Archive for the ‘Pattern for sale’ Category

Atalanta

February 3, 2011

This has been a long time in coming! In 2007, I made this top, Arthemis. At the beginning of 2008, I released a pattern for it. Unfortunately, said pattern was a mess. It was pretty well impossible to follow and made very little sense. To those of you who tried to use it, my deepest apologies. Since then, I’ve wanted for a long time to return to Arthemis and reknit and rewrite it. As time passed, I also came up with a list of ideal changes to the pattern: greater length (the original photos hide how much that top rode up when I moved in it), wider neckline, a repeat of the lace pattern in the sleeves. I also wanted to change the yarn – the Rowan Cotton Glace is pretty, but I didn’t like the way it wore as an against the skin top. I wanted to keep the dart shaping, the fluttery lace pattern, and the raglan sleeves created with yarn overs.

Meet Atalanta. I think I changed enough from the original pattern that a name change was also in order. Atalanta is a heroine of Greek mythology. I grew up listening to Free to Be You and Me, which is probably where I first heard (an updated, feminist version of) the Atalanta story. Atalanta has long been my favorite Greek mythological figure because of her speed and skill and determination to decide her own destiny. (This being a Greek myth, she doesn’t actually get to do that, but I respect the attempt!) The original name, Arthemis, referred to a butterfly, but kind of looked like a misspelling of Artemis, and, in combination with Clothilde, seemed like I just liked throwing extraneous Hs around.

Atalanta is knit in Knit Picks Shine Sport, which yarn, besides being very affordable, is also very soft and not at all hard on the hands. This tee makes a great spring knit, and while it may not currently seem like it, spring is definitely on its way!

SIZES
28 [32, 36, 40, 44, 48, 52] inches – (Pick size closest to actual bust size for a sweater with 7% positive ease at bust.)

MATERIALS

  • 6 (6, 7, 8, 8, 9, 9) balls Knit Picks Shine Sport [60% Cotton, 40% Modal®; 110 yds per 50g ball] in MC – shown in Serenade
  • 1 (1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1) ball Knit Picks Shine Sport [60% Cotton, 40% Modal®; 110 yds per 50g ball] in CC – shown in Leapfrog
  • U.S. size 5 (3.75 mm) 24 or 32 inch circular needles
  • U.S. size 5 (3.75 mm) dpns or long circular needle for Magic Loop
  • U.S. size 4 (3.5 mm) 32 inch circular needles
  • tapestry needle

GAUGE
20 sts/26 rows = 4 inches in stockinette stitch

Atalanta is available through Knitting Kninja or Knit Picks.

Buy it now for $5.00 US.

Apologies, etc.

January 8, 2011

My vow of getting better at posting here has gotten off to a rocky start. On my birthday, which was two days ago, I decided it would be fun to give something back, so I set up a few different Knitting Kninja related promotions on Ravelry. Did I then post here to let people know about that? No, I did not.

Basically, I noticed that the beginning of the year marks a spate of knitting resolutions among knitters, and saw many people adding one or another of my patterns to their queues in preparation to meet some goal in the coming year. The majority of these folks were part of a group wanting to knit 11 shawls in 2011. In response, I have two shawl related deals underway for the remainder of the month and one baby knitting deal. All of these deals are automatic when you check out, so no coupon code needed.

Deal 1: Buy Two Ladies, get $1 off Rosa. All three shawls for $15.50.

Deal 2: Purchase Clothilde or Arabella individually, get Beetle Tracks free.

Deal 3: Buy Surtsey, get Paulette free. Again, just add Paulette to your cart and it will be automatically discounted.

NOTE: Deal 2 originally read that you could buy ANY individual shawl and get Beetle Tracks free. However, including Rosa in that promotion was causing the first deal not to work, so I changed the parameters. If you’d like to purchase Rosa individually and get a free copy of Beetle Tracks, please email me or leave a comment here, on Twitter, Facebook, or Ravelry, and I will try to manually get the pattern to you as soon as possible. More apologies for the trouble this entails.

Dear Jane

December 21, 2010

I have all these half finished entries that I swear are not just another post about a new pattern, but I haven’t finished any of them. So you get another post about another new pattern this time.

This one is rather special to me. The Sanguine Gryphon’s winter collection has a literary theme, and I have a book addiction. I feel so clichéd in this, but like so many female knitters about my age, I love Jane Austen’s writing. I read her books over and over again without losing enjoyment in the process. (I tend to gain enjoyment, actually, because I also read essays on Jane Austen and gain context that helps me appreciate new aspects of her writing. No one ever accused me of being anything other than a giant nerd.) When the call came out for literary themed patterns, it was to Jane Austen I first turned.

When I think of Regency fashion, a lot of the standouts for me are the garments that didn’t really outlive the era. Ladies’ turbans are an interesting colonial relic that I find intriguing and distinctly of the period. (In the novella Cranford, published in 1851, Elizabeth Gaskell uses the turban style hat as a way of depicting a character’s age and her distance from trends in fashion. An elderly lady longs for a beautiful turban of the sort that was popular in her youth, and which she never got. Her young houseguest is appalled at the idea, finding it grotesque, and buys her a staid cap instead.) Unlike a true turban, Regency turbans for ladies were sewn into shape, so they did not need to be wrapped each time a woman wanted to put on a headdress.

The turban style hat was part of a general Romantic and Neoclassical trend toward Orientalism in which the eastern world was depicted as both incredibly exotic and exciting and also somehow accessible. Artists such as Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres depicted the Orient in ways that blurred the familiar with the alluringly alien. His obviously Western models, posed as odalisques, or female slaves, lounged in ambiguously Asian settings – supposedly Turkish bath houses or harems. In the literary world of roughly the same period, Thomas Moore would publish an Oriental romance, Lalla-Rookh, and the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge would publish his Oriental poem Kubla Khan.

As Xanadu, with its stately pleasure dome, was becoming a favorite subject for the critics to disparage, India was under the control of the British East India Company, and had been since the mid 18th century. This was a long enough period of time that Indian Englishmen had become commonplace, and India held an exciting but familiar place in the public imagination. Jane Austen had herself an Indian cousin, the romantic and tragic Eliza Hancock, upon whom she may have based some of her more sensational characters. In cooperation with the British Navy, the East India Company, starting in the mid 18th century, but escalating in the early 19th, drove east from its base in India, expanding its colonial empire into central Asia.

All of this context is to say that the turban as a fashionable accessory did not arise out of the blue and my interest in it arose out of its place in history as well as literature. Jane Austen refers to a turban in Northanger Abbey (published in 1817, but actually the earliest finished of Austen’s novels) and tellingly puts the words to the pen of Isabella Thorpe, a character with a taste for the trendy and new. My turban, however, was designed for Jane Fairfax of Emma, a character who might not be enamored of its ostentation, but who certainly, to my mind, deserved a little levity and fashionable respite from her difficult existence. Jane is introduced through her letters to her aunt, and while Emma takes her time to warm up to the character, it’s clear that Jane’s creator greatly admires her, hence the name Dear Jane.

OK, I’ve blathered on for five paragraphs now without even getting to any of the details of this design in specific! The pattern is knit in Sanguine Gryphon Codex, which is a gorgeous and wonderful yarn to work with. It’s a blend of Blue Faced Leicester wool and silk, and the result is a warm, soft, shiny, drapey yarn that knits up like a dream. The pattern was designed specifically with this yarn in mind, to take advantage of that drape and sheen. The construction is different from anything I’ve previously designed. It starts with a long ribbon knit in Tunisian rib, and then the hat stitches are picked up from the ribbon and knit up with large, strategically place eyelets throughout for the threading through of the dangling ribbon ends. The rather disturbing picture below shows what the hat looks like when the ribbon is unlaced.

(Said picture is the most looked at of the batch I uploaded to Flickr. Apparently y’all like looking at weird creepy pictures.)

Further details:

Sizes
To fit 20 (22.5)”/51 (57) cm circumference at brim

Finished Measurements
17 (19)”/43 (48) cm at brim
10 (10.75)”/26 (28) cm in height, not including ribbon

Yarn
The Sanguine Gryphon ‘Codex’, 4 oz/234 yd, 52% silk/48% Blue-faced Leicester wool, 2 (2) skeins, shown in Mary Crickett

Needles
US 4/3.5 mm needles, straight or circular
US 6/4 mm needles, 16” circular, or size needed to obtain gauge
US 6/4 mm double pointed needles OR long circular needle for Magic Loop

Gauge
19 sts and 27 rows = 4”/10 cm in St st on US 6 needles

Notions
3 Split stitch markers OR waste yarn
Tapestry Needle

You can purchase this pattern at The Sanguine Gryphon website! Be sure to check out the other patterns in the winter collection as well. There are some real beauties! I’ll save prototype pictures for another post.

Rosa

December 1, 2010

The Rosa pattern is now live! Hip hip hooray!

Rosa is a small, elegant top down triangle shawlette with simple lace inserts, equally suitable for wear as a scarf or as an evening wrap. This is a gentle introduction to true lace, in which the yarn overs occur on both sides of the fabric. Choose a beautiful solid or semi solid light fingering weight yarn to best display the lace pattern, which has the look of paper cut outs. The Bluefaced Leicester yarn used for the sample is smooth and sturdy, but still soft on the skin. Merino is another good choice for a soft, wearable fabric. Finished with an easy vertical lace edging to mimic the look of fringe, this is a fast and fun lace project you’ll love to wear.

SIZE
50 inches wide, 20 inches long

MATERIALS

  • 430 yds light fingering weight yarn – Shown in Rocky Mountain Dyeworks Bow Falls Fingering (100% superwash Blue Faced Leicester, 430 yds per 100g skein, 1 skein used) Note: I used 1 skein for the sample, but with very little yarn left over. You may wish to purchase an extra skein for security.
  • 1 U.S. size 3 (3.25 mm) circular needle 24 inches or longer
  • 2 stitch markers
  • tapestry needle

GAUGE
24 sts/37 rows = 4 inches in stockinette st

Buy it now for U.S. $6.50!

Sunniva

November 2, 2010

The Sunniva pattern is now available! Finally!

Sunniva was designed to fill a wardrobe gap and close a gap. I love button down blouses and cardigans as wardrobe staples, but the unfortunate gaping that occurs at times can make them problematic. I wanted to make a sweater that would be modeled on a tee shirt – easy to pull on and wear – but with the stylistic look of a button down blouse; something that would be equally appropriate for casual wear or in more formal situations. The idea of a side shaped tee with a false button placket stuck in my mind and wouldn’t leave. Sunniva offers a wide range of options to the knitter with two sleeve choices and an optional lace collar. Although it is simple to knit, the false placket keeps it from becoming boring. I hope you enjoy your sweater as much as I’ve been enjoying mine!

SIZES
28 (32, 36, 40, 44, 48, 52) inches at bust with zero to negative ease – pick your size or smaller

MATERIALS
for flutter sleeve sweater:
2 (2, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4) skeins Malabrigo Sock (100% Superwash
Merino; 440 yds per 100g skein)

for puff sleeve:
3 (3, 4, 4, 4, 5, 5) skeins OrangeFlower Twist 80/20 (80% Superwash Merino, 20% Nylon; 440 yds per 100g skein) Shown in OrangeFlower 4 ply BFL, currently unavailable

  • 1 set 3 mm 24” or 32” circular needles (listed as U.S. size 2 or 2.5, depending on the brand)
  • 1 set 3mm dpns or long circular for Magic Loop
  • waste yarn in contrasting color
  • tapestry needle
  • 10 stitch markers in various colors
  • 5 5/8 inch buttons

GAUGE
28 sts/36 rows = 4 inches in stockinette st

Buy it now for US $6.50

Maple Leaf Rag

September 30, 2010

The pattern for the Maple Leaf Rag hat was meant to be released tomorrow, but I’d forgotten that Malabrigo Stockpile starts at midnight tonight. In order to allow participants to get a jump on knitting, I released the pattern a day early.

I love buttons. Unnecessary, frivolous, pretty, silly buttons for the sake of buttons. Lately I’ve been seeing hats with button tabs in various clothing catalogs and magazines. I love these hats and knew I wanted to make my own.

The beautiful worsted weight yarn from OrangeFlower provided the opportunity, and a simple rib pattern provided the texture I wanted. This is a super easy, super fast knit with a fun result. The cloche style hat has a vintage flair, while the slouch fits in with current trends. The end result looks great on people of all ages and genders. Enjoy!

SIZES
Adult S/M [M/ L] Cloche or Slouch

FINISHED MEASUREMENTS
Brim circumference: 20 [23] inches

MATERIALS
* OrangeFlower Worsted Weight Merino Superwash [100%
Superwash merino; 218 yd per 100g skein]; colors: Burnt
Orange, Lichen; Cloche: 1 [1] skeins, Slouch: 1 [2] skeins
* 1 set US #6/4mm double-point needles
* 16 inch US #4/3.5 mm circular needle OR straight needles
* 16 inch US #6/4mm circular needle
* stitch marker
* tapestry needle
* large decorative button

GAUGE
18 sts/27 rows = 4” in stockinette stitch on US #6 needles

Buy it now for U.S. $5.00!

Surtsey

May 29, 2010

The Surtsey pattern is now available for purchase!  Surtsey is a baby cardigan with a little simple colorwork to add a special touch. Knit from the top down in one piece for minimal finishing, Surtsey knits up fast to make a charming baby shower gift or homecoming sweater. It’s also a great way to use up those special sock yarn leftovers wasting away in your stash. Solids and semi-solids will show the colorwork best, but the color possibilities are endless. Have fun!

SIZES
newborn 3 – 6 months, 6 – 12 months, 12 – 18 months
18 19, 19.5, 20 inches at chest

MATERIALS

  • 2 (2, 2, 2) skeins ShibuiKnits Sock 100% merino, 191 yds per 50g skein in main color (MC)
  • 1 (1, 1, 1) skein ShibuiKnits Sock in contrasting color (CC)
  • 1 set U.S. size 3 (3.25 mm) circular needles
  • 1 set U.S. size 3 (3.25 mm) dpns or long circular for Magic Loop
  • 8 stitch markers
  • tapestry needle
  • Five 5/8” buttons
  • waste yarn

GAUGE
24 sts/37 rows = 4 inches in stockinette stitch

Tech edited by crazyl

Buy now for U.S. $6.50

Saturday morning cartoons

March 13, 2010

It’s Saturday, but Mr. Kninja has work this morning, so I’m at home with the monkeys, trying to work up the enthusiasm to come up with something fun to do.  I’m thoroughly worn out.  This week was a busy one at Casa Kninja.  It was a long series of a lot of little things that needed doing, culminating in the yearly IEP meeting for the middle Kninja child yesterday.  I’m pooped.

Earlier this week, the Beetle Tracks pattern went live on the Knit Picks site.  This means a decrease in the price to $1.99, so if you’ve already purchased the pattern at the original $3.50 price, next time you purchase one of my patterns, let me know and I’ll give you a $1.50 refund on the purchase.  There are a lot of lovely patterns up on Knit Picks through their Independent Designer Program, so if you haven’t checked it out yet, now’s the time to do it!

I knit the new sample in Andean Treasure in Meringue.  It’s a lovely cream with a slight golden tone, and I actually think I’d like to use some for a sweater project in future.  My McQueen Knockoff is knit in Andean Treasure, and it’s one of my most worn knits.  (Incidentally, I think it would be nice to do an occasional return to an old project to see how it’s holding up and how often it’s worn.)  I wasn’t as sure about the yarn when I was knitting with it, but after wearing the sweater repeatedly for over a year, I have to say that it’s held up well, with some pilling, and that’s it’s very comfortable and warm, and the fit is still good.  This is better than I can say for a number of my sweaters where the yarn made a more favorable first impression!  The Andean Treasure has gotten softer and softer with wearing, and I love the way it looks.

We took pictures on one of our weekend walks on a recent (rare) day without rain.  I’m crazy proud of Mr. Kninja for this picture.  I don’t think he or I have ever taken such a good modeled shot between us.  I’m not a model and he’s not a photographer, and I think we muddle along pretty well for all that, but neither of us has an easy time with our photo shoots!  I feel silly posing and he’s dealing with a lot of technical stuff and trying to get a good shot that doesn’t make me look like an idiot and that also shows off the knitwear, and by gum, it’s tricky!

In the interest of full disclosure and also in keeping with previous posts on beauty and feminine ideals, I will say that all of my photos are edited in Photoshop, by me, and that I do some smoothing of my skin.  I tend to break out, even at the ripe old age of 31, and I have some minor scarring from previous breakouts, so I’m very self conscious about my skin.  I try very hard not to smooth out my freckles and other detail when I’m cleaning up my pictures, and I don’t change anything about the knitwear other than a little color correction, but my vanity is appeased only with a little clean up to my face.  I do not change the shape of my body, though.

Photos for this sort of thing are interesting.  They have a double aim.  On the one hand, you want them to accurately represent the knitwear to the customer, and to show them what they’ll get if they knit your pattern.  And on the other hand, you also want to present an idealized form, not so much of the knitwear, as of the model, because photos tell stories.  And we musn’t forget that these pictures are selling something.  I’m not a professional model and I don’t go as far as a company with a lot of money would to try to sell my patterns.  I have grey hair and wrinkles and my eyes get red around the rims, and I’m not so much of an expert or a liar that I can correct all those things in post.  But I am trying to show you a more idealized form of myself a lot of the time when I take photos of my knitting.  It’s more fun to think about walking around in nature than sitting on a couch, which is my more usual state of affairs.

While you do generally see the outfits I’d be inclined to wear anyway (that coat is one I wear almost daily when it’s at all cool out), I have found that since I’ve begun modeling my own creations, my clothing purchases have changed.  I tend to eye things with a thought of how it would look in a photo, or with knitwear on over it.  I buy more plain colored tees than I did in the past.  There’s a definite, but small, change in my wardrobe in consideration of how it would help with displaying my knitting.

One blatant exception to the daily wear is the wedding dress I donned for the Entrechat shoot.  I do not usually wander the beach barefoot in a wedding dress, however tempting it might be.  That was a fairly Rowan inspired shoot.  Rowan’s really good at getting into the heads of knitting fangirls of English literature and forcing us to picture ourselves out on a moor or at the seaside or in a lovely cafe, wearing our beautiful knitwear that makes us look so lovely that the handsome man wandering in from the side of the picture is sure to fall in love with us immediately.  I can’t compete, but I can create my own fantasies.

It’s like Saturday morning cartoons.  It’s all a lot of fun to watch Saturday morning cartoons, but the point is not just the entertainment, but what the entertainment sells.  And in the case of knitting patterns, photography is the cartoon that sells the toy.  I’m not trying to be cynical.  I have no problem with people making money from their work, myself included, and I have no real problem with the fact that good photography is what sells the pattern.  It’s not just the knitted item, but the story behind it.  The best selling patterns on Ravelry are usually accompanied by photos that don’t just show you what you’re making, but also tell you a lovely story.  So I’m trying to work on my photography and posing and storytelling skills.

(Please note: most of this post was actually written on Saturday morning before the weekend got crazy busy and I lost track of everything!  It’s most definitely not Saturday morning as I hit the “Publish” button.)

Anyway, I think I’ll describe my amateur photography/modeling process in more detail in future posts, to offer a look inside this particular sausage factory.  I’m learning a lot by not knowing what I’m doing, and hopefully others can benefit from all the things I try that don’t work and the few things that do.

Two Ladies

March 9, 2010

Two Ladies is a bundled package of both Clothilde and Arabella.  Both shawl patterns are sold separately for $6.50 each.  You can purchase them together as Two Ladies for $10, and you will receive both PDFs for download.

Arabella

February 12, 2010

New shawl pattern, now available!

Arabella is a simple lace triangle shawl that looks a lot more complicated than it really is. Envisioned as a modern take on Regency fashion, this shawl adds a touch of dash and class to your wardrobe. Arabella was inspired by Arabella Strange, of the book Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norell, as well as far too many Masterpiece Theater viewings over the winter! Knit in either fingering or lace weight yarn, this is a modular pattern that can be easily adjusted to fit the yarn or the size desired. By altering the number of repeats, you can change the size and look. There are several edging options included with the pattern, so you can pick the one that suits your yarn and taste. Use your favorite solid or semi solid yarn to show off the lace pattern to maximum effect. The pattern includes instructions for creating a small shawlette or scarf as well. Use written instructions or charts to meet your own comfort level.

SIZE
Small: 56 inches wide, 24 inches long
Large: 76 inches wide, 32 inches long

MATERIALS

  • 400 yds fingering weight yarn for size Small Shown in A Verb for Keeping Warm Creating 100% superwash merino, 385 yds per 100g skein, 1 skein used, color: Elephanta
    Note: I used only one skein for my small sized shawl,
    but I’d advise buying an extra skein for security, as I had only yards left at the end.
  • 665 yds lace weight yarn for size Large Shown in Madelinetosh Tosh Lace 100% superwash merino, 950 yds per 4 oz skein, 1 skein used, color: Norway Spruce
  • 1 U.S. size 6 (4 mm) circular needle 24 inches or longer for size Small
  • 1 U.S. size 3 (3.25 mm) circular needle 24 inches or longer for size Large
  • stitch marker (optional)
  • tapestry needle

GAUGE
Small: 22 sts/32 rows = 4 inches in stockinette on size 6 needles after blocking
Large: 25 sts/36 rows = 4 inches in stockinette on size 3 needles after blocking

Buy it now for U.S.$6.50!


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