A useful striped cardigan for a new baby

Stripey cardigan (Debbie Bliss’s classic cardigan from The Ultimate Book of Baby Knits, Quadrille Publishing, 2011)

Oh I do love knitting little items of clothing for tiny people. You whiz along and can complete a front or a sleeve in an evening. Reward is almost instant and I find it hard to put the knitting needles down until the whole thing is done.

Stripey cardigan (Debbie Bliss’s classic cardigan from The Ultimate Book of Baby Knits, Quadrille Publishing, 2011)

When I had my babies I preferred white for tiny babies and my husband’s grandmother obliged and knitted a wonderful collection of featherweight matinée jackets and cardigans, which I washed with care and no little enjoyment. (The shawls she knitted for my little ones are being nurtured back to utility right now and the first one is laid out on bath towels to dry on a spare bed as I write. More of these later.)

Stripey cardigan (Debbie Bliss’s classic cardigan from The Ultimate Book of Baby Knits, Quadrille Publishing, 2011)

Today, however, few have the time or desire for delicate hand washing and patting little garments back into shape – which I rather enjoy doing. Now yarns must be more robust and colour is helpful in making a bit of grubbiness less visible. I may have taken the anit-grubbiness notion too far for at least one of my recent little jumpers is quite a dark shade of grey – which I think I like and which I suspect will be incredibly useful but I have caught myself looking at it a time or two and wondering if it weren’t a bit too gloomy.

The small person is his stripey jumper

So, back to colour for my next piece of knitting and – with too little time to work out whether a Fair Isle design would work with this cardigan pattern – I opted for a rainbow of random stripes. The time consuming bit with multiple colours is weaving the ends in and I did consider leaving the side and underarm sleeves with neatened off fringing. Fortunately the bank holiday weekend spent with family in Yorkshire gave me plenty of time to finish things off while we sat around chatting.

Colour coded babygrows -see sizes at a glance

As well as knitting I seem to have washed hundreds of babygrows and vests, the hunt for whose labels gave me quite a headache. Why can’t manufacturers put the sizes clearly at the back of the neck instead of somewhere deep inside the garment. (Some do this, though few are clearly legible.) Thoroughly irritated – and mindful of future hours to be wasted in such searches – I spent a couple of evenings embroidering little dots of colour, a different one for each different size, on the neck of every item that passed through my hands. Now we just need to be sure the key to the colour coding doesn’t get lost! We are all slightly amazed at how many little items of baby clothing have appeared – one advantage of completely clearing out  one’s house before having a baby – there should be nothing lurking in a box in some clever place only to make its reappearance in 20 year’s time when you have no baby, just strapping university students!

Colour Coding for babyclothes (If I put here, we won’t lose it):

Newborn:  yellow

0-3 m:       red

3-6m:        green

6-9m:        blue

9-12m:      acid yellow

12-18m:    mauve

 

 

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Another really lovely little jumper (polo shirt for baby 6-9 months)

Polo shirt (Debbie Bliss Baby Cashmerino Bk 3) with Fair Isle banding

Easter weekends are usually busy times for clergy and their wives and ours was unusually full but this time we back pedalled on  church commitments and threw ourselves into family support as a small but dedicated team worked madly to make habitable what the small person calls ‘the builders’ house’. The vicar (still vicarious of course but with no parish responsibility since retirement) declared this to be the first Easter in more than 40 years when his duties were not the main focus of the rest of his family. Gallant fellow that he is, we let him take things easy and kept him from the hurly burly of unpacking.

Polo shirt (Debbie Bliss Baby Cashmerino Bk 3) with Fair Isle banding :back view

Somehow in amidst all this furious activity the small person managed to have the most marvellous Good Friday that he will possibly ever have (erm, in which observation of religious custom played no significant part but he did come to church on Sunday). In the morning he pitched up at Lord’s Cricket Ground (HQ of international cricket and a much loved venue – I add, for non UK readers). In the splendid Indoor Cricket Academy he was given a taste of the interaction of willow bat and red ball and then, as if that wasn’t enough, at teatime  he found himself in  No 10 Downing Street where the Prime Minister’s Easter Egg Hunt was in full swing (an annual event for political journalists and their families). It may take some living of life before any Friday will ever quite measure up to this one! The week end saw yet more Easter Egg hunts, one in his own garden and one after church, which was great for granny as I felt no need to buy him some highly commercial elaborately boxed concoction and made do with a few little chocolate animals instead.

Fair Isle sample (from 200 Fair Isle Designs by Mary Jane Mucklestone, Search Press, 2011)

Meanwhile Daughter No 1 has just rung me with the news that the Prime Minister has called a general election on the 8th of June. All those political journalists who were enjoying Theresa May’s hospitality hunting for Easter eggs last Friday will either be whooping for joy (because they love the rough and tumble of the hustings) or, if you have a wife who is about to have a baby, they may well be feeling a little weary. Paternity Leave which is anyway rather minimal with this sort of job, has probably just flown out of the window for one of our nearest and dearest.

Page from 200 Fair Isle Designs by Mary Jane Mucklestone, Search Press, 2011

And talking of babies, this is my latest little jumper – another of Debbie Bliss’s baby polo shirts (from Baby Cashmerino Bk 3). The Fair Isle design comes from 200 Fair Isle Designs by Mary Jane Mucklestone, Search Press, 2011 and as you can see from the sample shown above I tried a couple of colour combinations before settling on the one that I thought worked best. The main colour is silver and all colours are from Debbie Bliss’s Baby Cashmerino range. The result  is a dear little jumper and I may well end up knitting more.

2 little polo shirts (from Debbie Bliss: Baby Cashmerino £)

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