Prescott by Mary Annarella

Prescott

Knitting
April 2013
Fingering (14 wpi) ?
24 stitches and 32 rows = 4 inches
in stst
US 5 - 3.75 mm
705 - 1100 yards (645 - 1006 m)
29(32, 35, 38, 41, 44, 47, 50)" finished bust
English
This pattern is available for $8.99 USD buy it now

This pattern is the fingeringweight version of the Prescott DK cardigan. I’ve set up a promotion (no code needed!) that takes $4 off the cost of the second pattern if you buy the other (you don’t have to buy both at the same time, either, so past purchases do count)

Worked from the shoulders-down, the set-in sleeves of the Prescott cardigan are created simultaneously with the upper bodice in a technique originally described by Barbara Walker. A photo tutorial is included with the pattern to illustrate the technique.

The button plackets are worked along with the bodice, and allow you to place as many or as few buttons wherever you like without having to plan ahead. Shaping to the waist is accomplished along princess “seams” to allow for maximum customization. There is very little hip shaping, however, since the floral lace hem stretches to fit. See “Some Thoughts About Fit” section of the pattern for advice on how to adapt the shaping to your own fit preferences.

Finished bust measurements: 29.3(32, 35.3, 38, 41.3, 44, 47.3, 50)” require:
2(2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4) skeins Wandering Wool Udaipur Fingering (437 yds/100g), or
2(2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4) skeins Tosh Merino Light (420 yds/skein), or approximately
705(750, 880, 950, 1050, 1175, 1225, 1350) yards of fingering weight yarn.

Prescott is the first installment of Lyrical Knits’ Quabbin Series that takes inspiration from the four central Massachusetts towns that were disincorporated in the 1930s to make way for the Quabbin Reservoir. The town of Prescott was a small farming community on a ridge above the western edge of the Swift River Valley. Apples were a main crop, and one can still see the occasional remains of an orchard in the Prescott region of the Quabbin’s watershed. The floral rib pattern of this cardigan reminded me of the apple blossoms that still grace this landscape.