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Go Back To Go Forward

The Yarn Harlot (Stephanie Pearl-McPhee) used to say (and probably still does) that fast knitters make big mistakes more quickly. She’s right!

This is what I knitted last week:

Except these are balls of wool, not knitting, so what happened? Sue said “Oh no!” when she saw me frogging this earlier on (frogging – as in you remove the knitting from the needles and ‘rip it, rip it’ out). However, my response to her was a very calm, “Don’t worry, it will be better”.

It had been bugging me that the repeated pattern in this design started alternately on a right side and then a wrong side row. Also that the number of stitches before the actual pattern began kept increasing. That meant I couldn’t condense the pattern and every row had to be written out, which, when it’s for a magazine and every page used matters, is a potential problem.

Lying in bed I wondered whether removing one plain row before the repeat section began would solve both issues I was having, so this morning I went to my charting programme and drew it out and guess what? It works! Five or more pages reduced to two and a half and the pattern becomes easier to follow as well. But it did mean I needed to undo all that yarn you see in the pic above.

Sometimes you have to go back before you can go forward.


This evening I am teaching my Introduction to Two-Colour Brioche Workshop via Zoom. There are some major benefits to this: no one has to travel, you can attend from wherever you are as long as you have a reliable internet connection and my camera set-up means that everyone can see what I’m doing at the same time as though I were right next to them. It does mean that I can’t take someone’s knitting and fix it for them, but as long as they can hold it up to their camera I should be able to explain what they need to do differently to make it work. If you already know the basic brioche stitches and want to expand your brioche knitting skills, why not book on the Next Steps in Two-Colour Brioche Knitting Zoom Workshop? It’s on Tuesday 22nd October, 7-9pm (British Summer Time, which is GMT+1).

I had a lovely surprise on Thursday. I knew that my brioche cowl, named Menai, was due to be on the cover of the new issue (Issue 207) of The Knitter magazine, but I hadn’t realised they were also starting my four-part knit-along lace hap shawl Rhiannon in the same issue!

I was asked recently what my favourite fibre to knit with is and the answer was wool (from sheep). That may be because I’m so much more familiar with wool than other animal fibres, but the more you use them, the more you learn!

Both Menai and Rhiannon use alpaca yarn, which I was less familiar with before creating these designs. Rhiannon, the lace hap (square) shawl uses Cascade Yarns Alpaca Lace, which is 100% Alpaca. It was so soft to work with and created such a fluid fabric that I wasn’t sure if the blocking would hold the shapes of the lace stitches clearly, but it did and it blocked out beautifully. I used my hap stretcher to block it, propped up by the radiator.

Menai uses an Alpaca Sock yarn from UK Alpaca, and includes 25% nylon with the alpaca. Again the fabric flowed like water, which is one of the reasons I added the collar to the cowl, as otherwise it simply sat on the shoulders, which isn’t what you want a cowl to do really! Had it been worked in wool, it would have stood up on its own and would have looked completely different, but I’m glad it worked out the way it did with the alpaca as I really like the shape of the finished item which is part cowl and part mini poncho.

*As well as these two designs in issue 207, the County Shawl that I designed for James McIntosh’s Donegal 4ply yarn is in “The Knitter loves…” section!

It’s a great issue, full to brim with gorgeous accessories and some garments as well, from a range of brilliant designers, so if you are a knitter I heartily recommend you get a copy if you can.

I’m going to leave it there for today, get my desk set up for the workshop, and start re-knitting that lovely blue yarn (It’s West Yorkshire Spinners Elements DK).

Have a good week and do some stuff that makes you happy. Kx