Monday 24 March 2014

Creative Knitting Summer 2014: A Review


The Summer 2014 issue of Creative Knitting is up. Let's have a look at it, shall we?





This is the A Welcome Contrast pattern. I like it. The colour blocking is well balanced and eye catching and the lines of the top are good.





The At the Beach design. This one doesn't work for me. I like the stripes, but then the top went all "granny's afghan and macrame plant hanger" in the top band and straps, and that's not a happy effect for what should be a youthful summer camisole.





The Helios Wrap isn't bad as to texture and shape, but that is one muddy and unappealing colourway. But of course you can knit this in whatever colours you choose.





The Take My Breath Away tank. The graphic design on this bugs me. It looks wonky rather than balanced, probably at least partly because that solid double bar just below the neckline seems out of step with the graduated steps below it. I don't care for the colourway, either. Black and pastels generally don't work well together — they tend to drain each other.





The Woven Scrubby pattern. I have to admit, this does look like a neat loofah that came from some trendy, spendy bath accessories shop.





The Zoe design. This looks like a work smock worn by some downtrodden, depressed movie heroine who works in some sort of gruelling, ill-paid job (chicken plucking at a factory farm? litter detail at Disneyland?), and whose audience will cheer when she finally gets to discard her foul smock after receiving a better job and a makeover — not necessarily in that order.





The Celeste design. I wish I had a better, or even just complete, picture of this one. The description says it's cropped, which doesn't tend to be a flattering length, but of course that's easily to fix. I'm not liking the lace detail at the neck much. The designer has clearly tried to do something different with the standard lace collar but this just looks gimmicky and awkward.





The Cirrus design. I'm not thrilled with this one, though I suppose it works in its way if you like asymmetrical draped styles. To me this looks a little too much like it has a lace curtain half-heartedly tacked on the front. I'd want to turn this tank into the elegant, clean-lined, delicately lacy design it seems to want to be.





The Dayflower beaded lace scarf is very pretty.





The Ocean Breeze shawl looks a little too much like it should be called the Ocean Fishnet shawl.





The Shimmering Shoulder Wrap's description says that its "ends are split so that the lower portion can drape down, while the upper end can wrap over the shoulder or vice versa". I'll have to take Creative Knitting's word for that, and withhold judgement as to how successful that design feature is, as I can't see it. All I can say is that this shawl does have an interesting texture.





The Summer Skies pattern. This has some pretty components, but the whole is a little too fussy. The buttons, the waist tie, and the two different patterns of lace are a bit much in the altogether. I think I'd omit the tie.





The Whisper Shawl. Again I wish I could see the whole thing. What I can see does look promising, at once elegant and modern.





The Beachcomber Headband does indeed look like something that washed in with the tide.





The Breakwater tank is rather pretty. The texture is interesting and the lines are good.





The Little Sailor Boy top is cute, but I can't imagine putting a neckline this low cut on either a little sailor boy or a little sailor girl.





The Little Sailor Girl dress. Again, this is a cute design, but that neckline does look a little low.





The My Bonnie Lass sweater's stranded colourwork is very effective, but those I-cord ties look really awkward, and the neckline looks unfinished. Those are easy fixes, though.





The Nantucket vest is rather pretty. I'm not particularly liking the way it lies in front, but if you feel the same way it will be easy to add some more buttons.





The Safe Harbor cowl is very pretty and just the right weight to look right on cool summer days.





The Amazing Grace shawl. I wish I could see the whole thing, but what I can see does look promising. I love the leaf patterned border.





I love the stitchwork of the Linen & Lace Shawl, but am much less taken with the colourwork (what will this go with?) and the shape is pretty awkward even here, where it's been professionally styled and modelled.





The Midsummers Night's Dream shawl is quite pretty and is a one-skein project.





The On Pointe design. The description calls this a "necklace" — and those quotes are Creative Knitting's, not mine. When even they don't believe this to be an actual necklace, no one else should either.





The Periwinkle design. Like the On Point pattern above, this pattern is in the "Shawls, Wraps & Collars" section, so I suppose they are supposed to be considered collars. If I didn't know there weren't better patterns out there, I'd forswear knitting forever and take up arc welding.





The Plum Dandy shawl is something different, a lace shawl with a bit of a modern twist.





The Slip Into Summer shawlette. Not crazy about this one. It looks like it's a half-finished something or other in an uncertain colour.





And we wind up the review with this collection of skinny scarves. The Chain Link Fence (top left) and the Peapod Cabled Scarf (bottom left) are definitely my favourites owing to their striking stitchwork. The Everyone's Lace Scarf (centre left) and the Trellis Scarf (bottom right) are also very presentable. The Cocklshell Lace Scarf (top right) and the Favorite Blue Jeans (centre right) scarves look a little muddled here and might benefit from being knitted with a solid colour yarn.

Friday 21 March 2014

Knit.Wear Spring/Summer 2014: A Review


The Spring/Summer 2014 issue of knit.wear is out. Let's have a look at it, shall we?





The Folded Lace Tank. I like the ingenuity shown here with the use of pleats and lace, but A-line tops can be unflattering on many women, so proceed with caution. I'm also not crazy about the way the trousers and brassiere this model is wearing is showing so plainly through the top that it almost appears to be knitted in gradient sections.





The Box Pleat Scoopneck. This isn't bad. It's well shaped and the pleats at the neckline are an interesting, modern touch.





Front Pleat Dolman. This one is going to be wildly unflattering on most women, making them look six months pregnant at best. Notice how this model is having to raise an arm over her head to give it any semblance of style?





The Pleated Elliptical Cardigan has good points. I love the lace yoke, and the back looks good. But that front doesn't appear to sit well. One of the front view photos show the model holding it closed with her hand, the other with with her arm. I suspect it will flop open unattractively when it's not held closed.





The One-Sided Raglan. I rather like this one, which has a stripped-down modern vibe. The cropped length and side cut-outs aren't for everyone, but are also easily remedied.





Can't say I care for the Gusset Tunic. That side tail looks just pointless. Or more accurately, it has a point, but it's not a point worth taking.





I like the detail on the XOX Tee. I'm not crazy about the shape of it, but it looks loose fitting without looking at all sloppy and you can always neaten up the fit a bit if you like.





The Funnel Collar Pullover. I actually quite like this one. Yes, that collar looks more than a little like a braided rug with a hole in the middle, but it sits well and isn't unflattering, and the rest of the sweater is so well shaped that it balances the collar.





The Fitted Turtleneck Tee is a great little piece; very flattering and with a little texture and interesting detail in the line of contrast colour around the neck and sleeves.





The Six Point Tee. Another good piece. It's wearable, it's going to flatter most women, and it has a certain simple deconstructed charm. Make this in a beautiful yarn in your favourite colour and it'll serve you well as the perfect thing to throw on with jeans when you want to look casual yet put together.





The Ruched Yoke Sweater. I like this one a lot until we get down to the A-line lower half. That excess width isn't doing anything for this model and isn't likely to do anything for the rest of us.





The Diamond Funnelneck. I like the texture here, and the funnel neck, but some shaping through the body would have done wonders for the item as a whole.





The Cameo Caftan. I love the stitchwork used here, but I can't sign off on the caftan construction, and that "cameo" looks for all the world like a camouflaged tarantula biding its time.





The Bohemian Tee. I like this one. It's pretty and feminine and interesting and could function as an extra layer over your dress or tank top when you don't want to be bothered with a shawl.





The Circular Tunic. I'm gathering that knit.wear seems determined that we knitters shall swamp ourselves in excess knitted materials this summer, but I for one am not going down without a fight. This design looks like two tablecloths stitched together. Pretty tablecloths, but tablecloths nonetheless.





The V-Line Tee. I like this one, which has an elegantly relaxed outline.





The Painted Mesh Pullover. I rather like this one, which should be a comfortable and useful second layer for cool summer weather. I'm not a fan of that longer back hem, but if you feel the same way, it's easily fixed.






The Botanic Pullover. Hmm, there's much to like here. The leaf pattern is beautiful, and the attention to detail shown in the leaf motif continuing up the side hem and the garter stitch hems make this look like a certified design rather than something that's just been slapped together. And I can totally see a few friends of mine who have a modern dress sense rocking this. So yes, I like this piece on the whole, though I think of it as a "shawl to 'pull over' one's outfit" rather than a "'pullover' sweater".





The Naiad Tank. Those mesh ruffles look like they were attached by a drunken designer with a glue gun, and that is one ugly yarn.





The Zigzag Mesh Pullover. Very much like this attractively textured little sweater. I would stitch up those ribbed hems though.





This Ruched Cowl is really rather cool. I can see it working in a number of colourways and with a variety of wardrobes, though as a fall/winter item rather than a spring/summer one.





The Bold Stripes Wrap is very smart and wearable.





The Chevron Mesh Scarf. Not a fan of this one. I think it's the combination of the stitch and the colours used, which make it look like a strip from an afghan. Doing it in a single solid or variegated yarn would remove the ripple effect that's so afghan-esque.





Quite like the Bolt Tee, which is both well shaped and has an interesting and effective graphic design.





The Short-Row Vest. This is one of those patterns that at first glance seem to me to warrant a negative review, but that I come to like after more careful appraisal. This piece is has a striking graphic design and an interesting construction that sits well. It won't work on every figure or for everyone's taste, but then few knitwear designs do. On the right person with the right outfit this could be an original and eye-catching piece.