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Tagged baby cashmerino, hat, knit, sweater vest
Comments Off on Happy Holidays!
Tagged baby cashmerino, hat, knit, sweater vest
First, the facts:
Title: Folk Socks: The History & Techniques of Handknitted Footwear (Updated Edition)
Author: Nancy Bush
Published by: Interweave Press, 2011
Pages: 151
Type: Sock history, techniques, and patterns
Chapters:
1. From Hide to Hose: The Origins of the Sock
2. Looped Fabrics & the Legwear of Queens: The Beginnings of Knitted Hose
3. Knitting in Great Britain: A Way of Working & A Way of Life
4. Knitting in Other European Countries: Traditions & Stocking Styles
5. Carrying on the Tradition: How to Knit a Sock
6. A Classic Sock Pattern: And Some Variations on Heel & Toe
7. The Patterns
The In-Depth Look:
This is practically THE classic sock book. First published in 1994, it explored so many areas of sock knitting that hadn’t been touched on before. The history, first of all, but also heel variations, and different ways to finish off a toe–all sorts of details. It was an eye-opener for knitters who had basically knitted the same heel-flap/gusset heel and grafted the same toe for their entire sock-knitting careers. Which is assuming that they’d knitted socks at all because, when I started knitting in 1988, there were practically no sock patterns out there–which is why it was the 21st century before I knit my first sock.
Nancy Bush’s “Folk Socks” was a revelation. Not only did she explore the (mostly European) history of the stocking and all its regional variations, she provided some truly beautiful traditional sock patterns. Like many books of the period, though, the original had something of a no-nonsense feel to it. There were pictures, but, well, compared to the stylish knitting books in vogue today, it doesn’t look like anything special–very plain vanilla and utilitarian.
So, when I tell you that book has been updated, does it make your heart beat a little faster?
Because the new version–a good 30-pages longer than the original–is a sight for spoiled eyes. It’s the same amazing book but now it’s also a beautiful little book with a more generous layout. It’s got larger pictures, more color, and generally more pizazz than my 1994 edition, which makes it a pleasure to flip through. The old edition felt a little more like a textbook. This one feels like eye candy.
The burning question, though, is … how are they different?
From the press release:
“This revised edition of Folk Socks contains the in-depth history and the step-by-step instruction from Nancy Bush that sock knitters have come to love and depend on, but is now completely updated. Discontinued yarns have been replaced with current yarns, and modifications that Nancy has learned since the book was first published have been added. Also new is a bonus section on Estonian-inspired socks.”
Without comparing my two copies word for word, I can say that they look pretty identical. The sections of history, the lists of patterns, all seem to be the same, with the one exception that the old “Greek Sock” pattern is completely replaced by the new “Estonian Crossroads” pattern and there are a couple modifications to some of the other ones. I can’t say for sure what the “modifications Nancy has learned since” are, though.
Do you need to buy the new update if you have the older edition? Probably not … but the new edition sure looks nice. I find it easier to browse through. Knitting books have evolved a lot in the last couple of decades, after all, and this is one book that deserved a nice face lift.
You can check it out here at Amazon.com.
Want to see bigger pictures? Click here.
This review copy was kindly donated by Interweave Press. Thank you!
Other posts for this author:
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Tagged Classics, Nancy Bush, Socks
Last summer, I had a crazy plant grow in my morning glory bed near my back door. I let it grow because I was both lazy and curious to see what it was and what it would. I still don’t know what it was, but it grew to be huge – taller and wider than me.
Since it got cold and everything has turned brown and dead, every time I walk by that bed, I have thought to myself how bad it looked and how I really should have cut it down and cleared out the bed to get ready for next spring. I haven’t, of course (see above, re: lazy) but it’s been bugging me.
Yesterday morning when I came downstairs in the cold hours before the sun had been able to warm anything, I looked out the window and realized that the tangled brown mess was full of birds. Little black juncos and brown sparrows all chattering to each other and feasting on the seeds the plant mess was still holding in its dried branches.
Just like that, something ugly, messy and annoying was transformed into something wonderful and entertaining. It made me smile all day long.
Comments Off on There’s no grand plan here 2011-12-18 22:22:31
Tagged Main
Comments Off on Identical twins, one of them transgendered
Has writing gotten harder?
In those halcyon days when you were younger (last month, maybe?), it all seemed so easy. You sat down with your computer or your notebook, positioned the cursor or the pen at the ready and … words flowed. You didn’t have to work at them, you didn’t have to struggle to get them out, they just ran out of your fingers and onto the page in a steady stream. If anything, it was hard to keep up!
So, what happened?
Have you been reading too many “This is How You Write” blogs? Maybe you’ve been so diligent at reminding yourself of the rules, the dos and don’ts that you’re afraid to commit anything to paper because it might not be good enough.
But, “good enough” for who?
Don’t ever forget that first drafts are supposed to be crappy. It’s getting the words out of your head that’s important. The minute you clench up and worry about whether you need a comma before the ‘and,’ you’re just asking for trouble.
Maybe you’re afraid of what will happen AFTER you’ve written. The minute you finish your novel, you’re going to need to send it out, right? Who wants to deal with all that rejection? Whereas, if the writing’s not done, you’re under no obligation to do anything with it at all. You wouldn’t send a child out on its own, would you? No, so you can’t send out writing that’s not ready … it wouldn’t be right!
Perhaps you’ve got too many ideas in your head. You can’t decide which to work on, and so the words all bottleneck in your head and can’t make it down your arm to your fingers. In which case, pick one–whichever idea is jumping up and down and wavings its hand like Horschack used to on Welcome Back, Kotter. THAT’s the idea you want to work on. Any idea with that much energy deserves some attention.
Or maybe you’ve got the opposite problem–no ideas at all. Your brain is an empty wilderness, like one of those 1960s performance art exhibits of a completely white room with a battered shoe in the center of the floor. So, you know what you do? You write about the shoe. Describe its scratched and cracking leather, the limpness of its laces as they dangle on the floor. The way the tongue is lolling to the side, like a dog’s on a hot day. Imagine what kind of life that shoe has led to be in such a state.
And that pesky, tempting internet with its social networking sites, multitude of blogs, and websites galore tempting you and leading you astray?
…Um, I’m still looking for the answer to that one!
The point is to WRITE.
Comments Off on Why Is Writing Harder Than it Used to Be?
Tagged General
And then it dawned on me: the Postal Service has a mandate to deliver mail to every person in the United States. That means a Post Office and a Postmaster and probably a Mail Carrier in every small town. Other delivery services can focus on profitable markets and let small-town customers make the drive to the nearest big town if they want to use their service.
Pure speculation, of course -- my specialty. So I was extremely gratified to read this analysis which draws the same conclusion (and points to an outline of some other significant factors).
Update: Here's an Economist article that makes many of the same points.
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Tagged design, DIY, illustration, Inspiration, knit, logo, stationary
sans bark, for once. all snuggled up in their christmas sweaters on a sub 70 degree day in l.a.
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