HAVET SHAWL RIFF - how to incorporate lace and two colours into the wings
The Havet Shawl pattern was originally designed for a rustic, very woolly wool - the kind that still smells a bit sheepy when you unwind the skein. The colours are deep and rich, picking up the natural dark hues of the Zwarbles fleece that is part of the blend. And most importantly for the finished look and feel of the shawl, it blooms with blocking, fluffing out into the gaps between stitches. As a result, the first, blue and green sample of Havet is lightweight, incredibly soft to the touch, and also very warm.
To recreate this original sample it's important to use a similarly untreated wool, but this is by no means the only option. Indeed, part of the fun in both designing and making is to see where the combination of stitches and yarns take us, how much we can bend the 'rules', etc.
In making another sample I really just wanted to have fun with colours without worrying too much about how the yarn would behave. I'm sure I'm not the only one who's been wooed by the bright, popping colours and speckles that can be achieved on superwash-treated merino. The hand-dyed ones, the one-offs, the really special treats... The three skeins I used for my second Havet are all slinky, smooth superwash merino yarns. The dappled green {oh how I was sold on that dapple!} and the coral pink are single-ply, while the yellow is a 4-ply of which I had lots of tiny leftovers.
I knew that the resulting shawl would be very different from the original. Superwash yarns are kind of compact, and they barely change with blocking. You can stretch them into whatever shape you need, but the fibres that make up the strand won't shift at all. They certainly won't go fluffy and fill in any gaps between stitches, so a shawl made at a gauge as loose as this pattern calls for with a non-SW will be quite translucent. As the photo below demonstrates, the stitches in the original sample on the right are a bit fuzzy, while the ones in the second sample on the left are much crisper and the gaps between the stitches in green are more noticeable. Which one you choose really comes down to personal preference - a pattern may guide you but there is no right or wrong.
As well as the difference in style and texture, for the second sample I used three rather than two colours. On a complete whim, I decided to mimic the lace as I switched gradually from the dark green to the yellow in the wings of the shawl. If you want to do the same - perhaps because you have three fingering weight skeins in three colours, not two - I've roughly worked out the maths and written the instructions below. I should point out that I ignored the instructions, totally winged it (pun very much intended), and hoped for the best. Therefor, these instructions have not been tested in the same way as my for-sale patterns normally are.
HAVET SHAWL RIFF - how to incorporate lace and two colours into the wings
Dark green = colour B / Yellow = colour C
Follow the pattern until the stitch count for each wing equals a multiple of 8 + 1.
E.g.: total wing st count 73 sts - 72 (multiple of 8) + 1
Somewhere close to a multiple of 8 + 1 is fine too; Just skip fewer or more stitches in the first extra lace row as needed. Any wobbly edges will be blocked out anyway.
Extra row 1 (lace row): In C, [ch 3 (counts as 1 TC), TC 1] in first st, skip 3, *ch 1, [TC 1, ch 2, TC 3] in next st, skip 3, [TC 1, ch 1, TC 1] in nect st; rep from * until 8 sts rem to central lace panel, skip 3, ch 1, [TC 1, ch 2, TC 3] in next st, skip 3, TC 2 in last wing st, work appropriate lace row in A, change to C, TC 2 in first st, skip 3, [TC 3, ch 2, TC 1] in next st, ch 1, *[TC 1, ch 1, TC 1] in next st, skip 3, [TC 3, ch 2, TC 1] in next st, ch 1; rep from * until 1 st rem, TC 2 in last wing st, turn.
Extra row 2 (lace row): [Ch 3 (counts as 1 TC), TC 1] in first st, skip 1, *skip 3, [TC 3, ch 2, TC 1] in next ch-sp, ch 1, skip 4, [TC 1, ch 1, TC 1] in next ch-sp; rep from * until 10 sts rem to central lace panel, *skip 3, [TC 3, ch 2, TC 1] in next ch-sp, ch 1, skip 4, TC 2 in last wing st, work appropriate lace row in A, change to C, TC 2 in first st, skip 4, [TC 1, ch 2, TC 3] in next ch-sp, skip 1, *skip 3, [TC 1, ch 1, TC 1] in next ch-sp, skip 4, [TC 1, ch 2, TC 3] in next ch-sp; rep from * until 4 sts rem, skip 3, TC 2 in last wing st, turn.
Extra row 3 (Up & Down patt row): In B, work first 2 sts in patt, *work next 6 sts in patt, skip next ch, work next st in patt, skip next ch, work next st in patt; rep from * until 9 sts rem, work next 9 sts in patt, work appropriate lace row in A, change to B, work next 9 sts in patt, *work next st in patt, skip next ch, work next st in patt, skip next ch, work next 6 sts in patt; rep from * until 2 sts rem, work next 2 sts in patt, turn.
You will now have 4 more sts than you did on the last ordinary row. Continue in pattern with colours A & B as follows:
Rep R3 of main pattern once, rep R4 of main pattern once, then rep R3 of main pattern twice. 12 sts added. Total wing stitch count should again be a multiple of 8 + 1.
Using colours C and B, repeat the three Extra rows once. 4 sts added. Using colour B, repeat R3 of main pattern twice. 4 sts added. Using colours C and B, repeat the Extra rows once. 4 sts added. Repeat R3 of main pattern once.
Switch to colour C, rep R3 and R4 of main pattern until shawl reaches desired dimensions.
As you can see, I worked the extra lace rows on the wings three times in total, and decreased the number of green rows in between each time. I used exactly one 400m skein of green, one 400m skein of yellow, and about 200m of coral. The shawl feels lacy and appropriate for mild weather. And the colours make me smile every time I look at them, which is exactly what those Special Skeins are meant to do!
What would you go for - rustic and warm, or bright and lacy?