firstfrost: (knit)
firstfrost ([personal profile] firstfrost) wrote2009-05-11 02:02 pm

Okay, this is going to keep bugging me...

Did I knit you a grey shawl, which [livejournal.com profile] shumashi borrowed to wear in "Charlie and Algernon" six years ago? (Or, if it wasn't you, do you know who it was?)

(Crowdsourcing my memory in my old age, sigh...)

[identity profile] shumashi.livejournal.com 2009-05-11 10:07 pm (UTC)(link)
I suddenly have this memory of it being referred to as a Pi shawl, if that helps at all.

[identity profile] firstfrost.livejournal.com 2009-05-11 11:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Hmm, like this one:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/15906682@N05/1806463700/
except I keep trying to make that be your red shawl instead. Now I don't remember what that one looks like...

[identity profile] shumashi.livejournal.com 2009-05-12 02:22 am (UTC)(link)
No, I don't think so.

I'm pretty sure the red one is this, by the way.
http://stuff.mit.edu/~boojum/KnitIndex/html/pix/gathering%20011.jpg

[identity profile] firstfrost.livejournal.com 2009-05-12 12:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Ah, okay. That one is also a pi shawl (though pi isn't really in the numbers). It has to do with how the increases are done, which is "double the number of stitches in one row, then knit until double the number of rows that you knit last time" (because the circumference=2piR, except that 2pi might as well be k), iterated. So in both that one and the one I showed you, you can see that the increases are all in the visible rings, which go from sparse stitches to dense stitches. The technique was invented by Elizabeth Zimmerman, the grand dame of knitting, and she called them "pi shawls" when she described it.