Beaufoy Socks by Carol Huebscher Rhoades

Beaufoy Socks

Knitting
August 2015
Fingering (14 wpi) ?
34 stitches and 44 rows = 4 inches
in stockinette stitch
US 1 - 2.25 mm
US 2 - 2.75 mm
878 yards (803 m)
to fit woman's shoe size US 8 (Euro 38); 9 inches upper leg circumference; 6.5" foot circumference; 9" foot length
English
This pattern is available from shop.longthreadmedia.com for $7.99.

The original pattern for these socks—Gentleman’s Golf Stocking: Beaufoy Pattern—was one of the many stockings featured in Weldon’s Practical Stocking Knitter, Fifth Series: How to Knit Gents’ Cycling and Golf Hosiery, published in England in 1896. Men enjoyed these outdoor sports in the late nineteenth century, but the subtext is that women would be spending their time (probably indoors) knitting for the men rather than enjoying the same sports.

I had originally planned to make the stockings almost exactly as given in the Weldon’s pattern, but I ran into some obstacles. First of all, the sizing is for someone with long, thin legs. Interestingly, the foot is quite short in relation to the leg. After I knitted most of a cuff, I realized that it was too tight, so I increased the stitch count and needle size. As I was knitting the second sample, it occurred to me that one hank of the Teal was definitely not going to be sufficient, and, of course, I couldn’t get more of the same dyelot. By that time, I had reread Margaret Oliphant’s Hester: A Story of Contemporary Life and knew that the stockings should honor Emma, who was careful, neat, and, above all, always practical. She also was, in many ways, the most independent woman character in the book.

Influenced by Emma’s attitude, I decided to revise the original pattern from a practical standpoint. Rather than totally reconfiguring the stitch counts for a stocking that fit properly, I decided to make socks instead. Also, to use the yarn on hand more economically, I knitted the cuff’s ribbed facing with Gray rather than the Teal specified in the pattern. In a final tribute to Hester, I knitted a heel turn—a bit of fun for the humor that subtly underlies the book.