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> Athabasca Falls Cowl
Athabasca Falls Cowl
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Athabasca Falls is a low (23 meters) but powerful waterfall in Jasper National Park. The Athabasca River flows from the glaciers of the Columbia Icefield and the volume of water is high even through the fall when river levels tend to be at their lowest. The river plunges off layers of hard quartzite and carves through softer limestone below to create weaving and wandering cascades of milky-blue water, which takes its distinct colour from the rock flour suspended in the water. The interlaced forms that the water makes as they descend the chutes of Athabasca Falls are the inspiration for this textured lace cowl.
Difficulty - Easy
Skills used - Knitting in the round, increasing, decreasing
Sizes - One size
Finished measurements
Circumference: 64 cm / 25.5 inches unstretched; 96 cm / 38 inches stretched
Height: 29 cm / 11.5 inches
Gauge – unstretched and unblocked
10 stitches and 12 Rows = 5 cm / 2 inches in lace stitch pattern on US 7 (4.5 mm) needles
Approximate yardage est. 147 g / 5.1 oz. (294 m / 322 yd)
Yarn - Estelle Worsted 200 m / 100 g (219 yd / 3.5 oz), 2 skeins. Colour Q61229 Peacock. Any currently available Worsted (#4) yarn with similar yardage may be substituted.
Needles - US 7 (4.5 mm) circular, 21″ / 53 cm long
Notions - Stitch markers, tapestry needle
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- First published: November 2019
- Page created: November 9, 2019
- Last updated: December 19, 2021 …
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