Just as cooks produce recipe books with similar recipes under different names (made an almost new dish with the addition of one or two ingrenients), so – I now learn – do knitting pattern designers.
I had previously knitted two Fair Isle cardigans from a pattern in Debbbie Bliss’s Baby Cashmerino collection of 2002. A blog reader recommended Debbie Bliss’s The Baby Knits Book, also 2002 (Ebury Press) and when I found a copy I was attracted by the pattern for the beaded Fair Isle cardigan, although I wasn’t particularly keen on the beaded bit. Comparing the decreasing on the yoke rows in both patterns I realised that if I wished to I could shoe horn a Fair Isle pattern of more rows into the yoke for the beaded design and this excited me.
In the end, creativity on the wilt and wanting the cardigan to be given as a Christmas present, I knitted it up just as in the book! As I worked through the pattern I realised all the numbers given for stitches were very familiar and were in fact identical in both patterns (though as I say the yoke Fair Isles were different). No problem there as I love the end result. If anything, this has perhaps taught me a bit about reading a pattern through more intelligently before I begin – steep learning curves can appear at any point in life!
Having a pale blue and a pink cardigan already, one in navy seemed a good idea. I have, however, found it more difficult to photograph navy, in spite of rushing round multitudes of locations in not one but two houses. The close ups are an ok approximation to the real thing but I struggled unsuccessfully to get a good photo of the whole garment. As the pattern only goes up to 1 year and the 8 month old is very long in the body I may never get to knit it up with a different yoke pattern. Wish I knew how to adapt patterns for bigger sizes as I could go on knitting this until the child’s thoroughly sick of the sight of it!
Below are the first two cardigans I made. The blue one has a yoke different from that in the pattern.
6 Comments
They are charming, and with different colours and therefore different effects, I doubt the child will get sick of it!
Thank you, Rachel.
Hello Mary. Yes, I agree with Rachel; I’m sure that the different colours will do the trick. Lucky grandchild I say!
Most reassuring, though come to think of it, I doubt the child notices what she’s wearing … yet!
Hello I love this cardigan but cannot find the pattern anywhere. Do you have any suggestions?
Many thanks
Is this a top-down pattern?