Babies Vary And Knitting Stretches

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Illustration by Ilana Denis Bauer for BuzzFeed

Anyone who makes things should make something for a baby. There are obvious objections: They will spit up on the beautiful item you spent weeks laboring over, and they will not appreciate how the slate gray looks next to the mustard yellow, no matter how carefully you selected them, and, in any case, they will outgrow whatever it is within weeks. In my 17 years of knitting - I'm now 23 - I'd barely made anything for what I considered to be the messy, ungrateful under-4 set, and they were so foreign and separate from me that I didn't think I would know where to begin. Still, about two months ago I found myself knitting a cardigan for a baby who hadn't even been born yet. The baby was the as-yet-unborn child of my best friend's godmother. My friend and her mother had commissioned me to make a gift for the baby shower, and in exchange they bought the yarn and my friend bought me a lot of drinks. The baby would be a girl, and we eventually ruled out any too-saccharine colors in favor of a soft gray and cream for an accent. I also bought a book of patterns to figure out how the sweater should be constructed. I've been knitting since before I could read (taught first by my grandmother during a rainy week at the beach and then reinforced and expanded with YouTube tutorials years later) but only for myself, or for bodies the size of mine. Until the baby sweater, there had been certain indelible rhythms behind adults' hats or socks, drummed in by dozens of repetitions. But here, my sense of scale was entirely thrown off. How could your head be so big but your shoulders so narrow, I wondered, working on a sleeve too tiny to fit my fist through. How could a person ever be this small? The pattern understood: Its author, Elizabeth Zimmermann, is widely considered to be the mother of modern, unfussy knitting, and so where other patterns specify dimensions that would have meant nothing to me, she simply wrote, "Don't worry too much about size; babies vary, and knitting stretches." Still, I doubted at first that the sweater would ever take shape. And yet after a week of knitting on subways and while waiting for friends at bars, it began to look real. (That is one of the benefits of crafting for a tiny human: relatively instant gratification.) The essential thing about knitting that I will never get over is here you have these sticks and this string, and then you look

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Babies Vary And Knitting Stretches by craftsguide - Issuu