Lauren Bacall Gloves by Miriam L. Felton

Lauren Bacall Gloves

Knitting
October 2010
Sport (12 wpi) ?
26 stitches and 40 rows = 4 inches
in stockinette knit flat and in the round after blocking
US 2 - 2.75 mm
288 - 330 yards (263 - 302 m)
7[8] inches (17.8[20.3] cm) hand circumference, but will fit a larger hand circ with negative ease
English
This pattern is available for $8.00 USD
buy it now or visit pattern website

The woman of fashion wears hand-knitted gloves to go with every outfit!

-Knitting For All, Illustrated by Margaret Murray and Jane Koster

This collection of gloves was inspired by the glamor of old Hollywood. When men wore suits and fedoras and women didn’t leave home without a feathered hat on their heads and a stylish pair of gloves on their hands.

The whole collection can be purchased for $15.00 here.

This pair, inspired by Lauren Bacall, have a series of chevron pleats, that give the gloves the refined, sophisticated city-dweller feel that so many of Lauren’s characters exuded. The wrist slit, when unbottoned, allows the gloves to slide easily over the hand, but when buttoned, shows off slim wrists.

The gloves are meant to fit with no ease for a 7(8)” circumference, but with negative ease, will fit a larger hand circumference. The model shown is a 7” size glove on a 7.5” circumference hand. Hand circumference should be measured as shown here.

Stitches used: knit, purl, k2tog, ssk, Centered Double Decrease, m1, kfb, pfb, sl wyif, sl wyib, sl2-p2togtbl.

Notions: stitch markers to mark gusset, tapestry needle for weaving in ends. Scrap yarn and crochet hook for provisional cast on and scrap yarn or safety pins to hold finger stitches. Two buttons and embroidery floss in a color to correspond with the yarn.

Clarification about picking up stitches to fold the pleats:

Round 22 makes a raised ridge on the outside of the cuff and an indent on the inside. The ridge on the inside that you are supposed to pick up from is the outside of the indent. The indent itself on the inside creates a ridge above it (still on the inside).
The purl row indent is what makes the stitches you need to pick up stand out. You don’t actually pick up the stitches from the purl ridge row.