Showing posts with label 1930s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1930s. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2026

Dahlia pan-holder from "The Workbasket" (ca.1937)

This is the "Dahlia" pan-holder, one of three from the vol.3, no.3 issue of "The Workbasket" -- "Home and Needlecraft for Pleasure and Profit -- Ideas for the Bazaar, the Home, Gifts and Sparetime Moneymakers -- with Many Inexpensive, Easily Made Articles that find a Ready Sale" -- published in Kansas City, ca. 1937 (and generously made available through Antique Pattern Library).  "Frost Tone thread" is vaguely suggested in the pattern, but no gauge or target size is given; I used Lily Sugar 'n Cream in two not-very-dahlia-like-but-high-contrast colors, resulting in a potholder about 9 in./23cm across.  The yarn not in use is simply carried along the round underneath the working yarn, which makes for a lot fewer ends needing to be woven in, although it does mean that the carried color tends to peep through the stitches.  The scalloped petal tips are made with short rows.

(Lily Frost-Tone thread looks from the photos on Ravelry to be about the weight and luster of size 3 perle cotton.) 

There is a short history of "The Workbasket" magazine by Nancy B. on HubPages -- originally "Aunt Martha's Workbasket" but it seems, judging by the relative sizes on the cover of even this fairly-early issue, that most people just called it "The Workbasket".  The magazine was published for an impressive 61 years, changing with the times in the types of patterns and crafts it featured, but finally ceased publication in 1996.  The Antique Pattern Library has a number of issues available, mostly from the 1930s and 40s.


Thursday, May 30, 2019

How old is the "classic" fluted tea cosy pattern?

Bestway 1220.

1930s, perhaps?

Madame Weigel Cosies Book 1.

Both of these 1940s?

Greenock 58.

Sirdar 5578.

Bestway 3913

Copley's 1900

These four and Bellmans 1052 are probably 1960s, certainly pre-decimal currency in Britain, which was introduced in early 1971.

Emu 6196.

Along with Copley Lotus 1023, also 1960s or 1970s?

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Tea cozy

The cozy pictured here was knitted to the Paton's pattern with some nods to Keren's (both linked below), in rather un-1930s but extremely well-insulating wool and mohair blends from Brown Sheep Co., Lamb's Pride Worsted and Handpaint Originals for the solid and variegated respectively. Photo from A Bluestocking Knits.

Keren of Tea by the Sea gives a pattern for her granny's tea cosy, adding that the original on which she bases her pattern is at least eighty years old -- let's say 1930s.

Yasmin of Knit, Shear Bliss! has written up a pattern based on her grandmother's very similar tea cosy (with an earlier post about it here, in which she says her pattern is from the 1940s).

Paton's offers a free reprint in PDF format of their classic fluted cozy, though alas with no date. Their version offers three sizes of cozy, to fit your particular pot. 

("Cosy" or "cozy"? The first is British/Commonwealth, the other American.)

Sunday, November 26, 2017

The "Five O'clock Hat"


The "Five O'Clock Hat" from the book or booklet "Chic Hats" (1938).  The pattern is available free from Vintageous (old link here).