The next pattern is "Fence Row Insertion," a garter stitch panel with 14 stitches across and a 12-row repeat featuring eyelets arranged in two diagonal lines. Each double yarn over is worked as a single stitch on the next row.
You can download the full-size chart, verbal instructions and notes here.
I find I don't have much to say about this one, so I will leave it at that.
Next time: Narrow Edging
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
This knits easy. A lot like the first edging without the peaked edge. Duhhhhhhhhhhh, for insertion it wouldn't have anything other than a straight edge.
I began knitting lace about 15 years ago, and what began as curiosity quickly became a passion.
I have frequented used bookstores and antique shops for some 40 years, and have acquired an extensive library of works on textile arts going back to the 1850s.
This blog chronicles the patterns found in a late-Victorian composition book that was used by an anonymous east-central Illinois knitter as a knitted lace sample book. Some of the instructions were clipped out of newspapers, others written out by hand. Most were accompanied by a small sample worked in fine thread.
For more on the original book, see post #1, The Project. Phase Two of the blog documents the patterns in another late-Victorian knitter's notebook from my collection described in the August 2010 post Son of the Project. While including many knitted lace designs, the book also contains directions to make mittens, afghans, baby leggings and more.
2 comments:
This knits easy. A lot like the first edging without the peaked edge. Duhhhhhhhhhhh, for insertion it wouldn't have anything other than a straight edge.
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