Last week I got a question about how I keep the pattern for this sweater straight while I'm knitting it. This is one of those things that we knitters figure out along the way. My process works for me. I picked up some of it from other knitters, and some of it just made sense to me.
The pattern is When Harry Met Lucy. If you scroll through it, you'll see that the sweater is made up of five different panels. One center cable. Two side cables. And two raindrop stitches.
Each panel has a different number of rows to complete the repeat. How could one possibly keep track of all of that? Well, it's not really that hard.
There's my current sleeve. I have added lines to show each of the five panels.
Before I started, I took screenshots of each of the charts for each panel. (Working from charts is much easier than working from written out instructions. Especially for this.) Then I took those images and added them to a document. I adjusted the size so that it all was about the same and all fit on the same page. And I printed out:
The paper shows the wear it's gotten as I've used this for the front, the back, sleeve one, and now sleeve two.
I took a picture of the sheet where it's at right now, so you can see my sticky notes. Each one is underneath the row I will knit next, so I can easily see which stitches I should be making. It's numbered one to five as that's the direction I work while knitting.
Then the "wrong side" is the exact same, so I knit back (from five to one) knitting the knit stitches and purling the purl stitches. At the end of the non-public side, I move each sticky note up two rows, and I work from one to five again.
The sticky on the sticky notes wears off after a while, so I have replaced those sticky notes a few times. I also cut them to fit each panel. Panels one and five are worked multiple times over the stitches, while panels two through four are only worked once. The panels are worked bottom to top, so when I reach the top, I start over again at the bottom.
You can't really see the markers in my knitting if you look at my knitted piece, but they're there. I have a marker at each one of the lines, marking each one of the panels. Because if I somehow get lost in one of the panels, I only have to count back to that section, not back to the beginning of the row.
Any questions, comments, or concerns?
I'm getting close to finishing this sleeve. I'm not going to say how long it should take, because experience tells me the minute I make that guess, something is going to rise up out of nowhere and hit me across the face, stopping me in my tracks.
So, until next week...
The sweater's previous posts:
- Starting the Sweater
- Getting to the Back
- Missed Deadline
- Distractions from Knitting
- A Month Late
- Inching Along
- Tracking the Growth
- Weekly Sweater Update
- Moving Right Along
- Good Progress
- Almost to the Interesting Part
- Plot Twist
- Not Worth the Effort
- Sleeve Progress
- Continuing Sleeve One
- Sleeve Two!
- Continuing Sleeve Two
- Setting a Deadline
- Almost There


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