Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Allergies

This beautiful sweater is knit with Qiviut Yarn

Called Canadian Cashmere by some, it is indeed soft and very warm so I'm told.  No, this sweater is not mine.  I did lust after similar garments when I happened upon the Jacques Cartier store  in Banff a few years back  but the prices were too rich for me. 

This sweater belongs to a store customer and it was in sad shape.  She brought it in to see if it could be repaired and sadly I had to tell her I thought it was beyond repair.  Large elbow holes would have been difficult to repair in a plain stockinet pattern.  This sweater sports cables, stockinet and double seed stitch - all of which made it difficult - and for this knitter, most certainly  impossible  - to repair.  The customer despaired. 

She promised she didn't care if the repair was patterned to match the sweater.  She promised she didn't care if the repair was invisible.  She promised that she didn't even care if the repair looked good -she just wanted to be able to wear her beloved, hand-knit, Quiviut sweater.  Attempting to scare her off with stories of how inept my attempts might be, how amateurish the repair might look, I did my best to prepare her for a less than beautiful repair.  Not easily swayed, and having already purchased a ball of almost matching yarn,

she finally convinced me to try. 

An off-hand comment made by another knitter gave me the idea to repair the sweater with patches.  First, I knit two patches and sewed the first  to the outside of the sleeve.  It looked really - patched.  That wasn't going to work, so on the second try,  I sewed the patches to the inside of the sleeves,
 then tacked the  sweater to the patches.

The less-damaged sleeve looks not bad. 

The sleeve with the gaping hole will test the customer's promises. 

Aware the entire time I worked on the sweater of the rarity of the fibre, the exclusiveness of the hand knitting and the sheer cost of the yarn- this 25 g ball has a price tag of $85.00 - I felt as if I was getting a glimpse into  a different social sphere. 

Knowing a Quviut sweater is certainly too rich for me, I was not unhappy when  my face started to itch, my hands started to itch and my eyes became very bloodshot and sore.  An antihistamine  and drops of Visine later, I finished the repair and can now say "Ah, yes.  Qiviut.  Lovely fibre.  Unfortunately, I can't wear it.  Allergies, you know."

5 comments:

Needles said...

Oh no. And Oh well all at the same time.

Joansie said...

How can such a beautiful sweater be in need of so much repair? I hope it is from wear and not neglect.

Great job! I recently repaired a "Dale of Norway" sweater. Not my favorite thing to do.

I hope she rewarded you handsomely.

LaurieM said...

Perhaps you aren't allergic to the Quivit, but to something used to wash the sweater, or how it was stored?

Yarn and Ivories said...

I love stories and happy endings!

Stephanie said...

Allergies are a great deterrent to things that are too expensive! If only my allergies worked that way! :)