The first is a little chart that I made in response to this Ravelry thread. The original poster had seen a beautiful stranded Norwegian sweater and wanted the name of the pattern. No one had a name, but I was able to come up with a chart for the pattern, which features a stylized tesselated fish.
Stranded Fish
The next one was inspired by a beautiful sweater I saw in a National Geographic catalogue. I loved the color combination. I think it would be beautiful with a long repeat tonal dyed yarn as the main color. Or you could make it with three different shades of the turquoise, Fair Isle style. This is long enough for an entire woman's sweater at 8 rows per inch. You could repeat one or more of the patterns to make it longer for a man or if you just like your sweaters very long.
Sweater Panel
Estonian Motif
I copied this one from an Estonian Mitten. You can see the mittens here. Muhv has graciously permitted me to copy her combination of traditional stitch patterns for the cuff she added to her mittens. Use
the 44 x 24 stitch vertical repeat between the green lines as an allover
pattern or the entire chart as a mitten back. The 44 stitch horizontal repeat
ends at the pink line on the right.
An Assortment of Diced Pattern Motifs
When I made my husband his “Liev” sweater (http://www.ravelry.com/projects/ifdefelseif/-04-liv),
I wanted to replace the floral motif from the original pattern with something
less obviously feminine. These are the motifs I came up with when I was
deciding what to do. As far as I know, these are “original,” or at least, I
wasn’t referring to any sources when I charted them. I ended up using the very
simple one in the lower right corner. You can choose a single motif from this
selection to use in a diced pattern, as a motif in a repeated band, or you
could even use some or all of them as they are presented.
Love the charts! And realised it was you first post, so I thought I'd better comment and welcome you to the blogging world. Hope you'll have fun in here. I'm curious to see what comes next :-)
ReplyDeleteI wish you a Merry Christmas, if you celebrate that, and a Happy New Year!
Thank you for posting these patterns! Will try and follow your blog!
ReplyDelete@torirot
ReplyDeleteThanks! I've been wanting to start this blog for quite a while, so I thought it could be my little holiday gift to myself and I could start with a couple of small gifts to my fellow knitters. :-)
@thymegardener
ReplyDeleteThank you! I hope you like the charts. There will be more to come... :-)
Thank you so much for sharing this pattern:)
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing these lovely charts!
ReplyDeleteWishing you all the best in the New Year.
willow4 on Ravelry.com
Well, if I'm not mistaken, the Estonian pattern is written down from my Kihnu mittens http://www.ravelry.com/projects/Muhv/kihnu-mittens, so it would be nice to mention it. Actually that pattern motif is from a book Kihnu Roosi kindakirjad, the cuff part is my combination inspired from several Kihnu cuff patterns.
ReplyDeleteHappy new year!
Thank you so much for your lovely charts!
ReplyDeleteThank You. Great patterns.
ReplyDeleteLove the bottom chart!
ReplyDeleteThank you. It's very lovely. Hope to try it soon.
ReplyDeleteI'd love to see a photo if you do. :-)
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