Knitted Swatches

Crochet Swatches

Stocking Stitch Swatches

Granny Square Swatches

Garter Stitch Swatches

Other Crochet Swatches

Knitted Texture Swatches

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4PLY Be Reyt SWATCHES

4ply Be Reyt yarn is  a blend of three wools and nylon. It’s spun by John Arbon in Devon. 

The yarn is 60% Exmoor Blueface, 20% Corriedale, 10% Zwartables, 10% nylon. The Exmoor Blueface and Zwartables fleece comes from UK flocks while the Corriedale is from the Falklands. All fleece is processed and spun in the UK.

Approximately 50g / 200m (218 yards) per skein

    The yarn has not been superwash treated so it should not be machine washed unless you want to make felt. There’s lots more information about caring for your hand dyed yarns here.

    We’d recommend this yarn for socks, garments and accessories – so it works across a wide range of needle and hook sizes. Rather than produce samples of very colour we’ve chosen to  make a set of samples in one colour, so you can see how a change in gauge or stitch pattern affects how the yarn looks. We’ve put together some suggestions for colour combinations here.

    4ply Be Reyt swatches are worked in semi solid silver. All swatches have been very lightly blocked to allow the stitches to settle. The swatches have not been stretched as part of the blocking process, something you often do when making shawls and scarves.

    All of the 4ply Be Reyt swatches were taken at the same time with the same camera settings, so differences are due to tension and stitch pattern.

    This is the yarn as it’s shown in the shop.

    silver (mid grey) hand dyed sock yarn, close up showing tonal variations
    silver hand dyed sock yarn, wound up in a skein with The Knitting Goddess ball band
    silver hand dyed sock yarn, wound up in a skein with The Knitting Goddess ball band

    Knitted Swatches

    Stocking Stitch Swatches

    Circular stocking stitch swtches are worked over 64 stitches, as this shows what a sock or mitt would look like. Flat stocking stitch swatches are worked over 46 stitches. They begin and end with 5 rows of knitting, and the 3 edge stitches are always knitted.

    stocking stitch sample in the round square on 2mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    2mm / size 14 / US 0 needles

    Knitted in the round over 64 stitches

    36 stitches and 44 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gives a firm fabric which has has plenty of stretch, so it’s ideal for socks, mitts and toys which will be stuffed.

    stocking stitch square on 2mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    2mm / size 14 / US 0 needles

    36 stitches and 44 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gives a firm fabric which has limited drape, so it’s too stiff for shawls and scarves. This gauge would work well for mitts, toys and where a structured fabric is wanted e.g. for a cowl neck which you want to stand rather than fold. 

    stocking stitch square on 3.25mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    3.25mm / size 10 / US 3 / US D needles

    26 stitches and 34 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gives a well structured fabric which has good drape. It’s the gauge I’d choose for garments, as the fabric has enough structure to hold its shape and wear well without being stiff. This would work well for blankets, hats, scarves and shawls too.

    stocking stitch square on 4mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    4mm / size 8 / US 6 / US G needles

    22 stitches and 29 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gives a  fabric which has excellent  drape. It’s the gauge I’d choose for shawls and other items where drape was important.  I’d be wary of working a garment at the gauge as the looser stitches won’t hold their shape so well, allowing the garment to stretch.

    When I was knitting stocking stitch swtches I noticed something odd. As the gauge got looser the fabric looked lighter. None of the stocking stitch swatches are lose enough to have the background peeping through, so I suspect that the denser fabric produced at tighter gauges absorbs more light. It’s slightly more obvious in real life  than the photos.

    stocking stitch square on 2mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn
    stocking stitch square on 3.25mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn
    stocking stitch square on 4mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    Garter Stitch Swatches

    Garter stitch swatches are worked over 30 stitches. Garter stitch has a lot of stretch both lenghways and widthways. This is great if you’re making something where you want that stretch, like baby clothes where you don’t want a lot of loose fabric but you want the garment to fit for more than five minutes.

    Garter stitch can be tricky for adult garments, as the weight of the yarn will stretch the stitches. One way to limit this is to work garments from side to side rather than lengthways.  

    garter stitch square on 3.25mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    3.25mm / size 10 / US 3 / US D needles

    24 stitches and 48 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gives a well structured fabric which has decent drape. It’s the gauge I’d choose for blankets and  hats where I wanted the extra thickness of the fabric for warmth. This would work for scarves and shawls too, creating a fabric to snuggle up into.

    This swatch hasn’t been stretched as it was blocked. Firmer blocking could easily add an extra 25%, giving 18 stitches and 36 rows to 10cm / 4in

    garter stitch square on 4mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    4mm / size 8 / US 6 / US G needles

    20 stitches and 40 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gives a well structured fabric which has excellent drape. It’s the gauge I’d choose for  scarves and shawls too, creating a beautiful drape.

    This swatch hasn’t been stretched as it was blocked. Firmer blocking could easily add an extra 25%, giving 15 stitches and 30 rows to 10cm / 4in. Harder blocking would open the fabric up even more.

    Texture Swatches

    The last set of knitted swatches looks at texture and lace. If you’re going to spend time working these patterns you want to be sure they’ll show up. Both texture swatches were worked over 24 stitches.

    textures travelling rib square on 3.25mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    3.25mm / size 10 / US 3 / US D needles

    24 stitches and 40 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gauge gives a firm fabric which allows the texture to show well. It would work well for garments and hats. A looser gauge won’t show the texture so well.

    Travelling rib pattern is worked over any multiple of 8 stitches

    Row 1: [K4, P4]

    Row 2: [P1, K4, P3]

    Row 3: [K2, P4, K2]

    Row 4: [P3, K4, P1]

    Row 5: [P4, K4]

    Row 6: [K1, P4, K3]

    Row 7: [P2, K4, P2]

    Row 8: [K3, P4, K1]

    knitted mesh square on 4mm needles sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    4mm / size 8 / US 6 / US G needles

    21 stitches and 36 rows to 10cm / 4in

    Sample worked over 24 stitches. I wanted a sample which showed how the holes created by yarn overs would look. On slippier yarns the holes can vanish. The 4ply Be Reyt holds the pattern well. This swatch wasn’t stretched when it was blocked. Firmer blocking would open the yarn overs up a lot more, and tension would be close to 15 stitches and 27 tows to 10cm / 4in

    Mesh stitch pattern

    This is a simple one row pattern which works over any multiple of three stitches.

    All rows : [K1, yarn over needle, K2tog]

    Crochet Swatches

    Full disclosure – I’m someone who knits a lot more than I crochet. So please forgive any wobbly edges on sample swatches.

    I’ve worked samples of granny squares with two hook sizes, the double and treble crochet with a single hook size to show how the different stitch changes how the colours appear on the sample.

    All  terms refer to UK crochet terms unless otherwise stated.

    Granny Square Swatches

    Granny square swatches are worked with what I think of as a classic granny square pattern worked with treble crochet stitches (US double crochet). Swatches are worked over 6 rounds. It made more sense to me to provide a measurement for the granny square rather than trying to calculate row and stitch gauge.

    crochet granny square on 3.25mm hook sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    3.25mm / size 10 / US 3 / US D hook

    Finished square is 9cm / 3.5in

    This gauge gives a fabric with limited drape. It would wear well in garments and blankets. There’s some give in the swatch, but firmer blocking won’t increase the size by much.

    crochet granny square on 4mm hook sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    4mm / size 8 / US 6 / US G hook

    Finished square 10cm / 4in

    This gauge gives a fabric with good drape which would work well for scarves and shawls. There’s give in the swatch, and firmer blocking will easily increase the size to 12.5cm / 5in

    Double and Treble Crochet Swatches

    These swatches are worked over 30 stitches. The way crochet stitches are formed means that the lighter and darker areas in the skein are a lot more obvious than in knitting. The position of these will depend on stitch count, gauge and pattern.

    double crochet on 3.25mm hook sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    3.25mm / size 10 / US 3 / US D hook

    Double crochet (US single crochet)

    26 stitches and 36 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gauge gives a fabric with limited drape and stretch. It would wear well in garments and blankets, and would make great hats and mitts. There’s some give in the swatch, but firmer blocking won’t increase the size by much.

    treble crochet on 3.25mm hook sample swatch of baby elephant mid grey tonal Be Reyt yarn

    3.25mm / size 10 / US 3 / US D hook

    Double crochet (US single crochet)

    26 stitches and 14 rows to 10cm / 4in

    This gauge gives a fabric with much more drape and stretch than the double crochet swatch above. It will work well for garments and accessories and has enough drape to work for shawls (but I might be tempted by a slighter larger hook)