Hello Everyone! This is my first ever post. I went through the memories, but they didn't seem to cover my specific problem.
The Story:
I work at a place called Greenfeild Village. I don't know if any of you have heard of it. Anyways, basically what the place is ... well our tag line is '300 Years Of America's History'. It's about 80 acres and we have all these historic building, like the original Wright Brothers Home, Noah Websters House, and the place where Henry Ford was born.
I work on a site called Fire Stone Farm (where Harvey Firestone, the tire guy, was born) and we do living history there. We live each day like they would have in 1885. I'm starting christmas gifts for some of my farm friends and I wanted to make them scarfs to wear on the farm once it gets cold here (I live and work near Detroit, Michigan, our winters get crazy cold!). The problem is the patterns for scarfs I use have to date to 1885 or before!
So here's the question. Does anyone know where I could find scarf patterns that would be historically accurate? I would be using 100% Merino Wool. We have merino sheep here on the farm so we make all our own yarn. It's undyed and I get a whole hank for 6 dollars, so it's a good deal.
Can anyone help me? It would be greatly appreciated! Thanks!
June 18 2006, 02:25:10 UTC 5 years ago
June 18 2006, 02:27:25 UTC 5 years ago
maybe you could adapt one of those? (scroll to the bottom) no scarves, but some patterns you could look at to get ideas.
June 18 2006, 02:33:25 UTC 5 years ago
Also: I tried googling your issue, and I came up with these sites:
http://www.onceuponapattern.com/Knit_Pa
http://escproductions.bizland.com/stone
http://escproductions.bizland.com/stone
http://www.geocities.com/vintageconnect
And there are many more... I basically just googled "victorian knitting"... you should get quite a bit. Some are free, some are not free, but you should be able to find something (or at least find a stitch pattern you can use for something to your liking).
Good luck, and have fun with that yarn of yours!!
June 18 2006, 02:39:26 UTC 5 years ago
June 18 2006, 02:50:56 UTC 5 years ago
June 18 2006, 03:05:40 UTC 5 years ago
Yeah Greenfield Village!!!
I lived in Liviona until i was 5.. I spent many a summer there going to camp... Learning to make cookies, and having ducks steal them from our hands outside the school house.As far as a scarf goes, I would think a simple garter would be rather accurate. They didn't go for fancy back then just quick and warm..
June 18 2006, 04:00:07 UTC 5 years ago
I actually enjoyed talking to the women in one of the houses about spinning when I was there; my companion was trying to talk me into taking a job there, but I don't like driving far.
Good luck with your job :)
June 18 2006, 04:02:04 UTC 5 years ago
June 18 2006, 04:38:57 UTC 5 years ago
June 18 2006, 04:47:49 UTC 5 years ago
There aren't actual scarf patterns, but that's because a scarf doesn't really *need* a pattern -- it's just a really long swatch. There are a number of stitch patterns, both presented by themselves and as part of patterns (check both the "knitting instructions" and the "knitting patterns" sections). I would submit that you could use any one of these to make a scarf, and be perfectly historically accurate. In fact, as there are a number of patterns that use ribbing, you could probably use these to demonstrate that ribbing was well known, and from there extrapolate to a ribbed scarf. That's much more historically accurate than actually finding a pattern written out specifically to make a scarf, because people who really knew what they were about with knitting wouldn't have bothered with a pattern for something that easy.
June 18 2006, 11:16:01 UTC 5 years ago
Here are some resources:
Hook and Book Bibliography
The Hook and The Book: The Emergence of Crochet and Knitting in American Popular Culture
Weldon's Practical Needlework
June 18 2006, 11:22:37 UTC 5 years ago
I agree with a few others here - any simple combination of knits and purls would probably be appropriate. Ladies also knitted/crocheted/tatted lace back then (wealthy ladies with time to spend on such frivolous pursuits of course ;), so you might be able do a nice lace pattern for a shawl inspired scarf.
June 18 2006, 16:55:39 UTC 5 years ago
June 18 2006, 14:19:51 UTC 5 years ago
June 18 2006, 16:54:03 UTC 5 years ago