A popular design for knitted fabrics (both hand and machine knit) most often used on sweaters and socks. Usually, two or three colors appear in this diamond-shaped plaid pattern named for the tartan of a clan in the county of Argyll, western Scotland.
A popular design for knitted fabrics. Two or three colors are generally used in a diamond shape arrangement.
A pattern for knitted articles, especially socks, having a diamond-shaped pattern in two or more colors. American boys commonly wore Argyle kneesocks with knickers, but less commonly with short pants. Subsequenty a popular patteren for ankle socks. The style was named after the western Scottish county.
a design consisting of a pattern of varicolored diamonds on a solid background (originally for knitted articles); patterned after the tartan of a clan in western Scotland
a sock knitted or woven with an argyle design
A knitted design in the form of diamond shapes.
Geometrically knit pattern that produces a balanced design of multicoloured diamond figures against a solid colour background.
Balanced, geometrically-knit pattern of multi-colored diamonds against a solid color background.
From the district of Argyll, Scotland, this popular knit design consists of diamond shapes usually alternating in three colors.
A design of various colored diamond shaped blocks on a single colored ground, usually crossed by lines in a diamond shape. Popular in sweaters and hosiery.
Typically a diamond pattern woven into a garment.
Geometrically knit pattern that produces a balanced design of multi-colored diamond figures against a solid color background.
A pattern designed with different color diamond shapes knit into a fabric.
A popular design for knitted fabrics, both hand and machine knit. Two or three colors generally are used in a diamond-shaped pattern.
A knitting pattern of diamond shapes in various colours against a solid background. Originally a Scottish tartan for the Campbell clan, often seen in socks and sweaters, especially those worn on the fairways.
An argyle pattern is one containing diamonds in a sort of diagonal checkerboard pattern. ;
The argyle (occasionally argyll) pattern is one containing diamonds in a diagonal checkerboard arrangement. The word is sometimes used to refer to an individual diamond in the design but more commonly refers to the overall pattern. Most argyle layouts contain layers of overlapping motifs, adding a sense of three-dimensionality, movement, and texture.