Bayview Street Cardigan
Last fall, I began sketching a collection of works inspired by the landscapes – seascapes, rather – of my childhood on Cape Cod. About ten years ago, as a new knitter, I made a simple, raglan pullover for my grandmother. She would never buy herself a fancy sweater, and I thought it would be nice to make one that fit her very petite, barely 5′ self. For it to be worn at all, it needed to be something she could grab on her way out the door to wear down the street to the beach, where she liked to watch the ferries coming and going into and out of Hyannis Harbor. She loved it, partly because, for once, nothing needed to be altered: it fit perfectly. What made that sweater so perfect? It was simple, easy, it fit, it went with everything, and she could wear it anywhere. My other designs may be knitterly (i.e., with knitting interest like steeks, cables, and lots of color changes), but they are not articles I would wear anytime, anywhere. Last fall, I decided to design a cardigan that would be both knitterly and appropriate to wear every day.
Bayview Street Cardigan is the product of my efforts. I decided to name it after Bayview Street Beach, where I spent a good deal of my childhood. Down the street from my grandparents’ home, it may very well have been my first beach. As you can see, Beatrix has spent some time there too.
For this particular project, the yarn holds just as much appeal as the design. I wanted something soft, but I rarely use 100% merino yarns because they often fall apart so much more quickly than woolly wools. I selected Frog Tree Meriboo, which is 70% merino and 30% bamboo, in hopes that the strength of the bamboo would add some durability to the garment. The knitted fabric is both soft and strong as well as a little shimmery. One of the funniest parts of this design story involves the yarn. When chose Meriboo, I noticed Frog Tree was based on Cape Cod. When I spoke to Trish, one of the owners, she explained they were located only a few miles from this beach. Small world, no? In any case, Trish sent me a lovely card and a good deal of yarn to complete this project, for which I am very grateful.
I finished the pattern just after Odysseus was born, creating another problem: how to photograph it? Fortunately, my dear friend Ingrid came to the rescue with the perfect measurements to model the work. I thank her for the impeccable styling, modeling, and photography! Don’t they look great? I think it’s funny that although I did not tell Ingrid the story of the cardigan, she styled her photos at the beach.
As for the sweater details, the cardigan features tubular cast-ons at the hem and cuffs, tubular cast-offs at the neck and button bands, tapered sleeves, tailored waist shaping, and a very simple, 5-stitch lace repeat over the body. The cardigan and sleeves are each knitted in the round in one piece to the armholes, then worked flat. The only seaming required is to sew the sleeve caps into the armholes. I debated about adding a belt, but decided against it in the end because it would have required too much dull knitting for not enough use.
I am particularly happy with how the tubular edges look. Although it is a terribly fiddly endeavor, the finished product is worth the effort. Plus, it yields a nice and stretchy edge.
The buttons caused me no end of grief, as every kind I tried either looked or photographed poorly. In the end, I bought a fat quarter of coordinating fabric and made fabric-covered buttons myself. My grandmother would definitely approve of that, as she was quite the seamstress in her day! All in all, I will call this project a success. I hope you’ll think so too.
For more information about the pattern, please see the Bayview Street Cardigan page. The pattern is also available on Ravelry for $6.50.
**Photo/model credit: Ingrid Deon**
Socks Revived Design Contest Winners!
Voting has officially ended in the Socks Revived Design Contest! At long last, I can conclude this design contest and share with you the lovely prize baskets. Moving from Kansas to Ohio a few weeks ago, we packed two adults, two kids, two aging dogs, the mortgage papers, the kids’ vaccination records, and contest prize yarn into a tiny car. I know you would have done the same; after all, fancy yarn is important!
As all of the judges will attest, picking winners was quite challenging because there were so many terrific patterns from which to choose. I had hoped that a large panel of judges would result in a little something for everyone: easy, hard, simple, complex, mindless, and anything but. Happily, the winning patterns do indeed reflect the diversity of sock interest on the panel. I hope you will see work you like too! It is my pleasure to announce the five winners in order of the number of votes received followed by the beautiful prizes the contest sponsors generously donated. Each winner will receive yarn for three pairs of socks, a gift certificate for yarn for another pair, a Wee Lil’ Pouch from Splityarn, either a circular or DPN set in sock sizes, and tasty baked goods from me. I would like to add that I stalked the winners’ Ravelry pages for their color preferences when divvying up the yarn into five equal prize baskets; that is, I made no value judgments in deciding which yarns went to whom, only color judgments. Without further ado, here are the five winning designers and their patterns:
- 1st Place:

Brocade Socks
by Lauren Osborne [lauren0 ]
- 2 skeins Spud & Chloe Fine in #7806 Calypso
- 1 skein Dream in Color Smooshy in #16 Velvet Port
- 1 skein The Plucky Knitter 100% Merino Superwash Fine in Honey Wilkes
- 1 gift certificate for 2 skeins of Simply Socks Yarn Solids in her choice of colors from Simply Socks Yarn Company
- 1 Wee Lil’ Pouch in the her choice of print from Splityarn
- 1 32″ 2.25 mm Addi Turbo Lace circular needle from Skacel
- Not pictured: soon-to-be-baked goodies from me, likely involving heavy amounts of sugar, fat and chocolate (unless other ingredients are preferred)
- 2nd Place:

Burning Stripes
by Susan Luni [lunitink ]
- 1 skein north loop yarn superwash merino sock in spring grass
- 1 skein The Plucky Knitter 80/10/10 MCN Fine in Bennett Farm
- 1 skein Dream in Color Starry in #VR480 Midnight Derby
- 1 gift certificate for 2 skeins of Simply Socks Yarn Solids in her choice of colors from Simply Socks Yarn Company
- 1 Wee Lil’ Pouch in the her choice of print from Splityarn
- 1 pair 6″ US 2 (3 mm) Addi Natura double-pointed needles from Skacel
- Not pictured: soon-to-be-baked goodies from me, likely involving heavy amounts of sugar, fat and chocolate (unless other ingredients are preferred)
- 3rd Place:

Denature
by Margaret Mills [MGMills ]
- 1 skein Fleece Artist BFL Socks
- 1 skein hazel knits artisan sock in #228 ShannyPants
- 1 skein The Plucky Knitter 80/10/10 MCN Fine in First Crush
- 1 gift certificate for 2 skeins of Simply Socks Yarn Solids in her choice of colors from Simply Socks Yarn Company
- 1 Wee Lil’ Pouch in the her choice of print from Splityarn
- 1 pair 6″ US 0 (2 mm) Addi Natura double-pointed needles from Skacel
- Not pictured: soon-to-be-baked goodies from me, likely involving heavy amounts of sugar, fat and chocolate (unless other ingredients are preferred)
- 4th/5th Place (tie):

Angler’s Loop Socks
by Andrea Mules [knittingbybicycle ]
- 1 skein The Plucky Knitter 80/10/10 MCN Fine in First Crush
- 1 skein sundara yarn sock in end of day
- 1 skein Dream in Color Smooshy in #22 Tokyo Creme
- 1 gift certificate for 2 skeins of Simply Socks Yarn Solids in her choice of colors from Simply Socks Yarn Company
- 1 Wee Lil’ Pouch in the her choice of print from Splityarn
- 1 24″ 2.75 mm Addi Turbo circular needle from Skacel
- Not pictured: soon-to-be-baked goodies from me, likely involving heavy amounts of sugar, fat and chocolate (unless other ingredients are preferred)
- 4th/5th Place (tie):

Graveyard Socks
by Mandy Powers [zigzagstitch ]
- 1 skein Dream in Color Starry in #VR480 Midnight Derby
- 1 skein The Plucky Knitter 80/10/10 MCN Fine in First Crush
- 1 skein Mama Blue Knitting Goods Troika Sock in Juniper
- 1 gift certificate for 2 skeins of Simply Socks Yarn Solids in her choice of colors from Simply Socks Yarn Company
- 1 Wee Lil’ Pouch in the her choice of print from Splityarn
- 1 24″ US 3 (3.25 mm) Addi Turbo Lace circular needle from Skacel
- Not pictured: soon-to-be-baked goodies from me, likely involving heavy amounts of sugar, fat and chocolate (unless other ingredients are preferred)
Congratulations to the winners! I wish to thank all entrants, judges, and sponsors for contributing your time and efforts. All participants will receive a free copy of the goofy little sock pattern I designed for the contest, Culture Socks, which can also be found on Ravelry for those of you who did not participate in the design contest. I hope you like it. More importantly, I hope you feel this was a valuable experience.

This contest could not have come about without the generous support of the following sponsors. Please thank them for their contributions! Now, let’s go queue and knit some socks, shall we?
Socks Revived Design Contest Entries
Before I announce the five winners of the Socks Revived Design Contest (the voting will end Friday evening), I thought I would take a moment to share the 53 beautiful contenders. I am thrilled to have so many wonderful and creative designers enter sock patterns. There is no doubt that socks are on my agenda for the summer! See for yourself, I dare you not to be inspired by these works!
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Amphora Socks
by Melissa K Williams [oceania ]
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Any Which Way Socks
by Orli [tinyplasticmeat ]
Bamboo
by Alysa Joaquin [fishie ]
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Beaded Curtains
by Deb [knitiot ]
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Bonus Socks
by Laura Penner [ljpenner ]
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Brick Lane
by Katrin Salyers [Artnik ]
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Brocade Socks
by Lauren Osborne [lauren0 ]
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Burning Stripes
by Susan Luni [lunitink ]
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Circuitry
by Caryl Pierre [karako17 ]
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Darcey’s Hugs
by Jackie [ifelsif ]
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Diamond Cherry
by Isabelle Boutin [Isanou ]
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Diluvian
by Hunter Hammersen [hunter ]
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Drift
by Melissa Goodale [StickChick ]
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Easily adjustable lace panel socks
by pragueloop [pragueloop ]
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En Pointe
by Barclay A. Dunn [kewpiedoll99 ]
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Hootenanny
by Amy Herzog [stashknitrepeat ]
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Juliettes
by Linda Worland [knitlinda ]
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Latte Socks
by Mary Boetcher [hobbit ]
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Lavender Essence
by Teri Smith [teribella ]
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Lindale Lace Socks
by Shelby Dyas [ShelbyD ]
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Lisa Stichweh
by Lisa Stichweh [lstichweh ]
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Mayflowers
by Allison Haas [AlaskanPurl ]
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Meggan Frost
by Meggan [doubleG ]
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Memories to Walk In
by D Wien [dkinkyok ]
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Nancy’s Fancy Socks
by Nancy Streicher [NancyFancyPants ]
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Octopus’ Garden
by Jenna S [gidgettm ]
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Shipwreck
by Jen Escher [jennylee ]
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Static Socks
by Zina Davis [zinadee ]
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Think On Your Feet
by Whitney Gegg-Harrison [zigeunerweisen ]
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Triple Braids
by Ann Lim [1morerow ]
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Two Ways About It Beaded Socks
by Jackie Erickson-Schweitzer [JackieES ]
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Undersea
by Ann Thompson [fidgetknits ]
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Waffles for Wellies
by Jenna Wolf [jrwolf ]
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Wavy Weave Socks
by Wanda Lyon [WandaRose ]
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Winding Way
by Page Selinsky [live4rabbits ]
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WonderWings
by Jeannie [jeanniefanihi ]
Stay tuned for the winners!
Contest deadline moved to May!
For those interested in participating in the Socks Revived Design Contest, I have officially moved the deadline from 4/19 to 5/21 at 8 p.m. EST. I apologize if this inconveniences anyone – especially those rushing to finish now – and I hope most people will feel relieved for more time.
Unfortunately, Aaron and I don’t think we can get this off the ground right in the middle of a cross-country move that was supposed to happen in July, but might be happening in the next several weeks. It is best to extend the deadline, rather than close the contest and not announce winners for a month because we can’t get organized.
I HOPE you will not be angry, I HOPE you will still enter, I am thrilled with the entries that have come through so far, and I look forward to seeing more!
Best of luck and please let me know if you have any questions! I will try to respond as quickly as I can.
Anatomy of Sock Design Part I: Getting to the Cast-On
I am so glad to hear that many of you intend to enter some socks in my wee little contest this spring! I cannot wait to see your designs! I encourage everyone to give it a go. Lately, I have received many emails from knitters interested in entering, but intimidated by the design process, the prospect of judging, and the field of competitors. I will do my best to allay these concerns. Although it is a competition, I hope it is clear that the spirit of the contest is most certainly positive and supportive. My only interest is to encourage exciting new work. Who cares if you are not an established designer? You have ideas about socks, don’t you? Sock design should not be intimidating to anyone who has ever knitted a sock: after all, socks are basically two tubes joined by a heel and capped with a toe. The heel and toe are the only challenges of basic sock construction! If you choose to, you can design a completely new way of knitting socks; my point is simply that you needn’t do this to enter and be competitive.
There, are you convinced you can do this? I hope so. Since I am working on my own pattern for the contest – a thanks-for-entering pattern for all participants – I thought it might be worthwhile to document how I go about designing a sock. I am by no means an expert at this, but I’ll certainly share how I work best. I will divide this up into three separate posts: getting to the cast-on, heels & toes, and writing the pattern. Let’s start with the first segment: planning out a design well enough to cast on.
Anatomy of Sock Design
Part I: Getting to the Cast-On
Who?
First, I start with my audience. Who will knit this sock? People who designed socks for my contest – in other words, this will not likely be anyone’s first knitted sock. Therefore, the pattern should be challenging enough for somewhat experienced sock knitters, but not so complicated and difficult as to be intimidating. The design must be fun to knit, otherwise I will lose interest in finishing the sample and you will not get a sock pattern. So far, my criteria are 1) not easy; 2) not super hard; 3) fun to knit; and I’m going to add 4) pretty.
What?
Next, I think about what I want for the main body of the sock. Texture? Lace? Cables? Twisted stitches? Slipped stitches? Color work? If I am to enjoy the knitting, lace, twisted stitches, and slipped stitches are out. Although I like how those styles look, I find them rather fiddly to work. Since tedious knitting will not bring back my sock mojo, they’re out. Cables are out too, as I just finished a large cabled pullover and my wrists need a break. More about the sweater later – we’re talking socks here, remember? Focus! Between texture and color work, I’ll choose color any day.
Plus, I just found the most amazing stitch dictionary in the history of time: Latviesu Cimdu Raksti: Ornaments in Latvian Gloves and Mittens by Irma Lesina. I found a reference to it Lizbeth Upitis’ Latvian Mitten book and decided to look it up. If you can find a copy, it’s worth the hunt. It took my university’s library 8 weeks to get a copy by interlibrary loan – there weren’t many books printed and few remain in circulation today. Written in Latvian, the book contains only mitten and glove plates with traditional designs from Latvia’s four districts of Kurzeme, Latgale, Zumgale, and Vidzeme. I intended to photocopy some stitch patterns I liked, but the book was far too fragile to do this. Instead, I set up my tripod and photographed them. I may have photographed the entire book.***
This particular stitch pattern stood out in my mind: the splotches look like microbes! I’m really tempted to call these socks Culture Socks (bonus play on “culture shock”), but the ladies at my knitting group seem to think that would be rather a turn off.I know they’re right, but wouldn’t it be more fun to think of them as microbes instead of jigsaw puzzle pieces or a houndstooth pattern?? I like microbes. I think I’m going to run with this idea.
Now that I have a stitch pattern, I need to decide how to use it on the sock. That’s easy for me because I want to use it all over. Using two colors for the entire sock requires about as much additional skill as I’d like. After all, if you don’t do it regularly, knitting with two colors can be rather cumbersome. On the other hand, this small stitch pattern is quite easily memorized and will not tie the knitter to a chart. I hope to strike a good balance between complicated and fun to knit.
For several years now, I have made a rather conscious effort to never knit anything twice (excepting a design of my own that needs further testing). I do this for two reasons: 1) I like to learn something from every project to improve my skills; and 2) there are so many patterns I want to knit that I haven’t time to dawdle on any particular one. Because this is how I like to knit, I try to include in my patterns a technique or an idea that may be new to some knitters. For this sock pattern, I will use a corrugated rib cuff, an unusual heel, and some nontraditional striping down to the toe.
How?
Now that I have a plan for the cuff (i.e corrugated ribbing) and a plan for the sock body (i.e. microbe stitch pattern), I’m ready to consider gauge and size. This is where I fly by the seat of my pants a little. Although I am a religious swatcher and swatch washer, I will not swatch for a measly sock. I refuse. Luckily, as long as I don’t care about my sock height (and I don’t), it isn’t entirely necessary. Let me explain. I generally know that I can make a gauge of 7-8 spi with most sock yarns on US 1.5 needles, my preferred sock needles. At its widest point, my calf circumference measures 13.5″ and my ankle circumference measures 8″. If I cast on for an 80-stitch sock and work from the cuff down, the cuff will likely fit somewhere between those two points. If my stranded gauge turns out to be 10 spi, it will be a shorter sock. If my stranded gauge is 8 spi, it will be taller.
Now I have a plan for my 80-stitch sock, beginning with corrugated ribbing and continuing on with the stranded pattern. But wait! Where are my US 1.5 needles? Stewing in an unfinished sock, of course. Unfinished since August 2008, in fact.
These long unfinished Fascine Braid Socks were the unwitting casualties of my lost interest in sock knitting. The pattern is wonderful, well written, and really pretty. Sadly, I chose the wrong yarn to go with the pattern so Tiennie’s lovely textured pattern can hardly be seen. Since this contest is all about getting me back into knitting socks, I decided to finish this pair, rather than buy a new needle. You may laugh, but I’m not the only one finishing up these nagging projects - Maritza, Nova, Carolyn, and Val have all recently finished long languising single socks. It’s a good thing.
Alright, now I can begin.
I admit that I tried two other color combinations before settling on this one. So far, I like this one a lot. I’m using Louet Gems Fingering Wt in Fern and Teal. Now that I know my gauge from the leg of my sock, I can figure out the decreases I need to do to get down to the ankle.
I have absolutely no plan yet for the heel, foot, or toe. The good news is that I don’t need one for another couple of days. Knitted progress on my sock has been slow this week because we sold our house and will be moving 600 miles away in less than six weeks (right around the time this contest closes, actually). It should be fun!
Stay tuned for Part II: Heels & Toes.
***I assume this is completely illegal, but what am I supposed to do when I can’t buy a copy of a rare, out-of-print text? I would pay $$$ for this book if it were available!
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