So a few Wednesdays ago, Sylvie of Lettuce Knit floated the idea of me knitting her some store samples of my patterns. I thought this was a great idea and floated my Bukhara cowl pattern by her.
This is actually a lot easier than it looks. The colourwork technique here is slipstitching, also known as mosaic knitting. You're only ever working with a single colour at a time (two rows/rounds in one colour, the next two rows/rounds in a second colour, two more rows/rounds in the first colour again, and so-on), but through the devilishly clever and strategic use of slipped stitches, you actually end up making a colourwork pattern. It's excessively cool.
So I took home two skeins (60g each) of The Yarns of Rhichard Devrieze Peppino. And in fairly short order, I had two cowls:
I should point out, though, that I had to reduce the second cowl by four chart rows (eight rounds) in order to have enough yarn to finish it, so unfortunately I can't say that two skeins of the Peppino will give you two full Bukhara cowls. You will, however, be able to get one cowl and most of a second cowl, which is certainly a fine thing to be able to say. Certainly I ended up with two use-able cowls.
The two colours I used were "Egalité" and "Overly". Overly is the vibrant variegated colour...
And Egalité is the aqua...
I like 'em. What do you think?
1 comment:
beautiful - the mosaic pattern is really great for the variegated yarn...
margieinmaryland
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