Friday 23 November 2012

Are Instructions for that Afghan Pattern Included?


It is difficult to learn to knit from pictures in a book, and the best way to learn to knit is to be coached in person by someone: a relative, a Continuing Education class teacher, a knitting shop owner who offers courses, a neighbour or co-worker, or a friend. Kathy Anderson apparently decided she wanted to be that friend for you. However, she can't compass the "in person" part, or offer any visuals except the one unforgettable glimpse of the seventies' decor of her home (and apparently, some pictures on the back of the album cover).

Check out a sample of Kathy Anderson's smooth knitting instructional sounds here.

And The Kathy Anderson Listen and Learn Knitting Album is available on Amazon if you feel you must have it.

Thursday 22 November 2012

Interweave Knits Winter 2012: A Review

Let's have a look at Interweave Knits' Winter 2012 Issue. Which for some reason the photographer decided to shoot in the kind of pallid light common to the detective series made by the BBC.





I like this one. It's simple yet distinctive. You could knit it in whatever beautiful DK yarn you liked and really show off its texture. I don't think I've ever seen a neckline quite like that one. I suppose it's best described as a mock turtleneck. It would be flattering on even women with a short neck as long as it wasn't made too high, and it would be easy to adjust the collar for height.





I don't care for this one. It's not too bad on a carefully styled and posed model, but my guess is a woman with an average figure would feel like her stomach was perpetually emerging centre stage on opening night.





I actually couldn't open this image to look at its details and other pictures — clicking on it results in a message that the information has been moved or deleted. But it looked too interesting not to comment on. I love the tartan collar and cuffs. I don't care for the colour combination (looks like they mixed a warm spring green with a cool gray, purple and blue, and it isn't working) and I don't understand why that line of green is down the front. Is that a cord or part of the design? Please fix the link, Interweave Knits. Knitting minds want to know!





I wouldn't have put non-functional buttons on the yoke because purely decorative "fastenings" never add anything. A bit of lacework that would just show a touch of skin so the sweater looks a little less staid might do more for the overall effect. And this sweater looks too small for this model. A half-size up would have looked better.





If one of the Pilgrims and a ski bunny got stuck in a stalled time machine and had a love child, she'd probably wear something like this. Very pretty snowflake and edging patterning, but the shape of this capelet makes it look stiff and unflattering and rather absurd. And even Interweave Knits' stylist couldn't find an outfit for the model that really made sense with it.





Interweave Knits named this pattern "Professor Jackson's scarf". I'd say this model is styled less in a professorial style than in a grad student style. Which is to say, as though he has no money to spare for clothes and no real need to dress up, but still want to show that he has educated tastes and recognizes a cashmere jacket and a hand-knitted scarf for what they are when he finds them in a thrift shop, even if they're too big for him and don't really go together. It's not a bad scarf, and I can see it working with a man's overcoat if done in the right colours to look subtle.





Oh, I love this one. Love the pattern around the yoke, love the shape. This designer came up with an original twist on the classic argyle vest and brought her obviously considerable design skills to bear on it, making it wearable and flattering and refined. Very well done.





This one is.... okay. I like it, but I don't love it. It's evocative of the thirties.





I like this bag for its finished, polished look. You could carry this bag while wearing a suit, as the model is doing. That's not something you often see in knitted bags, which tend to look rather Boho.





I probably wouldn't have included this jacket, which is lovely but a bit on the generic side, if it weren't for the fact that I can never resist a beautifully done Irish cable (or fair isle) pattern. I blame my Irish-English-Scottish heritage. The waistband and cuff detailing do set this design apart from the usual cabled jacket.





Simple yet striking. This sweater is somewhat similar to a design from the Knit Simple Holiday 2012 Issue. Let's see if I can find the picture again.....

Yes, that's it. And I do like the Knit Simple design, but you can see why I like more complex, better designed patterns better. The end result is more interesting, more sophisticated, and worth the extra effort.





Another beautifully cabled item.





Love the intricate cable work on this mitten and hat set. And look, finger coverage. That seems to be a rare thing these days. I feel like I've spent the entire past week looking at fingerless glove patterns.





Cabled socks. They're nice, but I think I really included this picture because the model went to all the trouble of sitting that way to show them to us.





A much better capelet. It drapes and you'll be able to find something in your closet that will go with it.





This sweater looked pretty ordinary and I wasn't sure I was going to include it. Then I saw the back.


I'm really not crazy about the yarn combination in this sweater. Putting a neutral matte yarn with a glittery mohair just seems a little mismatched, like wearing a sequinned, strappy top with a gray flannel pleated skirt. I'd pick out two yarns with a roughly equivalent "zing" factor.


And when I wore the finished product, I'd be sure to wear the right colour bra underneath.





Did you ever think you just needed just a little something that didn't go with your outfit to throw around your shoulders so you could pretend to yourself that you aren't cold, so you threw the mat that sits outside your back door around your shoulders?

Neither did I.





These are nice, but they look like gardening gloves here. They really don't belong with the model's casual outfit.





The text with this pattern calls this a "ladylike dickey". Good thing I know what I'm supposed to call it, because I was thinking it looked like something... undefinable... that's sprouted legs and is trying to escape to a place where there are knitters who know what to do with good quality yarn.





These are called "Snowflake Socks". I like a seasonal theme item that looks like it's done for grown-ups.





A knitted trilby with leaves on it. It wouldn't be too bad a design if it weren't for the crown. That line of garter around it really detracts.


Such an obvious demarcation line between crown and sides of the hat just makes the hat look rough.





This looks to me like a beautifully designed and constructed bag (it's another bag that looks polished instead of Boho) with a really awkward pair of handles on it. I keep thinking how the ends of the handles would keep bumping into and catching on everything, and how things would keep falling out of the ends of the bag anytime it was in any position other than perfectly upright. I'd do something different with the top of the bag. Different handles for sure, and I'd find a way to close the top more securely.

Wednesday 21 November 2012

Unknitting the Unravelled Sleeve of Care


A 22-year old student, Imogen Hedges of London's Kingston University, has invented a machine to ravel knitting and wind the yarn into skeins for re-use. I do have my doubts about how much time this unknitting machine would actually save. I've ripped out a number of sweaters and, when you do it, you do often hit tangles that would have to be undone manually, such as the joins where one ball or skein ends and another begins, or where the yarn just meshes to itself. And the knitted piece that is being ravelled out is almost certainly not going to cooperate by sitting still in one place on its little counter as it shows in the picture. That said, the machine, which is made out of a bicycle, is a very clever contraption and a lot of fun to watch in action, and its facility for steaming the yarn as it winds it is genius.

Tuesday 20 November 2012

Knit Simple Magazine Holiday 2012: A Review

In all fairness, before I begin reviewing some of Knit Simple's Holiday 2012 offerings, I should explain that I really don't care at all for Knit Simple or Knit.1 or any of the other beginner-level knitting pattern magazines out there. I've never bought a single issue. I'll look at a new issue when I see it on the news stand, but I always wind up flipping quickly through it, thinking, "Meh," and then put it back. I certainly recognize that such magazines fill an important and necessary niche in the market, that they give knitters who aren't yet very skilled patterns and technical instruction and other articles geared specifically for them, and that this is a unqualified good thing. The last thing I want is for beginner knitters to feel intimidated or unwelcome in knitting culture.

However, as someone who has been knitting for over thirty years, I don't select knitting patterns based on skill level but on aesthetics, calibre of design, and practical concerns. The level of time commitment required by a pattern used to be more of a factor for me, but a few years ago I decided I would rather begin knitting and sewing fewer, better-designed items than whipping up a lot of simple items as I used to. I've been much prouder of and more satisfied with the items I've made since I put that resolution into effect. And so I approach a review of a simple knitting magazine in much the same way an accomplished pianist would approach a John Thompson's Modern Course for the Piano— Grade Three booklet. Which is to say, expect at least some condescension.

That's not to say that simple knitting magazine patterns aren't worthy of review. There are very effective and attractive simple knitting patterns that even master knitters would be glad to make, but there are also many that look amateurish and tacky. And so I'm going to review them with the same care as I do any other knitting magazine, and I'd urge even the most uncertain of beginner knitters not to leave their taste at the door when choosing knitting patterns. You're putting your valuable time and money into making these items and you deserve to wind up with an item you're proud to wear.

That disclaimer over with, shall we have a look at some of Knit Simple's Holiday 2012 issue patterns?




I really like this one. I wish there were more sweater patterns with ballet necklines. It's so flattering.





I don't like the laddered effect in knitting — it always looks like runs, and catches on everything. Replacing the ladders with another stitch would have improved this hat.





Nice classic man's cardigan.





I'm not sure how I feel about the slipknot tie on this shawl. On the plus side, it's practical. This shawl should stay put. You won't have to constantly rearrange your shawl. On the minus side, you can't rearrange your shawl. That shawl can only be worn in that one particular way, and being able to drape a shawl to different effects is part of a shawl's attributes.





I'm not sure about these slippers. I don't like the leather cord in them, for one thing. It looks as though someone thought Grandma's slippers could be made into a man's by adding the decorative cord from a Stetson. It might look better if it were colour-matched to the yarn. Or you could go with some other kind of cord, such as grosgrain ribbon, or a shoelace. These slippers also look a little thin to me, and as though they might stretch out. There's a reason you often see slippers with very textured stitchwork to them, such as cables: textured slippers are thicker and warmer and hold their shape better.





Oh come on. Look, knitting magazine editors, and I'm talking to each and every last one of you, I'm trying to keep an open mind on boot toppers, but you're going to have to meet half way and come up with something that doesn't look like something produced during Craft & Cocktail Hour at the local senior citizens' home.





When the very cropped Spencer jackets came in several years ago, for what was possibly the first time since the Regency period, I thought they were the most universally unflattering trend I'd ever seen in my lifetime. They were cut to lie open and worn over separates, and they made a woman's torso look chunky and were particularly unkind to the look of her breasts. I literally never saw them do any woman any favours, regardless of how good her figure was, and I was relieved that the look only lasted a summer.

But when I see this Spencer-length sweater on this model, I have to admit she's carrying it off. I think the key to wearing a Spencer jacket or very cropped sweater successfully is a) only wear them if you are small or flat-breasted, b) wear it closed, c) wear it over a dress, not separates, and d) check out Jane Austen films for Spencer jacket inspiration and affirmation.





I forgot to mention when discussing the Spencer jacket rules above that you can wear an open Spencer jacket any way you want to if you're under ten. This is a really cute look. I like the idea of matching the knitted flower ornament to the dress, and this sweater would knit up so quickly that it would make sense to make one just to go with a specific dress or two.





The problem with double-breasted jackets and sweaters is that though they look good when you're buttoned up and standing up, they look bad when worn open and/or you're in any other position. Which will be most of the time, even for an adult. I don't like this colour combination either — unless your daughter dresses almost entirely in pink, how much of her wardrobe will this jacket go with? If you've got the skills to adapt this pattern, make it single breasted and in one colour, or at least in two colours that work with your daughter's clothes.





Love the flowers on this little purse, but hate all that loose yarn. I'd like to comment on the rest of the purse, but I can't see it.





Just adorable.





I don't even know what's going on with this design. Are the reindeer supposed to be half-mittens or puppets? And in either case, why put them on a scarf where the child's wearing of or playing with them will be brought to a halt by his throttling himself? There might be a cute "reindeer on the end of a scarf" pattern out there somewhere, but this isn't it.





Cute robot mittens. I'd make these for the kindergarten-and-under age group though. Rule #1 about knitting for a child is that said knitting shouldn't result in the child's getting beaten up at school.





Nice sweater. I've made something similar for one of my nieces that was all striped like the yoke in this one. It was called the scrap yarn sweater, for obvious reasons. This one would still use up a good amount of scraps and be more suited to a boy.





Very simple yet eye-catchingly pretty baby sweaters.





I just can't endorse knitting for pets. Do you really want to knit something that will get chewed to bits and that your pet may end up partially ingesting? And does that dog look happy to you? Maybe I could support knitting the pet cushion, but that's as far as it goes.





Mmm, luscious. I could take a nap under that afghan right this minute.





Lovely.





Um, I don't know what this is. Is it a cover for your hot water bottle? If so... I am not sure I would go to the trouble of making one since it's generally hidden away at the bottom of your bed and behind your back, but whatever. If it's a cushion, which I doubt because it's flat, your cushion doesn't need a turtleneck because it doesn't, you know, have a neck.





Classic shawl-collared man's cardigan.





Knitted pencil cases? Hadn't ever thought of it, but why not, and these are very pretty. I'd use a durable, washable yarn — something with nylon in it.





This looks like a pattern someone found in a seventies' era-homemaker's magazine. And that should have stayed there.





The same owl reworked, and it's still not working. I mean, my mother loves owls, and she would hate this.





At first I thought these were doilies, and now I think they are probably intended to be trivets. And they're not terrible, though these are maybe a little on the chintzy-looking side because of the doily-type colours, but I wouldn't make knitted trivets or potholders. They'd have to be washed often, and would get so ratty so quickly.





I don't know if this bag is lined, but if you should wind up making it and the pattern doesn't call for a fabric lining put one in anyway, unless you're planning on only using it to go to the market for a single garlic bulb. Knitted bags will stretch out very quickly, especially when they are knitted in light, lacy stitch like this one is. I don't really care for the style of this bag, but that's just personal preference. If you're the type to float around in Laura Ashley-style sundresses and a big straw hat in the summer, it can work for you.





This bag looks sturdier and more practical. And less frilly.





Not a fan of this design. Colour blocking seems to be back for the first time since the early nineties, and when you're living through the second coming of a trend, you're harder to convince. A lot of colour-blocked designs look a little lazy to me, as though they were just pieced together randomly and not a lot of effort was made to get the components to work as a whole. I'd do something with the join between the blue and black sections, maybe add a few lines of patterning in the two colours, to pull the two parts together. And I don't think I'd do the top in dark blue and black anyway. There isn't enough contrast to make the combination pop and they just look like they don't quite work. Gray and black might be a better combination for this design.






If you want to knit your own jewelry, you're probably going to have to buy yarn that very closely resembles metal, or even knit with fine gauge metal wire, rather than pulling from the scrap yarn bag. These just don't look convincingly like actual jewelry.





This picture was in the section of patterns Knit Simple designated as "For the Party Girl". I don't know what kind of party the editors had in mind, but I should think these would be perfect as an accessory for an Ugly Sweater party. They'd probably score the wearer a special prize, the prize for the Dumbest and Most Useless Knitted Accessory.





My guess is that since a buttonhole big enough to accommodate the big, square button on this scarf would be just too unsightly, that you wouldn't make one but would simply sew the button on and through both thicknesses of scarf. It's one way to make a scarf stay in place, and the button is over-sized because it was chosen to be an accent to the scarf, but I don't care for this particular example. Maybe this scarf could be a decent accessory in a different yarn with a button that's more attractive and complementary.





This is in the "For the Teacher" category of patterns. And I'm just going to say, don't make this for the teacher. She won't have any use for it and she won't feel as though she can throw out something that you worked so hard to make for her. She'll just be stuck with a cute but useless item for the rest of her life, and will resent it, and even that low-level resentment can do your child's grades no good.





This eyeglass case it not only not attractive, it won't keep your glasses safe. There's a reason eyeglass cases are hard-sided these days.





Knitted cup holders. Hmm, I suppose they'd save paper, but they'd have to be washed fairly often so I don't know how far ahead we'd be environmentally speaking. And I keep thinking how soggy and crusty they would get once you spilled a little of your latté on them. They look good in a "I'm so leisured and monied that I knit little cashmere sweaters for my coffee cups" kind of way — if you don't mind looking like that kind of person. I'm thinking I'm going to come down on the side of "buying a good-looking travel mug and getting it filled at the coffee shop" to save both the paper cup and the knitting.





This is not just a beginner's project, this is the Chopsticks of beginner projects. It looks not bad here, draped artfully over a very attractive model, but it's not going to look as good in other, more ordinary settings. For your very first project, which will be, yes, a garter stitch scarf, choose a beautiful yarn and put a fringe on it. You don't want to make anything that screams "BEGINNER PROJECT" quite this loudly.