Weel Riggit

Like many people, I think, this style of warm, hard-wearing and definitively wintery sweater fills me with a very particular kind of nostalgia. I first saw sweaters of this kind when I was eighteen, and went away to University. There I encountered a very particular kind of student who wore this type of sweater – male, outdoorsy, hardy, often studying archaeology or politics, and – yes – most often Scottish. Because it was so strongly associated with a certain type of man to me, I thought of this kind of garment as distinctively Scottish for many years. And then, when I moved to Scotland, and learnt much more about knitwear and knitting, I found out that this style was actually Norwegian, and that the dotted patterns on a plain ground were known as “lus”, or lice.

Yet in Norway I understand this particular style of garment is known as “Islander” or Iceland-er. As you’ll know from Yokes, I am really intrigued by the shifting regional associations and nomenclature of knitted garments around the north Atlantic. This warm, allover garment seems somehow especially redolent — its appeal particularly long-lasting. For the English teenage me, it became associated with braw Scotsmen; for Norwegians it’s a signature Icelandic style. Perhaps this sweater presents an interesting example of how we project our dreams of warmth in winter — our evocative knitwear fantasies — forever further north.

So for me this garment carries very strong associations of nostalgia, winter, the great outdoors and (I suppose) braw men. And, in my own way, I do feel braw when wearing it – and this sense of feeling fine by wearing just the right thing for the weather is how the sweater got its name – ‘weel riggit‘ – or ‘well dressed’.

Weel Riggit has really simple straight-up-and-down lines (it’s a garment which could, of course, be worn by blokes as well); a slightly cropped length (which can be easily extended, if required, and nifty integrated raglan shaping (oh, how I love a centred double decrease!)

What I probably enjoy most enjoy about this design is the distinctive colours, and the way they work together. Four graded shades of Àrd Thìr are in use here: Ardnave (a deep teal-y blue); Camusdarach (a silvery grey); Kiloran (a complex lichen-inspired neutral with yellow-green-grey tones); and Vatersay (another complex, muted shade combining several soft aqua tones).

Close to, each shade is individually apparent. . . .

. . . but at a bit more of distance, the whole gradient melds together, to give a satisfyingly cool-toned wintery effect.

The yarn’s subtle, tonal range is one of the things I’m really enjoying about Ă€rd Thìr – you’ll see more of it in the months to come.

Weel Riggit is sized up to 56 inches, and when selecting a size, I’d aim for a minimum of 4 inches of positive ease (I’m wearing it with 5), allowing for the reduced inner circumference of the doubled-layered fabric and enabling a comfortable fit over your winter undergarments.

The pattern is currently exclusive to the Knitting Season club (which is still open for new members – join us!). For those who have been asking, it will be available as an individual pattern download (from April onwards). Ă€rd Thìr yarn packs for the sweater are available in the KDD shop, and if you are interested in trying out my new shades, you might enjoy the Ă€rd Thìr gift sampler.

At a gauge of 18 stitches to 4 inches, Weel Riggit is a garment you might knit with a wide range of heavy-worsted or aran yarns. Whatever yarn you choose, and whatever associations this garment has for you, I hope you’ll really enjoy knitting a classic cold-weather garment that should see you through many winters.

Be Weel Riggit in your Weel Riggit!