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Mr. Frogigami ([info]wankismyfandom) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2009-10-24 01:29:00


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Ugly knit hats provide hope for the masses!
Knitting Daily featured the Champagne Fizz Hat in its free patterns section.

Kristin@37 kicks off the comments:
I love to knit. I will knit practically anything. I will not knit this.

Too foul by far.


Some agree; others decry her negativity and ask where her sense of fun has gone. ShuriuL explains that the hataz are interrogating the hat from the wrong perspective:
Ladies! Everyone's missing the point! This hat was probably inspired by Diane Von Furstenberg's Fall 2009 Ready-To-Wear collection, which had lovely knit sweaters, knit tunics, knit scarves, and knit coats. Every model wore this hat with variations. The pompoms were much bigger and the overall silhouette made the models appear to be wearing hats similar to men's Renaissance hats. This collection was made touching and whimsical when most designers on either side of the Atlantic had chosen to make monotone, aggressive, boxy, conservative clothing that was more masculine and warrior-like than feminine and patterned. It was a seminal collection and spoke of hope, optimism, and fun when last year's collections came out in February and people were more depressed and scared than they are now.

As for me, I just hope I'm not on LynnR@15's gift list:
Oh, aren't some people just too precious for this rough world?

This hat is terrific fun! Not for everyone to knit, or wear. It is a technically simple knit, with plenty of scope in yarns and colour for some individual, creative expression. Daring older people will delight in shocking their stuffy peers and younger people will think it a cool novelty.

I shall knit loads of these for Christmas prezzies, for young and old alike.

Long live eccentric knitting! (Yes, I'm going to shock my peers!)


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On the other hand....
[info]queencallipygos
2009-10-26 02:56 pm UTC (link)
I've noticed that a lot of people seem to get very nervous when it comes to crafting and cooking-they want specific directions because they don't believe that there could possibly be no right answer or single way to do something and they are terrified of getting it wrong.

Fortunately, though, it sometimes passes. I have a crapton of cookbooks and I cooked like mad from all of them, and still do tend to follow a lot of recipes pretty closely -- but I think that a lot of the cooking-from-recipes kind of ingrained the techniques into me so that I'm now getting to the point where I say, "....wait, I don't NEED a recipe." It did take that period of cooking-with-training-wheels, but I did get there.

So in some cases, eventually people Step Beyond The Directions.

Thus endeth my thoughts on craft yaoi. (bows)

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: On the other hand....
[info]chaos_theory
2009-10-27 04:33 am UTC (link)
There are definitely things you need instructions for, and there are things you eventually learn to do well enough that you can stop having to check out the pattern or recipe every time, and then there are some people who can not handle doing anything without specific very detailed directions for every step, which they will then follow slavishly, with no regard for common sense.

For example: I was making cookies with someone and I said "hey, could you put the eggs in the bowl?" and so she took the eggs and placed them, gently so as not to break them, into the bowl. On top of the sugar and the butter. Put the eggs into the bowl. Years later I still can't figure out what she thought was going to happen after that. That has nothing to do with anything, really, it just continues to baffle me.

(Reply to this)(Parent)(Thread)

Re: On the other hand....
[info]edelweiss
2009-10-27 05:13 pm UTC (link)
the image of the eggs in the bowl has kind of made my day :D

(Reply to this)(Parent)

Re: On the other hand....
[info]chibikaijuu
2009-10-27 05:37 am UTC (link)
No, cookbooks have their place - if you've never made something before, they're great for teaching basic technique, and there's nothing wrong with following a recipe even if you do have a lot of experience - just because I know how to make a cheesecake or a roast doesn't mean there's no merit in trying someone else's way of doing it, or someone's specific variation. The same with craft books and patterns- you have to learn how to do it before you can make it up, and sometimes, hey, you really like the look of something special and it's worth buying the pattern to get it just right.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


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