Vogue Knitting

Last updated
Vogue Knitting
VogueKnittingCover.jpg
The Holiday 2011 cover featuring Martha Stewart
Editor in ChiefNorah Gaughan
Former editorsCarla Scott, Trisha Malcolm
CategoriesArts and Crafts
Frequency2x
PublisherDavid Joinnides
Founder Conde Montrose Nast
Founded1932
First issue1932
CompanySoHo Publishing LLC
Country United States
Based in New York City
LanguageEnglish
Website www.vogueknitting.com
ISSN 0890-9237

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] Vogue International Knitting is a registered trademark of Advance Publications Inc. and is used under a license.

Contents

Originally launched in 1932 by Conde Nast, the magazine shuttered in 1969. It was relaunched in 1982 by the Butterick Company, who had purchased Vogue Patterns. Publisher and marketing director, Art Joinnides, saw the market potential for a knitting title. Since the Winter 2020/2021 issue, the magazine is edited by Norah Gaughan, and has its headquarters in New York. NY.

Events

The editors of Vogue Knitting launched Vogue Knitting Live in 2011, a fan convention. It takes place primarily in New York and Seattle. Classes, demonstrations and vendor marketplace are held as part of the convention, along with a fashion show. [3] Currently the events are held virtually due to Covid-19 restrictions [4]

Vogue Knitting offers tours with travel opportunities. Their tours allow knitters to experience travel with benefits of workshops, guest speakers, specialty yarn shopping experiences, and excursions to textile manufactures, mills and more. [5]

Digital Media

Notable contributors

Books

Vogue Knitting: The Ultimate Knitting Book. New York. Sixth & Spring Books. 2018 [6]

Related Research Articles

Intarsia is a knitting technique used to create patterns with multiple colours. As with the woodworking technique of the same name, fields of different colours and materials appear to be inlaid in one another, fit together like a jigsaw puzzle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth Zimmermann</span> Knitting designer and author

Elizabeth Zimmermann was a British-born hand knitting teacher and designer. She revolutionized the modern practice of knitting through her books and instructional series on American public television.

Alice Starmore is a professional needleworker, knitting designer, photographer and writer, born in Stornoway, Western Isles, Scotland. As an author she is best known for her widely-read Alice Starmore's Book of Fair Isle Knitting, a guide to the complex technique of knitting pullovers and other items using a palette of five colours, on which she is an expert. Her photographic work is devoted to the natural world, especially birds and insects.

Wenlan Chia (賈雯蘭) is a Taipei-born American fashion designer and creator of the line, Twinkle by Wenlan, which she launched in 2000. Twinkle made its Fashion Week debut in 2003. The collection is known for its whimsical take on feminine dressing with a dash of the exotic, a dose of pop culture and a sense of humor. In addition to women's ready-to-wear, her line includes home decor and accessories, called Twinkle Living, which launched in 2006; costume and fine jewelry ; knitting yarns; and leather accessories.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lace knitting</span> Knitting method with a pattern of holes

Lace knitting is a style of knitting characterized by stable "holes" in the fabric arranged with consideration of aesthetic value. Lace is sometimes considered the pinnacle of knitting, because of its complexity and because woven fabrics cannot easily be made to have holes. Famous examples include the Orenburg shawl and the wedding ring shawl of Shetland knitting, a shawl so fine that it could be drawn through a wedding ring. Shetland knitted lace became extremely popular in Victorian England when Queen Victoria became a Shetland lace enthusiast. Her enthusiasm resulted i.a. in her choosing knitted lacework for presents; e.g. when in ca. 1897 the Queen gave a lace shawl as a present to American abolitionist Harriet Tubman. From there, knitting patterns for the shawls were printed in English women's magazines where they were copied in Iceland with single ply wool.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cable knitting</span> Knitting style

Cable knitting is a style of knitting in which textures of crossing layers are achieved by permuting stitches. For example, given four stitches appearing on the needle in the order ABCD, one might cross the first two the next two, so that in subsequent rows those stitches appear in the new order CDAB.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Decrease (knitting)</span>

A decrease in knitting is a reduction in the number of stitches, usually accomplished by suspending the stitch to be decreased from another existing stitch or by knitting it together with another stitch.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Increase (knitting)</span> Knitting term

In knitting, an increase is the creation of one or more new stitches, which may be done by various methods that create distinctive effects in the fabric. Most knitting increases either lean towards the left or the right.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Casting on (knitting)</span>

In knitting, casting on is a family of techniques for adding new stitches that do not depend on earlier stitches, i.e., having an independent lower edge. In principle, it is the opposite of binding off, but the techniques involved are generally unrelated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bobble (knitting)</span>

In knitting, a bobble is a localized set of stitches forming a raised bump. The bumps are usually arranged in a regular geometrical pattern or may be figurative, e.g., represent apples on a knitted tree.

In knitting, binding off, or casting off, is a family of techniques for ending a column of stitches. Binding off is typically used to define the final edge of a knitted fabric, although it may also be used in other contexts, e.g., in making button holes. In principle, binding off is the opposite of casting on, but the techniques are generally not mirror images of one another. Sometimes, however, they can produce a mirror image appearance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bead knitting</span>

Beaded knitting is a type of knitting in which the stitches are decorated with ceramic or glass beads.

Basic knitted fabrics include stocking stitch, reverse stocking stitch, garter stitch, seed stitch, faggoting, and tricot. In some cases, these fabrics appear differently on the right side than on the wrong side.

Shannon Okey is an American writer and knit designer.

Hand knitting is a form of knitting, in which the knitted fabric is produced by hand using needles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lion Brand Yarns</span> Business enterprise, producer of knitting and craft yarns

Lion Brand Yarns, also known as Lion Brand Yarn Company and Lion Brand Yarn, was founded in 1878 in the United States. It is the oldest producer of knitting and craft yarn in the United States, and also publishes several knitting and crochet newsletters.

Norah Gaughan is an American hand knitting pattern designer.

A knitting pattern is a set of written instructions on how to construct items using knitting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abby Franquemont</span>

Abigail M. Franquemont is an American textile crafts writer, lecturer and educator, based in Cusco, Peru. She spent her early childhood among the Quechua people of Chinchero, Peru, where "women spun to eat and pay for the home they lived in." As a revivalist of the ancient art of hand spinning with the spindle, she published her book, Respect the Spindle, in 2009.

Clara Parkes is an American author, yarn critic, and wool expert. Parkes has been described as "quite possibly the only writer you will ever read who can make a discussion of micron counts absolutely riveting."

References

  1. "About Us". Vogue Knitting. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  2. Glassenberg, Abby (2020-05-14). "Knit Simple Magazine Folds and Vogue Knitting Goes to 2 Issues Per Year". Craft Industry Alliance. Retrieved 2020-10-19.
  3. 1 2 Akun, Alanna (January 17, 2017). "A Massive Knitting Convention Gave Me (Some) Hope About the State of the World". Racked . Archived from the original on January 21, 2017.
  4. "Vogue Knitting Live!". www.vogueknittinglive.com. Retrieved 2020-10-19.
  5. "Tours by Vogue Knitting".
  6. "Vogue Knitting: The Ultimate Knitting Book, Completely Revised : Sixth & Spring Books, How-to Books". www.sixthandspring.com. Retrieved 2020-10-21.