My dear friend, the very talented and wonderful Felicity Ford has recently embarked on a campaign to produce a new knitting book unlike any knitting book that has ever come before. Currently entitled The KNITSONIK Stranded Colourwork Sourcebook, this tome aims to be the go-to resource for taking those everyday things and places that make up all our little worlds and turning them into colourwork knitting patterns. Word of this project - as well as the Kickstarter campaign to fund it - has been making the rounds on social media as of late, and today I am honoured that TODAY my blog is the designated stop on the KNITSONIK Blog Tour!
Earlier I had the chance to throw a few questions in Felix's direction about her VERY EXCITING colourwork sourcebook. This is what we said.
I know that you do a lot
of work with sounds – especially everyday sounds. How does this influence your work / HOW (or)
WILL you incorporate this into the book?
Listening
gives you a new way of seeing things. Working with sounds deepens my appreciation
for the distinctive character and texture of places. This is a general influence on the themes for The KNITSONIK
Stranded Colourwork Sourcebook: if I had not spent hours of my life leaning
against walls and trees, listening, I doubt I'd have noticed the things I
decided to knit in this book.
My
good comrade in sound - Patrick McGinley - said the stranded knitting swatches
are like "visual field recordings" and that is a pretty astute
observation. To make a field recording you have to stand still, pay attention,
be present, and open to noticing details in your environment. The woodpecker you
hear on the way to work; snow melting in a drain and dripping in a beautiful
way. Making field recordings of these moments turns them into something - a RECORD
- that can be shared with the world! Knitted swatches can also document things and
textures noticed in daily life, and - like working with audio - our knitting
can be rooted in a slow, mindful process of noticing.
The
book also contains some swatches rooted specifically in my soundwork. I'm
making a swatch based on my EDIROL R-09 - my little digital recorder, for
instance. This wonderful device has survived a fall into a pond, and is held
together with duct tape; it's my favourite tool and poses particular challenges
for colourwork because it is black, shiny, plasticky and not exactly
picturesque! But I love this device
and reckon most knitters own a tool which they treasure and would love to
celebrate in the medium of stranded knitting, so I think it's a useful case
study to include in the book. I'm also making a swatch based on my commute
along the A4074 road which was the subject of a documentary radio show I made some
years ago for the BBC. Many things I noticed in the process of recording
traffic, wind in cropfields, night-birds and weather need to now be celebrated
in colourwork!
Whilst
working on this book, I am simultaneously producing an album - The KNITSONIK
Audible Textures Resource - which knitters will be able to buy through iTunes when
the book comes out, if they choose. This album will convey sounds from the
places in Reading which have inspired the book, and also sounds from the specific
landscape of Shetland, where the Jamieson & Smith 2 ply I'm using was
grown. So you can listen to the source of the wool, and my sources of
inspiration while you knit, if you like! Or you can just get the book. My
2-part KNITSONIK podcast - "Finding The Fabric of The Place" give a
good sense of how these ideas fit together in sound!
This book is rather
concept-y, but I think it’s an easy concept for most knitters to “get.” How will you make this book accessible to the
knitter who is new to this concept?
The
book is concept-y, but the general idea
of finding inspiration in our lives is already present in the knitting world,
so I'm hoping it's not such a radical jump to imagine a sourcebook which really
unpacks that idea - and specifically which does that in relation to stranded
knitting.
In
terms of communicating concepts, it's an old cliche, but a picture really does paint a thousand words. I knew from
the start of this adventure that getting the images and design exactly right are
key to the success of this book. My system for developing colourwork based on
everyday life is largely based on seeing
things in a certain way, and reams of words will not communicate this as clearly
as meaningful images. For this reason, I have found the best designer in
knit-publishing and the best photographer I know of to work with me on the book:
Nic Blackmore and Fergus Ford.
I'm
encouraged that even in the short time that the Kickstarter campaign has been
live, the beautiful video that Fergus shot and editing and the promotional
images I've made seem to be really speaking to people. Knitters are talking
about their bricks, the new way they are looking at the world after watching
the Kickstarter video, etc. This is all really encouraging and confirms my
instinct that amazing production values and a precise focus for the pictures
will make this book make sense!
In your podcasts and
descriptions of this project you really deliver a strong sense of place
regarding Oxford and Reading. I think it’s important to show knitters who
aren’t used to thinking that way that their own cities and towns, and the weird
little things that they love, are ready to be celebrated in their own
right. Do you think that this is an idea
whose time has come?
Thanks
so much for your kind words on my descriptions and podcast, I really do try to
get a strong sense of place into my work. I am passionate about celebrating my
everyday reality, and I love to transmit that enthusiasm wherever I can,
because I think we need it!
I
definitely do think that the time has come to celebrate - as you so nicely put
it - "the weird little things" people love. That's one reason why the
EDIROL R-09 is in the book! I wanted to show that whatever is personal and
precious and special TO YOU can be embedded in your knitting, and deserves to
be celebrated.
Giving
my "Quotidian Colourwork" class at Shetland Wool Week last year consolidated
my instinct that this idea really should become a book. What I loved about that
class was how people held and spoke about the things they had bought in as
inspirations - their photos, their pictures, their treasure. We had great
conversations in the course of figuring out how to knit them. I am grateful for
the energy and enthusiasm that knitters brought to that class, and want to
infuse the book with the same sense of mutual respect, playing with colours,
and valuing daily life that we enjoyed there!
Are you familiar with
the term “psychogeography?” I’ve heard
you as much define it in your podcasts with your sticks-on-railings and field
recordings in and around Oxford.
Psycho-geography – the added layers of personal experience and memory
laid out upon the geographical plan of a place.
How much do you think that this has influenced your work and this book?
I've
come across that term and am definitely inspired by the idea that we map
concepts and memories over our environments, and that where we live is both a
layer of physical geography, and mental geography. Recording sounds creates a
special relationship with memory - you remember where you stood with the
recorder, where exactly you were in relation to the sounds you were
documenting, whether it was cold or there was a wind - and the recording can
bring the whole sensation of being somewhere immediately into my mind. In the
same way, knitting is a record of time. I can always remember where I was when
I was knitting a sweater or a hat, and what was going on then... so I think
there is a sort of KNITSONIK psychogeography that I am practicing; a mixing-up
of places with sounds, knitting and memories.
For
instance when I walk past St. Mary's Butts Church in Reading, I always remember
harvesting black walnuts from the tree in the grounds, dyeing yarn with them in
my kitchen, photographing the brickwork on the church, and then knitting that
brickwork. Sounds, stitches, surfaces, places... they are all combined and
after working on this book I am sure all of Reading will seem to me like a
giant collection of KNIT and SONIK impressions, overlaid on the actual
physicality of the streets. And I will feel closer to this place I think for
creating those associations.
I think it’s important
to celebrate and appreciate the things we are surrounded by each day –
especially the little things that we are around so often we hardly notice them
anymore. To me it’s a natural urge to
want to turn them into knitwear because that’s my medium of choice. We are
material beings in a physical space. What do you make of our need to MAKE
THINGS?
I
love your celebrations of the everyday in knitting! ALL your designs are
amazing, but my particular favourites include the Guardian Building Mittens, Circuit,
and Polska; I gasped out loud when I saw Polska on Ravelry and it made me run
to the cupboard to see if we still had a bit of crockery I remembered which had
been painted in that style.
That's
the thing: the effort and imagination invested in MAKING THINGS from the real
world makes you look with fresh eyes back at that same world. I was
re-enchanted with that style of pottery after seeing your fabulous knitted
rendition of it, and - likewise - if I ever am lucky enough to see the Guardian
Building I should like very much to visit with my mittens on, creating an
imaginative and celebratory connection with the building which would massively
enhance my experience of being there.
For
me the need to MAKE THINGS based on daily life has a dual function. Firstly,
the process of observing THE THING - whether it is the tilework of the Guardian
building in your case or the crumbling old deco factory in mine - sort of
impresses it into your mind. I've gone back and forth on the exact shades of
pink for that swatch many times, and love to notice how the light changes the
way that pink stucco glows whenever I pass it... so there is that thing where
you just gain this lovely, complex appreciation for the world and its charms
through the process of very closely observing it. Then if you KNIT those
observations, you kind of embed them back into daily life? I love to paint and
draw, but as soon as you frame a piece of paper and stick it on the wall it
loses some of its connections to the mundane and to the everyday. But if it
becomes socks or mittens, it continues to circulate there! The inspiration
starts sneaking into your laundry basket, onto your radiator, into your sock
drawer, and it's right there on your hands or your feet when you look down. I
love that. For me, wanting to keep that rich cycle going of inspiration, daily
life, inspiration, daily life, is at the very heart of my urge to MAKE THINGS.
I
think it makes life better.
What would you say to
someone who thinks that knitting buildings is silly?
I
would probably give them my copy of "Knitting Architecture" by Tanis Gray and something super, super precious from my personal stash to make a
project from it. Seriously, I would be very keen to win that person over,
because I think they would be missing out on a lot of fun!
Translating a big,
public thing, like a building, into a small, personal item like a pair of
woolly mittens, is something very close to my heart. Moreover, it’s something that I simply CAN’T
NOT do (if that makes sense.) What has drawn you towards this (some might say
odd) way of seeing things?
I
think it comes back to what I was saying before, which is that the whole process
of observing something closely enough to turn it into a coherent, knit-able
chart really causes you to appreciate its details. I am drawn to the process of
deepening my connection with my environment, falling in love with the little
things in life, and then putting my celebrations back into the everyday places
which inspired them by making them wearable.
I
could achieve the same sense of deep observation through drawing, but drawing
and painting do not have the same provocative and exciting connections with clothing,
social history and land-use that the medium of hand-knitting possesses. Knitting
has associations with economies of dress; the history of labour (usually
women's labour); and the politics of land use. Hand-knits are a site of
meaning, and I am incredibly drawn to the richness of that site as a place to
play and explore as a maker.
I
also love that knitting is useful.
You incorporate a rather
diverse collection of things into a colourwork patterning style that is clearly
not Fair Isle but somehow evokes a sense of Fair Isle. It’s like a modern take
on traditional patterns. How do you see your work fitting into the Grand
Tradition of knitwear/knitting?
That
is a super question. In simple terms, I love that Fair Isle knitting and the
stranded colourwork of Estonia underline connections between knitters and where
they are from. Looking at those Grand Traditions of knitwear - and listening to
knitters from Shetland and Estonia speaking about their knitting - has made me long to create connections in my own
knitting between where I live and where I come from in culture.
Growing
up in Croydon on the outskirts of London, with non-knitting parents, in the
suburbs, and living now in Reading, 40 miles west of London, I can't really lay
claim to any great textile traditions!
But my little Felix-shaped place in the world is nevertheless full of
references. I love the things that have shaped the texture of my life like
A-roads and dandelions and crumbly old buildings at the edges of Britain's
industrial estates. Since I do not have a specific textile tradition to draw
on, why not draw on these sources and
share what I discover through that process? And perhaps other knitters -
similarly not born into specific, Grand Traditions - might enjoy an adventure with
me, exploring what happens when we make up our own? That's a big theme for the
KNITSONIK Stranded Colourwork Sourcebook.