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Noro Silk Garden Lite Silk-Mohair Blend Hyacinth Stitch Shawl Kit - Version C
$ 24.81
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Noro Silk Garden Lite Silk-Mohair Blend Hyacinth Stitch Shawl Kit - Version CFiber Content: 45% silk, 45% mohair, 10% wool
Yardage: 137 yards per 50 gram skein
Gauge: 5¼-6 stitches to an inch (Label does read 4-4½ Stitches/Inch) on US size 6-8 needles
Care: Hand wash and lay flat to dry.
This pre-packed kit includes the following:
4 balls of Noro Silk Garden Lite yarn, all color #2094
Kraft brown paper bag
A copy of the shawl knitting pattern
NOTE
: color variations are a normal design feature of this and most Noro yarns. What you receive may look different on the outside than one of the photos, but all colors in the swatch photo will be in the skeins. We will not accept returns based on those color variations, unless you receive a kit version other than the above.
ABOUT THE NORO BRAND:
Eisaku is an iconic Japanese Fiber Artist. For many years he has taken his aesthetic from the "Colors of Nature". Earth, Ocean, Sky have the hues that mark his colorful creations. He takes seemingly unrelated colors like a pink into green and then a shock of charcoal that one would find strange to combine. Yet it works. The vision is to take the eye from the bottom of the ocean to the tip of a mountain into the sky. So, the emergence of ocean colors of blue and purple with the majestic charcoal to cloudy skies have a certain vibe that works. His fibers were ecologically friendly decades before it was in vogue. Noro's color palate is consistent amongst all his fibers. Some of his most popular lines are created from the natural palates and are blended into merino-silk-cashmere and mohair textures that are elegantly self-striping. The knitter can either control the striping by alternating balls of yarn or work free-form out of one ball and allowing the colors to appear randomly creating "pools" of colors that blend into unexpected surprises. Mrs. Knits like to pool the colors because the joy of "surprise" keeps her knitting just one more row to see the pink pop into a charcoal and the hand of thick vs thin textures that float across her needles with glee.