I saw this shawl on a Modern Daily Knitting post about applied i-cord. In that post, Kay talks us through her own method for the finishing of her Volt shawl, which is not the same as the pattern but gives just as nice a result. The zig zags of the Volt pattern appealed to me greatly, as did the size of the finished wrap. You know I love a blanket masquerading as a wearable item.

As a side note, Kay’s advice here is great and I followed her instructions, using a three stitch i-cord. I also took Kay’s advice about always replacing a SSK with a knit two through back loop and have never looked back. I find it so much more economical to do. Top tip.

Anyway, off I went and bought the pattern (Ravelry link) by Grace Anna Farrow (designer’s site). Then I headed over to the Katia website and after some deliberation bought some Promo Fin in white, black and two shades of grey. Which two shades? No idea – I actually ordered four and only used two of them, which is part of the reason I have so much grey in stash. It was a very inexpensive option, pleasant to knit with, and soaked/blocked up nice and soft.

The yarn was a considerably heavier weight than the pattern calls for and I do have a slight regret on that front. It’s a sport weight and if I were to make another Volt (which isn’t out of the question) I’d get a light fingering weight as suggested. The sport gave me a heavier, very cosy shawl which I do wear often, but lacks some of the elegance of a finer knit.

I’m not generally a fan of yellow, and had bought a turquoise yarn for the accent rows and edging. When it arrived and I had a good look at it, I felt called to put it away, and stay true to the pattern’s proposed colour scheme. There was some yellow in stash that was close enough in weight to get away with.

Look at those lovely zig zags

I went ahead and used up two skeins of each colour, rather than counting rows. It worked out really well with only small scraps left over, and the resulting wider stripes meant that I used one fewer colour than the pattern. I am completely happy with that choice – another colour would have made the shawl absolutely enormous, and following the row count would have left several partial skeins in my stash. Neither of those was desirable.

I get a lot of compliments on this piece, and I’d recommend it without hesitation. It’s a well- written pattern but there are also many helpful comments on Ravelry projects with regard to doing increases and decreases all on the right side, if that’s what you prefer.

My wings are like a shield of steel

22 responses to “Volt Shawl”

  1. nanacathy2 Avatar

    Absolutely gorgeous. What a fabulous shawl

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    1. CA Avatar

      Thank you! Isn’t it a great pattern?

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  2. Cathy Avatar

    Definitely a ‘wraparound your shoulders and keep you warm’ item. Spider’s web style! Looks great.

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  3. kiki Avatar
    kiki

    This is fabulous – I love the colours together. I’m not a fan of yellow either, but the greys and black actually make it look gold rather than yellow. And I hope you take this as a compliment because it’s meant as one: I’m getting serious superhero vibes from this! This is very cool.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Kat Avatar

    Gorgeous! I love those yellow lines… it makes it “electric” which is perfect for VOLT!

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    1. CA Avatar

      Oh that’s so true! Maybe that’s why the turquoise didn’t seem right!

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  5. tierneycreates: a fusion of textiles and smiles Avatar

    Oh my goodness – you make some impressive shawls!

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    1. CA Avatar

      😊 Thank you so much! I enjoy a shawl. Though all of them are posted now and my next plans are sweaters – no doubt in a few months I’ll be jonesing for another shawl.

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      1. tierneycreates: a fusion of textiles and smiles Avatar

        Sweaters! My dream someday but first I need to try and knit socks (start small, ha!)

        Liked by 1 person

      2. CA Avatar

        I never bothered with socks 😁 But seeing other bloggers’ creations is slowly changing my mind!

        Liked by 1 person

  6. kmkat Avatar

    Gorgeous shawl, and perfect colors!

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    1. CA Avatar

      😊 The designer was on the money with the colour scheme, why mess with it?

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  7. E.C. Avatar

    Magnificent shawl. You are very talented.

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    1. CA Avatar

      Oh gosh thank you so much! I was wearing it only yesterday, it really was a successful make by any measure.

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  8. kayak2016blog Avatar

    Absolutely, K2 tog through back loops! SSK looks a little more finished, IMHO, but most things I can’t be bothered. Maybe it’s just easier to type into knitting patterns?? I envy you weather cool enough to want a shawl right now, though.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. CA Avatar

      We had three weeks of heat in June, but it’s been cooler and rainy again for July. Not quite coat weather but not very summery!

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Izzie Knits Avatar

    gorgeous. ! You’re quite the knitter! :)

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    1. CA Avatar

      😊 Thank you so much, that’s really kind

      Liked by 1 person

  10. quiteayarnblog Avatar

    Great shawl! Love your colors, and the knitting looks great :) Yes on K2 tog TBL! So much easier.

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    1. CA Avatar

      I think the designer really nailed the colour scheme – it would look great in other ombre shades but this is just so classic, with a bit of fizz from the yellow.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. quiteayarnblog Avatar

        Very true! The yellow gives it a pop

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  11. U-KNIT-Y Rainbow Heart Cowl – The Crafty Yarnster Avatar

    […] even two false finishes, but in the end I got it to my satisfaction. I worked the edging as for my volt shawl; when it came to the k2tog (through back loop), I knitted through both the front and back colour […]

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