Vintage Baby Knits Book Review by Linda
Mood:
a-ok
Topic: Knitting
What do young mothers want for their babies? I feel state of the art on this topic with 3 daughters with 6 grandchildren under age 4 that see regularly. All you other grandmas out there eat your heart out. Plus I listened to a couple of knitting podcasts by young knitters about what their babies really use. Certainly that qualifies me as an expert. Right?
A new book Vintage Baby Knits by Kristen Rengren seems to be the answer. This book includes almost everything my daughters discuss and enough cute items to thrill any baby knitter’s heart. Kristen has taken old patterns from books and magazines and reworked them in contemporary yarns with schematics and sometimes charts. Patterns include a shrug, cardigan, hoodies, cape, kimono, socks, bonnet, christening gown, nursing shawl, a baby blanket, 2 soakers, several sacques, several toys, hats and more.
The patterns are very doable (no Cookie A’s here) and are shown in smooth, washable yarns from cotton, superwash wool, and others that you can see a baby really wearing. They also address most of the practical considerations of the podcasts moms. For instance the podcast moms say cardigans or sacques (not pullovers) and bonnet style hats. The podcast mothers and my daughters too can actually get on a baby and keep them on them.
Did you know that parents don’t use snow suits or coats any more? No, the current safety standards for car seats don’t want that much bunchy fabric between the baby and the safety restraints. Rule breaker that I like to think I am, when it comes to children’s car safety I follow the latest recommendations. So how do these parent’s keep the poor little kids warm on the way to the car and in the car. Handknit superwash wool blankets, bonnets, leg warmers, socks etc. Knitters to the rescue!
When you look at old knitting magazines carefully you see wonderful innovative designs and they aren’t all Elizabeth Zimmerman’s. I even found one from the 40’s a few weeks ago that showed you how to create self-striping patterns with a variegated yarn. I love old knitting patterns to look at, but I don’t love trying to figure out the schematics of a design and reading those tiny directions and trying to find a picture of the item that is big enough for me to see what is going on. Vintage Baby Knits solves this.
My oldest daughter has the most opinions about the “appropriate things” for babies to wear and eat because she belongs to LaLeche League and to many mothering groups on-line. She and my second daughter cloth diaper. Vintage Baby Knits addresses most of the issues of the very particular group including lanolizing the wool soakers for water resistance. As a former sheep breeder and long-time spinner, I wonder if this common requirement of the wool soaker advocates is accurate. But if this is what the mother wants, give it to her. Feels good anyway. The soakers in Kristen’s book are cute and have show row shaping so they would actually fit a baby. I tried to knit a wool soaker for my daughter in worsted weight yarn. I checked out many of the half-baked patterns on the internet and know they wouldn’t fit right. I did design my own soaker and got it ¾ done before I lost interest. My siblings raise their eyebrows when I complain about my daughter’s absolutes when it comes to child rearing. They insist that this sounds just like young mother Linda so I should not be complaining. I know they are right, but…
On top of lots of cool patterns Vintage Baby Knits, includes lots of history both of pattern making and knitting from the early 20th century. All in all I think this book is one of the coolest baby knitting books to come out in many years. Of course I’d change a few things, but not that many.
Now what size should you knit. I personally like to knit 18 or 24 months and the podcast mothers agree. Anything smaller than that although cute as can be, has a 50-50 chance of being in season when the baby should wear it. Fortunately babies stick around 18-24 month sizes for a while and with the flexibility of knitting these sizes will actually get worn. The podcast mothers agree. The only exception I’d make to that would be bonnets for winter babies who definitely need them and perhaps leg warmers or socks. So get out your washable yarn and knit a baby a pattern from Vintage Baby Knits published in 2009 by Stewart, Tabori, & Chang. Knit on Linda