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Knitted Lace of Estonia: Techniques, Patterns, and Traditions | 
enlarge | Author: Nancy Bush Publisher: Interweave Press Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $16.47 You Save: $8.48 (34%)
New (2) from $16.47
Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 1397
Media: Paperback Pages: 160 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 8.4 x 0.5
ISBN: 1596680539 Dewey Decimal Number: 746.226028094798 EAN: 9781596680531 ASIN: 1596680539
Publication Date: December 1, 2008 (In 12 Days) Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Save $10.00 when you spend $50.00 or more on Qualifying Items offered by Amazon.com. Enter code BMLSAVES at checkout. Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 2 to 4 weeks
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description DIVP style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"Combining some of the oldest knitted artifacts in Northern Europe with authentic tips and expert advice, this distinctive guidebook demonstrates a wide range of knitting knowledge. Featuring 14 heirloom-quality projects, this savvy reference includes traditional lace-knitting techniques such as the starburst, twig, peacock, and lily of the valley patterns. Modern variations on classic methods and adding lace edges are also explored, and photographs from several Estonian museums beautifully illustrate various completed designs. With accessible graphed and written instructions, the projects include Estonian-style shawls, stoles, and scarves./P/DIV
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
what a treat for lace knitters November 18, 2008 SHMILY (N.J.) I love the book...and I hope the instructions are as well thought out as the patterns...
Gorgeous Lace with a little history to boot November 16, 2008 S. Hollandsworth (Iowa, USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I just got my hands on this book last week and was just stunned by the beauty of the lace in this book. Nancy Bush writes about the history of Estonian lace and includes quite a few little tips on some of the finer points and unfamiliar abbreviations. There are little history lessons at the beginning of each of the different patterns. It's more like an origin lesson really. br / br /I think I was drawn to the unique texture of the Estonian lace with it's nupps. I am a beginner lace knitter, though I have knitted many other things. At first I was a little taken aback by the fact that the patterns are charted out, and I had never worked from a chart before, but the lace won out and soon I was casting on. br / br /I used a fingering weight, Navajo plied, handspun that I spun last month and started with one of the least daunting projects, the Raja Scarf. Before long I was at ease with the pattern symbols and concept behind the chart. In fact, it was so well laid out that I finished it in 2 evenings and then went on to adapt the pattern into a hat knit in the round to match. br / br /I have been beating the rest of my knitting group away from this book since they discovered it's existence. They can all get their own as I have plans to make one of everything in there. No amount of crying or outright bribery is going to get my hot little hands off this book. In the meantime, if anyone has a review on a good safe...
Stunning - Lace Lovers Rejoice! November 13, 2008 Tina Martinez (Catskill, NY) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
I will preface this review with the fact that I got to take a class with Nancy Bush on Estonian Lace at SOAR 2008, and what a great preview to the book it was! I got to see these shawls, and shawls like these first hand, so I can say they really are as beautiful in real life, if not more so. br / br /This book really has everything I enjoy in a knitting book, especially one that is based on a particular area or tradition. The front of the book is full of information on the knitted lace traditions of Estonia, informative without being boring or tedious. The tutorials are well designed to make some of the more "advanced" techniques like nupps something to enjoy rather than dread. br / br /The patterns themselves are just gorgeous, ranging in difficulty from easy to quite challenging. My favorites have to be the Queen Sylvia, Madli, and Crown Prince shawls. There are a range of shapes, whether you like stoles, scarves, squares or triangles you'll find something that suits your style and adventure level. br / br /As an added bonus the stitch dictionary and information in the back make designing your own shawl yet another option. The book is worth every penny, both the wow factor and how much knowledge it packs. br / br /Tip from class: If you want a dark colored shawl, try knitting it in white to give your eyes a break and then dyeing it when you're done!
I'm a knitted lace addict and I l LOVE this book! November 9, 2008 Twinknitter (Nebraska) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I've been searching for years for the perfect shawl to make my sister and I found it here! These are beautiful patterns and there is something for everyone who loves lace knitting. The book is well written, with both charts and written instructions, and very understandable technique instructions with pictures. The shawls and scarves are shown modeled and with close-up details so it's easy to see how they drape, the size, etc. The added stitch dictionary and instructions on construction make it easy to design and make your own creation if you don't like what's offered. I really appreciate the instructions for the blocking frame. My biggest disappointment is that I have to wait for the yarn I ordered before I can begin knitting! This book is definitely worth the price!
Beautiful Lace, Approachable Resource, Wish There Were More October 31, 2008 Book Fan (California) 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
This book is a great addition to Interweave's series of "approachable" knitting technique books, but it is not an exhaustive compendium of advanced techniques. It contains 14 projects and a number of knitting stitch charts for lace shawls and scarves which are typical of Estonian lace knitting, and which span the range from introductory (the Raha scarf) to advanced. br / br /Estonian lace is characterized by a few unique stitch components, such as nupps (knobs of yarn) and nature patterns, including lily of the valley (a graceful arc of nupps). The author seems to have spent much time in Estonia collecting stitch patterns and shawl designs from knitters, decades of magazines, and museums. (I wish this book contained much more of what she found!) The book begins with a brief history of knitting in Estonia, then describes traditional shawl design and techniques that the knitter will need to know. br / br /Next is the pattern section of 5 lacy scarfs and 9 shawls. Each of the designs is based on an actual Estonian shawl (purchased by the author or in a museum collection), or taken from Estonian magazines, or utilizing a documented traditional stitch or pattern, though there have been some reworkings. Only two patterns have been previously published by Interweave: Madli's shawl, from Interweave Knits Summer 2004, and Triangular Summer Shawl, in Piecework July/Aug 2008. Each pattern includes information about where it is from and its history, such as a designs created in honor of the Swedish Crown Price and Greta Garbo. br / br /Finally there is a small stitch dictionary, in charts, of 25 complex body patterns, 11 lacy edgings (none simple, and some complex), and 2 diamond borders. Some of these stitches are variations related to patterns that lace knitting fans already know, but some are completely new (at least to me). Additionally, in most cases, the project patterns themselves have their own charts for (usually) the body and the edging, and these patterns are usually similar to, but not exactly the same as the stitch patterns in the stitch dictionary, so that there are even more stitch pattern charts scattered throughout the text. br / br /I am delighted with what is here, but disappointed that it is not an exhaustive compendium and stitch dictionary. Nevertheless, there is a lot here, carefully described and presented, and to my eye, all the projects look appealing (except maybe the simple Raha scarf). I found the interspersed accounts of Estonian knitters interesting, and greatly appreciate that the author was careful to credit the sources of her patterns and included a bibliography.
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