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Knitting for Anarchists: The What, Why and How of Knitting by
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Vanessa
is on page 66 of 145
admittedly, this is not what I thought this was going to be based on the title, but it is a helpful guide for understanding what is happening and what you're doing when you do different things while knitting
— Aug 24, 2025 11:05PM
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Cal
is on page 89 of 145
Why are you trying to strong-arm me into making a sweater?
— Oct 16, 2024 02:01AM
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Cal
is on page 36 of 145
And another absolutism: this thing that I vaguely described is the only other common cast-on.
Um, no. That sounds very like cable cast-on, which is less common than knit. Provisional chain is also widely recommended to absolute beginners who start too tight, and there's at least one more though I can't remember more distinctly. Don't take absolutism literally, kids
— Oct 16, 2024 01:51AM
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Um, no. That sounds very like cable cast-on, which is less common than knit. Provisional chain is also widely recommended to absolute beginners who start too tight, and there's at least one more though I can't remember more distinctly. Don't take absolutism literally, kids
Cal
is on page 32 of 145
I find the absolutism creeping in distasteful. Wool is not the only worthwhile yarn, there are times when you have to sacrifice fun for the desired result, not all bamboo needles have a finish (mine have all been carbonised) are what I caught in just the last three pages
— Oct 16, 2024 01:43AM
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Cal
is on page 30 of 145
Ah yes, I don't like the forceful bias for wool here. No mention of the benefits of other fibres at all, so quite unbalanced. And then there is a return to the implication that wool is the only valid yarn on this page
— Oct 16, 2024 01:32AM
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Cal
is on page 17 of 145
As someone who failed to learn knitting for decades simply because I didn't know that there was more than one way, I love the book so far. I previously got a bit further, and dimly recall not liking her attitude to wool, but an essential read for those who work and/or think a little differently or are failing to start knitting
— Oct 16, 2024 01:27AM
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Clara Luce
is on page 57 of 145
Finding it really contradictory and unfortunately disagree with a lot. Ex: assume you know better than the pattern writer, kfb is an unattractive increase
May abandon
— Jan 22, 2024 06:53PM
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May abandon
Brook
is 94% done
“Part of the reason that knitting can, or could, be so friendly and cooperative is that it is not completely product oriented. Very little knitting is done just for the finished result…however important the product, the pleasure of making it and the satisfaction that comes with having done it, are crucial.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:36AM
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Brook
is 94% done
“I am deeply devoted to anarchist knitters: ordinary knitters who make things, pass on their discoveries and patterns to others, learn from others—keep the craft alive and flourishing. It is one of the few undertakings in modern life where competition is ridiculous and uncalled for. We can each make what we want to, and take pleasure in the different things that others want to make.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:34AM
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Brook
is 94% done
“Hand work with tools, in this case knitting, encourages individuality in a way that machine work does not. Children should be taught to use tools if only as a counter-balance to all the teaching that tells them to follow directions. Following directions needs to be taught and learned. We cannot navigate through modern life without that ability. But we also need to use the creativity we have.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:29AM
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Brook
is 94% done
“Tools are aids we can use however we like. Indeed, they encourage us to do more than we thought of doing when we picked them up. Unlike machines, tools encourage one to try different things, use them differently. Use a machine for something it wasn’t made for and it will most likely break down. Use a knitting needle as a hole punch and it will peaceably comply.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:26AM
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Brook
is 93% done
“There isn’t much in our culture that encourages individuality. There is a great smokescreen of words all around us about individualism, about finding one’s real self, fulfilling one’s destiny—whatever the phrase. But the truth is, we are encouraged to want, do, rejoice in, suffer from, be relieved by, the same, usually purchaseable, things.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:24AM
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Brook
is 93% done
“These days our fingers are primarily trained to push buttons. When you see the speed and mastery with which they address computer keyboards, you know that fingers have enormous talents that are not being tapped. To leave your fingers untrained for anything beyond pushing, and perhaps twisting, is like leaving a voice without singing. It is a shame and a loss.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:19AM
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Brook
is 67% done
“One last bit of advice about color. When you have a combination that everything in your head tells you looks dreadful and won’t work, but at the same time an inner voice keeps insisting ‘but I like it,’ go ahead and use it. The chances are it’s dynamite.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:12AM
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Brook
is 66% done
“Color theory is interesting but it will not tell you what you will like or what others will like. Following the dictates of a color wheel will give you combinations that are inoffensive, pleasing to most eyes, and therefore will sell well. The only problem, from the anarchist point of view, is that these color combinations always look somewhat commercial. They lack individuality.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:11AM
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Brook
is 65% done
“If you do not want to design your own knitting patterns, you should nevertheless bear in mind that the ones you want to follow have been made by a person following a comprehensible series of steps. They did not appear by magic, perfect and whole from a mystical vision. They can be altered however you want.”
— Dec 01, 2023 07:05AM
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Brook
is 27% done
“You have to take all directions with a modicum of skepticism. Which means you have to assume you are smarter than all written directions…When you are following written directions and find they do not work, it is a good idea always to check first whether you have followed the directions correctly. Then use your wits to figure out how it ought to be done.”
I really like this book so far
— Nov 19, 2023 06:59PM
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I really like this book so far
Brook
is 7% done
“The great desire of anarchism is for all people to live in peace, following their own stars. We may not be able to accomplish that in the world at large, reality being as it is, but we might well attain that ideal in the world of knitting. We do not need to be ruled by fashion in deciding what to make.”
— Nov 19, 2023 06:30PM
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