https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/sources/debgemmellmods
I have an idea. Uh, oh. It won’t go away.
I want to knit a vest. That’s not so weird, right? They are handy to have. Winter is coming and I want to be prepared.
I could make it in the normal vest way: start with the shoulders and knit the front to the underarm, knit the back, join in the round at the underarm, and well, you get the picture. But no, not doing that because of … the idea.

What I really want is a top down raglan …

https://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/side-pattern-vest-631 by Cabin Fever,
designed by me. It’s a lovely knit in worsted weight yarn.
… where the shoulder is narrower. How can I shorten the shoulder section so that when I cast off the sleeve stitches I have what looks like a sleeveless armhole?

Yes, this is my big question. I know, I know, why bother? Sometimes a question like this grabs my attention and won’t let go so … here we go.
Cheers, Deb
Any Gauge patterns by Deb
Deb.Gemmell on instagram
Interesting…
I’m on a deadline knit or I’d immediately start playing with this. I think I’d cast on for an itty-bitty swatch … maybe 15 sts — 2 for the front, 2 for the sleeve cap, 2 for the raglan line, 3 for the back, 2 for the raglan line, 2 for the sleeve cap and 2 for the front — and just start knitting, fiddling, and probably doing a lot of ripping.
Would some kind of short-rowing work? Increasing the sleeve cap portion only every 4th row? Putting the sleeve stitches on a holder when you get the width you want, and then knitting fronts and back separately, maintaining the raglan increase, and rejoining fronts to back when desired armhole depth is reached? Unventing a diagonal steek?
Do keep us posted on this. It’s a lovely puzzle in raglan geometry.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow, all good suggestions. Ripping will definitely be part of the project, LOL.
LikeLike
Interesting…
I’m on a deadline knit or I’d immediately start playing with this. I think I’d cast on for an itty-bitty swatch … maybe 15 sts — 2 for the front, 2 for the sleeve cap, 2 for the raglan line, 3 for the back, 2 for the raglan line, 2 for the sleeve cap and 2 for the front — and just start knitting, fiddling, and probably doing a lot of ripping.
Would some kind of short-rowing work? Increasing the sleeve cap portion only every 4th row? Putting the sleeve stitches on a holder when you get the width you want, and then knitting fronts and back separately, maintaining the raglan increase, and rejoining fronts to back when desired armhole depth is reached? Unventing a diagonal steek?
Do keep us posted on this. It’s a lovely puzzle in raglan geometry.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I eagerly await your solution.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Me too!
LikeLike