Saturday 27 July 2013

Finished: Scarf for Mum

Mum taught me to knit when I was five. Unlike sewing, which neither of us remember her teaching me, we just remember me being allowed to use her machine, I remember her teaching me. I still have the scarf I knitted, somewhere. It's about twice as wide at the end as the start, is made up of multiple colours and different yarns, even has a block of a different colour in the middle of one stripe. You can totally tell it's a beginner piece. But you have to start somewhere.

So, where I'm going with this ramble down memory lane. I like making things for other people, but only people who appreciate the effort it takes to make something for them. Mum is one of those people. I don't think I've made her anything since a knitted pair of socks 6 years ago, (my first pair, still being worn) and thought it was time for something else. I know she likes scarves, so I decided to knit her one. But plain was no fun, so I designed an eyelet zigzag, which it turns out I really like. Very tempted to make myself one in the same design, different yarn of course.

In my 'Little Dresses' post I posted a photo of me working on something for my Mum. Now I can show the whole thing. Well, as much of it as I photographed as it was just over 2m long. It took ages to knit, but nothing worse than a scarf that's too short, so I'd checked how long Mum wanted it.
Mum's zigzag scarf
So here is the finished product, well, both ends of it. You'll just have to trust me that the middle section looks the same. 
Mum likes it. Says it feels nice and is warm too. I'm hoping she'll send me a photo of her wearing it. Or wear it next time I'm down. 

6 comments:

  1. Wow! Beautiful work - I'm sure your mum will love it:)

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    1. Thanks, she does. I was chatting to one of my sister's yesterday, and she's asked if I can knit her something too.

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  2. This is beautiful. I love seeing it finished after seeing it as a work in progress at meet-ups. you have much more patience than me. I have given up on my knitting again.

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    1. It's always good to have a simple project to work on when chatting. I'm sure that knitting builds patience, rather than requiring it to knit.

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  3. Beautiful! What a lovely gift and a lovely tribute to your Mum. And you designed it yourself you say? Amazing!

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    1. I'd never considered it a tribute, just hadn't made her anything in awhile, but I think you're right, in some ways it was.

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