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  2. Sheila McGregor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheila_McGregor

    Sheila McGregor is a Scottish fibre artist, author, and historian who published The Complete Book of Traditional Scandinavian Knitting and The Complete Book of Traditional Fair Isle Knitting. She has also worked on a series called Culture and Language of which seven volumes have been published from 2017 to 2022.

  3. Norwegian knitting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norwegian_knitting

    Many of their sweater patterns most closely associated with knitted ski sweaters have been published in English by the manufacturing company. The heritage of Norwegian knitting has been preserved, documented and translated into English language history, and pattern books, that are available to modern knitters, mostly notably by the author ...

  4. Mariusgenser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariusgenser

    The origin of the sweater has been subject to dispute in media. Designer Unn Søiland Dale [] said she designed the pattern in 1953, influenced by traditional Norwegian knitting patterns found in the 1929 book Norske Strikkemønstre (Norwegian knitting patterns) by Annichen Sibbern.

  5. The surprising history of the Fair Isle sweater - AOL

    www.aol.com/surprising-history-fair-isle-sweater...

    The Fair Isle knit, a two-stranded knitting tradition originating off the coast of Scotland, has been a wardrobe staple for well over 100 years — keeping everyone from 18th century fisherman to ...

  6. Selburose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selburose

    The coat of arms of Selbu, featuring three selburoses Selbuvotter, Selbu mittens, featuring the selburose Detail of the pattern on a sweater. In Norwegian knitting, a selburose (Norwegian: [ˈsæ̀ɽbʉˌɾuːsə]) is a knitted rose pattern in the shape of a regular octagram.

  7. Arne & Carlos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arne_&_Carlos

    Their knitwear designs draw both on traditional Scandinavian and on contemporary influences. Julekuler, their book of patterns for knitting woolen Christmas balls, sold more than 50,000 copies in Norway, and has been translated into several languages including English, where it is called 55 Christmas Balls to Knit. [1]