Archives for category: Scarves

My Cinder Scarf pattern, which appeared last year in a Classic Elite pattern publication, is now available for individual PDF download. If you wanted to knit it but couldn’t justify a whole booklet purchase, the PDF is available now via Ravelry or Brooklyn Tweed.

This is a quick knit (great for last minute gifts), and looks much more involved than it actually is.  If you can knit 2×2 ribbing, you’ll be able to crank one of these out in no time. The pattern calls for bulky yarn, but can easily be worked in other weights as well.

Happy weekend to all.

Resources: Cinder originally appeared here. The PDF version is available via BT or Ravelry. Yarn used for this sample is Classic Elite Ariosa.

We’ve gotten tons of nice requests for an official pattern to be made up for my Romney Kerchief that was posted here in April. The pattern has been through the gauntlet and come out on the other side all polished and shiny for you.

We’ve worked up another sample version of the pattern in Shelter (“Nest”) to provide an alternative to the handspun used in the original pattern.  The Shelter version is soft, squishy and lovely – it’s already a wardrobe favorite at BT Headquarters.

Shelter & Handspun Versions

This is my favorite type of project: two skeins, easy knitting and a chic result.  Just the type of knitting I like to take on long trips when a portable form of solace is required.  It’s also the type of project you find yourself knitting multiple times without a second thought. Rather addictive, really.

The pattern is written as a standard kerchief size whose blocked dimensions measure 41″ at wingspan & 20″ at central spine of triangle.  I’ve included instructions in the pattern for extending the finished dimensions to best suit your own vision. The size is very easily modified.  Instructions are provided in both written and charted form.

PATTERN LINKS

Ravelry |  Brooklyn Tweed

The pattern as written requires about 245 yards of yarn — the Shelter version uses well under 2 skeins. I hope those of you who have been wanting to knit this one enjoy it! Thanks for all your requests – we love to be able to give knitters what they want!

On a snowy evening, there’s nothing quite like knitting through the long hours.  I’ve been sitting by my window marveling at just how quiet the city can be on the first calm day to follow a 30-hour blizzard. The timing seemed so perfect too — a blanket of silence to end a bustling week of holiday activity.

Behind the scenes here, we’ve been having some fun using Shelter to revive some old favorites in the BT design archive.  I love knitting old patterns in new yarns to see how they behave differently from a previous version.  Today I present you with A Winter Juneberry, worked in the Wool Socks colorway.

I originally published this pattern last Spring for Veronik Avery, using a firmly spun sport-weight wool.  It was fun seeing the triangle unfold this time with a woolen-spun yarn at a different gauge. The finished triangle blocked to a wingspan of 61″ across, with a height of 30″ at center back.  This upsized version is perfect for snowy afternoons!

Aside from being available through St. Denis magazine, the pattern is also available online as a PDF. For the digital version, I’ve added yarn requirements and gauge/dimension information for a worsted-weight version. This one took 4 skeins of Shelter.

I haven’t strayed far from my knitting spot by the window in the last two days, watching rather violent snow last night, and a whole lot of quiet today. I hope everyone is staying warm and safe, whether or not you find yourself stitching through The Thaw.

Is it almost August already?  I’d wonder where the summer has gone, but I’m too busy counting down days until Fall.  It’s been weeks since my last update — a summer-long silence that has been brought on by a very, very busy couple of months.  Rest assured, I’ve been toiling away on a large creative project that I’m not yet at a point to share.  But I’m getting closer.

There’s been a lot of knitting going on here throughout these hot, humid weeks, though — with sights set to Fall (this always seems to be the case, at least in my life).  As we cross the halfway point of summer, many of the larger yarn companies have started releasing their pattern previews for new Fall collections.  Last winter I designed a scarf for Classic Elite using the luxurious, heathery Ariosa in my favorite shade of icy grey.  I figure I already have a sweater made out of this yarn that feels like a big cashmere hug, so why not a scarf as well?

It’s a big, wavy, sculptural thing that feels great spiraling around your neck.  I love a good piece of texture to throw into just about any Fall or Winter wardrobe combo — Cinder can be just that.  Ariosa is a very lightly spun singles yarn composed of 90% merino & 10% cashmere, which means that despite its bulk, it remains light.  Not to mention cashmere-soft.

The reversibility of fabric in scarves is a common issue, because  after all who has the time and energy to make sure their scarf is always facing RS out? (Well, some of us try, but realistically that doesn’t always pan out)  Reversible stitch patterns are great for scarves and look good almost any way you toss them on, hence the brawny entourage of ribbed cables.  A reversible cable is generally not much different than a regular cable: the principle is the same, with one set of stitches crossing over the other, just imposed over a ground of ribbing instead of stockinette stitch.  Each side then features visible columns of knit stitches, effectively “popping” the cable.

That being said, this scarf is much, much simpler to knit than it might first appear — which is always nice when trying to impress your non-knitting friends, isn’t it? Although you will need a larger cable needle than usual, it is more or less regular 2×2 ribbing with a small percentage of rows employing a cable cross (or two). I think ribbed cables of this nature look quite good in almost any gauge — and although I made mine up in a heavier weight of yarn, a simple waltz with your calculator can easily allow you to adapt this to just about any yarn you want to wrap around your neck.

Cinder is available in Alley — one of Classic Elite’s yarn-themed pattern booklets for Fall 2010. (Find it on Ravelry here)

I’m preparing for some international travel in August — two weeks on the road overseas generally means about two weeks of planning for proper projects so as to harness the full power of away-from-home knitting time.  Then again, since I will be spending time in Shetland (knitter’s Mecca!), I’m sure I’ll find something to keep my hands busy if the need should arise…