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I started knitting mittens with some really amusing results. I have a collection of 5 or six mittens that my daughters occasionally have me haul out so we can all have a good laugh. You know the kind--the "elongated alien mitten", the "stunted thumb." etc. The ladies at my yarn shop pushed me to try socks because they said if you can mittens, you can do socks, and if you can do socks, you can do almost anything because you learn several important techniques. I couldn't take the sock class at the Knit Shop because it was always scheduled the same night as a night class I teach. But I gave it a shot after I found Amy Finlay's website knittinghelp.com where she walks you through knitting almost the entire sock (the northwoods baby sock). So I parked in front of the computer and did a baby sock with her. I also learned grafting or Kitchener stitch this way when I finished the toes.
So I'm not totally nutty about socks per se. I have a fondness for them because I learned so much from the effort AND they are very quick (unless you do the ones on #0 or #1 needles).
Ah the yarn stash thing!! Well, I didn't do this deliberately (I don't think), but I only have purchased acrylic or acrylic blends in the presence of my husband, so he thinks yarn is pretty cheap. I also have it organized by fiber and weight in different containers in a spare room so it's hard to tell just how much I have. My daughters laugh when they go in there, and my son-in-law did the gasping thing, but my husband is somewhat clueless--thank goodness.
I have a raglan pattern that works for any size and I think any yarn--I'll look for it. I think this is the easiest, but I hate putting garments together. My girlfriend did a sweater class over at the yarn shop and when she finished the neck did not fit over her grandson's head. I think that's the trouble spot for many of us. I knit about 4 or 5 baby sweaters with cheap yarn just to get the hang of it before I tried a "real" one. I'll post that pattern when I find it.
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