My sock WIPs have multiplied this summer, like bunnies! It began as one pair, as a distraction from the cardigan I’m knitting, but then they quickly took over
Many sock knitters will likely have a drawer full of hand knit socks, and I am no exception, although I almost exclusively knit socks in DK to super bulky weight, instead of fingering or sport weight, and prefer non-superwash wool yarns, which I find to be warmer. I’ve knit hubby several pairs of fingering and sport weight socks, but as he tends to be warmer than me, his socks last much longer, simply from lack of use!
I wear hand knit wool socks all year long – nothing is as comfortable and breathable, but I don’t have to tell sock knitters that!
The wide range of yarn weights I use covers all the seasons, with the bulky to super bulky socks knit larger, to be worn over a thinner pair, in the winter.
One of my favorite yarns for socks (and sweaters and afghans) is Lamb’s Pride, worsted and bulky weights. The mohair in the blend adds to warmth and wear, even though they’re single ply yarns, and they just feel cozy!
I’ve loved other wools for socks, like Lopi, the defunct Woolpak Perendale, yarn I spun from a blend of 44% Mohair, 28% Romney, and 28% Leicester wools, which is also no longer available, but which lasted several years and were so warm, and the single skein of British BFL (Bluefaced Leicester, for non-knitters) I bought from Iriss of Penzance in Cornwall, England many years ago.
Oh how I wish I could have bought a kilo (or 2, or 10!) of that beautiful yarn – it was heaven to knit and wear. British BFL yarns these days all seem to be superwashed, unfortunately. To my mind, and after many years of wearing wool socks, nothing beats long wools for socks.
These 2 most recent pairs are in a simple pattern, which has quickly become a favorite! They fill a thickness gap in my sock drawer between the plain all stockinette LPW socks and the bulky wt. socks, as the pattern has two rounds of stockinette followed by one round of stranded color work, so it’s not as thick as an all color work pattern, but thicker than all stockinette.
I mistakenly worked the first pair with the same 42 sts I would normally use for stockinette LPW socks. They fit, but they are a bit snug, so I used 46 sts for the 2nd pair. Stranding, even on occasional rounds, does take the fabric in a bit more than stockinette. The summer heat must have made me forget this fact!
Here is the 42-st pair, with slightly shorter leg than I usually knit. After knitting them, I decided the heel flap didn't look organic. It didn't *flow* from the sock patterning, so I changed it in the 2nd pair, below.
This 2nd pair is on 46 sts, and I worked a few more rounds in the leg, so that when working the heel flap in the darkest color, the color flowed from the center of the stripe panel. A 1/2 repeat was needed just before the toe shaping, to give the desired foot length. This, too, flows into the dark toe color, and will be how I knit this pattern hereon in!
It’s a simple 2 stitch by 12 round pattern, which works well with hue/shade changes within a color family. A 2 stitch repeat means the design can be easily adjusted smaller or larger as needed, and will work with any weight of yarn.
Such designs are also ideal for using up bits of stash. I used just 5 colors, but each color panel could be knit using a different set of colors, depending on your stash, or each panel could use the same 2 colors with a 3rd color as the background.
The other socks I’ve knit this summer (shown in the 1st photo above) are:
a 2-ply handspun Romney worsted wt. pair,
a super bulky handspun Romney pair (still in progress),
a Lamb’s Pride Bulky pair,
a re-knitting of the heels and feet of both a LPW pair and a Cascade 220 pair, and
a palindrome striped pair just begun.
I’ve knit many hundreds of socks since the very early ’90’s, and they’re still one of my favorite things to knit.
I love how they’re lightweight in the hands, so they don’t tend to stress joints, they’re small and portable, so they’re finished must faster than a sweater, they don’t use much yarn, and one can play with all manner of patterning or just enjoy plain knitting around. And who doesn’t like warm feet!
Onward!
Dawn
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