Bramble Shawl

Purchase the pdf file now through Ravelry (you don’t have to be a Ravelry member to purchase)
| add to cart | show cart

Bramble1

This easy and delicate shoulder shawl is a great transitional piece for those chilly fall mornings, or it makes the leap to winter wear under your favorite dress coat. The solid garter stitch body is a breeze to knit, while the Bramble Stitch border is deceptively simple to work.

Bramble2

Yarn: 900 yds of heavy laceweight or light fingering weight yarn. Sample shown in Impulse of Delight Merely Lace (80% Merino/10% Cashmere/10% Nylon, 580 yards per 110 gm skein) in Blackberry; 19 wpi
Needles: 3.25mm (US 3) and 3.75mm (US 5) 24-inch or longer circular needle for flat knitting or size needed to obtain gauge
Gauge: 22 stitches and 25 rows per 4 inches (10cm) square in garter stitch after blocking.
Finished Size: 55 inches (140cm) across top (not counting borders), 40 inches (76cm) from center of wingspan to bottom point, and border of 5 inches (13cm) wide (not counting picots)
Notions: 2 stitch markers, tapestry needle to weave in ends
Pattern Includes: written instructions
Stitches Used: knit, purl, p3tog, slipped stitches with yarn in front and with yarn in back, use of markers, knit front and back, knit front back and front, wrap & turn short rows with detailed instructions included in the pattern.
Other Details: The body of this shawl is worked from the bottom point to the long wingspan edge with slipped stitches at the beginning of each row, then the border is picked up along the slipped stitches on both edges of the triangle and knitted outward.

Bramble4

This pattern is part of the Confluence Collection. The whole collection can be purchased for $18.

Purchase the pdf file now through Ravelry (you don’t have to be a Ravelry member to purchase)
| add to cart | show cart

Trackbacks & Pingbacks 1

  1. From - Miriam Felton on 16 Jan 2013 at 8:57 AM

    […] have made some really great sample projects for display at the LYS, including my Bramble Shawl in Classic Elite Vail — which is such a luscious yarn that I can’t help but rub it on […]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *