First Sweater
Finished
1970
1970

First Sweater

Project info
Knitting
me
Needles & yarn
Bernat Calico
Green
Grand Central
Bernat Calico
Natural/Undyed
Grand Central
Notes

Not only my first sweater, but my first knitting project. I had my mother teach me to knit so I could make it. I’m not sure of the year, but it was around 1970.

It’s a plain drop-shoulder sweater with 2x2 ribbing at the hem, cuffs, and crew neckline. It fits quite well - I might have to deconstruct it and make a similar sweater. I do still wear it! It’s not the softest fabric to wear, but it’s a nice comfy sweatshirty type sweater.

After knitting it, I stopped knitting until 2005. After all, crochet was big in the ’70s.

I don’t know the source of the pattern, but I’m pretty sure it was a magazine. It might have been from a Women’s magazine (BH&G, Good Housekeeping, etc.) rather than a knitting magazine, but it might also have been something like McCall’s Needlework & Crafts. I don’t know if it called for this yarn, or if it’s just something I substituted.

I reversed the color scheme - the original was blue or green (don’t remember which) stripes on a white background. I decided to do white stripes on a green background.

The yarn is a boucle, but other than that, I’m clueless as to what it was. It’s been through the washer and dryer many, many times. ETA: Thanks to the magic of Ravelry, I was able to browse through discontinued boucle yarns, and identified it as Bernat Calico.

  • Width of front and back pieces: 18”
  • Overall height: 21”
  • Bottom ribbing: 1.75”
  • Sleeve length (measured along top edge): 19.5”, including 3” ribbing
  • Armhole height: 7”
  • Neck width without ribbing: 8”
  • Neck width with ribbing: 5.5”
  • Neck ribbing: 1”

02-13-2013 (from my old blog)

In Which a Mystery is Solved.

I’ve finished the front and back of the new sweatshirt sweater, so I’m ready to march onward with the sleeves.

As I mentioned before, the original sweater was one I made around 1970 – my first real knitting project, and the last until around 2005 when I picked it up again. After making this sweater, I guess I just decided that knitting took too long, and I’d rather crochet. Of course, crochet was pretty popular in the ’70’s anyway.

I don’t remember where the sweater pattern came from, but I think it was in a women’s magazine. I do remember that the pattern called for stripes of either blue or green on a white background, and I decided to make it with white stripes on a green background instead. I also don’t know whether the pattern called for this yarn, or if it’s just the yarn I decided to use.

What I did remember about the yarn is that I bought it at a Utah-based discount department store called “Grand Central”, which was later purchased by Fred Meyer. The only reason I know that is because I had a few skeins of leftover yarn that I kept for many years. I probably had it until around 15 years ago, when I figured I probably wouldn’t ever use it for anything (especially since I didn’t really expect to take up knitting again). When I did finally get rid of it, I remember seeing the price tag from Grand Central on it, and I remembered that I had to go to a couple of stores to get enough of the yarn for the sweater.

Yesterday I thought it would be interesting to see if I could figure out what yarn it was.

Here is what I knew about the yarn:

Purchased around 1970, so almost certainly discontinued.
Popular mass-market yarn, considering where it was purchased.
Boucle texture.
Worsted-to-bulky, but probably aran or bulky.
Cotton blend with acrylic or polyester. Definitely no animal fiber content.
Came in an oblong center-pull skein (I could remember pretty much what the skeins looked like).
It was quite distinctive since the yarn had little fluffy bits and hard-twisted bits. The white yarn was all white, and the green yarn had a base of white yarn with threads of black, green, and blue-green running through it, and fluffy bits of green and blue-green.

I put on my Deerstalker detective hat, headed to Ravelry’s advanced search for yarn, and typed “boucle” into the search box. Then I whittled down the options by selecting only worsted through bulky weights, discontinued yarns, and yarns with a photo. I excluded all animal fibers and ones I knew wouldn’t have been used back then, like soy and Tencel. I was able to get it down to around 120 matches. Scrolling down through the list, I recognized the yarn and label as soon as I saw it. Bernat Calico. I was pretty sure that was the right one from the main yarn photo, but I had absolutely no doubt when I saw this stash photo in what had to be the same colorway. Mystery solved!

It’s not a soft yarn, but I have to admit, it wears like iron. Over 40 years of machine washing and drying, and it still looks relatively new. Wearing old sweaters must run in the family. A couple of months ago, my mother told me she put on an orange mohair sweater, and remembered that she was knitting the sleeve of it when she heard on the news that President Kennedy had been shot.

Now if only I could identify the pattern…

viewed 151 times
Finished
1970
1970
About this pattern
Personal pattern (not in Ravelry)
About this yarn
by Bernat
Aran
64% Cotton, 14% Nylon, 13% Acrylic, 9% Polyester
70 yards / 50 grams

14 projects

stashed 55 times

CabledSheep's star rating
  • Project created: February 18, 2011
  • Finished: February 18, 2011
  • Updated: January 4, 2019