Chinaberry by Joan Forgione

Chinaberry

Knitting
September 2010
Aran (8 wpi) ?
18 stitches and 26 rows = 4 inches
in stockinette stitch
US 9 - 5.5 mm
5.0 mm (H)
860 - 1222 yards (786 - 1117 m)
33", 36", 39", 42" and 44"
English
This pattern is available for $8.00 USD buy it now

*Put any 4 Paper Moon Knit patterns in your cart at the same time and get 1 for free.*

If you’d like to receive the Paper Moon Knits newsletter, you can sign up here for news, notes and special subscriber-only discounts.

Join the Paper Moon Knits group for support, advice and fun!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Chinaberry is an easy-to-wear, three-season lace pullover in five sizes (S, M, L, 1X, 2X). It features set-in sleeves, high jewel neck and center front placket. Simple lace adorns the yoke, cuffs and bottom band. All pieces are knit flat, bottom up and seamed. The pattern is written in table format for ease in following directions.

When I was a girl, my dad worked as a machinist in a lumberyard in the Bronx. He used to come home smelling of sawdust. I loved that smell -- maybe it was dad, maybe it was the wood.
Every once in a while he would bring home a special bag. Inside would be small blocks of the exotic hardwoods that the lumberyard handled. There would be babinga, ebony, mahogany and teak. There were so many, I could never keep track, but it was a great lesson in geography because he used to tell us where each tree grew, and we would find it in the atlas. I don’t think he ever brought home any wood from the Chinaberry tree, but it sounds exotic enough that he would have. It grows in China (of course), as well as Australia and India. The tree yields small purple or yellow flowers that look like bells. These bells remind me of the lace on my newest pattern, Chinaberry.