Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Superwash Worsted Wool

I've been knitting with worsted weight wool lately. I've made three Turn A Square hats from Jared Flood's free Ravelry pattern. Brown Sheep's Lamb's Pride Superwash worsted weight wool is wonderful for this hat.

The Superwash Worsted flows through needles with a smoothness that every knitting from novice to experienced will love. The wool is warm. On a cool morning or in a damp wind, a sweater or hat made from Superwash Worsted is like a soothing hug.

Sweaters, vests, hats -- whatever you knit from Superwash Worsted is machine washable. Toss the garment into the washing machine. The wool comes out soft and smooth. The stitches even out and the garment will be just fine.

The label for these yarns says to dry the knitting flat. I have tossed hats knit from this yarn into the dryer and like the fluffiness and resilience that comes from the drying process.

Here are some colors that I have used in worsted projects. All of these colors are considered heathered. Heathering means that more than one color is carded into the yarn. Often gray or black fiber is added to the yarn recipe. Gray and black deepen the colors, making them richer and less flat looking.


Cactus -- dulled grass green, more toward gold.
Lichen -- soft grayed green, kind of teal, kind of gray.
Grey Heather -- medium gray with a touch of blue, toward denim.
Shane's Red -- not tomatoey, not rose, not burgundy, not bright.

My favorite project (so far) made from Superwash Worsted is a vest that I knit for my Dad. I used the color "Shane's Red" and know that he gets lots of compliments on his vest. He is so handsome in his warm red vest and wears it often.

The yardage on this yarn is great -- 200 yards per 100 gram (3.5 oz) pull skein. Lamb's Pride Superwash worsted is a 2012 Featured Yarn on the Graywood Designs website.







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