New pattern: Amarilli
I have something especially pretty to share with you today! This floaty, lacy shawl is Amarilli, part of the Wool People 10 collection and my second design published in collaboration with Brooklyn Tweed.
You can see the whole collection in the beautiful Lookbook. As well as a few more lace scarves and shawls, there are some very cosy-looking cabled jerseys (I especially love Marylebone).
Below are a couple of backyard photos of Amarilli, which we took late last year before sending it off to Brooklyn Tweed. I've been keeping this one a secret for quite a while!
Amarilli is knit in Brooklyn Tweed's new laceweight yarn, Plains. It's a laceweight with a lot of character and springiness, which gives a slightly rustic feel to the shawl. I used the colour 'Ranier', a calm blue-grey-with-a-hint-of-green that reminds me of lichen.
My starting point for this design was a 'bell lace' pattern from one of Barbara Walker's stitch dictionaries. I charted it out, tweaked it to fit a triangular shape, and added a border in keeping with the lace pattern. The design difficulty was in making the edges and border of the shape work with the stitch pattern - it took me a while to find a tidy and elegant solution!
Features:
all-over floral lace pattern which becomes nicely intuitive
knit and purl stitches only on wrong-side rows
top-down triangular construction with garter-tab cast on
requires 2 skeins of Plains by Brooklyn Tweed (or 750yds of laceweight yarn)
suitable for solid or semi-solid colourways
one size: 60" wingspan, 30" along spine
both charted and written instructions.
I named this shawl Amarilli because the lace motifs look like flowering bulbs - think amaryllis, lily, or crocus - but I also had a famous early Baroque song in mind, 'Amarilli, mia bella' by Giulio Caccini (published in Le Nuove Musiche, 1602). It's a very common song for young sopranos to learn - if you know someone who has had formal singing lessons, chances are they know it!
You can hear the song here:
And here is a different take on it, a much more decorated version published by Johann Nauwach in 1623:
You can purchase the pattern for the Amarilli shawl from Ravelry, or from the Brooklyn Tweed website.