Cover photo
coming soon
Borrow first · 3 / 5
The Expectant Knitter
- Organized by trimester — a genuinely useful structure for a knitting pregnancy book
- Good variety: garments, blankets, and something for mama
- Pregnancy anecdotes woven throughout add real warmth
- Standard diagrams included
- Designs are relatively modern for the publication year
- Yarn sourcing was possible — not always a given with older books
- Lifestyle photography hasn't aged well — not up to today's standards
- Missing the flat front/back garment photos that make patterns easier to execute
- Feels a little dated overall — more modern than most knitting books, but still dated
- Not every pattern will appeal — maybe 2–3 worth knitting for most people
Published in 2008, this book is structured around pregnancy trimesters — simpler projects for the first and third when you may be exhausted or uncomfortable, more ambitious ones for the second when you feel human again. That structure is genuinely smart and I appreciate that the author thought about it that way. There are also brief pregnancy anecdotes alongside the patterns, which gives the book a warmth that a lot of knitting books lack.
The designs are relatively modern for their age — more so than a lot of knitting books from the same era. That said, they do feel dated, and the lifestyle photography is not what you'd expect from a knitting book published today. My one consistent frustration is shared with a lot of knitting books: I wish there were simple flat front-and-back photos of every garment rather than prioritizing lifestyle shots. Standard schematic diagrams are included, which helps, but the flat photo would help more.
I've only knit one pattern so far — the Girl's Summer Suit, which is a genuinely lovely find. There are probably one or two more I'll get to. The best discovery from this book wasn't even the pattern itself but the yarn it called for: Blue Sky Fibers Organic Cotton, which I hadn't used for garments before and now love. That alone was worth opening the book.
Borrow it from your library first if you can, or buy a used copy — it's widely available secondhand. The Girl's Summer Suit alone might justify the shelf space depending on your knitting queue. But the real win here was discovering Blue Sky Fibers Organic Cotton. That yarn is worth the price of the book.
Cover photo
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Worth buying · 4 / 5
One-Stitch Baby Knits
- Everything in garter stitch — genuinely accessible to new knitters
- Smart design decisions: kimono-style jackets, drawstring mittens — things that actually work for babies
- Skill level is color-coded per pattern — know where to start before you start
- Clear instructions throughout, good photos
- Range goes deeper than you'd expect — not just beginner projects
- Garter-only constraint means limited texture — everything has the same visual register
- Not the book to grow into beyond beginner stage
- Some photos run small in print edition
This is the book I'd hand a knitter who just found out they're pregnant and has never knit a garment. Every single pattern uses garter stitch — the most basic stitch in knitting — which removes the technique barrier entirely and lets you focus on the actual construction. And the construction is surprisingly thoughtful. Kimono-style jackets that don't have to be pulled over a newborn's head. Drawstring mittens that stay on. Val Pierce wasn't just filling page count — she thought about what actually works for babies and built patterns around that.
I read this during my first pregnancy, when I was still a fairly new knitter. The skill level is coded by color on each pattern, so you always know what you're getting into before you start. The range is wider than the garter-only premise suggests — there are patterns here that will genuinely challenge a newer knitter, including construction types and shaping that take practice to execute well. The photography is clear and the instructions are clean. It's the most forgiving technical start to baby knitting I've found in book form.
Highly recommend for first pregnancies, especially if you're relatively new to knitting. The garter constraint is actually a feature — it forces you to care about construction rather than hiding behind stitch interest. You'll learn more about shaping and garment logic from these 22 patterns than you will from fancier books with complicated stitch work.
Cover photo
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Worth buying · 4 / 5
What to Knit When You're Expecting
- Trimester structure is well thought out — harder projects early, fast projects late
- Good pattern variety: booties, blankets, sweaters, cardigans, bibs, toys
- Instructions are clear with few reported errors — genuinely usable
- Author's personal anecdotes give it a warm, personal register
- More modern feel than The Expectant Knitter despite similar premise
- Some patterns require circular needles — not ideal for beginners avoiding them
- Pattern range is 0–12 months only — nothing for toddler stage
- A few patterns are more cute than practical — won't make everything in it
This is the cleaner, more modern version of the trimester-organized pregnancy knitting book. The structure is smart: the patterns assigned to the first trimester are more ambitious, because you have months to finish them. Third trimester patterns are fast by design, because by then you just want something you can cast on and finish before the baby arrives. The author lived this — she knit through her own pregnancy and then sorted the results into what she actually used versus what sat in a drawer.
The patterns are well-written and the instructions are clean. People who've knit from this book consistently note the absence of errors, which matters more than it sounds — bad pattern instructions in a book with no errata page are a genuine obstacle. The range is practical: booties, hats, blankets, cardigans, bibs, a few toys. Nothing so complicated it'll stall you, nothing so simple it feels like filler. The one limitation is the age range — it stops at 12 months, so it won't carry you through the toddler years. But for a single-pregnancy companion book, it's the best trimester-organized option I've used.
If you're choosing between this and The Expectant Knitter — buy this one. More modern, fewer errors, patterns I'd actually make. The trimester structure works the same way in both books, but this one executes it more cleanly. Worth having on your shelf rather than borrowing.
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Worth buying · 4 / 5
Sweet Knits for Baby
- 30 genuinely modern patterns — this doesn't feel dated
- Wide technique range: cables, lace, intarsia, fairisle, slipped stitches
- Covers 0–3 years — one of the few books that goes properly into toddler sizing
- Clear instructions and schematics throughout
- Good mix of garments, accessories, and toys
- Designed around Jody Long's own Ciao yarn — substitutions require some homework
- Technique range means not all patterns are accessible to beginners
- Some patterns are more ambitious than they look at first glance
Jody Long is a prolific knitwear designer and this book shows it. Thirty patterns, clean instructions, modern aesthetic — this is what a baby knitting book looks like when it's designed by someone who actually cares about the visual result. The range goes from cables to lace to fairisle, which means there's something genuinely challenging in here alongside the accessible beginner patterns. The sizing runs from newborn through age three, which is rarer than it should be — most baby knitting books stop at 12 months and leave you on your own for the toddler years.
The one honest caveat: the book was designed around Long's proprietary Ciao yarn, a 100% merino superwash DK. That's a great yarn, but it's not universally stocked. The substitution math isn't complicated — you need a DK weight superwash merino with similar yardage — but it does add a step. If you're already sourcing yarn independently this is a non-issue. If you're newer to substitutions, budget time for it before you cast on.
This is my go-to recommendation for knitters who've finished one or two baby projects and want a book with more range. The 0–3 sizing is the real selling point — you'll actually use this book across multiple years rather than shelving it after the baby turns one. Yarn substitution is required but straightforward if you know what you're looking for.
Cover photo
coming soon
Borrow first · 3 / 5
Baby Gifts to Knit
- Over 60 patterns — genuinely comprehensive at this price point
- Beautiful photography and highly illustrated throughout
- Organized by color scheme — makes coordinating gift sets simple
- Wide variety: booties, hats, blankets, dresses, sweaters, stuffed animals
- Both photos and diagrams for each pattern — more instructional than most
- Color-scheme organization makes finding patterns by type less intuitive
- Translated from French — some terminology inconsistencies remain
- Yarn weight labeling is inconsistent — requires interpretation
- Not every pattern justifies the effort relative to simpler alternatives
This is a beautiful book and a genuinely impressive collection — over 60 patterns organized by color scheme, covering everything from booties and bibs to coats, dresses, and stuffed animals. The photography is excellent. The diagrams are clear. If you're shopping for a baby knitting book based on cover appeal and sheer pattern count, this one wins. Originally published in France in 2012, it was translated and adapted for an American knitting audience in 2014, and for the most part the adaptation is competent.
The color-scheme organization is the book's most distinctive feature and also its most polarizing. On one hand, it makes gifting easy — you can build an entire coordinated set by flipping to the right color section. On the other, if you're looking for a specific garment type and don't remember which color section it fell into, you're hunting through the whole book. The translation leaves some yarn weight labeling inconsistent — not wrong, exactly, but imprecise in ways that require you to do some interpretation before casting on. Browse this one before buying if you can.
Borrow first. If you find 5–6 patterns you'd genuinely make, it's worth buying — especially secondhand. If you're mostly drawn to the photography, that satisfaction wears off faster than you'd expect and the organizational quirks start to feel annoying. The pattern quality is good; the editing is just uneven.
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