Tuesday 19 July 2016

Hollyhocks and vintage multi-floral cardigan


Recently I went for a walk in Hyde Park.  I got off the underground at Hyde Park station and went into the park near the lovely flower walk.  There I saw some of my favourite tall spiked flowers - Hollyhocks - in varying shades of pink and white.


I think the colours of these Hollyhocks looks great against the dark maroon leaves of the shrub in the background.


I loved the delicate colours of the white Hollyhock with lemon sorbet centres.


There was a large patch of tall Hollyhocks by the pergola walk.  Unfortunately, the poppies had finished flowering and I expect that they had look magnificent.  I love Oriental poppies too.


The design for the vintage hand knitted 4ply cardigan in the below photograph incorporates lots of different flowers, including Hollyhocks.  The other flowers are Lily-of-the-Valley, Daffodils, Irises, Lilies, Poppies, Sunflowers, Cornflowers and Roses.


Below is a graph chart for a design of very tall Hollyhocks and which was used to form part of the pattern for other floral tunics, sweaters or cardigans in the past.

Monday 20 June 2016

Foxgloves and vintage knitwear

Foxgloves are beautiful flowers and very easy to grow.  They look wonderful in gardens or growing wild in fields, where they can look amazing mixed amongst other wild flowers.

The foxgloves in the photographs below are growing at the bottom of a large garden, where they have self-seeded and are just growing as wild flowers.

Foxgloves growing wild at the bottom of a Suffolk garden
The beauty of the plants is that they come in a great number of shades of pinks and white.  I love their tall spikes.

Wild foxgloves in a Suffolk garden
These great flowers have also been the inspiration for designer knitwear - such as on this vintage hand knitted cotton cardigan.  It is covered with vases filled with flowers - jerberas, muscari and foxgloves - with climbing wisteria flowers twirling round the top part of the front and back.

Hand knit cardigan covered with vases of flowers and climbing wisteria
3-D foxgloves are growing round the lower part of the body and sleeves on another vintage hand knitted cardigan.  This time clematis twirls around the top part of the cardigan, with bees dotted between the flowers.

Hand knit foxglove and clematis cotton cardigan
The amazing group of tall, spiky, pale pink foxgloves in the photograph below was growing in the garden of a house I visited some time ago.

Flower bed full of light coloured foxgloves
Don't they just look absolutely incredible?

Monday 6 June 2016

Pandas on knitwear

My love for Pandas inspired designs for knitwear.

A PDF knitting pattern is available from my Ravelry store for a pair of 4ply fingerless mitts with a panda holding a piece of bamboo across his tummy.  The gloves can be hand knitted in any 4ply weight yarn - wool, cotton or cashmere.  Knitting instructions include typed pages for the shaping and graph charts for both left and right mitt.

Panda fingerless mitts
The panda also features on a hand knitted cushion and it is surrounded by a circle of flowers similar to those shown in the graph below.  There are also flowers on the  back of the cushion, with a buttoned fastening in the centre.  A PDF knitting pattern for the cushion is also on Ravelry

The graph below shows a design which was used for the body of a child's cardigan/sweater.  A selection of different sizes were made for stores in the USA.

Graph showing pandas and flower design for child's sweater
Another panda glove pattern in my Ravelry store is for a pair of 4ply mitts with a panda's face on the front.  The palms of the mitts are plain.

Panda Face fingerless mitts
I don't have access to the real thing, so the photo below was taken from a non-copyright internet site. The panda looks quite content while chewing away on the bamboo pieces, or whatever it may be eating.


Saturday 28 May 2016

Bewick swans and swan mitts

Living in Barnes Wetland Centre are two beautiful Bewick swans.  They seem to love swimming around together and are very synchronised.

Synchronised swimming for the Bewick swans
Two Bewick Swans
What a beautiful face, with lovely yellow and black beak.

Bewick swan
I have a PDF knitting pattern in my Ravelry shop for fingerless mitts with a Bewick swan on the front of each glove.  The original gloves were hand knitted in denim blue 4ply wool and are available in my Etsy shop.

Swan fingerless mitts
Swan mitt - left hand

Monday 23 May 2016

Peacocks - knit inspiration and noisy birds

One of my ideas for a knitwear design some years ago was based on vases of flowers and peacocks.  Unfortunately, I do not have any photographs of the actual knits, but the designs are still sitting on my computer.  I took a photograph of the screen showing a design for the fronts of a hand knitted 4ply-weight waistcoat.

Peacock and flowers design for the fronts of a hand knitted waistcoat
I am fascinated with peacocks and have seen them wandering around London's Holland Park and Quex Park, which is not far away from London.

I often go to Pendley Manor in Tring for their yearly Shakespeare Festival in August.  This year, for a change, I was there last Friday in order to attend a Murder Mystery dinner with friends, which included an over-night stay in the hotel.  There were, as usual, peacocks wandering around the grounds.  In the garden, I came across this lovely brightly-coloured peacock with a very long set of beautiful tail feathers.

Colourful peacock with very long tail feathers
There was also a dreamy ethereal white one too.

Ethereal white peacock
There are usually signs in the car park to tell people that the peacocks have right of way!

There was one big drawback - however much I love peacocks, I could do with them keeping quiet in the early morning.  One must have been roosting somewhere below my room and it started mewing at 5.30 a.m. and kept on at regular intervals until it was time for me to get up.  I was lying awake thinking about another victim for the Murder Mystery!

Thursday 19 May 2016

King Kong gloves and a shop window full of monkeys

I love monkeys, gorillas, apes and any sort of primate.  In fact, I have a large collection of them - soft toys, ceramics, such as monkey-shaped teapots, cups and plates decorated with monkeys and a plastic Kong Kong-shaped water-drinking bottle - but not the real thing!

My design of King Kong's face and part of the Empire State Building features on a pair of fingerless mitts and the PDF knitting pattern is available from my store on Ravelry

King Kong's face and the Empire State Building on a pair of hand knitted fingerless mitts
I have been to New York several times in the past and on one of my trips came across this shop window display.  Of course, I had to take a photograph of it!

New York shop window full of toy monkeys and bananas
http://www.ravelry.com/designers/twisted-classics

Monday 16 May 2016

Vintage knitwear - summer/winter looks - hand knits


The hand knitted cream 4ply-weight mercerised cotton tunic below was featured in a woman's magazine in around the late 1980's or early 1990's together with a free knitting pattern.  It features several textured panels, with the centre wide cable panel containing bobbles.  The lacy leaf pattern panel at the sides also features bobbles and the bottom of the tunic is trimmed with a lacy horizontal leaf-patterned pointed hem.  This is a really pretty summer look and, on a trip to Hong Kong a year or so after the pattern was published, I came across a lady wearing a white tunic that she had knitted from the very same pattern - what a coincidence!  
Twin Leaf Cable hand knitted cotton tunic
This pale blue DK-weight mercerised cotton sweater with patchwork textured patterns in triangular shapes includes cables, bobbles, blackberry stitch and bell-shapes.  The photograph appeared in a knitting book, Cotton Knits, that was published around the same time.
Triangular patchwork DK cotton hand knit sweater
One year during the 1990's there was a catwalk show at the Country Living Fair in Islington and two hand knit tunics were worn by models in the show.  The tunic on the left has a lacy scalloped hem and is covered with intarsia-knit vases of flowers.  The tunic on the right also has a scalloped hem and features panels of different cable and bobble patterns.  Both were hand knitted in 4ply-weight mercerised cotton.
Hand knitted cotton floral and textured tunics
The autumn/winter look below was in a catalogue produced by a clothing company in the early 1990's.  The cardigan is hand knitted and the sunflowers, clematis and lupins are all decorated with bobbles.
Hand knit DK cardigan with bobble-covered flowers
I think that all of these styles are timeless and could still be worn today.

Friday 6 May 2016

Oystercatchers and Oystercatcher fingerless mitts

Last year, in September, I went on holiday to Penrhyn Bay in North Wales.  The self-catering holiday home directly over-looked the beach, which was not suitable for swimming but was suitable for wading birds such as these two Oystercatchers.  This photograph was taken from the outdoor terrace in front of the house.  Unfortunately the Oystercatchers were too far away to get good photographs and, if you tried to creep near them, they flew away!
2 Oystercatchers on the beach at Penrhyn Bay
One day, I went for a walk on the beach and managed to get a bit nearer, so got some slightly clearer photographs.
Oystercatcher on the beach in North Wales

Oystercatcher looking for food on the beach
On the last morning of the holiday, I had time to kill while waiting for the train in Colwyn Bay so I went to investigate what was happening on the beach.  It was fairly early in the morning and I came across a group of sleepy Oystercatchers.  When I got too near, they woke up and flew off.

Sleepy Oystercatchers on the beach in Colywn Bay, North Wales
 I love Oystercatchers and, after I got home, I decided to design some fingerless mitts with an Oystercatcher on the front.  They were hand knitted in mid blue Drops 4ply Alpaca.

Oystercatcher hand knit fingerless gloves - left mitt

Oystercatcher fingerless mitts - background blue 4ply alpaca

Friday 29 April 2016

Pansy hand knits - I love pansies

 I love pansies and have used them as inspiration in the past for intarsia hand knits.
Pansy patterned hand knitted cotton bolero
I am not growing any of my own pansies at the moment, so have taken the following photograph from the internet.

The following photographs show various pansy designs on vintage hand knitted cardigans and sweaters from around the early 2000's.
Pansy and cable patchwork squares on hand knitted cardigan
Pansy and rose intarsia hand knit sweater
Cream Pansy hand knitted wool sweater

Pansy and Cable hand knitted wool cardigan

Pansy cashmere hand knitted long gloves
I still love pansies and have designed a knitting pattern for a pair of fingerless gloves with pansies on the fronts.  The PDF pattern is available from TwistedClassics shop on Ravelry.

Pansy fingerless mitts
There is also a pattern available for a matching scarf that is covered with pansies.  This is also available from the TwistedClassics shop on Ravelry.

Hand knit black cashmere scarf covered with pansies

Wednesday 27 April 2016

Dog roses - inspiration for cardigan and gloves


I love the delicate nature of dog roses and how pretty they look all over this hand knitted cotton bolero.

Hand knit cotton Dog Rose bolero
Below is a photograph of a 4ply wool hand knitted cardigan with the body in a patchwork pattern of squares, each containing a dog rose or textured lacy leaf pattern.  The roses and lace panels are vertical along the sleeves.
Madder Rose and lace patchwork hand knit wool cardigan
I have not got any photos of my own of real dog roses, but have added a public photograph taken from the internet.

Dog Roses
The design is now on a pair of hand knitted fingerless mitts.  The knitting pattern is available from my Ravelry shop - TwistedClassics.  The gloves, hand knitted in bluey-grey with rose and pink intarsia Dog Roses, are available from TwistedClassics shop on Etsy.

Dog Rose mitts - right hand

Hand knitted Dog Rose fingerless mitts