A new collection of creative knitting designs integrates classic stitches with other craft techniques and innovative materials including wire, beads, and recycled plastic to present twenty innovative projects including wire napkin rings, an Aran armschair cover, a patchwork throw, and a beaded silk scarf. Original.
Keep it simple, chic and contemporary! So says Erika, textile designer and fashion design consultant, whose trademark has been the traditional with a twist. Coming into knitting via fine art training, she is highly regarded in her field and works for many international companies designing ready-to-wear ranges. Author of Comforts of Home (Martingale), her latest book is Simple Knits for Cherished Babies (Collins & Brown).
It's rare that I simply don't like a knitting book at all, and even rarer when it's by an author whose past work has pleased me fairly often, but this is such a book.
Filled with very odd projects and patterns, pretty much all of which were, imo, totally unusuable or unsuitable for use by ordinary folks, purchasing this would be a waste of money for somebody like me who requires comfort and usefulness mixed with at least a modicum of beauty or "color pop!" in their crafting. It offers many different sorts of textures for lots of supposedly household items to make up, IF you are at all adventureous about that sort of thing then "go to it!", but be warned - most of these designs are terribly pseudo-chichi, (translation: trying to hard to be "chic!!!" that they completely defeat the attempt) and at almost ten years of age most of the designs are pretty much "dated" now, IF they ever were chic, that is! I sincerely doubt it, as there were things in here that, I swear, I saw in magazines in the 1970s - and didn't much like them then, either!
The book itself is beautifully produced, sumptuously photographed, and has beautifully detailed and illustrated instructions for lots of interesting techniques, though. Not at all my sort of thing, but if you're interested in unusual crafts projects, you might want to give it a try by taking a copy out from the library and, should you find you really truly *do* adore something here, then, and only then, would I recommend adding a copy to your own patterns library.
I really liked the pictures and the way they were displayed. You could clearly see the knitted item and still get a good glimpse of the smaller details as well. The colors were bright and added a lot to the general feel of the book. I also thought it was ingenuis how they used other materials you might not think about knitting with, such as satin ribbon, plastic bags, and even metal wire. I only found one pattern that I want to knit someday, which was the Woven Woolen Rug, but I'd recommend this book.
A beautiful-looking and inspiring book with projects well-suited for beginner knitters. Unfortately, there aren't any projects that I feel inspired to make! That said, the book will remain in my library.