Those nice people over at Lorna's Laces have a new yarn coming out in fall. I can't tell you what it's called, because it doesn't have a name yet. You can tell them what it's called, though, because they're putting the names suggested by the knitting public up to a vote.
It's a DK-weight silk/alpaca blend, and it's ever so nice on the fingers.
They gave me a bunch to fool about with, and this sheaf of quickie snapshots shows the result of the fooling. The colorway is under wraps until the debut at TNNA in June, so you're looking at it in black-and-white. (This is what blogging would have been like in the silent movie era.)
I'll photograph it properly when I can get it onto a model and into good light–Chicago is back to the usual February-in-May gloom that often passes for spring in these parts.
I call it Sahar.
The pattern will be available after the usual round of tech editing and test knitting.
Want! Now!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful work!!!!
Lovely, as always. But that's what we've come to expect from you.
ReplyDeleteOoohhh, aaahhhh! It looks feathery and pretty and that vintage look in the black-and-white photographs.
ReplyDeleteWhat beautiful stitch definition! Lovely work. I admire your eye for lace work, It takes a special talent to "see" the finished product before you get there. Stunning as always.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely beautiful! And I agree with Kate - WANT NEED NOW! I cannot wait for the pattern to be available Franklin! Once again, stunning!
ReplyDeleteSimply SCRUMPTIOUS!!!!
ReplyDeletegorgeous! That looks like a nice sock yarn, smooth and perfect
ReplyDeleteperfect flow from on lace to another. beautiful
ReplyDeletemarie in florida
OMG - As always, you have blessed us with yet another beautiful piece. I am in full agreement. WANT NOW! NEED NOW! BRAVO!
ReplyDeleteThat is gorgeous, even in black and white!
ReplyDeleteI like that very much, Franklin. Hope to see the pattern available soon.
ReplyDeleteAlso just saying I think you're one of the most entertaining bloggers around, and that you might even be so for those who don't knit.
Nice!
ReplyDeleteOH MY,that is gorgeous! And I'm lucky enough to be heading to TNNA! w00t!
ReplyDeleteWonderful pattern - the motifs flow in and out of each other in a way that is so supple it is hard to tell where one begins and the next ends.
ReplyDeleteAs for colorway, I love it in gray!
I love the flow of the motifs. Fantastic work and photography!
ReplyDeleteSuch a tease you are.
ReplyDeleteI have to say, it looks beautiful in the colorway you're showing it in: GRAY IS MY OWN PERSONAL HEROIN!
Ooooooh, shiny!ou
ReplyDeletePut me in line for that puppy.......love that pattern!
ReplyDeleteI really like the edging. Looking forward to the pattern release.
ReplyDeleteI'm in love. It looks beautiful in b&w. I wish I were one of your test knitters!!!
ReplyDeletewow I love it. I need the pattern :D
ReplyDeleteReally beautiful. The stalking, it shall now commence.
ReplyDeleteplease put up the pattern before Rhinebeck so we can have lots of choices to make that in. its beautiful!
ReplyDeleteOHMYGOD that is so beautiful!!
ReplyDeleteVery, very nice! Now I've got to decide to stick with the pattern that came in a shawl kit or wait for yours. Always the trouble-maker, aren't you?
ReplyDeleteI LOVE it!! Please send me your prototype!! No?
ReplyDeleteWow! I love it...I really want that pattern...can't wait for you to post it!
ReplyDeleteI reminds me of peacock feathers for some reason. It's lovely.
ReplyDeleteThat's a beautiful pattern. I can't wait for it to come out.
ReplyDeleteI like the black and white photos, too.
Oh, it looks so soft and lovely! And in DK weight too - intriguing!
ReplyDeleteOh, that's nice. Veddy, veddy nice.
ReplyDeleteOh gosh...lovely!
ReplyDeleteand thanks for not naming it Ann ;-)
black and white is often overlooked, but makes for stunning pix.
ReplyDeleteand I see you figured out your border.
now go have a lie down...you have had a busy day.
Lovely...
ReplyDeleteNo matter what the color may be in real life, it is simply stunning as photographed & displayed here.
ReplyDeleteBravo!
The pattern is fetching, and I'm sure the stole looks wonderful on both you and Dolores.
ReplyDeleteThe yarn -- the stitch definition is so good that I'd love to hear more about its other properties. Does it wash well? Does it need truly severe blocking or could it get away with little or none when knit in a more solid fabric? How does it stand up to abrasion -- say, when worn against one's 5 o'clock shadow?
Nice pattern! I prefer Sahar to naming their choices.
ReplyDeleteHa! I just thought it was a particularly lovely shade of gray. Can't wait to see a pattern.
ReplyDeleteIn my world I would call that Butta'!!
ReplyDeletethat is really lovely-- so lovely, it works well in black and white!
ReplyDeleteDood! Gorgeous even in a steel-tone "colorway." Is this something I could do or would I go mad? I may not be a baby knitter anymore, but perhaps a clumsy adolescent knitter now.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to get my needles on this pattern! It's gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteLIKE!!
ReplyDeleteOK, I admit it, I'm fickle with regards to knitting kits. Do you think that 200 grams of sea silk from handmaiden would be enough to do this shawl?
ReplyDeleteoooooohhhhhhh.......
ReplyDeleteI have some Stansborough wool that is waiting to be spun up. I think it would work for this.
Stansborough wool you say? Look it up, my friend. hee hee hee....
I feel like Dorothy waiting for my house to land... can hardly wait for the follow up photos. Lovely shawl!
ReplyDeleteBee-you-tea-full!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful stole, beautifully photographed !
ReplyDeleteBUT,as yourself raised the subject of pattern, could I, please, play the role of Nemesis, and remind you that some of us are still hoping since 12.2009 for the pattern of Calaf, the drop-dead gorgeous neck-warmer ?
So, for the ones who have forgotten it and for the new ones who haven't met it yet, go get a look and tell me if I am wrong to ask :0)
Pleasedtameetcha.
ReplyDelete(Did you put gauze over the camera lens for maximum movie-star beautification? Cause it surely is movie-star beautiful!)
Sahar... beautiful!!!
ReplyDeleteYour quickie snapshots leave me in awe. Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteAWWWW, Franklin, that was soooo sweet of you to knit me a shawl!! You're such a darling. I'll email you my address so you can send that flawless beauty via FedEx today, k?
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pattern. Those pictures remind me of the knitting pattern books of the 60's -- all black and white photos.
ReplyDeleteThat's beautiful, Franklin! Excellent work!
ReplyDeleteI shall be in line at TNNA to get a closer look I can't wait to see the color and the shawl in person
ReplyDeleteYour stole is absolutely gorgeous! I can't wait to see it in color.
ReplyDeleteBarb
I don't know how you do it Franklin, but you seem to just knock it out of the park every time you do!
ReplyDeleteIt looks gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pictures!
ReplyDeleteEven in B&W, Frannklin, your work is stunning.
ReplyDeleteOoh, just lovely. I don't need to see the color to say that.
ReplyDeleteWow...absolutely beautiful!!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous. Speaking of black and white, whatever happened to the Thousand Knitters project?
ReplyDeleteIt's lovely, Franklin.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous!
ReplyDeleteSahar, huh. Hmmm. I think I know someone who'd be an awesome model. :)
ReplyDeleteGorgeous, of course!
ReplyDeleteThat is beautiful! It makes me want to wrap up in it and lose myself in my Kindle. mmmmm Uninterrupted reading time....
ReplyDeleteJust a word to the wise Franklin... the color is given away in the previous post!
ReplyDeleteAnd I will echo the 69 posts before me... it looks lovely! You have a gift for lace!
such lovely stitch definition, the way each section smoothly translates .to the next.can't wait to see the colors. as Kate says"Want! Now!"
ReplyDeleteSimply gorgeous
Kris
as everyone else has pointed out, it's absolutely gorgeous! but my not-so-inner geek desperately needs to know if "sahar" is from the arabic word/ name, or if you had something else in mind :)
ReplyDeleteEven monochromotically, it's gawgious. Color will add even more--can't wait to see.
ReplyDeleteLove it, Franklin!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! Even in black and white.
ReplyDeleteNice. I like in black and white. It really shows the structure and, as someone else said, flow.
ReplyDeleteYou know, a black and white world would be simpler to deal with and I've already got half the wardrobe I'd need (black).
Gorgeous! I especially love the stitch pattern in the third photo. Can't wait to see the color!
ReplyDeleteI love that stitch pattern! And the B&W pictures are beautiful, letting the pattern show through without the distraction of what will surely be a gorgeous color.
ReplyDeleteSimply beautiful. Will watch for pattern availability....
ReplyDeleteIf you hand't said B&w photos, I wouldn't have noticed. Looks like sliver yarn to me. Lovely.
ReplyDeleteBack in my bellydancing days, I had a friend named Sahar - she was every bit as bewitching, fluid and harmonious as your Sahar, but she was always in living color!
ReplyDeleteummmmm...wasn't the colorway previously revealed under the teacups and Ann Coulter?
ReplyDeleteNope. I color-shifted the yarn in Photoshop before I posted that previous shot ;-)
ReplyDeleteThat is so light and gorgeous!!!
ReplyDeleteDarlin' - eye-wateringly beautiful. Is that a pattern that *I*, a not-great knitter, might could do? I have a spiritual thing with leaves and trees and growing-thingies........
ReplyDeleteThat is gorgeous. I like the color as it is but then, I'm a sucker for gray.
ReplyDeleteI wish one of the contest options was "yadoing." You know, Sahar Yadoing. Fine, and you?
ReplyDeleteHoly amazing. I literally cannot even imagine being able to complete this (let alone invent it!). I'm still crying my way through baby faux-lace centimeter by centimeter.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of the silent movie era . . . the design reminds me of some decorations I once saw in a vintage movie palace. Lovely design!
ReplyDeleteNice, Franklin. Nice nice nice.
ReplyDeletesoooo pretty!!! I just love lace, in any color.
ReplyDeleteOh wow, I must knit that!
ReplyDeleteSwooooooooooon.
ReplyDeleteThe color is just divine
ReplyDeleteMy niece's middle name is Sahar. Does that mean I can be a test knitter for Sahar? PLEEEEEEEEEZE???
ReplyDeleteI want to be your test knitter, your sherpa, your yarn winder. I want to have Dolores's baby. Anything that will get me an advance copy.
ReplyDeleteMy verification string is crypths. This is either burial after death from tuberculosis or what they divide the cemetery into to figure out how many plots they can sell.
I think you should do at least one B&W shot of all your lace projects - this shows the pattern really beautifully. "Eager anticipation" is the correct phrase for me, waiting for you to publish!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous!
ReplyDeleteMy, oh my, it is truly lovely and I have just stepped into the waiting line for the pattern.
ReplyDeleteI particularly like the edge you have created and the way it enhances and frames the center. Pure perfection!
Please hurry with the pattern.
Franklin, that is so gorgeous. I love the vintage photography.
ReplyDeleteI have the perfect, PERFECT yarn to use for this in a beautiful silvery grey. I look forward to acquiring this pattern. Thank you!
Magnficient.
ReplyDeleteOh my, this looks absolutely lovely. I am eagerly awaiting the pattern for this one!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely gorgeous. How does one get lucky enough to be a test knitter?
ReplyDeleteIt's beautiful Franklin. I can't wait to see the pattern.
ReplyDeleteOMG! jaw-fallen, eyes-wide open, °_°
ReplyDeleteThat's a very attractive pattern. I think the name goes so well for it.
ReplyDeleteSahar, in Arabic, is either "staying late" if pronounced exactly as is, or: the last part of night right before dawn, if pronounced with the middle ح sound.
Looking forward for the pattern.
Dina
I came across this when writing an article for my blog on male crafters and I just had to comment. It's beautiful and I want it!
ReplyDeleteI wondered if the pattern is available yet! I'm dying (no pun intended) to try it out!
ReplyDeleteYou are amazing!
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