New (to Me) Yarn Brand: Brooklyn Tweed

I've not knit with Brooklyn Tweed before, but I'm about to.

I thought it started with this hat, the Bray Cap.

Bray_Cap_1_small2

As soon as I saw it, I fell in love and had to knit it.  I knit one of Flood's hat patterns a couple of years ago, and it rates among my most enjoyable knits.  So I was eager to go again.  And, the pattern yarn was so pretty, that I decided to look it up and order it. (Thanks to the kind folks at Brooklyn Tweed for letting me use their picture)

The yarn is Brooklyn Tweed's Shelter, a 100% American Wool with a nice twist that gives it a rustic look.  I'm not much of an orange person, so I ordered it in a red color called Long Johns.  It's really pretty, don't you think?

Brookred

It's gorgeous and I love it.  But, the more I thought about it, the more I really wanted the beautiful orange color, Ember, for my hat.  So, um, all thoughts of knitting only from stash this year aside, I ordered the orange.

Brookorange

I adore it.  The color.  The fiber.  It is the yarn of my dreams for this hat, and I can't wait to cast on.

As I petted the yarn over the weekend, I kept getting the funniest feeling I had seen it before.  It turns out it didn't start when I saw the Bray Cap.  I realized that on a trip through New England a couple of years back, I had picked up eight skeins of this same yarn in Pumpernickel at Webs, thinking it would make a nice short cardigan, like this one.  I've been meaning to knit this sweater for ages, and I love this yarn.  I'm going to wind a skein and put it into my swatching basket for later this week, but in the meantime, I'm getting ready to knit Bray.

Have you knit with this yarn and what do you think?  I can't wait to get started with it.

 

One thought on “New (to Me) Yarn Brand: Brooklyn Tweed

  1. I love the Brooklyn tweed yarns! I’ve mostly worked with the fingering weight LOFT; in fact, I’m using LOFT for the sweater I have on the needles right now. It’s a little more delicate when you’re knitting because it’s woolen spun, but it makes for a very sturdy garment. The tunic I knit for my daughter almost two years ago (it’s more like a regular top now) gets pretty frequent wear and it’s still going strong. I think you’ll like the yarn, especially worked up into such a beautiful cap

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