Find Your Style and Knit It Too - Softcover

Turner, Sharon

 
9780470139875: Find Your Style and Knit It Too

Inhaltsangabe

This fun, funky guide helps you find your style and create great hand-knit clothes and accessories that express it.

Easy-to-follow instructions with colorful illustrations get you going even if you've never picked up knitting needles before. Cosmo-style quizzes make it fun to explore both your knitting style and your fashion profile. There are projects for you whether your style is:

  • Tomboy
  • Dancer
  • Punk
  • Preppy
  • Girly-girl
  • Arty and funky
  • Hippie
  • Fashionista

Put your new skills in action by choosing from more than twenty-five hip patterns, including a mellow newsboy cap, a delicate ballet skirt, a casual kerchief, a preppy sleeveless hoodie, and even some in-your-face skull wristbands. Mix and match styles and add details to express your mood and individualize your look! Lots of the projects are so simple you can knit an extraordinary one-of-a-kind item faster than you can drive to the mall and pick up a one-style-fits-all piece.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Sharon Turner is the founder of Monkeysuits, a playful, popular line of knitting patterns. She runs two knitting clubs for kids and teens at New York City schools. She is the author of Monkeysuits: Sweaters and More to Knit for Kids, Teach Yourself Visually Knitting, Teach Yourself Visually Knitting Design, and Knitting Visual Quick Tips.

Von der hinteren Coverseite

This fun, funky guide helps you find your style and create great hand-knit clothes and accessories that express it.

Easy-to-follow instructions with colorful illustrations get you going even if you've never picked up knitting needles before. Cosmo-style quizzes make it fun to explore both your knitting style and your fashion profile. There are projects for you whether your style is:

  • Tomboy
  • Dancer
  • Punk
  • Preppy
  • Girly-girl
  • Arty and funky
  • Hippie
  • Fashionista

Put your new skills in action by choosing from more than twenty-five hip patterns, including a mellow newsboy cap, a delicate ballet skirt, a casual kerchief, a preppy sleeveless hoodie, and even some in-your-face skull wristbands. Mix and match styles and add details to express your mood and individualize your look! Lots of the projects are so simple you can knit an extraordinary one-of-a-kind item faster than you can drive to the mall and pick up a one-style-fits-all piece.

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Find Your Style, and Knit It Too

By Sharon Turner

John Wiley & Sons

Copyright © 2007 Sharon Turner
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-470-13987-5

Chapter One

get set!

Now that you have this book, you're ready to learn how to knit, but do you have everything else you need to start knitting? You need yarn, needles, and a few little tools to begin with. After you've been knitting for a while, you'll naturally accumulate more yarn-LOTS more yarn, if you love knitting-plus more needles and accessories, so don't buy too much at first. What kind of yarn should you get? And what size and type of needles do you want? This chapter tells you all you need to know to make the right choices.

it's all about yarn

One of the most fun parts of knitting is choosing yarn. You may feel overwhelmed when you set out to buy yarn for your first project. Knitting yarns come in so many fibers, weights, textures, and colors that it can be confusing. Take a deep breath, read on, and you'll get a better idea of what to look for.

natural fibers

Natural fibers come from animals and plants. Wool, alpaca, mohair, cashmere, and angora are spun from animal fibers, and they're really warm to wear-and fun to knit with. Certain wools, like Shetland wool, can be scratchy; some, like merino, are nice and soft. Be sure to hold a ball of yarn against your skin to see if you would want to wear something made out of it. It would be a bummer to spend weeks knitting a scarf that is too itchy to wear.

Alpaca is a soft fiber that knits to a flexible, soft fabric. Mohair is hairier than wool, and things knit in mohair-only yarns have a fuzzy halo. So do things made out of angora, which is softer than mohair and comes from angora rabbits. Cashmere comes from goats-it is one of the softest yarns, but it's very expensive. Silk, produced by silkworms, is warm but not as stretchy as wool.

btw: Don't worry; bunnies, sheep, and goats don't get killed for their hair or wool. Angora is harvested by combing the rabbits a couple times a year. Sheep get haircuts: Their wool is shorn once or twice a year.

Cotton and linen yarns-also not as springy as wool-are made from plants, and they're good for things you wear in the summer or in a warm climate. They are also great for bags and accessories.

unnatural fibers

There are a number of synthetic, human-made fibers, including acrylic, nylon, and polyester. These yarns are sometimes less expensive than natural fibers, and many are machine washable. In olden days, acrylic yarn was horrible, rough, scratchy stuff; now you can find some highly respectable acrylics. Nylon is often used to reinforce wool, like for sock yarns, but there are also 100% nylon furry yarns that are downy soft and almost weightless.

fiber blends

Spinning two or more fibers together into one yarn makes a blend. The combinations are infinite: Even yarns containing the same fibers can be vastly different due to the amount of each fiber in the blend. For example, a wool/mohair blend that has 85% wool and 15% mohair will be slightly hairy, while combining the same two fibers 50-50 results in a totally different yarn. Sometimes fibers are blended to produce a less expensive yarn or a machine-washable yarn. Mixing one fiber with another can change the undesirable aspects of a fiber for the better. For instance, cotton can gain body and springiness by being combined with acrylic; combining wool with alpaca, angora, or cashmere can soften it.

yarn textures and colors

In addition to coming in different fibers and weights, yarn also comes in a zillion different textures, colors, and color blends. Furry, bumpy, metallic, and hairy yarns are called novelty yarns. These yarns are fun for edgings and dressy stuff, and they can be doubled up with another yarn to add some pizzazz. Even non-novelty yarns vary in texture from one to the next, depending on fiber content and how they're spun. You'll also see lots of colorful yarns-yarns that come in variegated color mixes or tweeds.

You will no doubt be tempted to buy some of these fun and fuzzy or rainbow-colored yarns. But if you're a beginner, don't do it! You can't learn how to knit with this stuff: It's too difficult to see the stitches beneath all that texture or amid that riot of color, and knitting with novelty yarns evenly takes some skill and practice. So for now, stick with a nice smooth traditionally spun yarn, preferably good old 100% wool, in a light to medium shade (it's hard to see the stitches in too-dark colors) of your favorite color.

balls, skeins, and hanks

Ball, skein, and hank are the names of the different forms yarn comes in when you buy it. A ball is-you guessed it-round. Skeins can be a few different shapes, sometimes long and cylindrical with a label wrapped around the middle, and sometimes shaped like an oblong ball. A hank is different from these two because it's not machine-wound into a ready-to-use form. It looks kind of like a twisted cruller, and you have to untwist it and wind it into a ball yourself. Sometimes a nice yarn shop will wind a hank into a ball for you using a yarn swift-if you're buying the hank from that shop, of course. If you see a yarn swift, a big contraption that looks like an umbrella skeleton mounted onto a table in the store, ask if they'll wind your hank into a ball. It will be well worth it in the end, since rolling it into a ball can take quite some time (and be frustrating, if it gets tangled).

btw: If you have to buy multiple hanks for a project, it's a good idea to wind all but one. This way, if you use less yarn than expected, you might be able to return the unused hank; most stores won't take back a hank that's been wound.

yarn weights

Yarn comes in many thicknesses, which are called weights-not to be confused with the actual weight, in ounces or grams, of the ball or skein. Yarn weight is labeled from thinnest to thickest as super fine, fine, light, medium, bulky, and super bulky. You use fat needles for bulky yarns and thin needles for fine yarns. Super-fine yarns are also called fingering, baby, lace-weight, and sock yarn. Fine yarns can be referred to as sport weight or baby. Light yarns include yarns called double-knitting (DK) and light worsted. Medium yarns are also described as worsted, Aran, or afghan yarn. Bulky generally refers to yarns labeled chunky or heavy worsted. Super-bulky yarns are usually called just that-super bulky. See the chart below for more information about yarn weight.

yarn substitutions

Chances are you'll want or need to substitute a different yarn than the one specified in a pattern. Either the yarn shop won't have the one you need, or you'll want a different fiber, or you'll want to spend less (or more) than the yarn in the pattern costs. The single most important thing to consider when subbing one yarn for another is the weight: If you want the pattern to come out the right shape and size, you need to get yarn that is the same weight and that knits to the same gauge. Remember that weight means thickness here, not the weight of the ball.

See the picture of the little knit squares called swatches? They were knit from yarns of different weights, using the same number of stitches; as you can see, they're completely different sizes. That's why knitting a gauge swatch is so important when you start a project. If you substitute a yarn with a different gauge, you can end up with a doll-sized...

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