aedifica: A pair of socks I knitted. (socks)
[personal profile] aedifica posting in [community profile] knitting
If I'm writing an academic paper and I find some information I need in someone else's paper, of course I cite them. If I'm writing a knitting pattern and I find something I want to use in someone else's pattern, do I cite them? Or do I just write up the pattern and it's fine as long as I'm not copying someone else's whole pattern?

Bringing an academic background to knitting leads to unexpected questions. :-)

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Date: 2010-03-01 10:45 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] mousefic
I'd definitely cite. Many people don't, but that's one of the things that causes serious grumbles.

Consider, for instance, the way many circular-start patterns cite Emily Ocker as the developer of the great cast-on they use. Similarly, many people cite Barbara Walker when they use her stitch patterns.

There's usually an underlying technique that's really what you're borrowing, though, as these examples demonstrate. You may not want to cite the pattern writer but the developer of the technique.

Also, some techniques have more than passed out of the realm of "needing" to be cited (Barbara Walker doesn't get a footnote on every SSK), but I'd say feel free to mention them, not least because knitting history is pretty spotty and it's nice to remind people of developments that we think of as having always existed.


Note: you probably won't be able to do this in a magazine pattern, for space reasons.

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