Category: design

  • now available for download! Vino Cardigan

    Vino sweatercoat

    Vino Cardigan

    The perfect answer to spring’s fickle weather. Long and luxurious, Vino is
    surprisingly quick to knit up in a squishy superwash merino. Ribbing adds
    interest to the bands and sleeves, while the stockinette body skims your figure.

    FINISHED SIZE
    Bust: 32 [36, 40, 44, 48] inches around fullest part of bust
    Length: 36 [38, 38, 41, 43] inches from top of shoulder to hem

    MATERIALS
    6 [7, 7, 8, 9] skeins Dream in Color “Classy” (Worsted), 250 yards/4 oz
    skein; colour: In Vino Veritas
    5.5 mm/US 9 needles or needle size
    needed to achieve gauge, circular
    5 to 7 1” buttons (depending on
    preference!)
    tapestry needle
    stitch markers

    GAUGE
    18 stitches/28 rows = 10 cm square in
    stockinette stitch

    DIFFICULTY
    This pattern is suitable for an adventurous beginner. Skills needed: cast on, knit, purl, increase, decrease, ribbing, picking up stitches, sewing up.

    TO ORDER

    $6.00 USD

    RAVELRY DOWNLOAD
    Just click the button to purchase through Ravelry – you will receive and automated download link, and the pattern will be saved to your library! Payment is through Paypal, credit card or balance transfer.

    Vino Cardigan

  • Rayne Wrap Cardigan

    Pattern now available! (Don’t you love how technology lets you do things really, really fast?)

    Rayne Wrap Cardigan

    Rayne Wrap Cardigan

    Rayne is an easy, fast-knitting and flattering wrap, sweater, or shawl – however you think of it. Sleeves are picked up and knit down to the wrist in the round for a completely seamless garment. This versatile piece will land a great place in any wardrobe! Perfect for wrapping around yourself on a chilly day, or just a great excuse to snuggle up under a blanket of your favourite yarn.

    SIZE
    To fit bust: 28[32, 36, 40, 44, 48, 52] inches around full bust
    Finished Crossback Measurement: 13[13.5, 14, 15, 16, 16.5, 17] inches.

    To choose the most accurate size to make, measure yourself (or get a friend to help!) from armpit to armpit across the back and choose the closest back measurement, erring on the larger side.

    MATERIALS
    Noro Silk Garden [45% silk, 45% kid mohair, 10% lamb’s wool; 110 yards/50 g skein]; colour 269; 8[8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 15] skeins
    Or 840[880, 990, 1100, 1200, 1430, 1650] yards of worsted weight yarn.

    Worsted weight yarn is purposefully knit at a looser than suggested gauge to result in a drapey fabric.

    6.5 mm straight or 24” circular needles
    6.5 mm double-pointed needles
    waste yarn
    tapestry needle

    GAUGE
    12 stitches and 18 rows = 10 cm square in stockinette stitch.

    DIFFICULTY
    This pattern is suitable for a beginner. Easy peasy!

    TO ORDER

    $6.00 CAD

    RAVELRY DOWNLOAD
    Just click the button to purchase through Ravelry – you will receive and automated download link, and the pattern will be saved to your library! Payment is through Paypal, credit card or balance transfer.

    Note: As of July 5, 2010, sales tax will be added to this price for all Canadian residents only. The rates are: British Columbia 12%; Ontario, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador 13%; Nova Scotia 15%; and everywhere else in Canada 5% GST. Tax will be added in the Paypal payment process.

    Rayne Wrap Cardigan

    More photos in my Flickr.

  • answers and substitutions

    Thanks for all the great comments on Roam. Now to answer a few questions!

    One warning: Alexis has very awesome things in her wardrobe that are often the product of being in the right place at the right time (random stores in toronto, at random times over the last few years) – so they might be kind of hard to come by!

    The BOOTS, the BOOTS!
    Alexis writes:
    “My boots are made by a company called Eject. I bought them in Toronto last year at a store called Shoon which has now become Trove on Bathurst just south of Bloor. So random!”

    I checked the Eject website and no sign of the boots. You guys might be out of luck on that one!

    The Crime-Fighting Utility Belt
    Alexis also writes that the belt is from Roots, but from last year – again, no sign of it on their website. I’ve always loved their leather, but never got around to buying any of it – I love the belt too, but somehow Alexis just carries it off the best.

    and now…the Very Important Info –

    Yarn Substitutions

    Now. I know a lot of people are a bit aghast at the price of the yarn that I used for Roam, Handmaiden Great Big Sea. I received the yarn for free, as designers sometimes (or often) do, and it was fantastic. I received six skeins, and at first thought I’d only use maximum five – but then the seed stitch, and the hood, ate up all the yarn.

    The yarn I used is 50% wool, 30% silk and 20% seacell, and is the only yarn of its kind on the market, so far as I know. It’s DK weight, with 250 m per 100 g skein. And of course, it’s handpainted.

    I must admit that sometimes I’m a bit stymied as to why some knitters take the suggested yarn so seriously – I mean, sometimes it’s necessary especially where specific colours or something is concerned, but otherwise there are so many wonderful different yarns in the world that you needn’t limit yourself! I hardly ever even consider using yarns suggested in patterns – I only look at it for the fibre content and yardage.

    If it so happens that I have access to the yarn and like it, I might consider using it – but more often, I find a yarn that I like and then think, “That pattern would be great in this yarn!”. I guess I’ve been doing that pretty much the entire time that I’ve been knitting, and I know it doesn’t come as easy to think of substitutions for some people. I guess I’m also helped along in that department by my yarn-monkey work!

    Anyway, onto the substitutions. The yarn is quite drapey, so for a similar drape a wool-silk, wool-alpaca, or wool-tencel yarn would be appropriate. I wouldn’t use something like 100% alpaca or 100% silk, because then it would likely be *too* heavy and *too* drapey.

    BUT, you could also change up the look and feel by knitting it in a yarn with more body, like a 100% wool. This would create a more substantial-feeling sweater, thicker, with much less drape (which can be a good thing as well). I’m thinking of knitting another one in a woolier yarn.

    You could also knit it at a tight gauge, with a thicker, drapey yarn for something inbetween – more body, but some drape. Or a 100% wool yarn at a looser gauge (thinner yarn) for more drape than a 100% DK weight.

    See what I mean? The possibilities are endless! Anyway, since I know lots of people just want a list, here’s a bunch that I think would work (using Yarndex and my yarn-store brain).

    More drapey yarns (most similar to the one used):
    Blue Sky Alpacas Alpaca & Silk
    Debbie Bliss Cashmerino DK
    Elann Highland Silk
    Fibre Company Savannah DK
    Fleece Artist Woolie Silk 3ply
    Filatura di Crosa Zara
    Handmaiden Lady Godiva
    Knitpicks Swish Superwash or Swish DK
    Knitpicks Andean Silk
    Knitpicks Gloss, held doubled
    Knitpicks Elegance
    Louisa Harding Grace
    Noro Cash Iroha
    Regia Silk 6ply
    RYC Cashsoft DK
    Sublime Cashmere Silk Merino (or whatever the order is) DK

    More wooly yarns (more body):
    Debbie Bliss Merino DK
    Knitpicks Merino Style or Wool of the Andes
    Filatura di Crosa 501
    Elann Highland Wool
    Elann Luxury Merino Superwash
    Araucania Nature Wool
    Rowan Felted Tweed
    Fleece Artist Blue Face DK
    Karabella Aurora 4
    Artyarns Ultramerino 6
    Briar Rose Fibers Fourth of July

    Does that help? It’s not even a drop in the exhaustive pool. For the vegans (or non-wool-wearing-people), a blend is important – cotton/rayon would probably be a good bet, or cotton/modal like Knitpicks Shine.

    All that seed stitch will kill me!
    I implore you to try Continental-style knitting! It is so easy to switch between knit and purl (it doesn’t require a whole half-a-stitch-movement) that my ribbing and seed stitch are almost as fast as my stockinette. Really.