Archive for March, 2015

h1

Sideways Garter Stitch Vest

March 28, 2015

gartervestblackontop

this vest is vertically reversible!

gartervestgreyontop

If you do not subscribe to Purl Soho’s e-mail newsletter, you really should.  This great little shop in New York’s Soho neighborhood puts out an awesome mailing that includes free patterns.  That is where I saw this pattern for a vest that is done entirely in garter stitch.  It caught my eye right away, so I looked it up on Ravelry to see how  many people were knitting it and what their creative spins on it might be. One great feature of this vest is that you can turn it upside down and wear it the other way, with the contrasting color on top.  Each way gives you a different size collar.

gartervestonneedles

This was such an easy project to knit – it’s just one big rectangle of garter stitch -but it does require doing afterthought armholes, which I kind of love doing.  I’ve done a lot of afterthought thumbs for mittens and afterthought heels for socks, so I know the technique well.

You just knit a length of contrasting waste yarn across the required number of stitches, slip these stitches back to the left needle and knit in your regular yarn.  This leaves you with this contrasting yarn embedded into your piece:

gartervestafterthoughtarmholes

To make the armholes, you slip your stitches just under your waste yarn, picking up one leg from each stitch underneath:

pickingupstitchesgartervest

Here are the stitches on the needles after they are all picked up, both below and above the waste yarn:

afterthoughtarmhole

Now you can get rid of the waste yarn by just picking it out and cutting it as you go to remove it:

pickingoutstitchesforvest

Now it’s a matter of just binding off those stitches you just picked up:

bindingoffafterthought

After they are all bound off, behold – an armhole:

gartervestarmhole

It’s really pretty easy.  A lot of people on Ravelry decided not to do Afterthought Armholes and, instead, just bound off the stitches as they knitted the garment but as I understand it, this method does not make as nice an armhole.  I guess the tension can vary too much.

gartervestside

I really love this vest.  It turned out with a very nice drape – I used a Made in Michigan yarn called Shepherd’s wool that I really love.

Pattern:  Sideways Garter Vest
Needles:  US # 8 Addi Lace 40″ circulars
Yarn: Shepherd’s Wool in Pewter and Black
Ravelry Page

Advertisement
%d bloggers like this: