Category Archives: Ravelry

KNIT HACK Pattern Provenance

It has been brought to my attention that some of you are not presently aware of the powerful extras offered in Ravelry’s database of patterns. This function is extremely useful when you want to know more about how a pattern is going to work out. You can see what types of yarns people have used, how the project has knit up, and modifications people have made to their version.

Personally, I especially like to refer to a pattern’s projects when knitting a sweater, because I want to see how regular people look in it (I’m not a candidate to be a sweater model, I don’t have the requisite large square shoulders and tiny bust). If I’m substituting a yarn I like to see what kinds other people have used, and how their projects turned out. I also like to see which colours the project looks best in. The provenance (a curatorial term that refers to the physical history and background of a specific piece of art) of a pattern can be extremely helpful.

So pull up your computer  (Ravelry is better explored on a computer, the mobile site for tablets and phones has limitations) and lets take a tour!

 

 

 

barley 1.png1. Details Tab

We’ll start our journey with a popular pattern called Barley. When you open a pattern’s page in Ravelry you’ll find a second tier of menus at the top, aligned to the right (Details, Yarn Ideas, Projects, Ques … etc). These tabs relate exclusively to the pattern and are a source of a LOT of useful information. When you open the page you will automatically be on the DETAILS tab. This is the pattern’s main information page, and offers details entered by person/s who created the entry in Ravelry (in this instance the would be the designers, Tin Can Knits, who maintain the page).

 

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2. Yarn Ideas

Click on the YARN IDEAS tab (to the right of DETAILS) and behold something beautiful! The YARN IDEAS page consists of the different yarns that people have used to make this pattern. It’s a popular pattern and it’s been made many, almost 13 000 times, so there are a lot of options to browse.

 

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Malabrigo Rios has been used 477 times (I don’t blame them, it’s one of my favourite yarns). If you click on the picture it will take you to the yarn’s main page, which will give you lots of info about that specific yarn. Instead, let’s click on the the link below the picture “used 477 times”.

 

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The “used 477 times” link shows you all the projects for this pattern (Barley) that people have made with a specific yarn (Malabrigo Rios).  You can browse them all manually, flipping through the pages, or you can refine the search even more. I like to flip through the pictures to get an idea of which colours I prefer for the project.

 

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3. Projects

Click on the PROJECTS tab (to the right of YARN IDEAS) and you will have access to almost ALL of the projects people have made with this pattern. Sometimes a pattern hasn’t been made much, and you can flip through the pages manually. In cases like this pattern there are a lot of projects and you might want to refine your search.

 

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Click on the FILTER THESE PROJECTS menu tab on the left side of the screen, and a menu will drop down.

 

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A bunch of options will appear; I think the most useful is ALL HELPFUL PROJECTS, so click on that.

 

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See the little round  red and white circles (highlighted in aqua)? Those are icons of life preservers, and they let you know that someone has found the notes in that particular project helpful. The number to the right of the icon shows you the number of people who have found it helpful.

 

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Let’s stop for a moment and decode those little symbols in the top right corner of each project’s box. The life preservers are the most important and useful, but the others can also offer a little bit of insight. The little hearts and the number to their right refer to the number of people who have favourited this project. The little blue speech bubbles and the number to the right of them refer to the number of people who have left comments on the project. The little yellow smiley face refers to how the person who made the project feels about their own product. Judging by the amount of interest in the project above I’d say there might be some useful info in it.

We’ll meet back up with the popular project above, but let’s get back to those little life preservers! Presently, there is not a way to sort the results, putting the most helpful at the top of the search. To find the most helpful projects we have to browse through manually and search for projects with higher numbers next to their life preservers. To scroll through the pages you can click on the PAGE NUMBER at the top (just above the pictures and below all the menus and search stuff), or click on the NEXT PAGE link on the right side of the screen.

 

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Conveniently, you can also find the same PAGE NUMBER and NEXT PAGE links at the bottom of the page. The number of the page you are presently on is coloured white, the other pages are light green.

 

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Above, I’ve scrolled through a few pages (I’m on page 4) and I found a project with 13 life preservers, 55 hearts,  and 2 comments (the aforementioned popular project from before). Click on the project’s title (in the purple bubble) and lets see what’s inside ….

 

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Judging by the notes and the pictures, I’d say people like this project because it fits snugly; the original pattern is looser and slouchy. Like other people, I find the notes helpful, so I’m going to click on the little YES button to the right of “are these notes helpful?”, at the bottom of the screen. When you click on the YES button it adds your little life preserver and bookmarks the page for you (we’ll get back to the bookmarking at the end of the post).

 

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A little speech bubble pops up, asking us to highlight what was helpful. I don’t know how this actually makes Ravelry better, but it does benefit us in two ways:

  1. Ravelry ROCKS and *anything* that makes Ravelry better will benefit you!
  2. If you ever need to return to this project and seek out it’s knitterly wisdom, you will know why you were interested and exactly what you found helpful. I don’t know about you, but I’ve come to accept that I always *think* I’m going to remember, and I NEVER remember.

 

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Use your cursor to go over the words that you want to highlight (how this works will depend on your computer or tablet, but you just highlight or capture the words like you normally would to copy them). Once you release the cursor the words will be highlighted in yellow. There is a little “X” button at the end of each highlighted section of words. If you want to delete some highlighting just click on the“X”. 

 

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Back to that bookmarking … how, you say, will you ever find that project again? Good question! The helpful project is at hand in two ways, the first of which is embedded in the the original pattern’s pages. Go back to the original Pattern (Barley), click the PROJECTS tab, then click on the Filter These Projects. In the drop-down menu,  to the right of “My Helpful Projects” is a number. Click on the little box to the right of “My Helpful Projects” and ….

 

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… you get the projects you indicated were helpful!

 

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The second place your helpful pattern will pop-up is in *your* projects. Above is my own Barley project.  I made it a few years ago, but you can also create a brand new project, it doesn’t matter. Scroll down to the bottom of the project page and ….

 

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Ta-Da!  The project we marked as helpful is already bookmarked in our project for our edification and referencing pleasure.

So there you have it, yay for other people’s projects! There are more options in this area that you can explore, I’ve just taken you through the most useful features. Don’t be afraid to play around with the features on Ravelry, you won’t break it.

 

 

KNIT HACK How to Find a Pattern for Stash Yarn

Ok, we’ve all done it – you bought some great yarn on a whim, without any pattern in mind, and now you don’t know what to make with it. In the past this might have been a pain to figure out, but these days Ravelry.com makes it much easier.

 

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Step 1. Go to Ravelry.com

At the top of the page is series of tabs – these are your main menu options and they are visible on every screen, no matter where you go on the website.

Step 2. Click on Yarns

Click on the “yarns” tab at the top of the page. This will take you to a simple Keyword Search.

 

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Step 3. Enter Your Yarn

In the search box, type the name of your yarn. Today we’ll pretend we are looking for a pattern that is suitable for Cascade 220.

 

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Step 4. Find Your Yarn

 

A list will come up with all the yarns that may match your search. In our case Cascade 220 and Cascade 220 are both suitable (they’re the same yarn, the company just markets the heathered colours under a separate name). We will start with the first choice, “Cascade 220”, since it has more projects (144 864 projects), and the heathered version of the yarn has fewer (62 716 projects). We will talk about these “projects” coming up …

 

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Step 5. Find Your Yardage

You are now on the yarn’s page. The page features a bunch of useful information about the yarn, including the weight, the yardage, the suggested gauge, suggested needle size, and fibre content.

Now is a good time to stop and take stock of how much yarn you actually have. We’ll pretend we have 8 skeins of Cascade 220.

Full Skeins

If you have full skeins/balls multiply the number of yards/metres in a single ball by the number of balls you have. We’ll pretend we have 8 skeins of Cascade 220:

200m per skein x 8 skeins = 1600 metres

You have 1600 metres of yarn.

Partial Skeins

You may have partial balls, or balls that are unlabelled and with questionable yardage. You’ll need to weigh your yarn – a digital kitchen scale is perfect. Mine is a Starfrit 5KG Scale, I got it on sale at Canadian Tire, but you can probably find one at any hardware store, on Amazon or eBay.  (Note, not all scales are created equally, so read the reviews. I’ve also used the Starfrit Slim Glass Kitchen Scale and I don’t like it as much – it isn’t as accurate or as responsive.)

Lets pretend we have a skein that weighs 82g. Since our yarn is a 100g skein, divide the weight of the ball by the weight of a full skein:

82g/100g = 0.82

Multiply this number by the number of metres/yards in a full skein:

0.82 x 200m = 164m

You have 164 metres of yarn.

The Tabs & Menu Options

The white tabs at the top of the page are menu options that refer to your yarn. You are currently in “details” and can jump around between tabs without losing your place or leaving this yarn. Most of the information about a yarn in Ravelry is input by knitters like yourself as they enter their own projects and stashes into the system, so it may not be completely accurate (for example colorways).

Colorways: Refers to the different colours available. For an up-to date list always check with the yarn company’s website.

Photos: a few pictures of the yarn.

Buying Options:  Stores that carry this yarn and are currently advertising with Ravelry.

Stashes:  The entries of people like yourself who have catalogued their yarn in their Ravelry account. NOTE: If you are looking for a specific colour or dyelot and can’t find it through stores, you can always research it in “Stashes” and contact the owner to see if they will sell theirs to you.

Pattern Ideas: These are patterns that people have used the yarn for. It will show you the pattern as well as the individual projects.

Projects: A raw feed of projects people have used the yarn with.

Comments: Notes people have left about the yarn.

Editing: A history of the edits made to the page (you won’t be using this tab).

 

Step 6. Pattern Ideas

The easiest search for a pattern is the “Patterns Ideas” option – click on the “Pattern Ideas” tab.

 

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Step 7. The Project Page

A long list of projects that people have used with Cascade 220 will appear – 167 pages to be exact. Yuck, that’s way too many to troll through! Is this where you normally feel totally overwhelmed and throw in the towel? Never fear, you can REFINE YOUR SEARCH! Ravelry works like a library catalogue and gives us options to narrow down the results.

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Step 8 Narrow Down your Craft

Click on the “All Crafts” menu. We will choose “knitting”, but there are still 167 pages of potential projects – gross, not good enough for us!

 

 

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Step 9. Refine Your Yardage Requirements

We want to use some yarn we already have, and luckily Ravelry lets us search based on yardage amounts. In the little boxes next to “Requires” “to” and “Skeins” we will put the minimum and maximum amounts we want to use.

 

 

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Since we are trying to actually use up a good amount of our yarn I’ve entered a minimum of 6, and a maximum or 8.82 (we might as well be exact – it never hurts).  Our search is now narrowed down to 87 pages … getting closer!

 

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Step 10: Narrow Down The Category

Categories refers to the type of project we want to make. Click on the “All Categories” and a drop-down menu will appear offering you choices based on category.

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Lets say we want to make a cardigan. Click on “Clothing” and a sub-menu appears. “Click on “Sweater” and another sub menu appears. Click on “Cardigan” and now our search will be refined exclusively to cardigans.

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Our search now consists of 38 pages of cardigan patterns that people have used Cascade 220 to make. On the left it shows us a picture and summary information about the pattern (including yardage required), on the right are pictures of the projects people have made using our yarn, Cascade 220.

From here you can browse through the pattern ideas in our search. Click on a pattern to read more about it, and compare the yardage and sizes to make sure you have enough yarn for your size.

 

You might notice that the search from the “Yarn” menu option is not as specific as the options in the advanced search from the “Pattern” menu option. You can do a search from that end using all the features to REALLY narrow down your search, but I think I’ll leave that for another day – we’ve done good work today, pat yourself on the back!