patterns > The Curious Knitter and 1 more...
> Zephyr
Zephyr
Before you print, please read the note at the bottom of the page.
Zephyr is part of a series that explores curves worked on the bias. There are 3 patterns in this series, available individually or as a set.
1. Chinook. A scarf, with waves that are curvier than its counterpart. Waves lean to the left.
2. Zephyr. A wrap, with waves that are long and languid, leaning to the right.
3. Squamish.A wide wrap, with waves stacked 3 high.
The pictured garment at the top was made with Madelinetosh Pashmina in Claude. Colorways Undergrowth, Hosta Blue and Favorite Pair were used for the applied color. The garment on the model was made with Woolcycle Sport in Medieval, with Blood Runs Cold for the applied color. These two garments show different color application techniques -- single crochet on the Claude wrap, and applied I-cord on the Medieval wrap.
Zephyr’s written pattern uses a creative, nontraditional format geared towards visual thinkers. Traditional knitting instructions are also available if you prefer. Either way, once you get the hang of the rhythm it is a relaxing and mesmerizing knitting experience.
Knitters generally use stitch markers to help them navigate this pattern, but every knitter seems to have a different opinion about where they should go. So although I do suggest stitch markers, I’ll leave it up to you to figure out what placement you like best.
For a general idea about the format of the Leeward series, you can take a look at its ancestor: Rosetta Stone, a free mini-pattern. The format has evolved quite a bit in the years since this little freebie was released, but you may find it useful to see where it all started.
Color is applied to the garment after it is knitted. Color application is optional, and application techniques are not explicitly taught in the pattern because there are limitless ways to apply color and so many freely available resources.
Below are three suggested starting points for color application. Each method uses only basic skills, and shows a different way to secure a strand of yarn to a finished garment. Garments on this page show methods 1 and 3; Chinook shows an example of method 2.
- Crochet chains. Visit my demo video. Requires a crochet hook.
- Bindoff chains. See Purl Soho’s video on picking up and knitting stitches along an edge. Pick up stitches anywhere in the garment that you want a path of color -- you are not limited to doing this only at the edge. Work a bindoff over these stitches on the next row. The resulting applied color is like a crochet chain but thicker and more elastic. No additional tools are needed, only the needles used to knit the garment.
- I-cords. View Cheltenham Yarn Shop’s demo on working an I-cord bindoff using a tool called a Cordsmith. As with #2 above, pick up and knit stitches anywhere you want a path of color through your garment, then work applied I-cord over those stitches. Requires a Cordsmith or similar tool. You can buy one at https://byautumn.com/cordsmith/.
Printing the pattern - Some of the pages in this pattern are in landscape orientation. Some printers default to printing everything in portrait. Please check your printer settings and verify that it prints pages in both portrait and landscape.
25515 projects
stashed 28171 times
12986 projects
stashed 15763 times
- First published: March 2024
- Page created: April 1, 2024
- Last updated: July 23, 2024 …
- visits in the last 24 hours
- visitors right now