Showing posts with label book reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book reviews. Show all posts

Friday 3 July 2015

Color Wheel Knits: A Review


Today we're going to have a look at Color Wheel Knits: Knits for Hand Dyed Yarns, written by Veera Välimäki and published by Cooperative Press. Cooperative Press has authorized me to give away an e-copy of the book to one lucky reader, so if you're interested in possibly scoring that copy, please visit this blog's Facebook page for details.





Concrete pullover. Nice one! As someone who can't wear a turtleneck, I do love a cowl neck. Between the cap sleeves, cowl neck, and waist shaping, this pullover has some good, flattering lines going on. Good use of texture too.





Spruce Cap. Cute, and the use of a two-tone chevron stitch to evoke the shape of spruce needles is really inspired.





Tin Soldier. Not so taken with this one. It looks awkwardly proportioned and unfinished.





Green Cables Cardigan. Adorable! It's simple yet has lots of style and would look just as good over a dress as it would over jeans or leggings.





Fine Jacket. Not liking this one much. The front "pleats" look more like poor workmanship than like a successful design.





Ground Vest. I'm not a big fan of this style, but if you like the open front, long, sleeveless vest style, this isn't a bad example of it. It has decent lines and the quality of the yarn used here really upgrades it.





Little Miss Frill top. This looks both baggy and rumpled.





Classic Cables Hat. Cute basic hat.





Little Red hooded cardigan. Very basic, but it has good lines and the yarn choice makes it.





Wonder Stripes pullover. Not thrilled with this one. The broken stripe pattern is interesting, but the neckline is a clumsy shape and the colourway could have been better. Something higher contrast would have done more for this design.





Afloat in Red Cardigan. This looks like someone's old, stretched out "around home" sweater. It's unflattering and frumpy.





Stripe & Cable Mittens. Cute. The two-tone effect used here works really well.





Bric-a-Brac Hat and Cowl. This is a handsome and not unstylish set.





Color Block top. This piece has good lines and a finished look, but the patch of yellow at the hem has that "I ran out of yarn as I was desperately trying to finish this piece on Christmas Eve and grabbed a random skein from my stash" look. I'd forget about this sad attempt at colourblocking and instead add stripes or some sort of other repeating design in a contrast colour.





Button Back Pullover. I like the idea of bridging two colours with a two-tone garter section, but am not sure about the back buttoned effect, which when viewed from the hindside makes this young boy look as though he might be wearing a girdle.





Knit & Purl Mittens. These look well-shaped, and a simple use of stockinette and reverse stockinette stitch gives them some texture.





Skyline sweater. Simple and sleek. I'd be inclined to lengthen this one and turn it into a dress.





Freezing Point sweater. This is pretty wearable. If the intended wearer is less hipsterish than the model, a change of buttons would turn this sweater into something suitable for the more conservatively dressed man.





Grid Plan Cowl. Lovely and simple and really sits well.





Be Mine Cardigan. Nice piece with some distinctive lines.





Cable Scarf. Lovely classic piece that any man would be glad to wear, unless he's one of those cave men types who insists on going out in sub-zero weather half-dressed because he believes his manly chest hair will keep him warm. Yes, there are several of those men in my family, why do you ask?





Beetle Cap. Very cute. The herringbone stitch and the visor really set this cap apart from the run-of-the-mill knitted cap.

Friday 22 May 2015

Doomsday Knits: A Review


Today we're going to have a look at Doomsday Knits: Projects for the Apocalypse and After, as published by Cooperative Press. Because the fact that the end of the world is drawing nigh is no reason for us to stop knitting. Why else would we have stashes?

For a book of knitting designs, Doomsday Knits takes an admirably holistic approach to its subject matter. It offers lists of recommended topical TV shows and movies to watch, books to read, and music to listen to, as well as a list of edible items to be found in the wild and a helpful, handy-dandy flow chart to help you figure out what form the apocalypse has taken and what to do about it (i.e., if people are sick and/or acting strangely and also tend to sparkle in daylight and attract "vapid floozies", you're "in a Twilight Apocalypse. Grab all the quality literature you can carry and run").





Fatigued. Speaking of the various types of apocalypses, I want to live in the kind of apocalypse this model does, because any place where a woman can have access to a great hair salon, make up artist, waxing technician, and tights that spontaneously ladder into perfectly proportional patterns can't be all bad. As for the knitwear, it isn't bad either. I can see this sleeveless tunic being quite wearable in our pre-apocalyptic day. However, I will advise nixing the chest pockets for any wearer who is any larger than an A cup. The chest pockets will look like breast-feeding hatches on a well-endowed woman.





Desert Warrior armwarmers and legwarmers. Nicely detailed and functional.





Fennec. Not sure about this one. It's described as a "cropped burnoose". It definitely has some interesting features, but the general fit of it is making me suspect that it's one of those designs that only really look good on professionally styled and professionally photographed professional models.





Ozone. This is a little too "1970s homemaking magazine pattern" for me, but then I'm a hard sell on ponchos. As far as ponchos go, it's well-designed, with a good shape and texture, and it's carefully finished.





Oxygenate. Love the back of this, but those bars of contrasting texture on the front aren't quite working and makes the top look like it was cobbled together out of disparate scraps. But then that's very likely the effect the designer was going for.





Fission. Very nice and wearable! These will work equally well with your best wool topcoat and your most ragged apocalyptic gear.





I Was a Teenage Mutant. Very nice simple hat. It's quite basic and yet very finished looking.





Fallout. This hood accommodates a gas mask and can be worn as a cowl. Because we'll all need to get a lot of mileage out of our post-apocalyptic wardrobes.





Alpacalypse. This isn't bad. It's wearable and would be very warm. Its lines are a little rough and ready for my tastes, but it would be styling by post-Apocalyptic standards, when people will consider themselves lucky to have clothing made out of carpeting.





Baby's First Principles. This blanket combines the symbol for radiation, skulls, and running figures. The design is visually sharp and clever. I know a macabre, doom-predicting, zombie-obsessed guy who would be delighted to get an afghan-sized version of this baby blanket for his couch.





Long Road Ahead Socks. These would be satisfyingly cushion-y to wear.





Alternating Current. Visually striking and wearable cowl.





Grom-Mitts. These are pretty cool, if not terribly practical... just imagine that metal against your skin on icy days, and all the cold air that will get in through the grommets. However, they do look very sharp and would no doubt be of great value to a human trying to "pass" as member of the robot overlord race. I'm wondering if they mightn't also be popular with the steampunk set.





Circuit mittens. These are cute. And man do they ever remind me of my Atari-playing days. Do you suppose the robot overlords of the future will be at all impressed with my Pac-Man playing skills?





Technologica. Very sleek, minimal style here. I'd close up the porthole over the chest, but then I'm prim like that.





Survivor. These socks are designed to represent the scarring resulting from a past zombie attack. It's a gruesome theme but they're reasonably pleasing aesthetically.





Oh Bondage. This looks kind of cool and edgy in this picture, but I suspect most women who wear this will wear it sans the leather straps (as all but one of the Ravelry members who have made it have done) because only so many women are going to care to go about wearing something that references a ball gag (and this will be wildly unflattering on a woman who isn't small-breasted), and without the straps... the cowl loses its point and just looks like some amateurishly constructed, nondescript thing worn around the neck.





Ditch the Tech. I'm trying to imagine alternate styling for this as I don't imagine too many women would care to wear it over stockings. It should look fine over leggings or jeans. I would do something with the hem and cuffs to make them look more finished, though. I know ragged edges are de rigueur for post-apocalyptic fashion, but after all, we're not there yet.





Suture. Not a bad little cap. The ruching effect works well.





Bulletproof. Quite like this one. The zippered straps give it a cool, sexy edge, and it's well-shaped and wearable.





Apocketmitts. These look very wearable, and also feature small pockets that could hold your phone, keys, or bus pass.





Lunar Progression. I can't say I care much for this design as an accessory, but it has a built-in, useable lunar calendar and that idea is so completely freaking cool that it justifies the scarf's existence beyond the point of debate.





Ringmaster. A very dandified jacket for the elite class of the survivors of the apocalypse. This is likely another item that will appeal to steampunk types, if any of those survive.





Utility Corset. This corset is meant to be the feminine equivalent of a handyman's belt, with lots of pockets and loops added to keep one's arrows, knives, flint, and other survival gear handy. I'm having trouble picturing this item being worn anywhere but on some Hunger Games-like movie set, but I suppose some hipster chickadee somewhere will enjoy claiming she was into utility corsets before they were cool. Or necessary.





Quaintrelle. This vest is... okay. I think I'd want to find better fasteners for it than the bone ones used here. Some metal clasps might be nice, or the right statement buttons.





Battle Ready. The vest is an interesting and amazingly detailed piece of design. I wasn't sure how I felt about the square side cut outs at first, but I think they work and that this is a wearable piece for a woman with a contemporary dress sense. The gloves I am less positive about. They look like they belong on someone named Brandee who's headed off for an evening shift of pole dancing as well as certain other activities for which she has a graduated price list.





Oryx. Nice piece. Modern and wearable for most women.





Thrumviator. I do find this thrummed aviator cap kind of cute, though it wouldn't be for every woman. It could work on the right sort of person, such as a hipster Amelia Earhart type.





Rattlebone. Rather a nice-looking pair of armwarmers. I like the detailing, especially the picot edging at the top.





Wayfarer. Rather a nice shawl, though those loose lace strings hanging down from the center strip would drive me mad. I'd shorten those or tie them up in some way.





Forager. This is one of those unstructured sweaters that don't tend to sit well on non-models in ordinary life.