Picture of author.
10+ Works 1,091 Members 20 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Jill Moreno, Jill Moreno

Image credit: courtesy Jillian Moreno

Works by Jillian Moreno

Associated Works

No Sheep for You: Knit Happy with Cotton, Silk, Linen, Hemp, Bamboo & Other Delights (2007) — Contributor, some editions — 528 copies, 11 reviews
Sock Yarn One-Skein Wonders: 101 Patterns That Go Way Beyond Socks! (2010) — Contributor, some editions — 389 copies, 8 reviews
Spin to Knit: The Knitter's Guide to Making Yarn (2006) — Contributor, some editions — 344 copies, 2 reviews
Lace One-Skein Wonders: 101 Projects Celebrating the Possibilities of Lace (2013) — Contributor, some editions — 140 copies, 10 reviews
Knitting In the Sun: 32 Projects for Warm Weather (2009) — Contributor, some editions — 122 copies, 5 reviews
Interweave Knits, Fall 2007 (2007) — Contributor — 77 copies

Tagged

book (3) borrowed (3) clothing (5) crafting (5) crafts (55) design (13) DVD (4) ebook (3) fashion (4) fiber (10) fiber arts (11) garments (3) handspinning (4) hardcover (4) knitting (351) knitting patterns (22) lace (4) library (3) non-fiction (48) own (6) owned (3) pattern (3) patterns (49) plus size (17) plus sizes (4) plus-size (8) projects (4) Ravelry (5) reference (14) shawls (4) socks (5) spinning (52) spinning yarn (6) stricken (4) sweaters (20) technique (4) textiles (6) to-read (9) women (10) yarn (11)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Moreno, Jillian
Other names
Moreno, Jill
Birthdate
20th Century
Gender
female
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Occupations
marketing
Short biography
Big Girl Jillian Moreno was formerly marketing director with Interweave Press, and helped launch magazines like Interweave Knits, Beadwork, and Natural Home Magazine.  She's a catalyst for Knitty.com and a frequent contributor.  She lives in Anne Arbor, Michigan, with her husband and two children. [from Big Girl Knits (2006?)]

Members

Reviews

I have been learning to spin and knit and this book was so helpful! Jillian walks you through how to think through creating the yarn that will work best for the project you want to make, shows examples of how little adjustments throughout the whole spinning process (including fiber prep and finishing) produce differences in your finished yarn and the fabric it will make, and then shares a collection of patterns and projects from a variety of designers. Thoroughly enjoyable and the photos are beautiful.… (more)
 
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erindarlyn | 5 other reviews | Jan 21, 2023 |
This is a really useful book for anyone who wants to think more about what they’re spinning for and how to make the yarn they want. I’m a bit of a one trick pony and consistently spin ‘about fingering’ weight yarn. There are some useful tips in this about ways to shake things up a bit if you’re in a rut or if you just haven’t thought of different approaches.

The chapters I found most useful were the ones dealing with the different ways to spin coloured braids to achieve different effects, and the one on being a more technical spinner thinking about grist, twists per inch etc. There’s a lot in here to either dip into or it’s a fascinating quick read cover to cover. There are also twelve patterns with tips for spinning the yarn for each one.

Although aimed at wheel spinners, and there is a section exploring different wheel set ups, I think there is a lot in here that would be useful to spindle spinners in terms of fibre prep, drafting, working with colour/ply etc. It does mostly deal with traditional yarns, there isn’t anything here really on art yarn, although it is touched on if a few places.

Overall this is a great book and although some of it won’t be particularly new to experienced spinners I think it has enough in it to be of interest to beginners and experienced alike,
… (more)
 
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Rabbitknitter | 5 other reviews | Jul 11, 2020 |
I skim-read* this one as a library book, and have added it to my wish-list so that I can add it to my permanent collection. There are some patterns I want to make, but more importantly some spinning techniques that I want to remember.

* Most of what I read was the technical part of how the spinning method changes the resulting yarn; most of what I skimmed was the cute-but-not-actually-spinning metaphor part that seems meant to connect with people who want a story to go with their spinning. (Note: the book needs this part to make it cohesive and useful to the most people. But it wasn't what I needed to read at the time in order to improve my color-handling when I spin yarn.)… (more)
 
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ca.bookwyrm | 5 other reviews | May 18, 2020 |
I read this in German and have asked my bookstore to order it for me in English.

This is a very useful book for spinners who want to develop ways of spinning different yarns. As usual, it is aimed at those who spin on a wheel and is not as useful for those like me who spindle. Still, I think it will help.

The German translation is well done, but the German title is very uncreative compared to the English. Once I have the English copy, I will borrow the German again to copy the metric measurements in, as the English doesn't seem to include them.… (more)
 
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MarthaJeanne | 5 other reviews | Apr 6, 2019 |

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Statistics

Works
10
Also by
6
Members
1,091
Popularity
#23,546
Rating
4.1
Reviews
20
ISBNs
11
Languages
1

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