Posted on Leave a comment

There is a Season

A large rose bed with sweet peas growing up a wooden support.

Each yarn show has its own ‘vibe’, its own season and particular designs that you predict might be popular. The Pop Up Wool Show last Saturday in Port Sunlight is a summer show – and it’s never rained while I’ve been going there – and, as such, I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised that What Do Points Make? is a popular seller.

The thing that does surprise me a bit is that this garment has been a good seller on all of the three occasions I’ve attended this show! Maybe the fact that I wear this item during the show helps – folk can see how it drapes on a real human. I’m sure the fact that it only takes 1 skein (800m) of lace weight yarn for all except the largest size (shown in blue and purple) is also a big plus! It’s reassuring to me that a knitwear design can be popular for more than just one year.

What Do Points Make? was originally a mystery knit-along for Yarn O’clock and folk had no idea what they were making. The way the garment is constructed (starting at the centre bottom of the back) made several knitters think after knitting Part One that it was going to be a top-down triangular shawl!

I like the fact that there are consistencies when returning to a yarn show. You know how set up works, where everything is, and roughly what to expect during the day/weekend.

I’m sure I’ve mentioned before that the Pop Up Wool Show was my first ever ‘proper’ yarn show in 2022. I’d had a stall quite often at the local pop up shop before Covid, but that was a general crafts/gifts/small business type pop up shop and not one where the customers were specifically coming for wool related stuff. It’s been really interesting over the past couple of days to look back at the photos from my first stand there in 2022 and comparing it to Saturday’s set-up. I’m quietly proud of how it has developed – though of course several of the designs are still present and correct!

Here’s 2022:

And here is 2024!:

The next show is Yarn Gathering in just under a month, followed by Yarndale just two weeks later. I had thought that Yarndale would be my final show of the year, but there are some more dates sneaking in (!) and when they are confirmed I will add them to my events page on the website. I’m going to be teaching workshops at most of these new events too which is very exciting.

Some yarn arrived yesterday for a commission, with a deadline of (you guessed it) the day after Yarn Gathering. Fortunately I only have to email the pattern to them and not get a knitted sample through the post by that date which does make things simpler. I can’t tell you any more details yet, but it will be out in the world in January 2025.

As the yarn has arrived I have, of course, cast on and started knitting. The pattern is actually already charted out and just needs a written version, including finalising the number of repeats, the yarn usage and measurements – all of which will be confirmed by my actually knitting the item.

Today we had a trip to Bodnant Garden to meet up with some holidaying family members and my lovely wife offered to drive so that I could knit in the car. Very helpful of her and enjoyable for me – and I’ve done an extra 20+ rows that I wouldn’t have been able to have done by now otherwise.

Bodnant was glorious; sunny but not too hot and with lots of plants in flower.

We got there at opening time as well, so it was almost as if we had the place to ourselves at times! The roses smelt heavenly and we now have a new rose on our wish-list – Princess Alexandra of Kent. My photo top right in the block above doesn’t really do it justice.

My car is fixed now by the way. It was so nice to be able to put my foot down a bit on the way home from the garage last week and feel Floella (my car is named after the amazing Floella Benjamin who I idolised on Play School when I was little) react as she should.

Now that I’m knitting a deadline piece I think I will probably have to put the new sample of Elinor Hap Shawl aside for a few weeks. The border is growing, albeit slowly. I’m up to about 880 stitches per row now and I’ve been averaging three rows during two episodes of Silent Witness (we’ve got up to Series 21 now) – that’s about 40 minutes per row. (I don’t knit much slower when I’m not watching telly). Here’s a little section of the border, photographed pinned onto its project bag (I rather like how these colours go together!):

That’s all for today – I’ll get back to you on the progress of the deadline knitting next week!

Take care all, K x

Posted on Leave a comment

New Tricks

A completed crocheted granny square in self-striping yarn that changes from pink-maroon-orange. It is lying on the arm of a pale sofa.

Last night’s workshop of Beginner’s Crochet was great fun. There were a couple of people there who had done some crochet years ago and some who had never even held a hook before. By the end of our two hours they had all crocheted at least two rounds and were feeling more confident with trebles and chains. Folk even asked when the next class would be, so I must have been doing something right! Many thanks to Liz for sending me the pic of her finished granny square once she got home (that’s the main pic!).

All those attending were brilliantly positive and determined, even when finding something tricky initially. As adults we can forget what it feels like to learn a completely new skill and how frustrating it can be when it doesn’t click immediately. But the satisfaction when it does is immense. It’s only relatively recently that I taught myself to crochet right-handed, having done so left-handed for decades. It really did feel like starting from scratch – and I *knew* what I was supposed to be doing with my hands! But practice and time make it feel more natural, as with any new skill.

I’m so proud of what everyone achieved. If you are a crocheter (or are simply good at seeing patterns) you might look at some of these pieces and think you spot some ‘errors’ – and that’s completely right. As with the brioche knitting workshop a few week’s ago, unless something was going to cause a major problem later on, I encouraged people to avoid undoing their work, or to try and make it ‘perfect’. Leaving in ‘errors’ helps you see how you’ve progressed and also see what happens when you do a particular thing. For example, the centre bottom image has more trebles in the chain spaces than you would do in a granny square – but it would make a great flower!

Much thanks as always has to go to Anne from Yarn O’clock for booking and organising the evening, keeping everyone supplied with drinks and biscuits and for being generally fab!


The next workshop is on closed ring cables – there are spaces! If you are near Mold and are free on 21st June 6.30-9pm, have a look at the full details on Yarn O’clock’s website.


Next week I will be able to share something very exciting with you – a new design is being published on Wednesday 15th June. We have been asked to keep ‘sneak peeks’ to a minimum before then, so newsletter subscribers and blog readers will hear about it first in the early part of the week.


Last Wednesday we had a visit to Yorkshire Sculpture Park. We’d not been there before and although we walked miles (literally) and saw lots and lots, it seems there is still a huge amount to explore, so we will be going back again! There was even gorgeous vegan cake in the cafe. Some of my favourite sculptures were the Barbara Hepworth ones – and Ronnie enjoyed them too!


And on Friday we had an early morning walk around part of the Great Orme to celebrate my lovely wife’s birthday. We walked about a third of the way round and then back again. I’ve been all the round the edge of the Orme in a car, been up to the top in a car, a cable car and on foot, but it was the furthest I’ve gone round the edge on foot (must remember the walking shoes next time to avoid a repeat of the big blisters).

It was quite a wind-swept experience, but lovely to sit on a bench with a flask of tea with a view of nothing but the sea in front and the Orme behind and to the sides of us. We also saw seals, cormorants and… a peregrine falcon!!! We wouldn’t have known what we were looking at if I hadn’t asked one of the two men who were sitting on folding chairs with cameras that looked like paparazzi ones with the huge lenses on the front (apart from the camouflage wrapping!) who seemed happy with the photos they had been getting.


Finally, you might be pleased to know that I did finish the embroidery by my Friday deadline! Sue is very pleased with it and it is currently drying on a towel before being pressed and stretched over mounting board prior to framing. The pattern is “Hint of Chocolate Limes” from Peppermint Purple. This was my first experience of blackwork embroidery and I loved it. I will be doing more.

I’ll be showing you LOTS of knitting next week! Take care and stay safe. Kx