Monday, October 16, 2006

I am having a fascinating time this weekend noodling out Russian language pages on knitting and crochet, and trying to translate some terms. I started doing this because I had (dimly) remembered some Russian language stitch dictionary pages that offered up a slightly different collection of texture patterns from those that commonly seen in English language books. I remembered some that employed ornamental floats, so I wanted to find them again. Now bear in mind, I don't speak or read a word of that language. My assumptions here are going to range from reasonable to laughable. But I'm having fun none the less.

I started my search with the one English character transliteration of a Russian word that I did know from prior searches. I have no idea how the original is pronounced, but in what looks to be a one for one letter swap, Latin alphabet for Cyrillic, uzor (plural uzori) appears to mean stitch or pattern.

I used that term to do a Google image search. When I found an image that was interesting, I clicked through to the parent page and followed some of the in-page links there. Along the way I kept a notepad file open, gluing in copied terms in both the original Russian, and the Latinized spellings frequently used in Web page URLs.

Here are some of them, along with my wild-ass guesses on what they might mean.

узоры - uzori or uzory - patterns (possibly also stitch designs)
петель - stitches
Вязание - knitting, probably also crochet work
Вязание крючком - Crochet
Носки - socks
Шапки - hats or caps
Салфетки - table linens, including doilies and runners, but also napkins and cloths
Схема - chart or diagram
Мотивы - motifs?

Along the way, I found a couple of interesting patterns. Here's one for a lace doily. Its pattern page presents some useful visuals, including starting a doily center using the crocheted circle method, blocking hints, and (of course) the chart for the piece itself.

Now I had a second problem. I can knit from a chart in any language, provided I have the symbol key. What do the chart symbols mean? It's hard to cut and paste the chart terms into on line Russian-English dictionaries (this was the best one for my purposes) because for the most part, the terms are there as images, not text. Sadly though Russian knitting symbol interpretation seems to be just as jumbled as Western charting, with different sources using either different symbols to mean the same thing, or using the same symbols but employing them differently. Looking over the lace chart for the doily above, I suspect that straight vertical lines are knits, the little arrows facing left are knit through the back of the loop (ktbl). U must be a YO (perhaps U with the 2 in it is a double yarn over), and downward facing Vs are decreases (numbers in the arms of the V indicate the number of stitches to be decreased). Obviously lots of experimentation is in order here to confirm (or disprove) these guesses.

Although I was hunting for knitting, most of what I found were charts for crochet. The crochet notation looks a bit more standard. Some of it seems to be similar to the notation found in Japanese crochet patterns. For the most part they look to be easily interpreted even if one doesn't read Russian. Here are a few of the ones I liked best.

  • A crocheted spiral doily
  • An interesting crocheted stole or table runner
  • A stole featuring a very mesh-like crocheted structure (click on the Схема link to get the charts)
  • A cushion pattern that could be adapted into a very nice lace scarf
  • Yet another doily, this one that makes subtle use of some pineapple style features, but does so without being "yet another piece of pineapple crochet"
  • Another small round piece. I like the contrast between the densely worked areas and the open net-line areas.
  • A spectacular collection of small round, square, and other shape motifs. (I am not quite sure how Russian copyright law works but be aware that other pages on this site offer what look to be scans of full books)

And finally I found Russian language stitch patterns that do look like they exhibit some kind of wrapping.

  • This one looks like the wrapping happens on the diagonal Perhaps this was done by reaching down a row or two and picking up a long loop, then knitting them off together with the current stitch.
  • Photographed sideways, this one has a combo of horizontal wraps that gather the stitches enough to make a smocked effect.
  • And this one clearly has stitches picked up several rows below. The chart is a bit confusing because it appears to be written for the flat, showing alternating rows of knitting and purling to produce the reverse stockinette texture. Most charts I've seen stick to "as seen from the front side" logic.

But I never found the dimly remembered patterns that set me off on this quest in the first place.

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Monday, October 16, 2006 12:20:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [3]  |