How many changes do you need to make to a pattern before it becomes something new?

Like the Ship of Theseus, is a pattern always itself, even if you replace all of the constitutional parts? Or is there a turning point at which it becomes a different pattern completely?

With a knitting pattern, you can change a bunch of things. Colour, to my mind, isn’t a pattern change. But what about changing stripe width? Choosing a different yarn in the same weight, again, merely cosmetic – but is changing the weight of the yarn a different kettle of fish? After all, this changes the number of cast on stitches, and the number of rows. If the pattern gives measurements instead of a row count, is changing the yarn less significant? What about pocket placement and method?

It has been suggested that I’m an over-thinker.

Anyway, I’ve been thinking these thoughts because of a current WIP. I got yarn for Christmas – I always have yarn on my wish list – and while I’d had plans for it when I first saw it… Those plans changed, as they so often do.

I had two cakes of Lion Brand Mandala in Warlock (Wool Warehouse link). I had it earmarked for a Mandala Striped Scarf (designer’s site), but instead opted to do a simple scarf on the bias, moving the colours around as I felt inclined in the moment.

That only used one cake, and having worked with the yarn and seen its stripes, I thought I’d do a long length cardigan, with Warlock at the bottom and a solid shade on the top and sleeves.

In searching for matching solids, I turned up some very interesting info: there’s another brand in exactly the same colourways and weight, at a far lower cost. Not only that, but this other brand, Papatya (My Happy Place link), produces matching solids – Papatya Love.

I ordered up skeins in mushroom, grey, and aqua and waited their arrival with bated breath. In the end, neither the grey nor mushroom exactly matched the tones in Warlock, but both were close enough to tone in beautifully. The aqua, on the other hand, looks to me to be absolutely identical. Delighted!

In among all the yarn excitement, I was looking for the perfect cardigan. Long, knitted bottom up (so that I could use up the whole cake before switching to the grey), pockets, DK weight, and in simple stockinette throughout. I finally landed on the Cody Cardigan (Ravelry link).

Just one problem – it was for worsted weight yarn. I’d completely failed to notice until a post-purchase read through.

So I did a bit of maths, made a few tweaks, and went ahead and got started on the pocket linings (which also served as a handy gauge swatch so I could check my sums again). Happy with those, I leaped on to sleeve island and knit up both sleeves at once, before swimming safely back to shore.

Really hope this pop of aqua looks as cool as I think it will.

Sleeves and pockets ready for later, I launched into the body. I chose to use straight needles instead of knitting in the round. Same with the sleeves. I find a circular needle slower, and it’s full speed ahead on this voyage.

50 rows in already – the colour changes are addictive

At time of writing, I’m just over 50 rows in, and when I get to 100, the pockets get added. Then another 50 and the arms are joined on and I knit the yoke and shape the v-neck. Then it’s done! I enjoy a raglan sleeve. Beats seaming any day. Oh wait, plus then some kind of neckband gets added, I’ll look at that more when I get there.

At a rate of 6 minutes per row, that’s probably, what, 20 hours of knitting? Even alongside two other projects, I reckon I can have that done in a few weeks.

Fascinated to hear any thoughts on what pattern changes you think are just modifications vs those that are fundamental. I’m only around knitters on the Internet and everyone else just kind of looks at me sideways when I ask this kind of question.


6 responses to “WIP Wednesday: The Cardigan of Theseus”

  1. kiki Avatar
    kiki

    Hey, there! A fellow overthinker, here to join you when needed 😂. Firstly, I can’t wait to see this cardigan. I already love the aqua on the grey and the colour changes that you’re working up now. Gorgeous!
    I think when you start changing the yarn, especially from worsted to DK, as you have, you can/will get quite significant differences between the original pattern and ‘your pattern’ due to the sorts of adjustments you’ve already mentioned you had to make. Does that make it a completely different pattern? I’m not sure, but I’d certainly call the new pattern a variation at the very least…a 2.0, if you will.
    I agree that colour changes and stripe width adjustments are purely cosmetic; style preferences rather than significant alterations to the pattern.

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    1. CA Avatar

      I’m still to see what happens when I get to the yoke and what needs to happen there. Might be some unravelling in my future. I could’ve gone for just choosing a larger size and following the pattern, of course, but that’s not the road I went down…

      I’m excited about it too, the colours are great and very motivating!

      Yes – styling vs changing is a good distinction.

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  2. kayak2016blog Avatar

    As one who almost never actually follows a pattern, I just don’t worry about it! I’m knitting from stash, so probably don’t have the yarn called for. I change a pattern so it fits better. (Case in point, I made a lace top in white cotton from stash, following the pattern, having done a gauge swatch, and top down so I could try it on as I went; when finished it showed every curve and bulge! I gave it to a young and slender friend of mine, and it looks stunning on her. I did another – and this time added gussets starting at the bust and going down using the same lace design, so it’s more A-line; it flares out nicely, fits well, and I love it.) I have several concept “patterns” that I make regularly: toe up socks, changing out yarns and stitch patterns; a raglan sweater top down, hats in general. I’ve done two fair isle cardigans from the same Jamison pattern, but used at least three different brands and two slightly different weights of yarn on each, in two very different colorways, and slightly modified the charts. If you look at the photos from the pattern and of my two versions, they are clearly related; I consider them the same pattern. Socks I made from a basic toe up generic pattern, and took combinations of stitches from the Japanese Knitting Stitch Bible? Not so much!

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    1. CA Avatar

      It sounds like you see a pattern as a starting point. More what you’d call guidelines than actual rules 😁

      End results being ‘related’ is a good way to think about it too – my cardigan is possibly a sibling to the original pattern. Not a twin sibling, of course.

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      1. kayak2016blog Avatar

        Or at least not an identical twin – ; )

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  3. WiP Wednesday: The Cardigan of Theseus (now with Pockets!) – The Crafty Yarnster Avatar

    […] was delighted to have a couple of thoughtful comments on my last update on this project. When is a pattern not a pattern? When you make adjustments, are you creating a […]

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