01_Gngerbread_House___Front_Porch
01_Gngerbread_House___Front_Porch
01_Gngerbread_House___Front_Porch
Gingerbread House
1, Front Porch
The first thing to add to the
house is a front porch. This is
constructed around plastic
canvas as the house was and
then sewn in place on one of the
end walls. You will need small
pieces of the plastic canvas used
for the house and some more of
the ginger and cream DK yarn.
First you will need to cut out the plastic canvas shapes. Use ultra
stiff plastic canvas with seven holes to the inch. Cut out five
shapes, following the diagrams below.
9 bars
5 bars
16 bars 9 bars
13 bars 9 bars
The Knitting
Each plastic canvas piece will be covered with two knitted pieces.
Make sure that your tension is right; the knitted pieces should end
up the same size or slightly smaller than the plastic they are to
cover.
The Sides
The yarn, needles and tension are the same as for the sides.
Using the long tail method cast on nine stitches.
Work 19 rows in moss stitch:
Cast off, using the double decrease cast off: sl 1 kwise, K2tog, psso.
You will need to knit two of these pieces, cover the plastic front
with them as you did the sides.
The Roof
These pieces are covered with stocking stitch pieces, knitted with
cream DK weight yarn on 3.25 mm / US size 3 needles. I used
Stylecraft Special DK (295m / 100g) in Cream.
Before attaching the finished porch to the house, read the notes on
assembling the Gingerbread House at the end of the pattern.
Line up the top point of the porch roof with the top point of one of
the end walls of the house and pin it in place at the bottom of the
wall. Sew the porch to the wall with ginger thread, working all
round the outside of the porch. This is awkward to do; most of the
rest of the pieces will be much easier than this. You only need to
sew through the top layer of the knitted wall and it doesn’t matter
if your stitches are a bit rough and ready. When you have finished,
take the thread from the top of the porch front, just below the peak
of the roof, right through to the inside of the house and back a few
times. This will anchor the porch more firmly. Don’t pull too tight
or you will squash the front of the porch – just tight enough to hold
it securely in place.
Use long pins to attach the pieces to the house before sewing;
either T pins or pearl headed pins. These need to be about 4 cm /
1¾" long in order to be able to anchor the three dimensional pieces
like the porch and the chimney.
The pieces are sewn on with sewing thread; this gives a tidier
finish than wool. Generally speaking, the thread colour should
match the background, not the piece being sewn to it, so this will
normally be ginger for things sewn to the house and cream for the
roof but there are a few exceptions so check the individual
instructions. Don’t worry about tidy stitches - the wool will hide a
multitude of sins.
Mostly you will be sewing the things on to the top layer of the
knitting only but sometimes you will need to work right through
the plastic to the inside. Again, untidy stitches don’t matter; they
won’t show and the main thing is to secure the decorations.