Friday 14 June 2019

Pom Pom Quarterly Issue 29: A Review


Pom Pom Quarterly has released Issue 29. Let's have a look at it, shall we?





Argil. This one's a little on the rough-looking, unpolished side for my liking, though it does have a certain sportiness to it.





Sanctuary. Very attractive. Love the texture.





Rookwood. Such a handsome, contemporary-style wrap.





Earthen. Perfect summer cardigan. I would raise the dropped shoulders, though.





Ogee. Nice camisole. The stitchwork is beautiful.





Faience. Wearable and attractive summer top.





Minton. The stitchwork in this bag is nice but the shape is schlumpy.





Rievaulx. I like the colour block effect used in this top, and am having fun imagining different colour schemes for it.





Tesserae. Nice use of mosaic knitting on this fun and striking summer top.

Monday 10 June 2019

Interweave Knits Summer 2019: A Review


Interweave Knits has released their Summer 2019 issue. Let's have a look at it, shall we?





Assateague Pullover. Love this one. Just LOOK at that beautifully intricate yoke.





East Beach Tee. This is pretty decent. I like the stitchwork and the aqua contrast trim on the lilac. I'd make it a littler neater fitting.





Cumberland Pullover. This one has the look of a beautiful lace blouse.





Clearwater Coverup. Not so thrilled with the lie of this, and for a coverup it doesn't cover up all that much, although the stitchwork is nice.





South Ocean Pullover. Quite decent. I like the subtle horizontal stripes, which is a nice way to give a simple pullover some distinction.





Van Damme Tee. Nice texture.





Kalaloch Pullover. This one has a great yoke, but can you imagine how aggravating it would be to wear a pullover that pulls up at the side when you raise an arm like the model is doing? I'd rework the design to raise the armholes to where they belong.





Ocean City Pullover. It is so nice to see a mesh piece that doesn't look remotely like a shopping bag. This is a very attractive piece, and I love the lace motifs around the waist.





Laguna Pullover. Very nice, but I would neaten up the fit.





Cove Beach Pullover. This is one of the best colour-blocked pieces I've ever seen.





Malaquite Tee. Decent, but I'd make it to fit the wearer. Things look so much better on the wearer when they fit, and think of the savings in knitting time and yarn when you make things smaller!





Baja Hoodie. This is making me flash back to the nineties, when the Baja hoodie or "drug rug" was such a thing. And it seems they've come back. This Baja hoodie is much nicer than any of those worn back then. I'd consider making it, while I was never tempted to wear a drug rug back in the day, unless you count the time or two I wore a loaner drug rug from a boyfriend because we were out somewhere and I was cold.





Grand Junction Shawl. Very striking blend of colours and patterns.





Rocket Pop Socks. Cute socks. Though I am having a bit of difficulty getting past that I hate this particular kind of popsicle. I'll be an easy sell on ice cream sandwich socks should any designers out there be thinking of making those.





Sonora Cacti Socks. These look like cacti as they might look in some sort of 80s-era video game, such as one entitled "Go West, Young Pac-Man". This is not a bad thing.





Tubac Stole. This has a lot of contemporary-style appeal, and it drapes well.





Silver City Shawl. Very attractive wrap.





Desert Sunset Shawl. Love the colours in this so much that I am keeping them in mind for my future use.





Lobster Socks. These ones are more than a little busy visually for my liking, but they are fun in their way.





Avo Toast Socks. These are pleasing both visually and as a sly reference to the whole avocado toast thing.

Monday 27 May 2019

Vogue Knitting Spring & Summer 2019: A Review


Vogue Knitting has released its Spring & Summer 2019 issue, but before we take our look at the designs in it, I'd like to take a moment to note that Vogue Knitting's longtime editor-in-chief Trisha Malcolm is stepping down to move on to a new role at MezCrafts, the parent company of Rowan Yarns. Best wishes to her in her career shift after over twenty years at Vogue Knitting! I know I'll never forget that first time that I saw that someone named Trisha Malcolm had liked something on this blog's Facebook page within the first year of its existence, how I instantly recognized the name but thought it couldn't possibly be *that* Trisha Malcolm, and how I nearly hyperventilated when a click through proved that, yes, it was. Also, it'll be interesting to see whether or how Vogue Knitting changes now that it's to have someone different at the helm.





Pattern #1, Eyelet Shawl. Fit for a bride!





Pattern #2, Lace-Striped Dress. Simple and wearable. I think it was a good call to add the belt to the look, as the waistline looks a little sad and baggy without it.





Pattern #3, Diamond Pattern Tunic. A pretty and airy look. I'd raise the shoulder and play with the length of the sleeve as it looks a little awkward as is, though chances are if the wearer adds a gazebo-sized hat to the look as has been done in this sample shot, no one will notice.





Pattern #4, Crocheted Cover Up. This one is too irretrievably doily-like for me, though I must admit the lines are good and that, as a piece of needlework, it is an accomplishment.





Pattern #5, Lace Hem Mini Dress. This one has a certain boho chic.





Pattern #6, Cropped Eyelet Pullover. The fit of this is just plain awkward -- even this professional model can't make it work, despite her considerable best efforts. One could alter the pattern to have a more flattering fit... or one could just use another knitting pattern. Your call!





Pattern #7, Beaded Shawl. Not a bad little wrap, though there are better yarn and bead choice combinations for it.





Pattern #8, Rose Cardigan. This is a lovely piece with quite a delicate, romantic feel and a certain amount of style, but unfortunately it's reminding me all too vividly of a set of cross stitch rose motif aida cloth placemats I made as a present for my mother when I was 17 and that she then wrecked after a single use by machine washing them even though I had TOLD her they were not machine washable and perhaps you'll all understand if I just move on to the next review without saying more.





Pattern #9, Eyelet Top. Nice little summer top with good lines and good stitchwork.





Pattern #10, Asymmetrical Tank. Sleek and contemporary.





Pattern #11, Patterned Tank. This is quite smart. It's 1930s sportswear meets contemporary shaping, and it's a happy combination.





Pattern #12, Offset V-Neck Top. This one has a relaxed, minimalist elegance to it.





Pattern #13, Drop Stitch Pullover. This has a rather attractive open lace effect, but I can't help wincing at the thought of how it would catch on everything. And I would raise the dropped shoulders.





Pattern #14, Mixed Yoke Pullover. I like everything about this striking fair isle design but the openwork crochet bands, which I'd replace with something solid. As is, the design would require an underlayer, which limits its usefulness for summer wear.





Pattern #15, Boxy Tee. I like this one, with its visible seams and deconstructed vibe. It definitely deserved better than to be paired with a skirt that appears to be sewn from used metallic gift wrap.





Pattern #16, Back-Tied Bubble Top. I very much like this one with its eyelet body, fun striped accent edges, and fetching back tie detail, and it definitely deserves a better colourway.





Pattern #17, Patchwork Yoke Pullover. I like the concept here, which is really quite fresh, but the edges of the front patches are a little too unfinished-looking to really work. I'd edge them in some way.





Pattern #18, Striped Pullover. These mesh pieces always look too much like a mesh shopping bag to me to be really successful as clothing design.





Pattern #19, Tangram-esque Dress. This one elicted an audible "Oooooh!" from me when I first viewed it on Vogue Knitting's website. The lines are good, the design is "you can't miss it" striking, and it's a wearable piece. Can't say that the colourway is doing much for it, but in six months' time the Ravelry member pattern pages for this design will be something worth checking out.





Pattern #20, Eyelet Lace Tunic. This is a pattern from Vogue Knitting's Spring & Summer 1999 issue, and isn't it amazing how contemporary it looks twenty years on? I have this one in my personal knitting library, having bought the issue back in the day, but I've never made it. While it looks great through the yoke, the fit through the body concerns me -- this is a DK weight and that extra material is going to be on the bulky side. However, given that this piece is knitted in the round and has an allover lace pattern, one would be hard pressed to come up with a way to add shaping through the body (it would probably mean moving to a flat knit below the armholes and require side seams, which would be a shame), and would likely end up simply have to embrace its generous lines.





Pattern #21, Garden Flower Yoke Pullover. Very cute!