Cardigan with Cabled Points – the left front.

My newest issue of Simply Knitting magazine has arrived!

The free gift this month is a pattern counting device, which is perfectly timed, as I keep losing track of my cables.

I spent much of yesterday afternoon knitting, and swearing. I don’t know what it is about this particular cardigan, but swearing seems to have accompanied its entire construction so far.

(The back and sleeves are complete, and I’m working on the left front.)

First I was annoyed that the edge cable and the point cables don’t twist on the same rows.

Then I was annoyed that my tension changed when the cabled points stopped, and now my edge cables are getting smaller and smaller! Either that or I’ve lost count, and am cabling on the wrong rows.

Either way, this cardigan is very annoying.

(Why would all the cables not twist on the same row? Why?!)

Cardigan with Cabled Points

Looking at the photograph, you can see very clearly that it’s definitely my tension that’s mucking up the edge cabling. You can see that the knitting between the two short cables is much looser than the knitting immediately above them.

Do I unravel an afternoon’s work and start again, or can I live with wonky cables that might even themselves out in the wash? I’m feeling quite inclined to live with it at the moment.

Speaking of cables, for weeks I walked past this jumper in my local Marks & Spencer.

M&S Per Una cabled jumper

Every time I saw it I thought, “I could knit one of those”.

If I’m not heartily sick of cables when I’m finished with this cardigan, I might give it a go. The one change I would make is to mirror the cables on either side of the central section. It annoys me (another thing!) about the Nicky Epstein cardigan that all the cables face the same way, so I don’t really want to knit a second annoying cabled garment!

I did learn something extremely useful while I was knitting this cardigan. I learned that if you expect all the cables to be twisting on the same row, and don’t read the pattern properly, and then discover that you should have cabled the front band two rows ago… it is perfectly possible to carefully drop the six stitches you’re working on for those two rows, twist them round to make the cable, and then pick those two rows back up again.

This is not something I’d like to make a habit of doing, but I’m pleased to find out that it works!

50 Years of Everyday Fashion

This weekend we were idly looking at the magazines in the local shop, when Paul said, “I can’t believe you haven’t picked up this!”

“This” turned out to be a magazine by Yours (the best-selling lifestyle magazine for the fifty-plus woman, apparently), called, “50 Years of Everyday Fashion: How the Women of Britain Created Glamour and Style on a Shoestring”.

It has a glorious picture of Audrey Hepburn on the cover, it costs £4.99, and I heartily recommend it! It covers the period 1948 to 1997, and also has sections on men’s clothes, Royalty, and weddings.

The thing which particularly interests me about this magazine is its “everyday fashion” approach. So many fashion magazines and books, whatever period they’re discussing, tend to only talk about the prominent designers of that time. Of course this is important, but it often bears very little relation to what was being sold on the high street, what women were making for themselves, and what kinds of clothes people were wearing to go about their everyday lives.

There’s a whole chapter on making your own clothes, and it’s full of photographs of people wearing the most beautiful outfits. Some of the clothing made during wartime and post-war rationing is particularly noteworthy, because people had to be imaginative in the ways that they used fabrics and re-used old clothes. The magazine suggests that the rise of designer labels during the 1980s was one cause of home dressmaking going into decline, but cites the recent resurgence in the popularity of knitting as a hopeful sign that people might also regain enthusiasm in making their own clothes.

I think that enthusiasm is already here – although I’m naturally somewhat biased on the subject!

The TV show Project Runway, for example, has inspired a range of Simplicity sewing patterns. Books such as Rip It and Generation T are a drop in the ocean of books telling you how to make new clothes out of old ones, and there are dozens of online communities devoted to showing off clothes that you’ve made yourself.

If I was going to recommend one book to anybody who wanted to learn how to make their own clothes, it would be the Reader’s Digest New Complete Guide to Sewing. I have the original 1978 edition, and it’s an absolute goldmine. Anything you could possibly want to know about making your own clothes, you’ll find it in there.

If you’re more interested in reading about clothes than in making them yourself, then you might enjoy The Virago Book of the Joy of Shopping. It’s little snippets from literature which give an insight into the ways that people used to shop, and it’s absolutely wonderful.

Happy Day After Valentine’s Day!

After an unprecedented amount of secrecy from my former boyfriend…

…he is now no longer my boyfriend, but my fiancé!

I have a pretty, sparkly ring, and at some point in the future I will need to think about making myself a wedding dress.

Oh my goodness though… so many styles… so much beautiful fabric… (so many shoes…) and only one wedding!* How am I ever going to choose?

Still, we’re not planning on doing the wedding part any time soon, so at least I can take as long as I want to think about it.

My current thoughts are straying towards this Vintage Vogue 1957 dress, or maybe this Butterick one, in the beautiful silk we had delivered to work yesterday. It’s lime green, shot with pink.

I can’t imagine anyone else (i.e. Paul) being too thrilled by a lime green and magenta wedding though, so perhaps I’d better think again!

*Okay, this will be my second wedding. But beautiful as my first dress was, I think it might be considered slightly inappropriate to wear it again! 😉