Lilla Bjorn - Tatsiana Kupryianchyk - Fjell Cardigan - Fjell vest - Dutch.
The Wool Loop - Tania - Oversize Cardigan - Spanish - Free.Mon Petit Violon - Candy Pink Baby Cardigan.Novice Cardigan - Mohair Edition by PetiteKnit-Russian translated.Fridag Cardigan (V-neck) by Enya Ødegaard - Aftenstrikk.Monteiro Cardigan by Maria Martins-Free.It is a relatively easy pattern which would be suitable for the knitte. This cardigan is worked from the bottom up in one piece, then divided for fronts and back. Cozy raglan sleeve cardigan by OGE Knitwear Designs.Magnolia Bloom Cardigan by Camilla Vad - English, German.Wisteria Cardigan - Knit Version by Melody Rogers.Nelchina Cardigan - Caitlin Hunter - Boyland Knitworks.Bristol Ivy Designs-Marylebone Staghorn Cable Cardigan by Bristol IvyWool People Vol.Yorkshire Television were obliged to pay damages for the – albeit unintentional – defamation. Labour MP Tom Pendry took offence to an episode where Rigsby made disparaging remarks about a fictional election candidate called Pendry (pictured), calling him homosexual, hypocritical and dishonest. Only Richard Beckinsale had not appeared in the original stage play. Rising Damp was derived from a one-off stage play called Banana Box, in which Rossiter had played ostensibly the same role (though under the name Rooksby).
Rossiter himself (a former insurance claims inspector) quickly rose to fame with his trademark sleeveless cardigan and his often-imitated “My-y-y-y God!”, and went on to star in the equally popular series The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin before his own premature death from heart failure in 1984, in his dressing room during a stage performance of Loot. The success of the series led to a film version in 1980, but this met with mixed response, lacking the conciseness and sharpness of the television series and also lacking the presence of Beckinsale, who had tragically died of a heart attack at the age of 31 the previous year. The series was originally screened on ITV between 19 and has continued to be revived on British television at regular intervals ever since, always attracting large audiences. Other lodgers later in the series were Brenda (Gay Rose) and Spooner (Derek Newark). Sharing his inmost fears and suspicions with his cat Vienna, Rigsby skulked about the ill-kempt house, bursting in on tenants when he thought (almost always mistakenly) that he would catch them in flagrante. The two both aided and hindered his attempts to woo his third tenant, the middle-aged and slightly dotty spinster Miss Jones.
Rigsby’s obnoxious manner was perfectly offset by his two male tenants, hopeless medical student Alan and Philip, the black son of an African tribal chief. Snide landlord Rupert Rigsby constantly spied on the (usually very innocent) private lives of an assortment of long-suffering tenants. This classic 28 episode comedy series from Yorkshire Television told the story of a group of people living in a shabby tenement boarding house.