Knitting in Durham

This post is going to be long and picture intensive so 1. Apologies in advance and 2. Go get a cup of coffee / tea or glass of wine.

River WearI headed north to Durham on the Sunday with plenty of knitting in tow. I made sure I had a variety of things to work on so I could knit depending on my mood. I knit on my socks on the way up - I hadn’t knitted on them since I turned the heel. I didn’t get very far - just one pattern repeat - before I decided to try them on. Folks, I’ve had to put them down, again, because somethin’ ain’t right. This is the first pair of toe-up socks I’ve knit. The pattern is written top-down, but I’ve followed a combination of toe-up patterns to determine what I need to do and where.

Here’s the problem. I cast on and did the toe as described by Misocrafty. I increased to 72 stitches - the pattern is a multiple of 12 - and knit the instep and foot until it was roughly 2″ shorter than my foot. I then followed the recipe for the heel from Nautilis by Anna Bell and the Generic Toe-up sock pattern because it was written in a way that made more sense to me as a novice toe-up knitter. Now, when I stuck my foot in to try it on, the thing was very tight. It could’ve done with a bit longer in the foot as the heel turned out a bit shorter, but it’s not that bad. But around my ankle (the gusset area) it is so tight. None of the recipes said to increase (in fact, the generic pattern says to pick up a few extra stitches to close the gap, but to be sure to decrease those) and that just seems wrong. Maybe I’ve totally misread something? I’d like to see a good side-view picture of a toe-up sock to see what the gusset looks like.

Has anyone reading done a toe-up sock? Did you have this problem w/ the heel/gusset? I can see that I probably need to add in an extra repeat bringing the stitch total to 84, but how? How would I go about increasing from 72 to 84 stitches? It just seems weird to have it go from foot / heel straight into leg without the taper you get doing top-down. Any and all advice is truly appreciated! I like this toe-up sock thing for the most part, but there are things I’ll change the next time around…

Up next, I started the Marigold hat (no relation to Ms Marigold, heh) from Marnie MacLean for my sister. I was nearly done when I realised that I hadn’t remember to bring DPNs to finish the crown. I’d actually tried to knit the hat on DPNs from the start, but I only have aluminium needles in the right size and the stitches kept slipping off. Anyway, it didn’t matter because I was too tired when I was in that second-to-last round of the last pattern repeat and I messed up. I started tinking to fix the mistake, but again, too tired, and I’d dropped the stitches which quickly unravelled the lace pattern and I couldn’t salvage it. Argh. I ended up ripping it out all the way to the band and started it again last night.


Green knitting River wear path
I kinda like green… Falling leaves socks, Ms Marigold, Marigold hat — The view from where I sat knitting until my fingers got too cold and I needed lunch

I didn’t actually touch Ms Marigold. And on the train ride home I didn’t knit a single stitch because I’d had two nights of very bad sleep and was feeling absolutely shattered so I dozed the first two- to three-hours and then I think I must’ve just stared into space the rest of the time as I listened to music.

Now Durham is absolutely beautiful. People are enamoured with Oxford and I honestly don’t know why. I guess it’s the history, but in terms of how it looks, well it really isn’t spectacular. I suppose it probably is when compared to the US, again, because of the history. However, the city centre of Oxford is ugly. It’s generic, it has all the same shops as you find anywhere, it’s dirty, it has three pedestrianised areas except that two of them actually allow traffic (one is the bus / taxi route through town and the other is a car park). The pretty bits, the colleges, are hidden behind walls and gates that only University members can enter. The rest of Oxford is total shite. Now Durham, it’s city centre is no different in terms of shops, but it’s buildings are beautiful, it has truly pedestrianised streets and a central square. It has hills and views and river that you genuinely want to walk beside and sit beside that isn’t littered with rubbish and obviously highly polluted. It was stunning. I loved it. It was a cold, wet, grey day and I just kept thinking how much I absolutely loved it and would move there in a heartbeat if I had a chance. It’s still not my preferred place to live (that’s Scotland), but it is so much better than Oxford. So much better. Nicer people, nicer buildings, nicer views, cheaper cost of living, etc.


Spring colour Durham cathedral St Cuthberts Society? faces Prebends bridge reflection Framwelgate Bridge

You can see my full set of Durham photos on Flickr.

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Comments

Thank you for sharing your trip with us! I have not been to Oxford or Durham (the UK one; we have a town called Durham north of here that is lovely!!) so I can’t comment on them. I have been to Cambridge and thoroughly enjoyed walking through the streets and stopping at the bookshops, having tea. I didn’t knit then like I do now, or I would have had to find the knitting shops.

I love your green falling leaves socks. It appears as a beautiful aqua color on my screen.

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