I was surfing Pinterest, like you do, when I fell upon a gorgeous photo of Loop by Casapinka. I was discussing it in depth via Messenger with a friend, like you do, when she casually told me she bought me the pattern and it was waiting in my library.
No, you can't have her. She's mine.
I was not deeply committed to the laceweight sweater I'd just started (because, duh, laceweight), so I decided to cast on.
And then found myself completely flummoxed by choices.
After dithering longer than I care to admit, I chose Madelinetosh in Spectrum, my very favorite colorway in the entire universe, paired with Knitpicks Hawthorne Kettle Dyed in Blackbird. I began.
And promptly screwed up. Those two colorwork rows should be the same. The pattern clearly states that you hold the yarn in the back when you slip stitches. As you're working a wrong side row, the back is the front of the work. I was thinking about the wrong side as being the back, held the yarn in the wrong place, and, well, crap. I can't blame that on anyone but myself. Rip.
That fixed, I trundled ahead. I loved Spectrum.
I did not love the pooling in the black.
In a move I'm incredibly proud of, I stopped and considered. I didn't like the pooling. Could I learn to like it? It probably needs better light. I went to bed.
The next day I took it to work, spread it on my desk, and glanced at it from time to time.
Pooling.
Yep, still pooling.
Sigh. Still pooling.
Besides the fact that my time is precious, because we all know I've knitted something I hated despite the truth to that, this colorway is too precious to use it in a project that screams, "I'M POOLING!" at me every time I see it. Rip.
I went back to the stash. One of the grays I had initially rejected was Good for Ewe's Sultry Steps. It's a great gray*, but it was fuzzy and monochrome and I wasn't sure I'd like it in this project.
I was wrong.
knit in Good for You Sultry Steps in 98 Pewter
and Madelinetosh 80/10/10 Fingering in Spectrum
Onward, again.
*For me, a great gray doesn't have brown undertones. Brown undertones make me sad.