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Enrich your favourite knitwear by dipping your needles
into the palette of painterly knitwear designer, Kaffe
Fassett
Published
in time for Christmas, but intended as a companion for
life, this is a new book from the original master of
colour and pattern.
Tall and still strikingly handsome, Kaffe Fassett's looks and his
creative energy belie his 65 years. He led the way into
his light, bright front room and sat on the floor on a
pile of his cushions in the bay window, beneath his
collection of lucky Buddhas. He
explained to me, "Pattern Library" has taken 3 years to
compile. It harks back to my earliest knitting motifs,
featuring designs for the Italian fashion house Missoni,
Scottish fashion designer Bill Gibb and The Peruvian
Connection. Every design in the book is done in basic
stocking stitch, so even beginners can jump in and
unleash their creativity, choosing colours and making
their own personal combinations."
The book begins with a section on geometric patterns, starting with
multi-coloured stripes, which make fabulous blankets and
throws. "The first few pages are steps
that are easy enough for anybody to follow," Kaffe said.
It moves on through wonderful stars, to crosses, zigzags
and 3-D cubes. Later there are colourful photographs of
his figurative patterns, from his famous Apples' design
to flamboyant 'Daisy' and ceramic vases. I asked him how
he managed to put so many colours together in each
pattern to such exciting effect. He said, "As you travel
you collect up a collage of wonderful colour
combinations in your head. When you play with ideas, out
it comes, because it is in you." He added, "But you have
to begin to value looking. You don't just say `that's
pretty' and pass on, you quickly analyse it."
In the book, he writes, "For outrageous dancing on the table colour, look
at The Simpsons cartoon on TV, circus and bullfighting
posters, paintings by Emile Nolde, Matisse, or any of
the Fauve school of painters. Or better still, travel to
India, Africa or Guatemala and spend time in local
markets."
At the back of the book all the stitch patterns are given as charts, with
captions giving hints about Kaffe's creations. For
instance there is a vibrant red, green, grey, purple,
black, charcoal, brown, pink, fuchsia, ochre and orange
ties, called `Mirage'. The caption explains, "This
jazzy pattern was inspired by my passion for kilim rugs.
I knitted it on my first trip to India - hence the spicy
hot palette." Since Kaffe was a painter
before he became world famous for his knitwear designs,
I asked if there was any conflict between the two art
forms. "To me it's all the same - it's all the
manipulation of colour," he said. "I would like people
to have fun with this book. To try lots of things they
wouldn't usually knit by making a big sample blanket or
a long scarf and trying patterns out on it. I'm not
telling them what colours to use. They have to make
choices.
Everything is possible; any colour way can be exciting."
The
book helps knitters to do this in a section on using the
charts, which explains in a simple and encouraging way
how to design your own motifs and how to turn the chart
patterns into garments. "You need a maverick streak," he
said. "A woman asked me for a jumper, specifying `no
purple'. I was knitting it, telling myself `no purple'
but then something happened in my head and I just had to
put purple in after all. I delivered it and waited for a
reaction. She came back to me saying she absolutely
loved it and that I had converted her to purple because
of the way in which I'd used it!."
Kaffe's great enthusiasm comes through, and he
suggests that groups of knitters should make blankets of
knitted patches. "By crocheting around each contribution
you needn't worry about the various tensions not coming
up with a uniform size, just add more border until they
equal out. Tassels or fringes
could be a luxurious finish to your splendid group
effort." This is what the knitters in his family do for
each new baby. Kaffe said he feels that since
the late 70s, England has unleashed an eruption of
design talent on the world.
Sasha Kagan, Jamie and Jesse Seaton and Susan Duckworth
and Kaffe have launched
collections, published books and taken part in
exhibitions and TV programmes on
knitting. "This country is now ripe to host its own
celebration of knitting," he
believes. Knitting is therapeutic, because it provides
people with an antidote to the stresses of the modern
world. It is satisfying, too, he says, "I find that all
people who work with their hands are centred people.
They tend to be confident and happy to work with
themselves."
"Kaffe Fassett's Pattern Library" should help unleash many people's creative
spirits. Flipping through its pages you can start with
colourful rows of stripes
and graduate to complex flowers or animal forms. If you
change the colours to suit yourself, all the better,
according to Kaffe. He said, when he sees one of his
patterns in stunning new colours he inwardly celebrates,
and if the new colours don't work, he admires that
person's courage and says to himself, "At least she did
it!"
- Kate Taylor

Kaffe's sampler of designs in the book.
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This article was reprinted
with kind permission from Knitting magazine.
For inquires and subscriptions they can be reached
at:
Knitting
GMC Publications Ltd
166 High Street, Lewes,
East Sussex BN7 1XU
Phone: 01273 488 005
email:
pubs@thegmcgroup.com
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Kaffe Fassett's Pattern Library
Over 190 creative knitwear designs
For over 30 years, Kaffe Fassett has produced some
of the worlds’ most successful knitting designs.
Now, for the first time, Kaffe Fassett’s Pattern
Library brings together in one place a collection of
over 190 of his most brilliant creations.
Each design is illustrated with a close-up
photographic match, accompanied by a detailed color
chart, so you can copy the pattern. A general
chapter on creating your own designs, covering
issues such as scale, repeats and borders, enables
you to share in Kaffe’s creative process and benefit
from his unique tips for designing your own pieces.
Whether you are an experienced knitter or a beginner
looking for the best place to start, the Fassett
creations featured in this book will open up new
possibilities, introducing you to an ever-exciting
world of color.
- Over 190 exquisite patterns from the world’s foremost
textile artist
- Easy-to-follow, illustrated designs with
close-ups and a detailed color chart to enable you
to copy the pattern
- Practical articles and tips to design
your own patterns
ISBN 0-091-88917-0, Ebury Press, 160 pages,
hardback, X25, from bookshops. Website:
www.randomhouse.co.uk
email:
uksoles@randomhouse.co.uk
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