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  2. Barbara G. Walker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barbara_G._Walker

    Barbara G. Walker (born July 2, 1930, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American author and feminist.She is a knitting expert and the author of over ten encyclopedic knitting references, despite "not taking to it at all" when she first learned in college.

  3. Vogue Knitting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vogue_Knitting

    Vogue Knitting, also known as Vogue Knitting International, is a magazine about knitting published by SoHo Publishing LLC. [1] It is published biannually [ 2 ] and includes knitting designs, yarn reviews, and interviews with designers. [ 3 ]

  4. Jane Gaugain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Gaugain

    Knitting motifs published by Jane Gaugain, 1845. Jane Gaugain (née Alison) (26 March 1804 – 20 May 1860) was a Scottish knitter and writer.She built up a successful business in Edinburgh, and published 16 volumes on knitting that helped to make it a popular pastime for ladies and a source of income for lower classes of women.

  5. Elizabeth Zimmermann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Zimmermann

    (Always knitting, she'd even developed the ability to knit while on the back of her husband's motorcycle.) In The Opinionated Knitter, Zimmermann's daughter Meg notes that while her mother wanted to call her first book The Opinionated Knitter, her publishers changed it to Knitting Without Tears. However, the former perhaps best expresses ...

  6. Stephanie Pearl-McPhee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephanie_Pearl-McPhee

    She has been described as a knitting humourist, and has called her own writing "knitting humor". [ 5 ] [ 6 ] She has said of her writing "I believe knitting is a transformative and intriguing act that can change the life and brain of the person doing it, and that knitting is a perfect metaphor for life and insight into some better ways through it".

  7. UK Hand Knitting Association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK_Hand_Knitting_Association

    UK Hand Knitting Association. The UK Hand Knitting Association (UKHKA) is a not-for-profit British organisation dedicated to promoting hand knitting in the UK. Through a variety of initiatives and the assistance of a nationwide network of volunteers who pass on their skills, the UKHKA focus on ensuring a vibrant future for all aspects of yarn crafts.

  8. Sweater curse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweater_curse

    Although the existence of this effect remains uncertain, it is a common belief amongst the knitting population, and several plausible (and non-exclusive) mechanisms for the sweater curse have been suggested within knitting periodicals and books: Unlucky timing. Knitting a sweater takes a long time, and the relationship dies of natural causes ...

  9. Gift book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gift_book

    The Victorian gift book market emerged in a time of mass-production, increased literacy, and growing demand of middle-class buyers. Most gift books were made from 1855 to 1875, the ‘golden age’ of wood-engraved illustration. These books—explicitly intended to be given as gifts—were normally published in late November in time for Christmas.