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Le Lambswool

Sale price€14,00 EUR
Select your chosen color(s) in the dropdown Menu 🐚 & Find more details below the photographs
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Le Lambswool
Le Lambswool Sale price€14,00 EUR

Details

Knitting Needles
3.5 mm / US 4 / UK 9
4 mm / US 6 / UK 8
4.5 mm / US 7 / UK 7

Gauge
19 to 21 stitches and 24 to 26 rows/rounds per 10 cm
≈ 4.75 to 5.25 stitches and 6 to 6.5 rows/rounds per inch

Each skein contains approx. 50g with a yardage of approx. 170m

100% Lambswool (the first shearings, offering the very finest quality)
Cross-Breeds (Merino excluded)

How to wash:
Always handwash and lay flat to dry - Handle with care and make sure not to stretch your knit while wet.

Le Lambswool is part of our Lambswool family, together with Le Petit Lambswool (Fingering) and Le Gros Lambswool (Aran) - and sits beautifully in between in terms of thickness. It is created and produced in the same Scottish mill, using traditional techniques and craftsmanship. These natural wools and carefully chosen processes result in a fabulous and timeless yarn. It is incredibly light, with a warm softness, while keeping a slightly rustic character thanks to its dry wool feel, which allows the knit to hold its structure and beautiful stitch definition over time. A sweater knitted with Le Lambswool will feel wonderfully light to wear and keep you warm in comfort.

Classified as a DK (double knit) weight, it is woollen spun, giving it a lofty, airy texture and natural warmth. It has a soft and authentic expression. We recommend knitting it with 3.5 mm to 4.5 mm needles, depending on the desired result. Le Lambswool is perfect for sweaters, cardigans, and accessories.

Colors:
Le Lambswool color palette now offers 33 beautiful colours. We started with a range of Neutrals and warm Neutrals for a minimalistic and timeless style, and little by little we are expanding the palette with brighter and colorful nuances.

When Astrid decided to create a knitting-kit shop, she set out to find a special yarn for her designs and to offer in her very own woolen shop. She was looking for a slightly rustic wool (or dry wool) that reminded her of her trip to Norway in 1995, where she discovered the pure wool from Norwegian sheep. Something that echoed her Scandinavian roots, and a wool that could become timeless, long-lasting jumpers. Then, the wool also needed to feel softer, delightful to knit with, and of course, to wear. That’s when she found this pure lambswool, produced from a fiber mill in Scotland.

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