Let’s add some new items to my knitting resume, shall we? I have made a toe-up sock.
Before we get into the knitty gritty of the construction, this sock was made with Socks That Rock, Pebble Beach colorway, in the OLD put up, so half of 325 yds. See that weird ridge right at the beginning of the toe? I’ve had some questions about it – that’s my odd purl row to delineate the start of the toe decreases. I HATE the way a stockinette sock looks when it goes straight through to the end of the toe. I call it Gold Toe Syndrome. So I decided to put a purl ridge in there to break things up. It’s only on the top of the foot and it’s just one purl row. The next row is when I usually start my decreases (or in this case, the row after I finished my increases.) Oh and the shoes? I’m not sure where I bought them, but they are Naot Sea. If you google it I’m sure you can find them.
Okay. The sock. When last you found me, I was getting ready to throw away all my deeply held beliefs and make a short row heel. THANKFULLY, Deb, in the comments (GET THEE A BLOG DEB!) saved me from that woeful fate. She gave me a bunch of links to a FOURTH choice in the toe-up heel. Let’s reiterate. There’s the short row heel in all of it’s incarnations – wraps, PGR, and a million others listed here. You’ve got your traditional heel flap heel as seen here and here and a million others here. And we can’t forget the Afterthought heel.
I don’t like the way the short row heel fits and I’m not really a fan of the method and the other toe up heel flap stuff seemed really really really fiddly. (Thanks LA!) And as far as the afterthought heel goes – I’d kind of like the socks to be all in one. There’s something deeply satisfying about finishing with only two ends – one at the beginning, one at the end.
In stepped Deb. Deb of the comments. Deb who desperately needs a blog if only so I can link to her and tell everyone how amazingly helpful she is!!! Deb fielded like 80 emails from me Friday and was a saint about answering all of them and even asking her teenage daughters (who also make socks this way) their opinions on my options. Thank you ALL! Deb’s suggestion is best illustrated by this pattern.
Did you look real fast? Looks almost exactly like the traditional top down heel flap doesn’t it. Get this: IT IS!!! So, I knit until the foot met my leg and then I ripped a few rows, and I should probably have ripped a few more. As I usually do when working from the top down, I started my heel flap – only this time the heel was on the BOTTOM OF MY FOOT. The directions say that you can do a standard s1k1 heel flap (only it’s a sole flap – way cooler) but I decided to do a stockinette flap – so I did s1 k to the end, s1 p to the end until the flap met with the edge of my heel. Then guess what I did? I TURNED THE FREAKING HEEL!!! Just like you do top down. I did my normal 32 stitch heel turn (which no matter how many times I do it I still have to check with Charlene Schurch to see how many stitches I need to knit before the first turn) and then I PICKED UP FOR THE GUSSET just like top down. CAN YOU BELIEVE IT!?!
Click for a bigger view.
Once I started knitting the gusset (decreasing the same way I always do!) I knit the 32 stitches on the back of the heel in s1k1 so I could get the extra padding I love so much on my top down socks. I did that for all the of the decreases and a couple more rows until I had my normal “heel” flap. Want to see how it fits on my foot?
No. I don’t bend that way. Picture taken by my lovely husband.
Want to see it compared with a regular top down heel flap?
Neat, huh? Once I was done with my pseudo heel flap, I knit and knit and knit and then STILL had angst because I didn’t know when I was ever going to run out of yarn and when should I start the ribbing? I know I know it’s not like anything bad would happen (like running out of yarn at the toe) if I started it late and I could just rip until I got it right but where’s the fun in that? Anyway, I guessed right and managed to get fifteen rows of ribbing in and then I did Elizabeth Zimmerman’s Sewn Cast Off. I also used Julia’s innovation of doing the cast off inside out to make a nicer edge on the front side. But guess what? The cast off edge is like a tourniquet! I don’t know – maybe I did something wrong, but I don’t think so. And I know that I’m known for my tight cast off (wait – you didn’t know that? Yeah. I cast off pretty tight. I think it looks neater.) So I might rip it out and do something else, but for now I’ll just leave it as it.
This is how much yarn I had left:
So, the toe-up method works for getting the most yarn out of your yarn. But, I’m not convinced. There’s something off about this sock. I don’t know if I can rightly identify it (besides the tight bind off) but it just feels different. I’m glad I did it, and I’m glad I did it the way I did it, but I still really really like the fit of my top down s
ocks. I guess I’ll do the mate to this one, and then I’ll see. Now that I know how far up I can go with my 325yd skeins, I’m thinking the next pair will be top down.