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April Already

Menai is being launched as an individual pattern on Friday 4th April – sign up to the newsletter before then for an exclusive subscriber discount code!

It seems very appropriate that the launch of this design as an individual pattern happens in the spring as it is covered in growing leaf shapes!

With everything being quite busy lately, I completely missed that my latest design for Knit Now, Crenellate Shawl came out over a week ago! Knit Now Issue 179 is the one to look for.

Crenellate is a textured top down triangular shawl that uses just knit and purl stitches with yarn overs placed at the edges and centre spine for the shaping. It’s knitted using West Yorkshire Spinners Elements DK which catches the light beautifully.

This photo shows the textured pattern really well. I took this shot while the shawl was blocking and drying so the colours are a little darker as the yarn is damp here.

The camellias are starting to look good as I had hoped. The pink one flowers before the red one with larger flowers. The red one certainly knows which side the sun hits it as that side is becoming covered in blooms and the other side is still very much green.

The daffodils and front borders are looking good too! The red cowslips always surprise me as I forget they are there. Do excuse the weeds and grass in the border – there hasn’t been any time for gardening this week.

Very soon I need to get the veg patches into use, which will mean deciding which veg we want to grow this year. There hasn’t been a lot of time to think about growing our own veg lately, but it would be nice to get that part of the garden up and running properly. Everything was a bit of a disappointment last year as most of the plants got eaten, so we’ll probably try for different crops this time.

There were some more long car journeys this week, down to the midlands to visit my Mum, then further down to Kent to help my lovely mother-in-law celebrate her birthday and then back home again. I tend to listen to unabridged audiobooks when I’m driving and I’ve been expanding my eras of historical fiction.

On the way down I listened to The Bookseller of Inverness by S. G. MacLean, set in the wake of the 1746 battle of Culloden, and on the way home I started listening to The Forbidden Queen by Anne O’Brien, telling the story of Katherine de Valois who becomes the wife of Henry V and mother of Henry VI. Both are hugely enjoyable and I recommend them, in whatever form you enjoy a book. Usually the historical fiction I listen to is Tudor or Elizabethan, so it’s nice to fill in some of the gaps on either side!

Anne at Yarn O’clock is busy getting ready for my trunk show there on April 12th! This window display is full of my designs!

Pictured are Into the Vortex, Nubble Slip Stitch Mitts, Llanberis, Twisted, Ice Diamond Mitts, What Do Points Make? and Calon Cariad. I’ll have paper copies of all these designs and many more with me on the day, and also lots more samples for you to see in person. I’ll be there all day from 10am -4pm and I hope folk will find time to pop in and say hello! The shop is on Earl Road in Mold and there is lots of parking in the town. As it’s being held on a Saturday, you’ll also be able to enjoy Mold’s street market.

I told you that I have two design commissions that I’m working on. One is a lace pattern that needed to have a small rejig in terms of size to make it a little narrower, but since then it’s been coming on a treat. I’m nearly at the end of the fifth pattern repeat of seven. Once all seven are complete, there’s just the final part of the chart to work and the top border and it’s done bar the blocking.

I’m using Jamieson’s of Shetland Ultra Lace for this design and I’m really enjoying it. It’s a yarn with a lot of personality and is able to withstand being pulled out and re-knitted quite happily, despite being a laceweight yarn. It’s the same yarn I used for the original three colour version of Maid Marion, my Pi shawl. If you come to my workshop on lace knitting next month (May 28th) at Sew Woolly in Cheadle, you’ll be using this yarn too! I’ll tell you more about my workshops there next week.

Until then, take care and remember to sign up for the newsletter if you’d like a discount for Menai! K x

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Mixing It Up

This has been a very varied week, despite spending quite a lot of time on my own. I even made biscuits, though there are none left and no photographic evidence was taken.

Knitting wise, I have been working on four designs! One, Elinor Hap Shawl, has now been updated with an improved layout and a correction of stitch counts. There will be a further update later in the year once the new sample is ready for photographs.

Another design, Menai, will be launched as an individual pattern next week on April 4th, having been originally published last October in The Knitter magazine. We took advantage of yesterday’s sunshine to take some new photos and I am pleased with how they have come out. It’s a brioche cowl that almost behaves like a mini-poncho and there are some fun decreases to create the leaves and leaf-bud shapes.

I have kept the layout and language consistent with my other brioche designs, so you will see rows labelled as “Row 1 LC (RS):”, followed by “Row 1 DC (RS):” where LC stands for light colour yarn and DC for dark colour yarn, rather than “Row 1 (RS): Using yarn A…” followed by “Row 1 (RS): Using yarn B…” which was the magazine’s house style for brioche.

It’s knitted flat, partly because the alpaca yarn I was using started to make the fabric twist when I tried knitting it in the round, and partly because it’s easier to block properly! The method I use for drawing a blocking schematic varies wildly: sometimes I draw it in a computer programme, and at other times, such as here, I take a very different approach: I print out a photograph of the work while its pinned and blocking, tape it to the window with a plain piece of paper over the top and use that as a free lightbox to trace the outline! To this I can add measurements!

There will be a time limited subscriber discount when Menai is launched for digital copies of the pattern, so if that appeals to you, make sure you sign up to my newsletter before the end of March!

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I will have Menai (both the sample and printed copies of the pattern) with me at the Trunk Show at Yarn O’clock on April 12th. The shop is open 10-4 and I will be there all day with lots of my printed patterns and samples and Anne who runs the shop will be able to show you all the fabulous yarn she has that would be appropriate for the different patterns.

The two other designs I have been working on are new designs that will be published later this year, both single colour items, but very different in yarn weight, technique and finished item! I can’t wait to share them with you.

As well as doing lots of knitting and pattern writing/tweaking, I have been doing quite a bit of singing this week. It was the Spring Market in our town on Saturday and the community choir I lead, Shelby’s Singers, sang for a full hour with songs from Pink, Steps, Les Miserable and Joseph to name just four! The church choir I sing in also had a great rehearsal in the week as we are preparing for performances of FaurĂ©’s Requiem and Allegri’s Miserere just before Easter.

And, surprise surprise, I spent a couple of hours at the garage during the past week (knitting of course) while they checked out my un-opening door. And yes, they did agree after that investigation that it does have wrong with it what I said it did when I booked it in, and they will be ordering the part. I had been foolish enough to think that, having told them the problem had also occurred on a different door nearly 18 months ago and what had been needed, that the part would already have been there and the fault fixed that day, but I was wrong. They needed to check it out for themselves first. Which I suppose is fair enough, but it does mean another wait for it to be fixed.

Then this afternoon, I spent a lovely couple of hours in the company of some ex-colleagues working through a cryptic crossword as we had used to do in the staff room. To be fair I wasn’t a regular member of crossword corner then as I couldn’t often get out of the department during day, but I had always enjoyed the times I did and today was wonderful. Laughter, sharing news, a little reminiscing, but not a lot, and a lot of brain work wrangling our way through the cryptic clues. I will definitely be meeting with them again.

I am looking forward to seeing more of the camellia flowers opening up on the bushes in the back garden – I am hoping they will look quite good by next week and intend to take some photos to share with you. I still need to finish some of the winter cutting back, but I have at least finished the fruit bushes.

I am also looking forward to cooking dinner for my lovely wife this evening, so I had better stop now!

What will you do this week that makes you smile? K x

Trunk Show at Yarn O’clock, Mold, 12th April 2025

Anne at Yarn O’clock has very kindly invited me to showcase my designs at a trunk show in her shop on Saturday 12th April 2025. A trunk show is like a very mini yarn show with the focus on one brand or designer and, on this occasion, that’s me!

I will have lots of printed patterns with me and you will be able to choose the ideal yarn to go with the pattern of your choice from Anne’s wonderful selection in stock. Most of the yarn she sells is made from natural fibres with a focus on British yarn.

Do come along, I’ll be there all day, 10-4. There is no entry fee and you can browse to your heart’s content!