Вязание
Жаккардовый свитер - Вязание - Страна Мам // Людмила Бугрей
...against all odds (Max) pattern by Isabell Kraemer
For pattern support please go to the questions thread here.
ravello pattern by Isabell Kraemer
For pattern support please go to the questions thread here.
Swingback
This simple top down raglan pullover uses worsted weight linen and a thinner fuzzy mohair/latex yarn for the contrasting stripes. The oversized sweater is meant to be worn with positive ease for a casual effect. Yarn over increases at the back and short row shaping accentuate the generous circumference. You can also utilize the back yarn overs by weaving yarn, ribbon, or leather cording through the holes. Feel free to substitute a variety of other yarns for a woolly winter pullover or make a…
íslenskur textíliðnaður - Héla
Riddari pattern by Védís Jónsdóttir
Note: There is not a free version per Istex
Strikkeoppskrift: Tovede tøfler
Garnet jeg har brukt er fra Sandnesgarn, og heter Fritidsgarn. Fargen er 5930. Du trenger 150 gram garn. Oppskriften passer til en skostørrelse 37-38. Legg opp 50 masker på rundpinne nr. 5,5. Strikk rettstrikk fram og tilbake 39 omganger. Du skal strikke rett på rettsiden, og vrangt på vrangsiden.
Reflectance
This two-color T-shirt, finished size 60 x 60 cm, is worked sideways. The pattern is both charted and written out and contains a schematic. Thanks to the shape of the neckline, front and back are interchangeable, and the shirt can be worn either way.
Bedford pattern by Michele Wang
A comely sweatshirt to reach for over and over again, Bedford remains effortlessly sophisticated when lounging at home and wears comfortably cozy on an adventurous day out. Columns of mock cables grow out of the ribbed hem for allover texture that reads well in any hue, while reverse stockinette sleeves serve as a subtler visual and tactile counterpoint. Worked circularly from the bottom up with raglan shoulder shaping, Bedford is a breeze to knit as it is to wear.
Ásta Sóllilja
Featuring the Icelandic hammer rose motif, this yoke is named for the dogged protagonist of Halldór Laxness’s dry and incisive Independent People (1954), on whose arrested potential much of the novel turns