I've always been enamored by the idea of traditional anniversary gifts. One is paper, two is cotton, five is wood, seven is wool.... And if you take an additive approach, then every anniversary can be a knitted (or knitting) gift: silk + wool = 19, wool + wood + paper + paper (yarn, needles, and a two-page pattern?) = 14, and so on. The traditional gift for the tenth anniversary is tin. Hmmm. Sometimes inspiration comes when you least expect it. Corrugated metal, manhole covers, and diamond-stamped metal plates started jumping out at me and their textures and repetitive patterns seemed natural to knitting. So this scarf, knit in a yarn with a metal component that gives it a unique form and structure, with a stitch pattern inspired by stamped and corrugated metal, is my 10th anniversary gift to Knitty. Here's to many happy returns of the day! |
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models: Ella, Zoe photos: Siobhan Arnold |
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SIZE |
FINISHED MEASUREMENTS |
MATERIALS Notions |
GAUGE |
13 sts/18 rows = 4 inches in stockinette stitch 22 sts/18 rows = 4 inches in smocking stitch |
PATTERN NOTES |
M1: Insert left needle, from front to back, under the horizontal strand which lies between the stitch just knit and the following stitch; knit into the back of this loop. 1 stitch increased. Smocking Stitch |
DIRECTIONS With a single strand of yarn, CO 55 sts. Row 1 [RS]: K5, [p5, k5] to end. Body Work Smocking Stitch until scarf measures approximately 60 inches, ending with Row 10 of the pattern pattern. Second Ruffle Set-up Row [RS]: (K1, m1) twice, k1, [(p1, m1p) twice, p1, (k1, m1) twice, k1] to end. 55 sts. Row 1 [WS]: P5, [k5, p5] to end. Bind off.
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FINISHING |
ABOUT THE DESIGNER |
Kristi has been involved with Knitty since its start in 2002. She had a design featured in the first issue, "Haiku*", and took on the role of Knitty's first technical editor. These moves led directly to her current work as a designer -- and author of four knitting books -- as well as her principal work as a freelance technical editor for major publishers and independent designers. You can find her on Ravelry and Twitter. Kristi would like to thank her daughters for their willingness to model, Suzanne Pineau for knitting quickly, beautifully and cheerfully, Siobhan Arnold for photography, and Thrift Trader for allowing us to use their location. *Editor's note: The model for Haiku is the same Ella you see at the very top of this page. And here's Zoe in another of her mom's designs from one of our very early issues. This is how we know a decade has really passed. We only hope we've grown 10 years older as gracefully as Kristi's girls have. |
Pattern & images © 2012 Kristi Porter. Contact Kristi |