A couple of days ago, I found an error in the “cable” section of my Cape Christmas project.  The mistake was about 20 rows down and consisted of a traveling (crossed) stitch done on the wrong row. It looked like a hiccup in the diagonal line.  It was a subtle, but unmistakable mistake.  And I immediately resolved to fix it by “dropping down” and uncrossing the wrongly crossed stitches and crossing the two that were supposed to cross.  But I did not have the time to do surgery (as I call it) that evening, so I set it aside.

Crab stitch 018

Two days later — on a sunny afternoon with plenty of time to work — I sat down with crochet hook and those little plastic safety-pin-type markers that I love and Cape Christmas.  I started dropping the stitches in the two columns involved in the error.  About 8 rows down, I stopped dumb-struck.  I had been approaching the problem as if it were a cable, but it was, of course, not a true cable, but a pattern of traveling stitches:  1st stitch crossed with 2nd stitch on row 1, 2nd st. crossed with 3rd st. on row 3, etc. over 5 sts.  So, all 5 columns of stitches were connected to each other. 

I would have to drop the stitches of all 5 columns for some 20 rows to get to the stitches that needed to be fixed!

I am gutsy.  But I am not that gutsy.  If I had only had 2 stitch columns to deal with, I could have used the other 3 columns to orient myself and make sure I was staying in pattern.  With all five columns gone, I would surely make mistakes not unlike the one I was hoping to correct.  And it would be a big, loose stringy mess.  5 columns of stitches for 20+ rows?  Over a hundred stitches to be re-done (with all those crossed stitches!).  Even if, after several (probably many!) attempts and pullings-out and re-doings, I got it all correct, I suspect the yarn (merino and silk)would have suffered and probably the stitches would be wonky and uneven. 

So, I am going to do that which I seldom do.  I am going to knowingly let the error stand –even though it is, theoretically, correctable.  I have assured myself that I am not being cowardly or lazy.  That a little humility is a good thing.  That I am not perfect, that my knitting is not perfect, that Cape Christmas is not going to be perfect – and am I pretty nearly okay with all of that non-perfection. 

And what is the Life Lesson I can take from this situation?  What we always tell our students:  to look at the work carefully and frequently!  If I had noticed the mistake after only a few rows, I could have fixed it by dropping a manageable number of stitches.  Now, it is just too late (since I am unwilling to pull back thousands of stitches, hours and hours of work to correct this small error). 

So, lesson (re)learned.  Time to move on.  Cape Christmas looks to be a gorgeous piece.

3 responses to “A Time To Let An Error Stand”

  1. Lori Avatar

    you know, the amish always place one quilt block incorrectly….on purpose. that way they don’t offend god by pretending to be perfect. this is always what i tell myself when i let an error stand – yeah, i did it on purpose. 🙂

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  2. Joyce Avatar
    Joyce

    The Navajos place always put an error in their weaving for the same reason.

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  3. Nancy in NJ Avatar
    Nancy in NJ

    Love your blog, and checked out Pelagia Fiber Arts site, too: lovely!

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