Tag

pattern

29
Jan
2014

a collection about possibility

knitting like a woman obsessed.

Riffing off of the idea of instant gratification from yesterday. I adore a project I can sink my teeth into.

A project that inspires nothing short of commitment, adoration, and borderline obsession.

A project to sink your teeth into.

It’s part of why I knit shawls, they aren’t quick by any stretch of the imagination, and they don’t requite piecing like most sweaters do. No second sleeve syndrome with a shawl. Just a beginning, and an end, with an expanse of fabric to play with in the middle.

I’m currently working on a collection that’s pulling out this kind of obsessed focus. The kind of focus where you can’t concentrate on anything else. The kind of project that has you staying up late and waking up early to work on it.

I see a small pattern collection accompanied by lots of writing.
A collection centered around simplicity, elegance, grace, drape, ease, flexibility, adaptability, possibility, experimentation, curiosity, and play.

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Announce! Announce!

Have you seen the new Resources Page? Or the new About Page?

8
Jan
2014

Taking Stock

I’m always working on some project or another, and most weeks I talk about what I’m working on Wednesdays as part of Tami’s WIP Wednesday project. You can see past WIP Wednesdays … right this way.

 

What’s in progress?
Somethings you’ve seen before:

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but it hasn’t come out of it’s project bag since you last saw it.

Some totally new things:

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-a simple elegant circular purple shawl

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-a coat, which I kind of done because it’s been damn cold

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swatches for the next Shawl Geometry book about mutant shawls, at least the swatches aren’t green this time 😉

-a non-sucky about page, which is harder than it sounds

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-the pattern for this shawl went to my technical editor Monday.

What’s coming up next?
-a new blog series about binding off, specifically for shawls

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-writing the pattern for this shawl

-writing the mutant shawl geometry book

 

Announce! Announce!
I sent out an exclusive free pattern to the list just before the new year, if you aren’t on the list, and want the pattern, you can sign up here.

 

This was part of Tami’s WIP Wednesday project. If you’d like more WIP Wednesday posts, from other bloggers, visit Tami’s blog.

 

19
Nov
2013

even complicated projects usually start simply

Unfortunately complicated projects don’t generally fall out of your brain fully formed.

It usually starts with an outline, or a sketch, a rough approximation. There’s a reason painters sketch, novelists outline, and knitters swatch.

Sketches, outlines and swatches are all places to play and experiment, to solve problems and work out contingencies, with low expectations, and little investment.

I’ve talked about my love affair with swatching before, but I also “sketch” for many of my knitting design projects.

I open up my charting software and draw out what I want the design to look like, using yarn-overs and decreases, kind of like a proto-chart . Then I refine and tweak, refine and tweak, until I’m happy with the chart, and I start knitting. (This tweaking is what turns the initial sketch into the final chart.)

This process of sketching, then tweaking and refining, isn’t just for knitwear or pattern designing. The execution is different, but the process is the same.

For example, the map for Shawl Geometry III, started as hand drawn sketches on a piece of paper. Actually, the entire book started as handwritten scribbles on graph paper.

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Which then turned into hand drawn scribbled schematics on top of typed text.

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The complete map started as kind of a total mess. But drawing these hand messy maps served the purpose of getting the idea out of my head and onto paper.

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Getting something out of my head is the first step towards being able to put an idea down and walking away. Walking away from an idea allows your brain to quietly munch and mull on all of the information you have, and come up with creative solutions to whatever problem you’re running into.

It turned out that the key to creating this map, was to have a central hub around the square and the right triangle, then have all of the longer paths looping around the outside of this central hub.

So if you look at the map closely, you’ll see that the center out square, and the right triangle (the two most interconnected shapes) are right at the center of the map, with half a dozen lines leading away from either of them.

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Then if you look at the outsides of the map, you’ll see that’s where the shapes that are connected to two or three other shapes are, such as the crescents, and the half circles.

This rather simple idea of a hub, with longer paths looping around the outside, meant that I could go into illustrator and sketch out the final version of the map. Other than lots of small annoying tweaks* here and there, that was it.

*the tweaks that are a total pain in the butt to do, but that make the final product look so much better. Details matter.

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It’s a crazy complicated map. That started as some pen scribbles.

Big complicated projects usually involve:
an idea
a sketch/outline/draft/plan/swatch
messing about with said sketch/outline/draft/plan/swatch
a period of thinking about anything else a.k.a. brain munching time
a final draft/sketch
rearranging
tweaking
stupid annoying tweaking
stop tweaking (it will never be perfect, but at some point it will be damn good)
ta-da! a finished a big complicated project. yay you!

What crazy project are you working on? Or are thinking about embarking on?

 

Announce! Announce! You can get Shawl Geometry III (the book that explains the map) here.