FO: Three of Diamonds
Early this fall I did a sock design for TheKnitter.com’s Luxury sock club for their November shipment. I enjoyed the design so much and had such a time photographing (took over 350 shots and purchased additional photography equipment) that I decided to knit myself a pair in easier to photograph yarn. Now the pattern is available to everyone!
Pattern: Three of Diamonds (on Ravelry)
Designer: Myself
Needles: 2.75 mm & 2.5 mm
Yarn: Misti Alpaca’s Handpainted Sock Yarn in Shadow (dark) and Miss Babs Yummy Sock and Baby 2-Ply Fingering in Sandi’s Red Monochrome
Size: Wmn’s US9.5 (red) and Men’s US10.5 (dark)
For: Myself (red) and DH (dark)
While this pattern was one of my most challenging to grade into multiple sizes (and there are 5 adult sizes), it is a fun and relatively easy knit for those comfortable with cabling. There is a lot of stockinette or reverse stockinette to balance out the time it takes to knit the cables. I knit each sock only took one weekend of dedicated couch potatoeness. The five sizes were crucial and worth some of the hair pulling since the ribs and cables make this a great sock choice for men and I know how difficult it is to find man friendly patterns that are interesting to knit and don’t take 4 years to finish in such larger sizes. So the sizes of the pattern range from a finished sock foot circumference of 7-10 inches. With more sizes to choose from there can be leeway in gauge and still find a stitch count that produces the adult size sock you need.
My favorite part of these socks is how the cuff ribs flow right into the diamond cables on the leg, then the ribs that exit that diamond split and half adorn the heel flap and the other half combine with those from the other side of the leg to form a third diamond cable in the gusset. Then to spice it up a bit, the gusset decreases are placed non-traditionally to follow the lines of the cabling.
Both yarns were great to work with. The Misti Alpaca sock yarn is fantastically soft and the colors are nice short bursts with a definite main color so there were no concerns about pooling. It was not splitty or hard to cable and I ran into no knots. It was, as I stated before a photography challenge. It is hard to photograph fuzzy yarn and it is hard to photograph dark yarn - especially when photographing knitting. Combine the two and it is near impossible. The pattern does show up in that yarn in person, though alpaca yarn will never yield crisp stitch definition. I enjoyed knitting with the yarn so much that I do have some in my stash that I’m looking forward to pulling out at some time. Perhaps some Herringbone Ribs of my own?
Miss Babs Yummy yarn was fantastic to work with. Her Monochromes (semi-solids) are solid enough that they don’t fight any stitch patterning you may want to use, but there is enough variation in them to keep it interesting to knit, even with large areas of simple knit fabric. You may recall my talking about knitting with reds a while back and how I’m not much of a red person. It is true. I’m not sure why it is, but it has been that way for a long time. Sandi’s Red is my kind of red. I actually loved working with it and love opening the sock drawer and seeing them pop from amongst all my green and purple socks :-)







