dorky. I have trouble with things that sit “just below the natural waist.” See my rant on denim below.
On the yarn: My advice to those weighing the cost of Calmer vs. a substitute is to wait for the Calmer - wait for those sales. It’s worth it.
Blocking: I stretched this a lot in the boob/abdomen area and did some shaping around the neckline and shoulders. You can see that the mid-to-lower torso pattern with 2×2 ribbing does stretch appreciably with the added touch of microfiber twisted into the cotton. Not enough stretch in my case, as we’ve already covered, but once I get rid of the extra flab it should – in theory – have a slimming effort.
Length: I know, I know, it looks like a tunic on the blocking board. Why so long? Well, I’ll tell you. My long torso combined with a sizeable booty require special needs when it comes to anything I might end up wearing with jeans.
Two things about jeans that don’t mix well with my body shape:
Denim – even stretch denim doesn’t stretch enough to hug this butt when I go to sit down.
Low-rise anything - High waisters aren’t exactly “in”, but with low-rise trousers, unfortunately I risk revealing more to the bleacher seats behind me than I bargained for, if you know what I mean. I wear the low-rises anyway because I agree with Mother Fashion’s guidance on this (I’ve no desire to re-live junior high, thank you very much). But. You get the gist of my issue here.
As such, I decided that I wanted this sweater to be a tucker-inner so that I could wear it with jeans and sit down without constantly feeling around back there to see if I was giving the person seated behind me a little show.
As I said above - tuck-in or no tuck-in, after experimenting a bit, I’m happier wearing this with a skirt for now.
Sleeves: I added a couple of inches. I don’t quite have the Michelle Obama arms I want yet, so cap sleeves don’t do me any favors. Not that short sleeves hide much more, but they do help the cause.
You can see below that the red yarn line was the point at which I began adding. I threw in an increase on each side of the seam under the armpit every row for a few rows, then every other row for a few more, before knitting even for a bit until I was happy with the length.
Neckline: I liked the way that some of the Ravelry FOs had a nice wide boat-necky ballet-like neckline, although I was puzzled by the way the neckline look varied widely (without declaration of modifications). Maybe it’s just different body types (shoulder width and length from top of shoulder to bust).
Because I was too lazy to modify via increased cast-on stitches, I simply cast on very, very loosely and let the initial row stretch out a bit more than as written. It might have added a bit of width between bra straps, but nothing dramatic. The edge looks smooth, anyway, and I’m happy with it.
And, that’s all I’ve got on Feefers. Highly recommended.
Even if it ends up a size or three too small for your body size.
[scurries off to gym, a trail of variegated burgundy sock yarn in her wake]






