Itty-bitty Toys: How to Knit Animals, Dolls, and Other Plaything for Kids, by Susan B. Anderson. I have recently tried out a few patterns for amigurumi, which has really exploded on craft blogs in the last 6 months. I have made a few, pretty successfully, I thought, and have had requests for more. (at left, the original giraffe, followed by the giraffe of love.)
This book is pretty well written and the patterns look simple enough. I chose not to do any of them because all the animals are the kind of teddy bear pattern-- big round tummy, spindly appendages, and the head the only thing that looks like the animal actually is. I am looking for patterns that approximate the actual body of the animal.
Currently I am making a sweater. I would say that I'm 7/8ths done, but I just figured out why the front left panel doesn't look quite right. Fixing it will require taking out about 50 stitches.
Death of a Gossip, by M.C. Beaton. At my previous library (which I can now name, as I am no longer bound to the Board's terrified knee-jerk reaction policies about the internet. Look at the scandal at La Porte County Public Library!), I saw this author's name all the time. (Thought it was a dude, by the way. Turns out to be a woman.) She has two very long series, and I was constantly filling holes. It wasn't until I went to fill holes in this series that I put two and two together. This is the Hamish MacBeth series!
I checked out the next two and am going to read them, because I am hoping for a glimpse of the characters I liked. But this is all the mystery stereotypes we have all come to dread. There are quite a few characters, pushing "too many" I think. (The first chapter of the next was included at the end of this one, and there are already 8 new characters.) Characters are described physically and, with the exception of a few random thoughts, we get no in-depth knowledge or personality for any of them. They each threaten the soon-to-be-deceased-- and in preposterous ways.
I am not too hopeful.
Too bad about the sweater. You are quite talented none the less.
ReplyDeleteI want to learn how to knit...but I'm rubbish at any kind of textiles. As established in my D&T class last year!
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