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> Tintype Scarf 01
Tintype Scarf 01
DESCRIPTION:
The Tintype Collection is a new group of designs that continues my work in the field of short-row pattern motifs. This body of work highlights the way color changing and gradient yarns move throughout a design. The Tintype Scarf comes in two different versions - 01 and 02. The pattern featured here is for the 01 version, a larger sister design to the 02 which is much smaller. The Tintype Scarf design is composed of a series of elongated hexagonal shapes that are intentionally positioned off-center. The location of them from top to bottom is also framed in an asymmetric manner. This style of composition stems from my love of Japanese design aesthetics. The resulting work is both modern and timeless appealing to a broad range of individuals.
INSPIRATION:
This collection was inspired by a minimalist, architectural wall, fabricated with a series of vertically stacked, elongated, hexagonal cut-outs that serve to frame the landscape. The design (https://www.nadaaa.com/portfolio/newton-house/) is the work of architect, Nader Tehrani, from his portfolio entry entitled, “Newton House”, and located in a suburb of Boston, Massachusetts. When I first saw this design, I immediately fell in love with its use of asymmetry, the subtle tone variations inherent in the natural wood, and the way the cut-outs create a unique window into the space beyond.
Tintype: also known as a melanotype or ferrotype, is a photograph made by creating a direct positive on a thin sheet of metal, colloquially called ‘tin’ though not actually tin-coated, coated with a dark lacquer or enamel and used as the support for the photographic emulsion. It was introduced in 1853 by Adolphe Alexandre Martin in Paris. The name for this collection stems from the way the design is knit. Garter stitch rows are used to create the slat styled ‘walls’. The ‘windows’ are short-row shapes made using stockinette stitch and the double stitch turn technique. With the garter stitch rows visually rising up above the areas of stockinette, the short-row shapes appear to visually fall behind the garment or beyond the space of the main body of the work. I see these ‘windows’ as a way of looking through time into the past, like an old photograph. Memories are hidden within the mystery of the shifting colors as the work takes shape, each ‘window’ focusing our attention on the moment at hand.
TECHNIQUES:
Techniques used in this design are garter and stockinette stitch involving both knitting and purling as well as the double stitch technique of forming short row shapes. There are two options provided for casting-on, binding-off, and edge detail - either slipped stitch or continuous i-cord.
DIAGRAMS: This pattern comes with instruction along with a detailed vector diagram for both color placement and knitting order.
SIZE:
Width: 37cm/14.5”
Length: 214cm/84”
YARN + YARDAGE:
Junction Fiber Mill: Farm Fresh LITE
MC: 862m/942yds (4.5 skeins)
Junction Fiber Mill: Making Tracks LITE
CC: 292m/320yds (1.5 skeins)
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- First published: November 2024
- Page created: November 26, 2024
- Last updated: November 26, 2024 …
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