Perlego Ereader: Patterns, Design and Creativity
Perlego Ereader: Patterns, Design and Creativity
Perlego Ereader: Patterns, Design and Creativity
Using Patterns
Textile practices such as knitting and sewing are blessed with a rich
diversity of shared designs which makers have used, adapted, reinvented
and contributed to over generations. Many such designs are linked with
particular regional communities, such as the intricate two-colour geometric
glove designs which emerged in the Scottish town of Sanquhar in the late
eighteenth century. Traditionally, these patterns would have been passed on
orally from generation to generation. Alison McGavin, a Sanquhar knitter
interviewed in 1955, suggested that ‘there are some bits you can’t do unless
you’ve seen them done’.2 Since the nineteenth century, however, it has
increasingly been common practice to document garment instructions in an
accessible form through patterns. An explosion of hand-knitting books
provided patterns for items such as caps, shawls, baby clothes, mittens,
stockings and blankets when the craft became a respectable hobby for
middle-class women in the 1830s.3 Sewing patterns have a similarly long
history: the same decade saw the first of many clothing-related books and
periodicals for women containing patterns in some form being published.
These books were followed by the first paper patterns a couple of decades
later.4
Over time, patterns have varied in the amount of detail offered. The first
sewing patterns for domestic use provided scant information, assuming a
significant amount of knowledge on the part of the maker.5 The same is true
of early knitting patterns.6 Patterns also vary in terms of complexity, from
basic options for beginners to ‘couture’ projects requiring a high level of
skill. In their most common format, sewing patterns combine full-size
shaped pattern pieces with step-by-step guidance, while knitting patterns
provide instructions in the form of written, and sometimes graphically
represented, code. These resources are invaluable in guiding makers
through what is – even for a simple garment – a relatively complicated
construction process, providing a highly effective means of communicating
instructions from one person to another and recording procedures for future
reference.
Despite their ubiquity, patterns are not without problems. For example, in
her interview Rosie Martin spoke about novice sewers being afraid of
patterns and not knowing how to approach them. As Rachael Matthews
explained, this is also the case with knitting: ‘Most people that haven’t used
a pattern ever before, they’re terrified of it, because it’s all in code. They
just look at it, freak out, and say that’s not for me.’ Even experienced
makers can sometimes have difficulty deciphering pattern instructions –
whether due to a temporary lack of the lateral thinking skills required on the
part of the user, or unclear coding by the pattern writer. I have heard many
stories about poor-quality knitting patterns, such as projects published with
sections of the instructions missing and jumpers with neckholes insufficient
to stretch over a head. I have also heard both knitters and sewers criticise
the fit of some patterns, describing them as sloppy, shapeless or drafted
only for a specific figure. Makers sometimes complain about a lack of clear
visual information; seductively styled photographs often fail to
communicate the true shape of a finished item. Despite the massive choice
of patterns now available, some people struggle to find styles that they want
to wear – perhaps because their tastes are not being catered for, or because
they are unaware of the full diversity of designs on offer. In a way, this is
another form of enclosure: it could be argued that patterns are as restrictive
to the commons as the ready-made clothes available in the shops. A further
problem can be identifying patterns which are suitable for your skill level,
as Hereford knitter Kiki described:
I try and find a pattern that’s not too difficult, which is difficult in itself
(laughs). Especially when you ask the person in the shop and they say it’s a
relatively easy one, and then you get home and you haven’t a clue.
People who sew often don’t see themselves as creative. They see it as
something you can do if you’re not a creative person, because that recipe is
already there, the sewing pattern … so all you’re doing is following
instructions.
This way of thinking seems to be pretty widespread. It has its benefits: if
making clothes is thought to be uncreative, then the activity arguably
becomes more accessible, as people do not have to identify as ‘artistic’ or
‘creative’ in order to get involved. Yet in many ways this perspective
downplays the value of folk fashion and contributes to the long-standing
hierarchy of fine art over craft.
One area of fashion that for years has dangled its devotees on puppet strings
is handknitting. […] The puppet strings are labelled always and never […]
Thinking in such absolute terms produces copycat knitters who blindly
follow someone else’s dictates.16
The complex format of the written knitting pattern further contributes to
this problem. Maggie Whiting explains that when presented with ‘lengthy,
row by row written instructions [...] even many experienced knitters often
[have] no idea how to adapt patterns to suit themselves’.17
Despite these barriers, I have found that makers often do start to adapt
patterns as they gain experience and confidence. In many cases, patterns
themselves support a degree of adaptation. Dressmaking patterns have long
been designed – as Marcia McLean describes – ‘so that the sewer could
choose various options and features, giving her a role to play in the design
of the garment’.18 Similarly, knitting patterns usually include multiple sizes
and sometimes a number of style variations. And makers frequently venture
beyond the options provided by the pattern. Margarethe Szeless suggests
the term ‘unorthodox home dressmaking’ to describe the way in which
home sewers exceed these boundaries,19 and the same practice is now
described in the sewing world as ‘pattern-hacking’. A widespread
‘unorthodox’ approach employed by knitters is the use of a different yarn to
that specified in the pattern. More experienced knitters might even use a
yarn of a different weight or a different stitch, or vary the design, as
Hereford knitter Alex described:
I look at things and think, I really like that, but I would make the neck
lower, and I’ll make the sleeves shorter, and I’ll make the body longer …
I’ll take this idea, I’ll take 90 per cent of this pattern, and I’ll just do the bits
that I want, so that I know I’ll wear it and be comfortable in it.
I always want to tweak it a little bit, or change it. For instance, I had this
weird funky pattern from the 80s for a wrap dress. I really liked the top, so I
ended up adapting the pattern so I could just make it into a blouse.
Online platforms are now making it possible for makers to share their
adaptations with others, fuelling further activity. As Rachel Kinnard
explains, the BurdaStyle website – like knitting website Ravelry – provides
a platform for user-generated variations on commercially produced patterns:
‘This extensive catalog serves as a library as well as a source of inspiration
for members’ own versions, and also represents a genuine alternative to the
popular image of the “designer as genius”.’20 Other pattern companies
actively encourage users to hack their designs, sharing and rewarding
inventive adaptations. By Hand London, for example, ran a ‘Pattern
Hackathon’, where they invited customers to ‘show off [their] favourite
hacks, hybrids and lovechildren’.21
While many makers derive great satisfaction from using patterns, whether
adapting them or following them faithfully, there are plenty of people who
have the desire to work without commercial patterns and instead design
their own projects. In some cases, this is because they cannot find patterns
for what they want to make; in others it is because they are keen to feel a
greater sense of creativity in their making practices. I used to run a weekend
workshop in calculating knitting patterns, and at the start of every course I
would ask the participants why they had come along. One woman
memorably responded that she wanted to knit ‘off-piste’ – a statement that
others in the group heartily agreed with. At an early session with the
Hereford knitters, Julia said that she did not like using patterns simply
because ‘I don’t like being told what to do’. Although I have met many
makers who share this desire to design, I think most would agree that it is a
rather intimidating challenge. As Alex commented at the beginning of the
reknitting project: ‘It’s a scary thing to be creative, when you’ve got nobody
anywhere giving you a nod that you’re on the right line.’
What does design mean? Influential design thinker Herbert Simon argues,
‘Everyone designs who devises courses of action aimed at changing
existing situations into preferred ones.’22 Victor Papanek takes a similar
line, saying that ‘The planning and patterning of any act toward a desired,
foreseeable end constitutes the design process.’23 Despite these
impressively inclusive definitions – open in their understanding of what is
being designed, and who is able to design – it is fair to say that design, as
Philip Pacey suggests, is commonly thought of as ‘a modern activity
practised more or less exclusively by a professional elite’.24 The
consequence of this is that design carried out by amateurs is generally seen
as either non-existent or crude and incompetent, a perspective that
corresponds with the more general denigration of the homemade. This is
unfair and inaccurate, of course. While some clothing designed by amateurs
is indeed rather crude, there is nothing to say that an amateur cannot come
up with just as elegant a design as any professional.
I’m really interested in geometric patterns, and how you can make
clothing out of geometric shapes. A lot of the clothing that I do for myself
will be based on triangles or on squares – and how you can make those fit
together and make cool clothing out of them.
It’s one of these things you’re told that you can’t believe until you’ve
done it. Everybody has to do it for themselves to understand what you get
out of it, you can’t be told. Certainly I feel, now, that doing any samples or
trying out wool is not a waste of time because it adds to a benefit of what
you’re eventually going to do.
She went on to explain: ‘I would have thought that was beyond me before,
that was something that designers did.’ These comments reveal a shift in
what Alex felt she was ‘allowed’ to do as a folk fashion maker, and an
important blurring of the lines between professional and amateur activity. I
see this as yet another potent way of challenging enclosure: stepping
beyond the established role of the ‘home sewer’ or ‘home knitter’.
Design Considerations
If I did something simple like that, I know I would be prepared to wear it.
I like the frills, but I don’t think I’d wear them. It’s not me, I’m not frilly. I
like them, I think they look lovely, but they’re not what I’d wear.
At the same time the knitters were thinking about their preferences as
makers, considering the scale and complexity of various options and
choosing one which felt right for them. In some cases, options were felt to
be too complex. Kiki, for example, simplified the plan for her garment to
make it more manageable. For some of the knitters, time was the critical
factor. Margaret said she was not being too ambitious because she had little
time available to complete the project. She did, however, take the
opportunity to use new techniques which appealed to her: ‘I might stitch-
hack my initials, because I’d love to just do a bit’; ‘I quite fancy the idea of
knitting down, because I’ve not done that before.’ In the early stages of the
design process, Julia considered two possible projects, comparing them in
terms of effort and reward: ‘I think that one would be easier. But this one, I
think I’d be more pleased with the result. I’d feel I’d achieved a bit more
with this one.’
I was impressed by the way in which the knitters were able to balance
these multiple factors and come up with successful designs which they were
happy to wear. They each developed a vision for their item and formulated
a workable design which was flexible enough to embrace the contingencies
of the existing garments. In the process, the knitters created their own
patterns, which took different forms: conventional row-by-row written
notes, graphically represented stitch-by-stitch diagrams and even a general
plan held only in the knitter’s memory. During the project, I observed them
grow in confidence and begin to trust their own instincts about aspects of
design such as colour, balance and silhouette. After the project finished,
they were excited by the prospect of continuing to design and make.
Catherine – who had previously been a professional artist – reported that
the experience had allowed her to reclaim an important aspect of her
identity: ‘This is the bit that is me and the bit that has felt “asleep” for a
hundred years – reawakened, excited and raring to go.’
It is important to note that this ability to design did not emerge from
nowhere; it was aided by the knitters’ tacit knowledge of knitting and the
support of the group. Tacit knowledge is sometimes described as ‘personal
know-how’ and contrasted with formal or explicit knowledge, which can be
expressed and transmitted via language. I observed the knitters drawing on
their tacit knowledge of knitting throughout the design process, and I
believe that this was crucial to their ability to design. They used this
understanding to inform their initial ideas, consider technical issues,
anticipate how a proposed alteration would look, and evaluate the
complexity of a proposed alteration. It is particularly interesting to note that
this tacit knowledge, which enabled the knitters to design, had been gained
primarily through the use of knitting patterns. In the introduction to her
book which aims to support knitters in designing and calculating their own
garments, Barbara Walker writes: ‘Those who blindly follow commercial
knitting directions may never have given themselves time to understand
garment construction, so they remain always at the same level of untutored
helplessness.’31 I disagree; this project shows that when knitters use
patterns, they build up a stock of transferable tacit knowledge. While
knitters may feel rather helpless, in a supportive space they are able to apply
this tacit knowledge and use it successfully to design garments for
themselves. This process is not restricted to knitters. Rosie Martin
mentioned the value of tacit knowledge, gained through using patterns, for
sewers: ‘By making more and more different patterns, they’re building up
their repertoire and skills. It’s almost like you can build this pile of what
you know by stacking up your pattern envelopes.’
Along with tacit knowledge, I would also identify peer support as being
crucial to the design process. During the project, the knitters worked
collaboratively, discussing their projects in pairs and small groups. They
helped each other by making suggestions, sharing expertise and giving
encouragement. I see this as ‘dialogic’ design: a conversational equivalent
of drawing. While, like many other designers, I draw and redraw to explore
and fine-tune my ideas, the knitters’ ideas developed through discussion,
evolving and becoming clearer with each iteration. When they reflected on
the experience, they felt these conversations and the support of the others in
the group had been particularly important. This comment from Anne
summarised the collective view: ‘I don’t know that I’d be very good on my
own, sat at home, trying to come up with something. So I love the
collaboration bit of it, chatting about it, the exchanging of ideas.’ Kiki made
a similar point: ‘I need to feed off other people, I think, to get ideas, and
then to gain confidence in my ideas, I suppose.’
Creative Appropriation
Satisfying Needs
Might the ability to make more creative decisions amplify the benefits of
making and, in particular, more intensely satisfy the human need for
creation? I believe this is the case – but only for makers who have a desire
for this experience. Many people are strongly attracted by the relaxing
mode of making and find that following patterns is the best way of
accessing this form of relaxation – choosing, as others have in the past, ‘to
eliminate […] the time consuming and anxiety-ridden process of drafting
original designs’.34 Nevertheless, for those people who are searching for a
greater sense of creativity, the experience of designing can deliver great
satisfaction. During the reknitting workshops, Margaret talked about the joy
of taking her garment ‘somewhere else’ through the creation of an original
design, rather than – as she often felt when adapting existing patterns –
‘ending up with a mish-mash of what it should have been’. Making
contributes to identity construction; if makers consider producing their own
designs to be more creative than the ‘conventional’ practice of using
patterns – as the Hereford knitters did – then, by engaging in this activity,
they strengthen this positive sense of identity.
On the other hand, the various satisfactions associated with design can be
compromised if folk fashion makers fall into the trap of expecting a project
to turn out exactly right on the very first attempt. Designing and making
clothes is a tricky process. To get the most out of the experience, makers
need to realise that problems are not mistakes, but rather an integral part of
this process. Even with a decade’s experience of designing and making
knitwear, I expect to take a few attempts to get a garment exactly right –
especially if I am trying to create an unfamiliar garment shape or working
with a new yarn. In my experience, amateur designers give themselves only
one chance for success and tend to beat themselves up if their project does
not turn out as desired. Rachael Matthews talked about the importance of
being willing to make mistakes:
It’s really hard, because how many times have we all knitted something
and gone – oh shit, done it wrong, just unravel it. It’s so valuable that we’re
not frightened of doing that. Because it’s so easy to be precious, isn’t it?
That thing of giving someone permission to do something, you can get that
really wrong. You could actually be really freaking them out, because inside
they’re saying, I couldn’t possibly do that! I can’t imagine what she’s
saying!
As we discussed this further, Rachael described how she gets round this
problem:
I probably say things like – in all the time that you’ve got working with
this yarn and these needles and following the pattern up the front and the
back, you’ve got plenty of time to think about how you would decrease the
stitches on the sleeves. And you can always do those decreases and unravel
it, and try it again.
‘Platforms for creativity’ can refer to anything that is designed to foster the
creativity of people, or to encourage creative conversations, as part of
everyday life or within a more particular context. Platforms for creativity
can be events, spaces, environments or tools. […] These platforms,
whatever their size or type, are about offering people opportunities to
creatively express themselves and to – perhaps, ultimately – transform their
worlds.36
It is widely acknowledged that creativity thrives within restrictions: a
completely blank page can be daunting for even the most experienced
designer. These platforms for creativity, therefore, frame activity and set
open tasks that makers can choose to engage with. A well-designed
platform will take people far beyond what they thought they could do.
Platforms might take the form of challenges, such as a pattern hackathon
promoted by an indie pattern company or an open brief set by a blogger,
with responses shared on Instagram. Something as simple as a craft group
can be a valuable platform for creativity, if the right environment is created
and participants support each other to explore their individual ideas.
Workshops and books can also provide platforms. For example, Print,
Make, Wear by Melanie Bowles and the People’s Print guides makers
through different methods of originating textile designs to be digitally
printed and then used to create totally one-off garments.37 Similarly,
Felicity Ford’s Knitsonik Stranded Colourwork Sourcebook supports
knitters to design their own patterned knits, taking inspiration from their
local surroundings.38
32. Trousers made using Hackney Lights print by Ruth Esme Mitchell,
from Print, Make, Wear by Melanie Bowles and the People’s Print.
A New Role
Notes