Now that it has been gifted, this is the Midwinter Blanket by Martin Storey with three of the strips assembled. The full item has thirty-five squares.
Choosing colours was a puzzle. Some of the finished pieces on the Rowan site use only two colours - a cream with a wine pattern colour - and look very sophisticated. There is a Festive colourway which is very bright, but a bit jazzy for my taste. Someone else had used terracotta and black. Here, I have used terracotta and a selection of dark colours against the oatmeal background. This is Haworth Tweed, a 50% Merino 50% nylon blend with a smaller colour range than Felted Tweed - and less than half the price.
I realised part way through that the designer had used Fair Isle motifs from Sheila McGregor's "Traditional Fair Isle Pattern", so I chose some more to give more variety - so long as they were 25 or 27 row patterns they would work. I prefer a bit of symmetry so I reversed the stags and paired the tiles.
After I had done fifteen tiles I began to flag, but then I worked out a grid to be sure the final placements would work so that motivated me to continue. Each tile took at least two hours to knit.
This is it almost finished - here you can see some different colours in it. We worked out a 2023 tile.
This one - the initials of the recipient - took a couple of tries. The final choice is lettering from an antique French sampler. The style and scale seems to fit better with the other tiles.
And this is it finished, showing how it fits in an armchair. I edged it with applied i-cord, just to neaten the edges. I was very pleased with it.
3 comments:
Oh my, your Midwinter Blanket is beautiful, both elegant and playful. I would never thought of reversing patterns for symmetry, but here it adds to the composition. Thank you for sharing these photos of your work.
That is a stunning piece of work.
Beautiful!
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