What to Do With Tension Squares?

8 September 2013

Autumn is coming. It's time for a cardigan.
© Melissa Schaschwary
Ok. I'm taking the plunge. After years of flirting with the idea of knitting something more ambitious than a scarf or hat I'm going to attempt...

... a cardigan.

Granted, a small one for a toddler so that I can spot the knitting disasters sooner and have less to unravel when it all goes horribly wrong. But a cardigan nonetheless.

Here's the pattern on Ravelry, the ever-so-sweet, slightly 1950s retro Cricket cardigan by Melissa Schaschwary.

© Melissa Schaschwary

© Melissa Schaschwary
Very classic and charming, n'est pas? A character from Swallows and Amazons or maybe Anne from The Famous Five would be sporting one of these. As for the yarn, I made the wonderful discovery of a mountain of German angora DK circa 1989 in my mother's own craft cupboard of dream (we all have such cupboards don't we? So many projects. So little time...). Here's the mountain of fluffiness:

So much 1980s angora.

And I'll be making the cardigan out of the pale blue.

It's at this point I have a confession. All those hats and scarves of from the past... Yeah... I've kind of just thrown myself into them without bothering with a tension square. Bad, bad habit I know. Thus I've made two tension squares before starting the cardigan so that will be one less chance of mucking up the project.

But what's the best bit? During a soggy afternoon with an energetic toddler I found a use for the squares. Ready?

TA DAAAA!

Living the dream.
House and Garden, World of Interiors and Elle Decor, eat your respective hearts out for your eyes do not deceive you. That is indeed Upsy Daisy from In the Night Garden fame, snuggled up under a blanket of cloudy softness that makes one sigh.

Behold! the other square is a rug beneath a Philip Starck-inspired chair and coffee table made out of a toilet roll. The other half of said roll is Upsy Daisy's bed. Her abode? A bit of book case.

One bijoux, impromptu apartment for a plastic figurine. One happy toddler. One mother, surprised at her creativity under pressure.

(Images: Zoë F. Willis & Melissa Schaschwary)