28 Timeless Projects
Crochet Traditions Fall 2012, a 148-page special issue from PieceWork magazine, explores the rich variety and techniques of crochet with 28 patterns for mittens, a skirt, hats, a shawl, bags, socks, and more. Companion stories frame projects in their cultural or historical context. In addition to this beautiful treasury of tradition and design, crocheters from novice to advanced will love the special focus on techniques, ranging from Irish crochet and tapestry to Tunisian and filet.
It’s Lacy
Originally, crochet wasn’t considered a technique for making true lace
and often mimicked bobbin-lace or needle-lace techniques. Crochet
Traditions Fall 2012 includes contemporary renderings of vintage
patterns designed to mimic both Armenian and Battenburg lace, but it
also illustrates the beauty and variety of several crocheted-lace
techniques. A whole section is devoted to lace which just might prove
that crochet is the perfect lace technique after all. Learn six separate
motifs in one knockout Clones Irish lace project. Filet and broomstick
lace patterns are also included.
It’s Worldly
Travel to India to learn about the tradition of crocheting coins into
purses. Visit Sweden and meet Berit Westmann, a lifelong crocheter
working to teach and preserve the history of crochet in her country—and
slip stitch crochet a pair of mittens based on one of her designs.
Explore the tapestry crocheted hats of the Foumban people of Cameroon in
western Africa and make your own.
It’s Fun
Discover a section devoted to fun vintage crochet patterns. We’ve
included a doll’s dress, a sweet donkey based on a 1936 Needlecraft
magazine pattern, a cat, and a lamb. Filet-crochet Sunbonnet Sue with
her puppy and create your own lacy fruit basket in hemp cord. Tapestry
and slip stitch crochet your own colorwork socks based on a nineteenth
century mystery sock.
It’s History
As with PieceWork and all of its special issues, the projects are
unbeatable, but it’s the history we love. Crochet Traditions Fall 2012
is full of rich stories profiling crocheters of the past and the
present, spanning the traditions from 1880s Ireland and Italy to fashion
choices of the early twentieth century in America. A grandmother and a
great-grandmother’s legacy of crocheted work create fond memories in the
lives of two authors and led to two designs based on the original work.
- Sprache
- Englisch
- Format
- Zeitschrift
- Seitenzahl
- 148
- Verlag
- Interweave Knits
- Herkunftsland
- D