Sunday 18 March 2018

Dots and dashes, socks and beanies, and finally something new

 After a long break I have been cutting my fabrics again. Reds and neutrals from the shirt boxes.


Squares and strips like dots and dashes. I wonder if this will be something in Morse code? I really liked Inspector Morse!


I knitted a plain pair of socks for little Miss Purple, because her little sister was going to get one,


and a striped pair for little Miss Yellow, because there was a striped pair for her big sister.


The chemo caps are easy and fun to knit. This one took a little more than one ball of yarn 


so I used this pattern with less stitches and made an XS size in straw yellow.


This is the "new" I'm learning. In fact this technique, nalbinding or nalebinding, in Finnish neulakinnastekniikka, is ancient and much older than knitting or crochet.


It has been used to make mittens and socks and hats. This is the longest chain of first stitches I have managed to make so far. The idea came from Melanie, and we are learning together with Tracy in Norway, all of us total beginners. In Finland this technique has been used up to WWII and the last masters have passed it on to new generations. I have been asking around, but several friends who have studied handicrafts only remember they learned the basics during their studies but didn't make it a hobby. My mother had taken a class in nalbinding as well, and made a lovely, beautiful pair of mittens nobody was allowed to wear as she had won a price with them at some contest. At that time I was too young to be interested in learning something so old and slow. At least I have her needle and some papers from her class. I hope to be able to show you a chain in the "Finnish stitch", and maybe a second row as well. Our first stitch to learn has been the Oslo stitch.