Today is February the 1st.
In Ireland today it is St. Brigid's day - the pagan feast of Imbolg, the festival of Spring. Making a St. Brigid’s cross is for some people a traditional ritual. They are hung by the door and in the rafters to protect the house from fire and evil. I didn't make this little cross, that is a project for next year.
Today I have chosen to post up photos of a cardigan I knitted a few months ago. The design is my own and the yarn is sirdar eco dk wool, in a medium beige and grey. I wanted to create a cardigan that was pleasant and comfortable to wear in neutral, natural colours yet with something special - a continuous cable running in one unbroken strip around the waist. As far as I know aran style cables were first knit in Ireland by women for their fishermen. I have great admiration for anyone who knits a whole aran style jumper of cables. For me one cable is quite enough.
This wool is very warm while still being a dk weight and it kept me warm on many cold days this Winter. So far no bobbles have formed and the cardigan hasn't lost it shape. It wasn't particularly expensive either.
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I first knitted the cable. Then I picked up stitches along one side and knitted up towards the shoulder and then picked up stitches at the other side of the cable and knitted down. This means that the sides of the cardigan are seam-free and the cable is unbroken. It also meant that I had quite a lot of stitches on one single row since I was knitting front and back in one go.
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seam free sides |
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close up of cable at waist |
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close up of cuff |
As usual I had some wool left over - one ball of beige and another of grey
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mittens |
While waiting for the wool for my next project (navy alpaca dk wool) to arrive I busied myself making mittens from this left over yarn. I didn't have enough wool of each colour to knit both mittens. My brother had the idea to make each hand a different colour but with the thumb the same colour as the other hand, which I think works well. The cuffs are ribbed with little bobbles around the edge.
I began by using a mitten pattern from one of the sublime angora books, but as often happens I found the dimensions were a bit strange, so I altered the pattern a bit.
Your knitting looks beautiful and I really can feel the warmth of the wool. Well done!
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