My maternal grandmother and my mom were both avid knitters when I was growing up, and my grandmother is the one who taught me the basics. The first thing I ever made when I was about 10 was a hat and booties for a new baby cousin. Obviously it was a very easy pattern and it was fun to work on it in a weekend when I stayed with my grandparents.
When I first married in 1971 my grandmother knitted Christmas stockings for my husband, me, and our dog. I think she might have gotten them as a kit, but she always transferred instructions to graph paper, using one page to write the basic instructions, one to write the directions line by line, and then another to chart the design. I never had the original instructions, but she gave me her handwritten pages for the stockings and I've used the pattern many times.
I also shared the handwritten pages with my friend Margherita when I worked in New York City, and over the years she made over 200 of them!! She was from a large family, as is her husband, and whenever anyone married into the family, a brand new hand-knitted stocking was one of their gifts. I loved that idea!!
My mother never made any stockings, but she used to knit a lot of afghans and baby blankets, sweaters, mittens, and slippers and socks. In the photos you'll see the instructions for the stockings, some of my grandmother's knitting needles which were passed down to me, and an old very basic book to knit socks and winter accessories using just 2 needles. While the photos on the front cover look very outdated, the actual instructions and patterns make very nice items which are quite easy. For several years when we still lived in New Jersey I used to knit mittens in assorted sizes to donate to the Catholic Charities at one of the local hospitals. It was always a lot of fun to work on those in between other projects I worked on, such as sweaters, vests (when they were popular), afghans, and slippers.
I came across these patterns and book earlier today so decided this would be perfect for Throwback Thursday. I have a lot of yarn in my stash and am thinking that it might be fun to make some mittens again, and I can donate them to one of the downtown charities that takes in cold-weather items for the homeless. Or, I might just finally knit a new stocking for my husband, Dennis. I made his back in 1982 and over the years it's been shredding a bit from being overly stuffed with lots of snacks :) I did a much better job when I made Jacquelyn's in 1985 for her first Christmas. Or, perhaps I just don't buy things quite as bulky for her stocking stuffers.
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