Lacy Serpentine Scarf, aka an Ode to Sea Silk
Pattern: Lacy Serpentine Scarf, from Heartstrings Fiber Arts
Yarn: Handmaiden Sea Silk (70% silk, 30% Seacell), color Glacier.
First, the pattern. The scarf is knit lengthwise, which is perfect for the variegation of the yarn. My small swatch showed a little bit of pooling of the gold color, but knitting lengthwise solved this completely. The scarf is a fairly simple lace pattern – only three distinct pattern rows, you definitely get the hang of it after awhile. That didn’t prevent me from making a big mistake – I forgot to work one of the rows, as you can see here. I kind-of noticed on the flight back home, but was entirely too lazy to do anything about it.
The yarn. Sea Silk, you are:
1. Soft.
2. Drapey
3. Shiny.
4. Mucho awesome.
As Knitter’s Review pointed out, there’s very little seaweed in that Seacell – it’s mostly Tencel with 5% seaweed. But seriously, who cares? Tencel is hot hot hot these days (well, as hot as a fiber can be), and it’s shiny and soft and works for me. The yarn as a whole blocks out like a champ, and the end result is drapey as all hell.
Behold the miracle of blocking:
Yum. The colorway of the Sea Silk isn’t quite my thing, but I think that my mother will love it. It seems much less intense knitted up than it was in the skein. Also, the color striping is subtle enough that it doesn’t distract from the lace pattern.
One caveat about the yarn – frogging is somewhat dangerous. I ripped out a few rows when I noticed a mistake, and it was like literally watching the remaining scarf unravel before my eyes (at least before I could get all 303 stitches back on to the needle). Ok, perhaps that description of the situation is a bit extreme, but the yarn really is extremely slippery. I ended up frogging to the row before the mistake row, then unknitting, stitch by stitch, the (303 stitch!) row. Knitter beware!
The yarn + pattern worked out great – I have 18 grams (of a 100 gram skein) left over, so this is a great one-skein project for your Sea Silk. In fact, I wish that I had worked another pattern repeat, because I think that this scarf is going to stretch lengthwise (and therefore get skinnier and skinnier widthwise) with wear.
Overall, I consider this project a success! Rob even gives it the stamp of approval, where the stamp is actually a swig of beer.
Random
Houston weather == wacky. On Wednesday Houston hit record highs, for both the high and low temp – 83 and 70 degrees, respectively. Then Thursday, the apocalypse descended and it went from an early high of 71 down to the 40’s at 10am. Yes, you read that right – 10AM. Now the high is in the 50’s for the next few days. I’ve never seen so many worn handknits at the Houston Stitch+Bitch – everyone was taking advantage of the weather to wear their scarves and sweaters!
And last but definitely not least, Gilmore Girls hearts the yarn!





I love the scarf! I’m sure your mother will too …
Blocking really is a miracle, isn’t it?
Pretty–did you bring it on Thursday? I must have missed that. You all are making me want to try that yarn too.
Lovely.
I want that yarn so bad, but I need to find a fabulous pattern that will really do it justice and so that I can use just one skein and have very little left over.
That is beautiful. I like the very subtle striping – you can barely see it, but it adds a little something to the pattern!
The weather has been nuts here too – 65 one day, 37 the next!
Pretty! And you’re right, the color does look much less intense than it did in the hank. Your mom’s gonna love it.
Rob is wearing a lace scarf, but keeping it manly by drinking a beer straight from the bottle.
Well, it’s just beautiful and what a nice gift for your mom! Isn’t blocking incredible?
It is really beautiful!
Rob is adorable in it giving his ’stamp of approval’. Only a real man can carry off a lace scarf with such panache!
Um… YUM! I needs to gets me some of that SeaSilk! The scarf is loverly and, if I had a beer, I would give it my stamp/swig of approval, too!