Tag Archives: pattern

The Ornamented Lozenge Pattern by Virginia L Harvey

Red beads contrast against the white rayon lasting cord to make an interesting and distinctive diamond or lozenge pattern. The beads must be selected very carefully because the over-all size must fit the space they fill in the pattern and they must have holes large enough to take two strands of the knotting material.

Each diamond is a pattern unit, and it is knotted from eight doubled cords or sixteen ends. The directions cover one unit and the transition from one unit to the next, both horizontally and vertically. In the knotted piece that was photographed, the cords were mounted with Reversed Double Half Hitches and a row of Horizontal Double Half Hitches were tied immediately below the mounting knots. The mounted cords were then counted off in groups of sixteen ends. No pattern was knotted in the centers of the diamonds in the first row, so the pattern in that row is a series of chevrons.

Hot-Dish Mat, Spiral Pattern BY MRS. E. L. NICHOSON

Hot-Dish Mat, Spiral Pattern BY MRS. E. L. NICHOSON

Originally published in December 1922 issue of Needlecraft Magazine

MERCERIZED crochet-cotton No. 5 was used for the model, but a finer thread may, be substituted, if

  1. Fill the ring with 16 doubles (d c).
  2. [Chain (ch) 5, miss 3, fasten in next] 4 times.
  3. Fill each loop of 5 ch with 7 d c.
  4. (Ch 5, miss 3, 4 d c in remaining 4 d c) 4 times
  5. (Fill loop with 7 d c, ch 5) 4 times.
  6. D c in each d c of loop of last row, taking both veins of stitch (st),* fill next loop, ch 5, miss 3, d c in each following d c.
  7. Repeat from *, working around and around, until the mat is of size desired. The d c be-tween loops will increase by 4 each time around. Simply work d c in d c, fill loop with d e, ch 5, miss 3, Or, if you find the work is becoming slightly full, miss 4 in making a new loop.

The model is eight inches in diameter. Having the size desired make the turnover, which holds the asbestos’ mat in place, as follows, after filling the last loop. of row. 1. Ch 5, miss 4, d c in next ; repeat. 2. Slip to middle of 5 ch, * ch 5, fasten in next 5 ch ; repeat_ 3. Slip to middle of 5 eh, ch 2, 2 d e in next 5 ch ; repeat. As will be seen, this pattern is a very simple one, requiring almost no thought in working, after it is started, and the may be of any size design for Peasant sired. Oval mats may be made beginning with a chain at center instead of ring.

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