Mara Shawl "Seall na Mara"
Finished
August 15, 2015
October 4, 2015

Mara Shawl "Seall na Mara"

Project info
Mara Shawl by Madelinetosh
Knitting
Neck / TorsoShawl / Wrap
Me
Needles & yarn
US 4 - 3.5 mm
madelinetosh Tosh DK
182 yards in stash
2.51 skeins = 564.5 yards (516.2 meters), 276 grams
Yellow
Die Mercerie in München, Bayern
September 13, 2014
Notes

Walking along the deserted shore, the cries of the seagulls in my ears and surrounded by thundering winds… the cold water of the North Sea tugging at my naked feet… snuggling up in my shawl… its colors so similar to those of the wild and rough nature around me…. ochre sand… lead-grey storm clouds… the steel blue of the deeper sea and the bright cobalt blue of windswept skies, reflecting in the waves… a view of the sea…


During the greatest summer heat in August, I had an intense craving for the sea and beach life.
As I couldn’t take a holiday at the sea this year, this yarn came to my mind again, as the colors of “Earl Grey” match those of a special beach I love very much… not as yellowish as in the photos, the color shifts between a sand-colored grey-beige mingled with different shades of blue (not grey ;)) of the ocean… very difficult to describe.

After a few days searching for the right pattern, I decided for the Mara Shawl, as it’s a simple knit without many fancy lace stuff and should bring out the beauty of the variegated yarn.

I also just learned, that in Gaelic, one meaning of “Mara” is “of the sea”… so in gaelic “Seall na Mara” means “A view of the sea”.. isn’t that a lovely coincidence?

Related Blog Post: http://suzanoakhill.com/2015/10/04/mara-shawl/


After 10 days knitting (note: only while commuting and in my evenings), I’m still on my first skein, but in my opinion it turns out beautifully.

(No) Mods:

  • I’m knitting strictly after pattern as I like the lace center and edging, it gives a good contrast to the heavy DK yarn.
  • That means I didn’t replace the yarn overs with M1L and M1R increases (which would read: “k2, sm, m1l, k to m, m1r, sm, k1, sm, m1l, k to m, m1r, sm, k2”) as many other knitters did

Sept. 2: Easy, relaxing knit so far. Used up one and a half skein until the first rows of the p1/k1-section. I even removed the stitch marker in the middle as I don’t need it. When you just keep in mind that there’s always a yarnover at the sides and a yo-k1-yo-spine in the middle, the stitch marker is not necessary (in my humble opinion. :))

September 10, 2015

At the second rib section now. Quite quick knit. Some wrote that they miss instructions for the lace part at the borders during the rib section. Well, that’s true. But you can fix that when you just strictly continue knitting the border as you learned in the beginning: k2, yo on the RS and then continue in k2,p2 (or k1,p1 for the first rib section) so it fits into the rhythm. The k2,yo-pattern on the RS always stays the same and is always done this way, no changes required!
Problem: If there’s just one stitch before the k2,p2 starts, doesn’t matter, just knit for example k2,yo,p1,k2,p2,k2,p2 etc….
Due to the continuing yarn overs, this will get fixed on the next RS row and you won’t recognize afterwards there’s just one p1 stitch… at least - I wouldn’t.
So, yes, this requires a bit improvisation but it’s manageable, I’d say. :)

September 12, 2015

Accounts the same way for the middle “spine” yarn-overs… just keep knitting the established rhythm of k1/p1 or k2/p2 while sticking to the yo,k1,yo-spine in the middle (for RS).
If your knitting turns out for example k2,p2,p1,yo,k1,yo,p1,k2,p2 etc. do this single p1… on the next RS you will have two purl stitches: the pattern will read then k2,p2,p2,yo,k1,yo,p2,k2,p2… the yarn-over from the RS before turned into the second purl stitch to continue the pattern and rhythm.

I intended the shawl not to become as big as the pattern version, so I stopped knitting the body (before the rib sections begin) by trying it on until it was the size I wanted - adding mentally a broad rib border to it.

So I used up 2.5 skeins of yarn, see above for exact amounts. On the pic with the red arrows you can see where I changed skeins.

September 20, 2015

Finally finished!

Though the knitting stayed relaxing, in the end I almost “ran out of steam”… the final broad rib border seemed endless and had 520 stitches per row when I was half through it. Every row took about half an hour in the end… so… keep up your spirits when you’re there, it WILL finally be finished! ;)

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Finished
August 15, 2015
October 4, 2015
 
About this pattern
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About this yarn
by madelinetosh
DK
100% Merino
225 yards

68338 projects

stashed 52887 times

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Sunnyi's adjectives for this yarn
  1. Rough
  2. nice colors
  3. heavy
  • Project created: August 15, 2015
  • Finished: October 4, 2015
  • Updated: May 15, 2021
  • Progress updates: 3 updates