« 64 Days and Counting | Main | Dresses = Art (I could have told you that) »

01/17/2007

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Frowner

I wonder--although I do not knit--whether one could make a dress like this in a different yarn. Do knitting patterns let you do that? Because a dress like this might be pretty cute in a finer, softer knit and maybe in monochrome. I always wonder about those pebbly wool clothes that you find at the thrift store--who wore them? Why? Did people just accept that they should be constricted and itchy as a matter of course?

Kim P.

If anyone is really curious about the incredible (and hilarious) variety of inane modeling postures featured on knitting patterns, you will have a blast visiting Threadbared (one of Dress a Day's links). Warning: if you check it out while you are at work, be prepared to stifle or explain your guffaws!

nancy bea

According to Bill Bryson in The Thunderbolt Kid (chapter 13) 1957 was the peak of American happiness. After that people in America began getting self-aware and worried, and lost the confident innocence of earlier times. Although he was speaking in broader sociological terms, perhaps this is also reflected in the faces of the knitting models. Dissertation idea needed anyone? :-)

knitgirl

I am by no means an expert knitter, but you can most definitely use different yarns, however it can be fairly complex because you need to do gauge swatches if you switch to a finer or heavier yarn, or use larger or smaller needles, or if you knit looser or tighter than the pattern developer! Actually, experts recommend that you always do at least a 4" x 4" swatch to make sure that you're on track. To make that knitted Duro in a finer yarn, you would also need to use smaller needles and do a lot of math to determine how many more stitches and rows you'll need to get the same size. The only sweaters I've made have been for my niece and nephew and I deliberately made them a little too large in the hopes of getting more than a couple of months wear out of them. That Duro would probably be hundreds of thousands of stitches if you did it in a nice drapey merino, (at least to fit me!)

Gidget Bananas

Holy carp, that dress looks like it was knitted out of Astroturf. Slightly moldy Astroturf! Is it any wonder the model looks self-concious? I'd feel sorry for her if I could feel sorry for a beautiful young blonde thing.

Gidget Bananas

Holy carp, that dress looks like it was knitted out of Astroturf. Slightly moldy Astroturf! Is it any wonder the model looks self-concious? I'd feel sorry for her if I could feel sorry for a beautiful young blonde thing.

Anonymous

I used to knit a lot. You would have to line this creation, it would seat when you sat down for longer than 5 mins and it would go saggy and lose it's shape in the wash, even if you hand washed it. It would also take a century to dry. Not a good look! Best left to the model in the picture I think.

Ms Baroque

No, come on! I love it. In a camp way. The dress, I mean, NOT the tunic jumper, for which there can be no excuse.

Anonymous

OK, forget the self-conscious woman. It's the MAN that intrigues me! Not a shred of self-consciousness there! He thinks he's so hot in that Gramma-loves-her-Packers creation! Right down to his thumb, man. He thinks she digs him. She's just thinking about getting her measly modeling paycheck and blowing the joint. And how is that man in the background playing both the guitar and the drums at the same time?

the_lazymilliner

Anon: it isn't necessary to line a knitted dress anymore than a sewn garment. It's a matter of preference. You could wear a slip with it if you like. As for the garment "seating out," this also happens to stitched garments. Ever seen a saggy 100 percent cotton skirt? Yep. But this can be easily corrected with a little pressing with your handy-dandy iron. Knits need to be washed and reblocked, usually with a touch of steam from a kettle or the aforementioned iron.

Joyella

The style lines of the knitted dress are groovy. I'd like to see it in a soft, fine yarn and smaller gauge. Maybe pale pink and chocolate brown perhaps? or even one solid color.

Robinson

I believe that there are programs out there for transferring patterns to different types of yarn and gauges. Personally, I can't see a hand knit dress looking great on anyone who's past the ripe old age of 5.

Anonymous

Oh, there are programs? Now you tell me. I just spent the better part of a flight from Portland to Minneapolis doing longhand calculations on the back of my knitting magazine, and I think the sweater I've started is about 2/3 the size I meant it to be . . .

knitgirl

ooh, chocolate brown and pale pink! I like that, I've been wearing lots of brown, will have to throw some pink in the mix. Also like charcoal grey and pale pink

Gidget Bananas

Oops, sorry about the double post.

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Vintage Patterns Wiki

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter
    Follow Me on Pinterest
    Blog powered by TypePad