Celestarium by Audry Nicklin

Celestarium

Knitting
November 2012
Fingering (14 wpi) ?
22 stitches and 28 rows = 4 inches
in stockinette stitch
US 4 - 3.5 mm
1200 yards (1097 m)
English
This pattern is available for $7.00 USD buy it now

Celestarium is an accurate view of the night sky from the North Pole in the form of a pi shawl. It is the sister shawl to Southern Skies and cousin to Equatorial Nights, an infinity scarf featuring all the stars around the celestial equator. Eyelets and beads are used to represent the stars. The center bead represents Polaris.

The first bead is prestrung, the rest are attached using a small crochet hook. The edge of the shawl is a knitted on garter stitch border.

To help keep track of the star placement, stitch markers are placed every 72 stitches once the shawl reaches above 72 stitches. There will always be 72 stitches in between markers. No stitch markers have be moved around to accommodate star placement. The pattern includes a star chart that shows what constellations have been knitted.

Finished measurements:
46” / 117 cm diameter

Suggested yarn:
3 skeins Blue Moon Fiber Arts Seduction (400 yd / 366 m per 4oz / 113 g skein; 50% Merino, 50% Tencel) in Haida

Needles:
Size 4 US / 3.5 mm:
• needles in preferred style for small
circumference knitting in the round
• circular needle 24” / 60 cm long
• circular needle 40” / 100 cm long
Adjust needle size if necessary to obtain correct gauge.

Notions:
0.75 mm crochet hook for beading,
8 stitch markers, 370 size 6/0 silver-lined crystal seed beads

Gauge:
22 stitches and 28 rows = 4” / 10 cm in Stockinette stitch
Getting exact gauge is not critical. It is more important to get the row gauge than the stitch gauge. To save time and to ensure accurate sizing, check gauge

For those of you who are knitting Celestarium under a deadline, MissAudrey has kindly made a google doc with stitch totals and percentages finished which can be found here.

An alternate edging by Existentialist called Stellar Wave Edging has been adapted to fit the Celestarium.