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> Pigeon's Neck
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Pigeon's Neck
Pigeon’s Neck is an asymmetrical, reversible, triangular shawl knit from the bottom up, with contrasting stripes in intarsia (color blocking) and kicky bits of knitted-on fringe. The remarkable texture is produced by each row having a random sequence of knit and purl stitches. It is suitable for an advanced beginner, and it is a good introduction to simple intarsia. This version is 74 inches from side to side, but it may easily be made larger or smaller; it uses most of two 100g skeins of the main color and a small amount of contrast color for the stripes. The pattern is written, not charted.
Why call it Pigeon’s Neck? The lovely Viking Yarn I used is a light tonal gray with bits of other colors; the dyer calls it “Petrol,” which made me think of an oil slick on wet pavement. The contrasting stripes accentuate one of the bits of color in Petrol. I remembered when George Carlin commented many years ago that pigeons had been in the city so long they ended up with oil slicks around their necks …
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- First published: March 2018
- Page created: March 24, 2018
- Last updated: July 21, 2022 …
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