Saturday, June 28, 2008

Blockin' with Ma

Indiana was a good place to rest and recuperate. Fresh air, open space, great stretches of soothing greenery, and this.

Rock Pile

Such a sight for a weary uncle's eyes. Gosh, did we have fun! We blew bubbles, and splashed in the pool, and read Proust, and played on the swing, and put all the animals into Noah's ark, and pet some doggies, and discussed the application of Kant's categorical imperative to the present political situation, and built a tower with alphabet blocks.

While I was there I finished the little hoodie I was working on–pictures in the next post–and got to check out the Baby Surprise Jacket that my mother made for Abigail. It was her first shaped garment and she did a bang-up job. She hadn't washed and blocked it, though, so we did that together.

When I first started knitting in earnest, I remember that blocking scared the daylights out of me. I didn't have anybody to show me what to do, and the instructions I found in books were labyrinthine. I remember one authority who wrote that it was impossible to block a sweater properly without a waterproof board–five feet square, marked with a grid of one inch squares–and a dozen clean, white bath towels.

I don't remember who she was, but I'm pretty sure she didn't live in a city apartment.

Since then other, kinder authorities have shown me how easy it is. I've also learned how vital it is not just for cleaning a piece, but for giving it a properly finished appearance. Not blocking is akin to not weaving in your ends.

If you're just beginning, here's what I've been taught to do. It works for me. There may be a better way, and I'm sure there are flourishes and refinements I have yet to learn, but so far I haven't turned any of my sweaters into potholders and that's good enough for me.

Mind you, these instructions are for wool. Wool from sheep. Other fibers or blends may have other requirements. If you need to wash and block the shrug knit from a cat/mohair/rayon mix, do your homework before you take the plunge.

Here's what you need to do the job.

Supplies

An absolutely clean, watertight basin. The kitchen sink is fine, if you make sure to get the stubborn, dried on pasta from last week's spaghetti dinner off the sides. Since we were doing baby clothes, we used a large pot.

A mild detergent. I am presently in love with Soak, but you can use a mild dishwashing liquid or baby shampoo–which is what we did.

A couple of bath towels. They don't need to be white, just clean.

Now, let us begin.

Step One. Fill the empty basin with tepid water. Lukewarm is fine. Don't use hot. Hot can shock wool fibers and encourage felting. When the basin is full and you've turned off the water, add a few drops–maybe a teaspoon per gallon–of your detergent. Swish the water gently to mix in the detergent, but try to avoid making suds.

Suds

Step Two. Place your knitted thing on top of the water and watch it sink like the Titanic. It can be fun to pretend to be the hand of God and push the knitted thing gently under the water and scream "Help me! Help me!" in a tiny voice as all the little Edwardian people are drowned for tempting Providence with their "unsinkable" ship. Fools!

Soak

Do not agitate the knitted thing. Agitation can cause friction, and wool plus friction plus water equals felting.

Let your knitted thing soak undisturbed for up to an hour. I soak stuff with thicker yarns for longer times to make sure the water penetrates completely. Just let the thing soak. Leave it. Walk away. Go.

Step Three. Gently lift the knitted thing from the water. Keep all of it well supported in both hands. Don't let the sleeves or other bits hang loose or they'll stretch like taffy. Somebody–Elizabeth Zimmermann?–compared this part to handling a baby.

Lift

If you are using a wool wash that doesn't require rinsing, go to the next step. Otherwise you may repeat the first three steps, omitting the detergent.

Step Four. Holding the knitted thing over the basin, squeeze it. Don't wring it or rub it, just give it a few good, firm squeezes to drain some of the water. (This part is not like handling a baby.)

Squish

Step Five. Wrap the knitted thing in a towel. Put the towel on the floor. Jump up and down on it to press out more water. You may enlist help with this process.

Jump!

Step Six. Lay the knitted thing out on another, dry towel which you have spread out in a space that is unlikely to be invaded by inquisitive pets, curious children, or nosy adults.

Measure

Arrange the thing into the shape you'd like it to hold when dry. This is an opportunity to make small adjustments to the fit, including length or width of sleeves, curve of the shoulders, and so forth. A yard stick is useful for making sure that you keep the hem even, the sleeves the same length, and so forth.

The yard stick is also useful for beating back inquisitive pets, curious children, or nosy adults.

Let it dry. You may set a cool fan to play on it in order to hasten the process. But just leave it alone. Leave it! Walk away. Go!

When it's absolutely bone dry, put it on the recipient and have a fashion show.

Proud Nana

I think Abigail loves her jacket. I hope Nana's proud.

67 comments:

  1. Anonymous11:32 AM

    Thank you, Franklin. That was a lovely post and a nice thing to read to start my morning--Jenn

    ReplyDelete
  2. Wow! When did Abigail turn into such a "little girl?" Seems like she was just a baby, still. Lovely jacket, and thanks for the blocking tutorial! I'm working on my own first Baby Surprise, so I'll take any tips I can get.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous11:38 AM

    When you wash this, which would be it's second time in water, do you have to block it out again adjusting the hem and sleeve lengths? What about every time you wash the sweater, is it the same procedure?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous11:50 AM

    Good lord, Abigail is cute! And you're funny! And your Mom's nails rock!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I think this is excellent for sweaters, but not so much for scarves and lace. I'm a little OCD about getting my edges to line up. (And I do want one of thos fancy blocking boards.)

    I'll keep this in mind for sweaters, hats, etc.

    How do you block lace? I'm slowly pinning my lace scarf with a gazillion t-pins and my Mom's quilting ruler. It's very tedious, but I don't have blocking wires.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous12:08 PM

    Is it just me.... ;)

    Or is that an absolutely marvelous piece? It's truly lovely. Lovely on Miss A, lovely knitting by your mother, all around lovely!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous12:21 PM

    So adorable! Abigail is so growing up! (wipes tear) What a great post...your mother should be proud of her sweater!

    ReplyDelete
  8. great timing-I need to block a finished sweater and your helpful and humorous instructions have taken my fear away.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Ohmygosh - Abigail's so grown up! And cute (still)!

    And your mom did a fab job on the sweater. Nice work!

    ReplyDelete
  10. When did she get so big? The BSJ is awesome!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Anonymous1:02 PM

    The sweater is beautiful; Mom should be proud. Thanks for the blocking instructions, too. Now my cat wants me to enlist *her* help in the squishing out water process. Nope.

    Abigail is beautiful!

    ReplyDelete
  12. Anonymous1:11 PM

    Oh, Franklin, she's gotten sooo big!! She continues to be beautiful.

    Your mom did a great job on the jacket. I'm sure it will get TONS of use! Find Abigail a teddy bear that will fit that jacket so that when it doesn't fit HER anymore, her teddy can wear it. :o)

    ReplyDelete
  13. Man, I wish all these Internet kids I see while reading my RSS would just stop it with the growing up! I feel so old.

    That Abigail...she's a little beauty. (And you're such a good photographer, Franklin. I think that every time I read your blog, whether there are niecely photos or not.)

    And hey, we know where your Mom gets her knitting talent! Oh wait, that's backwards...

    ReplyDelete
  14. Gosh, if anyone deserves a little down time it would be you, Mr. Whirlwind Spring 2008 World Tour!! Glad you got some rest.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Anonymous2:06 PM

    make sure to tell your Mom that we are all impressed with her Baby Surprise -- the striping is smashing. also thanks much for the tutorial -- your mother makes a great hand model.

    ReplyDelete
  16. WOW - for the sweater, for your mom, for your (so big now!) niece, for you taking some time to relax and recharge - WOW!

    And good timing for me, because I've got my first BSJ ready to finish. I've been thoroughly daunted by the prospect of sewing/weaving the shoulder seams, but once I get over that hurdle, now I'll be prepared for perfect blocking. Thanks so much, Franklin and Franklin's Mom!

    ReplyDelete
  17. I just recently found your blog and wanted to let you know that I really enjoy your sense of humor and writing style! I'll be a frequent visitor.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Yep. That's how I block too. Abigail is lovely and I think she may have a future in modeling.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Yay for Nana!! (I have a Nana too, I heartily approve having Nanas.) I have to say I'm surprised to see Abigail has turned out to have light hair. She's still a doll.

    ReplyDelete
  20. For a second there I had visions of babies stretching like taffy. Great tutorial Mr. Habit. I feel I should bring an apple to the teacher. My problem with blocking is the 3 small furry assistants who want to help!

    ReplyDelete
  21. Oh my gosh Abigail is getting so big!! Even having a little one of my own running around, the change from baby to little girl/boy never ceases to amaze me.

    Love the toddler help with the blocking process too.

    So proud of Nana's sweater!!

    We're also really glad that you got some well deserved R&R with your favorite bundle of energy.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Wow! I really needed a tutorial on blocking! Especially for when I finally finish Adamas shawl. Abigail is getting so big!! She is beautiful too. It seems like only yesterday you were posting pics of her when she was a new born. Time flies!! Your mom did an awesome job on the coat!! I've got to knit one of those.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Abigail is stylin'. Love how she's workin' that BSJ! Adorable and chic (how does she do that?) Kudos to your Mom.

    Thanks for the blocking tutorial. It might well be the most straightforward one I've seen.

    ReplyDelete
  24. OMG, she's growing so quickly!

    That's freaking me out especially because I recently found out I'll be having one around New Years :P

    I have about 8 bazillion baby hats on my knitting list and mine is due in Summer, lol.

    ReplyDelete
  25. Franklin, your nails look great. But you're supposed to bury the child to the waist in sand, not gravel.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Anonymous8:22 PM

    How did Abigail get so big? Your blog has turned into a daytime soap. One show the kid is a baby and then the next episode she is a teenager. What a beautiful BSJ!

    ReplyDelete
  27. Anonymous8:51 PM

    What a great tutorial. STOP
    I can't believe how big Abigail is already! STOP I detect a definite familial resemblance through the eyes. STOP Great job Mom on BSJ! STOP
    Hope the recuperation was a total success. STOP
    Do people still send telegrams!?! STOP

    ReplyDelete
  28. Excellent tutorial, Franklin! Elizabeth would be proud! Your mom is great and Abigail is just the cutest!

    ReplyDelete
  29. Wonderful tutorial Franklin. Abigail is growing into a beautiful child. I too have an adoration for SOAK and currently have a bottle of Aqueous(?) frangrance in the laundry cabinet. Before I had SOAK though I used Pantene 2 in 1. :oD

    ReplyDelete
  30. Anonymous10:04 PM

    W-O-W! I haven't seen a pix of abigail in a l-o-n-g time; such a beautiful princess!

    your mom rocks (and so does her BSJ)!

    smooches! :-)

    ReplyDelete
  31. Anonymous11:17 PM

    Your blog makes me smile -- thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  32. What a fun post and I love the family photos! And this Nana thinks that Nana should be very proud!
    (((hugs)))

    ReplyDelete
  33. That niece of yours is just precious, and very lucky to have such nice handknits. Thanks for the blocking info, also. It scares me a little, also, so I like the tutorial.

    ReplyDelete
  34. Anonymous11:55 PM

    Thank you for the fun blocking walk-through. I've blocked and am not afraid, but your fun take on it (like a baby, not like a baby) was definitely enjoyable. Thank you, also, for the gratuitous baby-feet picture! Abigail the Amazing, is truly darling.
    As always, a truly wonderful post! Have fun in Indiana! Did you take the bus? :)

    ReplyDelete
  35. I want them. Both. I want your mom as a tea-and-chinwag partner; I want your niece as an adopted 'Nother Grandkid, on account of she is so CUTE! Also she is girlie and I'm heavy on the boy-flavored grandkids. Please tell your mom I bow in her direction with unabashed awe; I tried a BSJ and it is three rows on a needle somewhere; it intimidated me right out the door at the outset. You got a lot of Powerful Good Stuff in your DNA. Nana's lucky. Abigail's lucky. The whole lot o' youse, lucky. (Oh wait..WE're lucky! Thanks for the lessons, too!)

    ReplyDelete
  36. What a gorgeous post! Abigail is so sweet ~ and so is her jacket. Thanks for the tutorial too ~ it's going to be really helpful.

    ReplyDelete
  37. Oh, Franklin, she is adorable. But you knew that. Thanks for the tutorial. I wonder if Abigail will realize, ever, that she is famous among knitters.

    ReplyDelete
  38. The Jacket is Goooorgeous!

    ReplyDelete
  39. Thank you! I have read miles on blocking lace but not alot on blocking a 'thing'. Baby shampoo- I will remember that! Cute pictures of your niece too.

    ReplyDelete
  40. Oh, Franklin -- she has gotten so big! And so, so cute!!

    Please tell Nana she did great -- LOVE IT!! And thanks for the 'strcutions on blocking, too!

    ReplyDelete
  41. Anonymous7:28 AM

    Franklin, this is the clearest explanation of blocking I've ever read. I have not gotten completely over blocking-phobia, and this gives me hope.

    ReplyDelete
  42. Anonymous8:38 AM

    She's wicked cute!

    ReplyDelete
  43. Anonymous9:17 AM

    Wonderful blocking instructions, thank you!
    I add to the supplies a colander, to put the soaking item into so it can lose some of the water before the towels.
    Kudos to your mom for her first shaped project, it's lovely.

    ReplyDelete
  44. Anonymous9:42 AM

    Awesome, non scary method for blocking

    ReplyDelete
  45. Anonymous9:57 AM

    Best blocking tutorial ever. I intend to drown little Edwardian people in my next blocking go-round, including the voice over.

    The Baby Surprise Jacket kicked my butt. I could never get my stitch counts right. Your Mom did a great job!

    ReplyDelete
  46. Anonymous10:20 AM

    Wow, she's growing so fast! And the jacket is really cute on her!

    ReplyDelete
  47. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  48. [edit to correct spelling error] Love the photos, love the instructions. Instead of the towel-stomp, I use my salad spinner to extract the water in small things (baby sweaters, hats, scarves) and the spin cycle of my washer for the bigger ones.

    You know, I was going to be jealous of Abigail's ability to discuss philosophy. The Tiny Prince of Wails is reading Dostoyevsky in the original, even though I suggested to his parents that the French translations are more readable. He's not so big on the discussion part. But then, he's not talking yet, so there's the difference.

    Perhaps next summer they can get together and talk about some of the renaissance writers.

    ReplyDelete
  49. Anonymous2:47 PM

    Thank you Franklin for the tutorial. The baby sweater I just finished this morning is trying to sink in the basin. It is 100% wool, the pattern is Knitting Pure and Simple #275 baby Bolero. I did it in 3 days.Deadline is Tuesday, Baby shower.I will need to use a fan, because the humidity is awful today in Boston. Rita

    ReplyDelete
  50. What a talented, brilliant, good-looking family y'all are! (Not surprised in the least.)

    ReplyDelete
  51. Anonymous6:20 PM

    The Zimmermann jacket by your Mom looks great on Abigail and it's alao a great pic of two important ladies in your life!

    Thanks for the blocking instruction - they are very simple and easy to follow.

    ReplyDelete
  52. fantastic tutorial, I've been blocking for ages and didn't know a few of those tips (the baby part in particular, makes total sense now that I think about it!).

    ReplyDelete
  53. Anonymous11:59 PM

    ?Proust?

    Wow - Abigail has "grown up" since the last picture I recall.

    Franklin's mother - CONGRATULATIONS on a lovely knit - I got discouraged about matching decreases and gave up on the baby surprise!
    Margie from Maryland

    ReplyDelete
  54. She is so dang cute!

    ReplyDelete
  55. Babies grow too fast. It's hard to believe that Abigail has gotten so big!
    Beautiful baby, beautiful sweater (and beautiful nana).

    ReplyDelete
  56. Anonymous9:46 AM

    You have a wonderful knack for letting personalities shine through your photos!

    I have a feeling your sister will need ALL of her school teacher talents to deal with the results of the twinkle in that child's eye!

    Way to go grandma!

    ReplyDelete
  57. Lovely combination of helpful tutorial with utterly delightful story with pictures. I just wanted the fun to last a bit longer. Oh, and I'm definitely going to try that Titanic thing, including the little voice.

    ReplyDelete
  58. Thanks for the instructions. I have been putting off blocking my very first lacy wrap for 3 weeks because I was scared. Tonight I'm tackling it. You're a doll.

    ReplyDelete
  59. Anonymous3:12 PM

    I get the most water out by squeezing the sweater over the sink, then carrying it to the washing machine and setting it to the spin part of the delicate cycle. Takes only a few minutes and the sweater dries much more quickly. I even do this with (gasp!) cashmere sweaters!

    ReplyDelete
  60. Anonymous3:40 PM

    Thanks for the tutorial! I'm about to start on my very first wool baby sweater and this post was perfect timing.

    Oh, and Abigail, if she got any cuter it would be illegal!

    ReplyDelete
  61. Very nice tutorial, and I wanted to say that I enjoyed your article in Piecework! Those Interweave folks do like your work, and for good reason!

    ReplyDelete
  62. Did anybody stay home last week?

    We were in Columbus OH for the Origins Gamers convention, but we did go outside to clap and whistle at the local gay pride parade. (With my husband in full Army ACU.)

    ReplyDelete
  63. Great looking BSJ and on a beautiful little girl. My Piecework arrived today. As soon as I can quit drooling over Nancy Bush's Estonian shawl pattern, I'm going to read YOUR article!

    ReplyDelete
  64. Anonymous10:32 AM

    Coming out of lurkdom to tell you that niece Abigail is just adorable and I love all the sweaters, etc, you have knitted for her.

    Barbara

    ReplyDelete
  65. Anonymous6:37 PM

    You have solved a personal dilemma. I have arthritis and can't press on the towels with my hands to squeeze out water. Standing on it-who knew?! Thanks so much for these instructions, and always for your humor.

    ReplyDelete
  66. Thanks for the great blocking tutorial!

    ReplyDelete
  67. Anonymous5:05 AM

    Kondiloma akuminatum ialah vegetasi oleh Human Papiloma Virus tipe tertentu, bertangkai, dan permukaannya berjonjot. Tipe HPV tertentu mempunyai potensi onkogenik yang tinggi, yaitu tipe 16 dan 18. tipe ini merupakan jenis virus yang paling sering dijumpai pada kanker serviks. Sedangkan tipe 6 dan 11 lebih sering dijumpai pada kondiloma akuminatum dan neoplasia intraepitelial serviks derajat ringan. Kondiloma akuminatum ialah vegetasi oleh Human Papiloma Virus tipe tertentu, bertangkai, dan permukaannya berjonjot. Tipe HPV tertentu mempunyai potensi onkogenik yang tinggi, yaitu tipe 16 dan 18. tipe ini merupakan jenis virus yang paling sering dijumpai pada kanker serviks. Sedangkan tipe 6 dan 11 lebih sering dijumpai pada kondiloma akuminatum dan neoplasia intraepitelial serviks derajat ringan.

    ReplyDelete