Knitting and Writing from the Top Down

Final paragraphs of "Out There" by Heather Wright
Final paragraphs of "Out There" by Heather Wright

My summer knitting project was a knit-from-the-top-down Fair Isle sweater. I’d never knit a sweater this way before. I’d always followed the traditional route of starting at the bottom and working my way up. I also found this route stressful at times. There was so much I didn’t know until the end. What if I made the sleeves too short? What if the body was too long? I really only knew how the sweater would fit when it was almost finished.

 Knitting from the top down gave me the chance to try the sweater on as I was going along. I knew precisely when it was the right length. I knew exactly when to start finishing the sleeves. And what fun to see the project growing every time I slipped it on. Knitting from the top down completely turned around the way I think about putting a knitting project together. My thanks to Barbara G. Walker who gave North America top down knitting. I can’t wait to start my next one.

 Knitting ‘in reverse’ made me think about my writing, too. I have a novel in progress that is stuck. I know how it will end, but I’ve got to a point where I’m not sure which route to take to get there. I’m beginning to lose control of the shape of the project.

 Maybe I’m going about my writing in the wrong way, too. I have a final moment for my book that I love. Why not start there and work my way back? If the traditional method isn’t working, isn’t now the time to try something different? Here’s my chance to learn and create in a different way, just as I did when I was knitting my sweater. And, who knows, the final product might be just as satisfying. I will probably have to unravel a bit of my book to get this all to work, but that is part of my process whether I’m knitting or writing.

Have you ever knit a sweater from the top down? Have you ever started at the end of your story and worked back? Drop me a line and share your stories.

 p.s. To read the rest of the story, “Out There” (from the beginning) go to http://www.wrightwriter.com/index_files/Page949.htm

Do you follow the pattern?

Summer 2009 Knitting Project
Summer 2009 Knitting Project

This is a photo of my knitting work-in-progress–a knit-from-the-top-down, black, Fair Isle cardigan. I’m slogging through the sleeves on 4 needles on a hot August afternoon, and what breeze there was has died.

You won’t find a final product resembling my sweater in the pattern book I’m using. I haven’t followed the suggested colours, I’m using different yarn, and I’m not going to put a zipper in the front. What remains of the original is the shape and the stitch count. Do you do this, too?

I like patterns in the books I read, too. I love to read mystery novels. In fact, one of my writing works-in-progress is a mystery novel. But just because mystery writers need to follow certain patterns, such as being fair and revealing all the clues to the reader, doesn’t mean that there isn’t an endless variety of mystery novels and short stories out there to delight readers of every taste.

In knitting and writing, patterns are a starting place for a creative journey that can result in a lot of fun and some surprising and satisfying final products.

How do you play with patterns in your knitting and crochet projects and in your writing?

First Steps

When I make a mistake in a knitting project, I have two options–go back and fix it, or find  way to get the pattern back on track so I can move forward without unravelling everything. Does one small mistake spoil the entire project? I don’t think so, as long as I’m content with the final product. Have I ever proofread a writing project before sending it to my client and found a mistake–or 2–or 3? Of course. Has an editor changed my work to make it even better? Yes!  In writing and in knitting, the process and the final product give me a lot of pleasure–flaws included.
I want to write about knitting and about writing because I think they are similar in many ways–and I love doing both.  And if I make some mistakes in this new venture, I look f0rward to … well … doing just that–looking forward. I want to share and invite and respond and enjoy the company.
So, what are you knitting? What are you writing? How are you stitching these activities into your life?
There–first steps taken.
%d bloggers like this: