Suggested yarn and estimate yardage
Background colour: 300 g Novita 7 veljestä (light
green)
[150g skein = 300m/328yd; gauge: 18x26 = 10cm/4" on 4mm/US5-6
needles]
Foreground colour: 150 g Novita Wool (black)
[50g skein = 135m/148yd; gauge: 22x26 = 10cm/4" on 3.5mm/US4
needles]
[Translator's note: You'll probably have to substitute the
Novita yarns this pattern calls for. It's usually recommended to
knit illusion scarfs with a tight tension in a worsted or light
worsted yarn (20-22 stitches = 10cm/4"), for instance Brown Sheep
Nature Spun Worsted or Katia Diana.
Please note that Heidi used a thinner yarn for the foreground
colour to enhance the illusion effect. Don't assume from the above
you'll need twice as much background colour as foreground colour.
Usually illusion scarfs use up roughly the same yardage for both.
My guess based on my skull illusion scarf which half as wide is
that you'll need at least 150g or 300m/330yd in each colour, more
if you wish a longer scarf.]
Needles
4 mm / US 5-6
Width
Scarf measures circa 29 cm.
Tip
Read Heidi’s advice on planning
illusion knitting [in Finnish].
[Translator's note: Illusion knitting is based on repeating
throughout a set of stripes alternating 2 stockinette stitch rows
in the foreground colour with 2 garter stich rows in the background
colour. On RS, this will create a flat fabric for 3 rows followed
by a bumpy one (the bumps caused by K on WS). When you get to knit
the foreground pattern, you reverse this order: the background
colour will be knit flat so that the bumps knit in the foreground
colour can emerge. As a result, on RS, a slanted view will reveal
the full illusion since you only get to see the bumps. From a
frontal view, however, you will only see stripes, albeit slightly
irregular in some places.]
Pattern
CO 60 stitches in background colour (light green).
Work 2 rows of garter stitch in background colour (light green)
and 2 rows of stockinette stitch in foreground colour (black).
Start knitting the penguin [following Tux chart from the bottom
up].
Each line on the chart represents the following 4-row
sequence:
1st row. K across the row with the green yarn.
2nd row. K all the white squares and P all the red ones, using the
green yarn.
3rd row: Change colour and K across the row with the black
yarn.
4th row: K all the red squares and P all the white ones, using the
black yarn.
Repeat until the penguin is done.
Work several sequences of 2 rows in garter stitch with the green
yarn followed with 2 rows in stockinette stitch with the black
yarn, until you have reached the desired length for the scarf,
taking into account the fact that the Linux text will be roughly as
long as the penguin.
Work the Linux text section [following the second chart from the
top down] in the same way you did the penguin one.
BO and add fringes on both ends.
Remember! One line on the charts represents 4 rows.
The numbers on the chart indicate the number of stitches to be
worked in each colour.
Charts
Original images
Tux image © 1997 Larry Ewing (1997) /
GIMP
(lewing@isc.tamu.edu), Permission to use and/or modify this image
is granted provided you acknowledge him and The GIMP.
Linux-logo © 1997 Andreas Dilger, free for
commercial and non-commercial use.
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