I’ve just typed a reply and thought I had posted it but it seems to have disappeared. So lets try and remember what I had said.
Greybird, yes there was a booklet on Card 3 and this was by Kate Armitage and showed many variations on what you could do with that basic Card 3 punchcard. She also did one on Card 1.
Then as a variation on a theme there was a lady called Pat Stanton who had articles published in the To and Fro magazine or the Electronic To & Fro magazine. Pat produced some lovely garments using variations on tuck stitch and sometimes in conjunction with the ribber. Then I believe she also did something similar with slip stitch.
A long time ago now we had a guest speaker at our Knitting Club – sadly the club no longer exists – but this lady was Pam Turbett and she was a dressmaker and definitely not a knitter. Pam had someone knit her up lengths of knitting, yards and yards of this – sometimes it could have been lace knitting, and then Pam treated this like fabric and laid out her pattern and made up the garment using both her sewing machine and an overlocker. Pam then went on to produce some books on how she did this – by the way her patterns were proper paper patterns like Butterick or Simplicity.
Then there was yet another lady from South Africa who did great things using knitweave and her name is Audrey Palmer and again she produced several books on her technique.
It just goes to show just how versatile our knitting machines can be, When my local knitting club existed we were very lucky in that we seemed to have an excellent source of industrial yarns and they made quite a difference to our knitting.
Earlier I had mentioned tuck lace and then there was something peculiar to Brother machine only and this was fine lace.
Other excellent books are those by Mary Weaver and Kathleen Kinder.