Custom Knits: Unleash Your Inner Designer with Top-Down and Improvisational Techniques

by Wendy Bernard

Hardcover, 2008

Status

Available

Barcode

312

Description

Along with being pleasurable and satisfying, knitting can sometimes be frustrating: the turtleneck that looked so fabulous on the model is too bulky for your body, or the cardigan you spent countless hours on just doesn't fit right. Herein lies the beauty of Custom Knits, which teaches knitters how to use improvisational techniques to achieve spectacular results--and to unleash their inner designers. Wendy Bernard, creator of the popular blog Knit and Tonic, provides 25 original designs for sweaters of nearly every type, plus variations, most knitted in one piece starting at the top, a method that allows you to try on as you go, alter as desired, and essentially design on the fly. "Make It Your Own" prompts in each pattern suggest easy alterations to suit your style and body type. And an in-depth reference section teaches how to alter key sweater elements, for example, change a crewneck to a V-neck, add sleeves to a vest, and much more. For the truly adventurous, the book concludes with guidelines for knitting sweaters with no pattern at all. Bernard's friendly writing style and photographer Kimball Hall's lively images create an inviting book of beautiful designs and key techniques that a knitter can use to customize nearly every garment she knits from now on.… (more)

Publication

Stewart, Tabori and Chang (2008), 168 pages

Similar in this library

ISBN

1584797134 / 9781584797135

User reviews

LibraryThing member wyvernfriend
An interesting book. It starts with the authors philosophy and a "how to make your own custom dress form" guide, then takes you on a journey through some patterns and then to how to adapt said patterns to suit yourself.

This is all top-down construction, which suits some people and doesn't suit
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some others, but it does talk about adjusting designs and working them for yourself. This is a book for someone who knows something about what they're letting themselves in for. Definitely not a beginners book, though many of the patterns are mostly stocking (or stockingette) stitch or with a little bit of fairly simple design involved. It's a book to stretch you, to make you think about your relationship with your favourite jumpers and see how you can make them yourself, in your own favourite colours and with your own detail.

Overall, I'm torn, it's a good book with interesting ideas but nothing really sings to me in it, except of course the guidelines.
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LibraryThing member laurazlsk
This book is great. It's one of few books I love most of the patterns and if I don't absolutely love it, there are instructions on modifying them (or any other pattern for that matter) so that I do love it. There also plenty of other tips and ideas included that are fabulous. On a lesser note I
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also love the design of the book. I highly recommend it.
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LibraryThing member MarthaJeanne
It would be a good idea to look at this book before ordering it. I think I will find it useful, but most of the patterns will not suit my body shape, and to make it worse, they are mostly shown in the very colours that just do not look good on me. The best thing about it is that it encourages
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knitters to change the pattern. However there is one pattern that might just be a good starting point for some special yarn I bought last year...
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Original language

English

Collection

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