Animal Hats by Vanessa Mooncie, photography by Chris Gloag and Rebecca Mothersole, pub. The Taunton Press, 2012. This book contains 15 adorable patterns for hats that resemble animal heads. Most have earflaps; the cat and the pig do not. (The pig does, however, have a fetching curly tail.) The ones with earflaps mostly have cords at the ends of the flaps, with pompoms or tassels at the ends of the cords, but the penguin and the dog have buttons to secure the flaps to the hat. There are only two sizes for each hat: child and adult. Nonetheless, they seem to fit a variety of heads, as evidenced by the staff portrait below. I do wish dimensions were given for the hats themselves. It would be helpful to know beforehand whether the hat I was working on had a chance of fitting my oversized noggin. Though this is mainly a pattern book, it includes a basic techniques section which describes everything needed to make the hats---from basic knit and purl stitches to intarsia to embroidery, pompoms, and sewing up. Also, this book contains a helpful section on lining your hat either with polar fleece or a knitted lining. Instructions are fairly clear, but as a non-seamstress I would be nervous when following the instruction "Stitch the darts where indicated on the pattern template." I see the indication, but I don't know what it means to stitch a dart. Am I supposed to cut it out and then stitch it together? But as a non-seamstress I would probably just knit a lining. The photography does a good job of showing each hat from various angles, and the model truly looks good in each of these silly hats. Many of the hats have a pointy crown, perhaps because of the back seam. Seamed hats, you say? Well, some of these hats feature intarsia, which is most easily worked flat. I'm not sure about the reasoning behind the others. The koala, for instance, at top center, looks distinctly pentagonal, yet its nose is knit separately and the eyes are buttons. This book is full of cute designs. When I knit one for my sister in Minnesota, I will probably convert the pattern to knit the majority of the hat in the round. Which one should I choose? I love the lion (reminiscent of Luna Lovegood's hat in one of the Harry Potter movies), but the elephant looks wonderful in tweed, and they all bring a smile to my face! Kangath reviewed this copy of Animal Hats from her library. All opinions in this review are her own.
1 Comment
Joyce
6/30/2013 12:19:31 pm
These hats make me smile too. Thanks for the review.
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