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Cake and Wool

I can hardly believe that it’s already Tuesday again. The weeks are spinning past. Sometimes I wish I had a regular structure to my blog as my wife does. She always starts with what the morning smells like, describes the photo she is using to accompany her post, writes her main section and finishes by sharing a poem. However, my blog doesn’t have that regularity of form. It’s more a ‘this is what I’ve been doing and this is what’s coming up’, which is useful for me (and hopefully for you!), but also can make it hard to know at times where to start. So, I’ll start by telling you what I’ve been doing.

Sunday was Stollen and Wolle at the RiverKnits studio in Weedon Bec, Northamptonshire. It’s a lovely venue and there were five visiting exhibitors (including us) plus RiverKnits’ own yarn for visitors to peruse. It was lovely to see the familiar and friendly faces of Ishrat (Fruitful Fusion), Christine (Rauwerk), Rachel (Skein Queen) and, of course, Becci and Markus of RiverKnits again. The chap from Yellow Bourbon was kept busy all day providing visitors with coffee, gluhwein, stollen and cake. Two of the cakes were vegan as well (carrot cake and blackcurrant and apple crumble/flapjack) which delighted us! And to top it off, Susan Crawford of Susan Crawford Vintage was there. She had a lovely stand with her yarn, books and samples and gave a 1 hour talk in the afternoon which was absolutely fascinating and included her handing knitwear round the audience for us to look at, handle and even inspect on the inside (if you’re a knitter, you’ll know this instinct!). One of the samples was the first sweater she had ever knitted which was an impressive picture knit (using intarsia technique) of a Roy Lichtenstein image worked in cotton. The re-worked sweaters made from studying samples in the Shetland museum were incredible, as were the stories that accompanied them – especially of how knitters from Shetland were ‘breaking the rules’ of Fair Isle knitting even in the 1940s. I was excited to meet and chat with her.

We had originally planned to do the whole journey in one day, but once we realised that would probably mean getting up at 3.30am, we decided to stay in Daventry the night before, giving us just a 6-mile journey to the studio to set up and get ready. The set-up was quick as we had stripped it right back, bringing only 28 patterns (a few were doubled up in the pull-up stands), the pull-up display stands and the relevant samples.

It was the first outing for the height extension on the 3-foot rail and I have to say I am very pleased with that. It doubles the hanging space and makes it easier to display the samples. The other benefit to stripping back the set-up was that it all fitted in Sue’s little Aygo! That was the first time I had been driven to a yarn show we were exhibiting at and it meant I could relax and even do some crochet in the car on the way there before it got dark. It was lovely. Despite Storm Claudia lashing large parts of Wales on Friday and Saturday we were luckily unaffected and the journey was smooth with clear weather.

Our next event will be the last one of the year – Yuletide Yarnies at the Shrewsbury Flaxmill Maltings on Saturday 13th December. Opening hours are 11am-4pm, tickets are £5 in advance and £7.50 on the door – so if you are coming, I recommend buying an advance ticket! As well as this I am teaching my Introduction to Two-Colour Brioche workshop tomorrow at Shaz’s Shabby Chic in Buckley (there are still spaces available if you want to come!).

There is lots of singing happening too, what with it being the run up to Advent and Christmas and I need to decide the running order for the songs at the first Christmas market that is in 11 days time!

I’m also working through the modules in the tech editing course that I’m taking – I’m enjoying it and finding it appeals very much to my sense of order and logic.

All of this sounds as though life is swinging along smoothly, but Mum has spent most of the last three weeks in hospital and so I’ve also been travelling down to the midlands much more frequently and for longer to visit her. It’s been a worrying time as you might imagine.

So, my 4ply What Do Points Make? remains unblocked, and while I’ve done some of the website updates I haven’t done them all yet. But, even if I haven’t done these things next week I will able to tell you about a new design of mine that will be in the next issue of The Knitter which is due out on Nov 27th. Until then, take care and I hope you are able to do something that makes you happy this week. K x

The Wool Monty, 13-14th June 2026

I’m very excited to be exhibiting at The Wool Monty for the first time in 2026. It’s a yarn show I’ve heard so many good things about and I can’t wait to be a part of it.

I’m also going to be teaching there! More details on that soon.

Day tickets are £11.50, weekend tickets are £15 and they are available now!

The Wool Monty Is A Different Kind Of Yarn Show

ACCESSIBLE.
INCLUSIVE.
WELCOMING.

We’re committed to hosting a yarn show with a difference, that everyone can attend and enjoy. We cannot wait to see you there!

Our Accessibility Commitment

  • fully accessible venue with step-free access and all activities on one level
  • 300+ free parking spaces with blue badge parking near the entrance and space for coaches and vans
  • space for mobility scooters and powered chairs
  • 3.5m (11.5ft) wide aisles as a minimum
  • assistance dogs welcome
  • quiet room away from the main show area with dim lights and comfy seating
  • Carer tickets available
  • high ceilings to diffuse noise
  • several accessible toilets, including a Changing Places bathroom
  • different types of seating and lots of it
  • hot and cold food options which cater to all diets and preferences

 

TexStyle, 14-15 March 2026

TexStyle is a new fibre and textile festival in the north of England. We’re bringing together independent stitch craft creators under one roof and I am delighted to be part of it!

Join us at Manchester Central to celebrate all the fibre crafts you love. We’ll have a hall full of knitting and crochet, sewing and quilting, weaving, and more.

I will have a ‘designer stand’ at this event, so I will have patterns and samples only with me, no kits or other items.

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Going round in circles – or squares

Recently I have been enjoying the simplicity of crocheting a large granny square with a set sequence of colours. I can relax and as long as I can count to three it pretty much sorts itself out. Mind you, the counting bit isn’t foolproof!

It’s steadily and slowly growing which is good. I’m still not entirely convinced whether or not the two darkest shades of green are in fact the same colour – I think they might be, but as long as I keep to the sequence I’ve chosen it doesn’t actually matter.

This urge for simplicity may surprise you as I am more known for my love of knitting quite detailed and sometimes complex things. There has been a bit of that too. I’ve finished the new sample of my Prime Cowl and love this colour combo. I still haven’t got it listed on the website – apologies for that. I will get it on there soon.

It did languish in the sink for about 5 hours yesterday evening as I had forgotten I’d left it to soak. I don’t think it minded.

I also began this yesterday:

It’s a knitted gnome from the book The Gnomes of Grimblewood by Sarah Schira and it’s intended for my mum. Don’t worry, she doesn’t use the internet so she won’t see this. What you can see so far is the hat and the start of the body. The arms, nose and beard will be knitted separately and sewn on.

I’ve gradually started updating the website, beginning with events – I’ve added two more yarn shows to the listings this morning. There are several more and some workshops at the yarn shows to be added as well. The next event we are at is Stollen & Wolle at the RiverKnits studio in Weedon Bec this Sunday. It’s open from 10-4 and entry is just £5. If you are coming, please try to get an advance ticket as this greatly helps their caterers.

Also still languishing is my 4ply What Do Points Make? which is still waiting to be blocked. However, since I saw someone’s recent post that said their’s had waited two months for 15 minutes of sewing up (the two short side seams), I know I’m not alone here. It will get done. It won’t be ready by Sunday for Stollen & Wolle, but hopefully it will be ready by mid-December for Yuletide Yarnies at the Shrewsbury Flaxmill Maltings which is our last show of 2025.

I hope you all have a good week and if you come to Stollen & Wolle on Sunday, please say hello. K x

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Turning Out

This week is turning out to be very productive. I was a bit apprehensive in the run up to this week that it would be a bit too busy and I would get overwhelmed, but so far I’m really enjoying the variety and bustle of what I’m doing. I know, it is only Tuesday, but it’s a good start!

On Saturday I started a new sample for the moebius version of Gnarly Roots. This is using one of Knit Picks‘ new yarn lines, Modish Merino, and it’s very soft with a lovely stitch definition. I was sent a couple of skeins of this yarn recently when submitting a design idea. I decided a second moebius sample would be useful. The original sample I made uses the very gorgeous Shropshire Ply 2018 Double Knitting yarn from Ewe & Ply which is a semi-solid colour on a yarn with attitude. The semi-solid colour and slightly toothy texture is wonderful and very appropriate for the pattern name, but I also wanted a sample that showed the two sides of the reversible cable very clearly – especially as the lighting can be variable at different events! This yarn seems to be doing that well and the colour is ideal for a sample for shows, light and easy to see; I would probably choose a more ‘forgiving’ colour like the rich green Lady’s Mantle of the Ewe and Ply yarn if it was going to be worn next to the skin regularly!

The joy of a moebius pattern is that you get to see the front and back of the knitting at the same time, so a pattern that looks good on both sides is ideal, and reversible cables certainly fit the bill! It’s lovely to see visitors to shows exploring both sides of the straight version of Gnarly Roots which I knitted using HeartSpun DK dyed by Woolly Chic (the design was originally commissioned by Helen of Woolly Chic), especially now its label states “I’m reversible!”.


As part of my preparation for my stacked stitches workshop at the WoollyAway retreat this coming weekend, I’ve been developing one of my workshop swatches into a full design.

Prime Cowl uses prime numbers throughout the design and there are two versions, each using three colours. One has a ‘tabbed’ edge with 13 tabs and the other has a straight edge. It’s worked with the wrong side facing you throughout and is turned out once completed. This is because it is worked in the round and all the ‘action’ in the stacked stitches technique happens on wrong side rows. Today’s main post photo shows the side you look at while knitting.


Winter Seaside Cosy is the 2026 show pattern for the North West Winter Wool Festival held at Norbreck Castle Hotel in Blackpool on 14-15 February and the big reveal of this design happened last Friday on social media!

I was really pleased when Shirley asked me to design the show pattern once again, following on from The Imperial Cowl last year (thinking about it, the in-the-round version of that design was also worked inside out, just like Prime Cowl is!). Advance tickets for the show go on sale tomorrow, Wednesday 15th October at 8am UK time. When you buy an advance ticket you also receive a code that allows you to download the pattern for Winter Seaside Cosy for free! Currently that’s the only way you’ll be able to get this pattern, but you will also be able to buy copies at the show (if you didn’t get an advance ticket) and afterwards. This hot water bottle cosy is worked in the round from the bottom upwards. Once it is finished and washed, you turn it inside out to weave in the ends, then you have two options. You can either place the hot water bottle inside and sew up the cast-on edge with a mattress stitch seam to permanently keep the hot water bottle in place. Alternatively you can sew five press-studs/poppers along the bottom to allow the hot water bottle to be removable. This option is useful if you think you will need to wash the cover frequently.


I’ve applied to some new yarn shows for next year. Some of them are brand new and some have been running for a while, I’ve just not applied to them before. Six of the shows I’ve applied to have been confirmed already and I’m waiting to hear back on a few others. Lots of shows like you to wait until closer to the show before you tell folk you are going to be exhibiting there, but I already have ‘social media badges’ for two of the ones new to me! TexStyle is a brand new show in Manchester that will feature a whole range of textile crafts, including lace-making, embroidery, quilting, macrame and weaving as well as the usual knitting, crochet, felting and spinning. It’s being held in the Central Hall at Manchester Central on March 14-15. (Manchester Central used to be known as G-Mex.)

The Wool Monty has been running since 2019 and is now held at Magna, in Templeborough on the site of the old Templeborough steel works on June 13-14. It’s a show that has accessibility and inclusivity at its heart and I’m so thrilled to have had my application to exhibit there accepted.


The other big thing I’ve been doing this week is an introductory course on tech editing knitting patterns. I think I’ve mentioned this before, but it started on Sunday and has Zoom calls every day this week, each day focussing on a different aspect of tech editing and some days finish with a quiz to submit! I have to admit I was super confident when I pressed submit to yesterday’s quiz, but it turns out I hadn’t thought about every single step of one question so I got 9/10. I will triple check my answers today before I submit them! I am enjoying it a lot so far.

We’re in the process of gathering feedback from the vendors at Yarn Gathering. If you were a visitor to that event and would like to contribute your own feedback, please contact me via contact@kathandrewsdesigns.com and let me know what you enjoyed about the show and anything you felt could be improved!


That’s all from me for today – there’s lots to do and I’m quite impressed that I’ve managed to get this post completed before 9.30am! Take care, and do some things that make you happy this week. K x

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Time flies when you’re having fun

Yarndale flew past! It felt like no sooner had we set our stand up than we were taking it down again! Having just one table definitely gave us more room, but there were still people waiting to be able to get in to look at the patterns, so I think we will need a double space another time.

Lots of people admired Crenellate and Lichfield among many other patterns, and about half a dozen folk signed up to my monthly newsletter. Subscribers often get special short term discounts off new releases and are also able to get 10% off all patterns and kits so it really is worth signing up.


We had many lovely conversations during the weekend with friends old and new, and we even had time to be sociable on the Saturday evening which was fabulous and is something we will be making time for again at future shows.

There were lots of mandalas around this weekend, mostly in The Gather (the main entrance part to the show), but I also spotted several on different stands. They were beautiful and made gorgeous shadows as well as looking splendid in their own right. Ronnie made friends with Dolly the sheep too.

My moebius workshop was a lot of fun and there are now more knitters out there who are able to knit moebius patterns. They thoroughly enjoyed the workshop too and several commented on how quickly the time went – and it was a two and a half hour session! I didn’t manage to photograph everyone’s headband, but these are the ones I did take pics of:

If you missed this workshop at Yarndale and would like to learn I am teaching it again in person next month as part of my Autumn series of in-person workshops!

There was almost a problem on Saturday morning as we were getting ready when I realised that I had failed to pack any tights! The Auction Mart at Skipton can be a chilly place and my DMs are not shoes that can be worn with bare feet, so it was with great relief that we discovered a nearby Asda open early that had some tights I could buy. All the same I was very very grateful to get home to my regular Snag tights. If you are a wearer of tights and have not yet tried this brand I highly recommend them! They stay put and their larger sizes are actually wider and not just longer, so they fit really well. This is not an affiliate link or anything like that, I just genuinely think they are brill.

Anyway, back to the yarn! I was very excited to see that Menai is having another moment in the spotlight, this time on the front cover of the German version of The Knitter. A friend who is honeymooning over there sent me this pic!

Next month I am teaching at Woolly Away, a knitting a crochet retreat in Hertfordshire. There may even be a few spaces left if you’d like to attend, but you’ll need to book soon if you do want to go.

I’m also teaching four workshops at Shaz’s Shabby Chic in Buckley, Flintshire, over the next two months:

  • 22nd October – Fair Isle (Stranded) Knitting
  • 29th October – Moebius Knitting
  • 19th November – Introduction to Two-Colour Brioche Knitting
  • 26th November – Introduction to Lace Knitting

All the workshops are from 6.30-8.30pm and full details are on my Events page.

In the middle of these workshops we’ll also be at Stollen & Wolle at RiverKnits’ studio in Weedon Bec, Northamptonshire which I mentioned last week! That’s on Sunday November 16th, 10am-4pm. Susan Crawford (author of A Stitch in Time and The Vintage Shetland Project) will be there a special guest speaker and I’m very excited about it.

And, last but not least, we’ll be at Yuletide Yarnies in Shrewsbury on Saturday December 13th!

Amidst all this I think Issue 220 of The Knitter that comes out on Thursday will have a new design of mine in it, and I’m playing with lots of ideas for more designs! One of the things about a big show like Yarndale is that my brain starts buzzing with ideas, partly through seeing lots of new yarns and colour combinations, partly through conversations had with visitors and fellow vendors. Also, although my lovely wife Sue is not a knitter, she will often plant a seed that it would be a really good idea if I were to design a pattern for xyz… She’s usually right too!

So, this week I will be prepping for the retreat and knitting up some new ideas as well as getting something very special photographed ready for a big reveal on October 10th!

Until next week, take care and do something that makes you smile. K x

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Licenced to Crenellate!

On Friday I will be (re-)launching Crenellate! We had lots of fun at the end of last week taking new photographs and I have been scouring through the pattern to make sure everything is listed in the abbreviations and the pattern is presented as clearly as possible. As the pattern has already been published in a magazine (this was published in Knit Now, Issue 179 in March 2025) this should be easy, but I still like to make sure everything is correct and it all fits my own ‘style’ of layout.

A friend of mine told me that in the medieval period a licence from the king was needed to be allowed to add crenellation to a property. I didn’t know this, but find it very interesting and will definitely be reading more about it, especially since I’m finding my recent audiobook listening is becoming a lot more historical fiction based.

As it happens, much of my Crenellate design is very straightforward. Sue had a look at the printed pattern and asked, “Do the charts really only use these symbols?” Yes they do, because it’s a textural pattern with no lace.

In fact, here is the chart key:

Crenellate just uses knit and purl to create the textural design, with yarn overs (yo) creating the increases for the shaping. The blue and red outlines show the sections of the chart that you repeat. That’s it. And, of course, if you’re not a fan of charts, the pattern is also written out in full.

The textural design is one of the aspects of Crenellate that make this design one of my easier patterns to knit. It’s a top-down triangular shawl with the body of the shawl simply increasing in size until the border. The border is also straightforward, even though it has a very fun shape! The border is all garter stitch, with the crenellated shaping created through casting on and off to change the length of the rows.

If you are a newer knitter there are three things in this design you may not have encountered before.

The first is the ‘garter tab’ that begins the shawl. Lots of top down shawls begin this way and I’m going to be recording a little video for my website and youtube channel to show how it works. Essentially, you cast on a few stitches (usually about 3), knit a few rows of garter stitches (often 6, giving three garter ridges) which creates a tiny garter stitch square (or tab, hence the name). You then knit one more row, but instead of turning and knitting back, you pick up some stitches down the side of your little square, then pick up some stitches along the bottom from where you cast on. This means you’re now working around three sides of the square and it becomes the centre top of a triangular or semicircular shawl!

The other two possibly less familiar things are both included in the border. One is a wrap and turn short row, which is used four times in the whole shawl and is described step by step in the abbreviations. I’m going to add a new video on my youtube channel for this as well. The last is the joining stitch to join the border to the body of the shawl as you knit it. That sounds more complicated than it is – it just means you knit the last stitch of the border together with the next stitch of the body of the shawl. As these are in different colours it’s easy to know when you’ve got to that point in the row – you’re knitting two stitches together, one of each colour.

Crenellate is worked in DK yarn so it’s ideal for the cooler weather we’ve started to experience. The original sample was knitted using West Yorkshire Spinners Elements DK which is a wool and Tencel mix, but it would work very well in other fibres too, including pure wool for a super cosy version.

Newsletter subscribers already have their exclusive discount code for Ravelry and Payhip which lasts for 48 hours from 10am on Friday until 10am on Sunday. The sample and printed copies of the pattern will also be at Yarndale this weekend. The timing is a bit of a gamble as I’ve not done an online launch at the same time as a yarn show before and I’m hoping that the two events will boost each other, rather than cancel each other out.

All the patterns are now printed and ready for the show and I now just need to plan the layout for our spot. We are in D5 this year, which is very near the Wharfdale entrance, and almost as far away from where we were last year as we could be!

think we may well be one of the first stands people come to if they come in this way to the show so we will need to make sure the stand is attention grabbing. We may well need extra woolly layers to wear as well being near the entrance, but that’s not going to be a problem!

There are still a few spaces left on my moebius knitting workshop on Saturday 10.30am-1pm. We will explore the unique structure of a true Moebius ring, where the knitting grows from the centre outwards, and discover how this technique can be used to make wonderful neckwear and more. You’ll learn two Moebius cast on methods and create a simple headband. From there you can tackle a range of moebius designs! Go to the Yarndale website to book your place if you’d like to learn this amazing technique – it’s a whole lot more than casting on and then twisting your knitting before you join it!

Who is coming to Yarndale at the weekend? Do come and say hello if you are there. Remember, we are on Stand D5.

Until next week, take care and do something that makes you smile this week in this mad, mad world. K x

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All Fired Up

Yarn Gathering went really well on Sunday. We had plenty of visitors despite the rain, and everyone commented on what a good range of vendors we had. It was a shame that one of our number (Tecstiliau) was unable to make it on the day, but hopefully they will be able to join us next year!

I’m really only properly tidying up the study after Yarn Gathering today, as yesterday was a trip down to the midlands to visit Mum. Fortunately my car is sturdy enough that we didn’t feel too much buffetting from the wind! Part of the tidy up process after a show involves analysis of sales, what went well and what stayed on the shelves – and then a look ahead to what needs printing for the next show!

One of the more popular patterns on Sunday was Fiery Dragon Skin Cowl. It’s a design that gives you a lot back for what you have to do and that makes it ideal for newer knitters who want to try a new skill, like slipping stitches with the yarn at the front or trying the ‘knit 1 under’ stitch where you put the right needle underneath the strands of yarn to create the wonderful textured effect of the fabric.

I had an email from Anthony last week, who had previously shared his gorgeous multicoloured Fiery Dragon Skin Cowl with me, and had allowed me to share it with you, with an update on the cowl. He had entered it at his local show the day he emailed – and came away with first prize for the knitted or crocheted item class! How fantastic is that? He also told me that his mother, who taught him to knit, had entered the jumper she knitted for him (which he is wearing in the picture below) the previous year in the same show, and she won second prize! A talented family. Anthony’s mother no longer knits so it is now up to him to maintain the family tradition. I think they both deserve a resounding hurrah! Many thanks to Anthony for sharing this wonderful news and for allowing me to share it with you all.

If you have any exciting news of items you have knitted from my designs please do share it – even if the exciting news is simply that it’s finished! You don’t have to have won a prize – I’d love to hear about your knitting progress.

Some news of my own: I’ve decided to mostly wind down my kits. I’ve got about a dozen left at the moment. I will continue to keep a few pride flag kits in stock as they are great little gifts and ideal for beginners and maybe some Bryn or Twisted kits, but for the most part, I am aiming to focus on just patterns. Yarn shows have plenty of yarn options for folk to buy once they’ve chosen a pattern from me and I always think choosing your own colours is a large part of the fun! This will simplify things quite a lot in terms of packing the car (and be a lot lighter too) and it will mean less space is taken up in the house with storing the kits, tins and yarn. Also, many of the shows I apply to are in a ‘pattern only’ capacity, so it will mean that what you see from me at different shows is more consistent. I will bring the kits I’m not going to continue with to shows until they are sold and you may even see a few ‘last chance’ offers on some! If you’re coming to Yarndale, keep an eye out for a bargain!

Speaking of Yarndale, there are still 5 spaces on my moebius workshop. So if you’d like to learn this amazing mind-bending cast-on technique (which is a lot easier to do than you might think!) have a look at the Yarndale website and maybe book yourself a spot. The workshop runs from 10.30am – 1pm on Saturday and, as well as the class handout, you will receive approx 60g of aran weight wool (100% wool) to use in the workshop.

This afternoon my Crenellate shawl sample arrived home! There was the quietest tap on the door and when I opened it I found a packet leaning against the wall with my shawl inside. This is wonderful as it means I can take some new photos and get the printed version of the individual pattern ready to re-launch. I should have it with me at Yarndale in a couple of weeks! I’ve got some ideas about where to do the photographs – tied in to the name of the shawl. I wonder if you can guess where in my corner of North East Wales we will be heading to snap the new shots? These photos are of the shawl in a bit of a heap on my desk – I promise the new shots for the printed pattern will look a lot tidier! The colours on the right are the most true to life.

Until next week, take care and do something that makes you smile. K x

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Gathering Together

This week sees the final lot of planning and organisation for Yarn Gathering which takes place in just five days! We have been making last minute tweaks and refinements and continuing to promote the event on social media and in our local area. Things that can’t be done until just before the event are setting up the venue with tables as requested by each vendor, marking out and labelling each vendor’s space, putting the signs up, and (most importantly) putting the snack basket together!

There will be 15 vendors this year, four of whom are new to Yarn Gathering and they cover a wide range of fibre arts. 11 vendors are downstairs and 4 (including myself) are upstairs. If you are coming to Yarn Gathering and you can’t manage the stairs, do ask to see the videos we will be taking at the start of the day once everyone is set up. This is so you can see what is up there and, if there is an item you want to see in more detail or buy, we can bring it down for you.


I promised to show you my progress on my 4-ply version of What Do Points Make? this week.

On the right hand side I’m almost ready for the next short row corner, then everything gets quicker as I work towards the top right hand corner point and the rows get progressively shorter. Then I will return to the stitches on the left hand needle, rejoin the second colour of yarn (the darker purple) and work the left hand side.

My progress on this project has been slower than anticipated, partly because I have had some secret knitting/designing to do at the same time, and partly because I have been under strict instructions from the osteopath not to overdo things again and risk returning to the pain I was experiencing in mid-July. I’m being more careful now about my posture when I knit, knitting for shorter periods of time (30 minutes in a row, then stop for a bit and stretch rather than 3 hours without moving) and I’m paying attention when niggles and aches do arise – and stopping! It might mean I don’t complete projects quite as fast, but if it means my back, neck and arm are not trying to gang up on me, that is fine!


One of the new designs I’ve been working on will be getting its ‘big reveal’ fairly soon. What I can tell you now is that I am once again designing the exclusive pattern for advance ticket holders to the North West Winter Wool Festival. Their instagram post yesterday gave a great teaser:

“Something special is sailing in for our advance ticket holders at the North West Winter Wool Festival ⚓✨ A free exclusive pattern designed by the talented @kath_andrews_designs will be waiting for you… but we’re keeping the details under wraps for now.

Think cosy, think seasonal, think a touch of the sea 🌊❄️

🎟 Advance tickets are your passport to this secret treasure. – don’t miss out!”


Do you remember I told you about my lovely wife and her sister climbing Snowdon (Yr Wyddfa) overnight? This is a ‘before’ shot of them taken in the bar of the hotel I was staying in overnight while waiting for them to navigate the mountain safely.

They completed this epic challenge at about 7am on Sunday morning, having set off about 12.30am, alongside nearly 140 other people, who had all gathered together to challenge themselves and raise money for Macmillan in the process. Not everyone who started completed the walk/climb, but everyone did as much as they could and over £31K was raised!

Sue and Katie completed the whole walk, and were able to reach the summit as the winds had dropped by then. I am in total awe as I wouldn’t even be brave (or fit) enough to try this walk in daylight, let alone at night. It does make me want to be able to get to the top of Moel Famau again though. The last time I went with Sue I managed about two thirds of it, which wasn’t too bad for my first attempt in over 8 years.

If you don’t make it to Yarn Gathering on Sunday, I’ll tell you all about it next week. But if you do come, please say hello!

K x

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Milestone

So, this is post no.250! I had no idea when I started this blog that I would still be writing 5 years later. I’ve missed a few weeks along the way, but not many, and a lot has happened during this time.

The main post photo shows Sue and me at Rhos at the weekend – it’s been a while since we were there and it’s still a wonderful place to be and to walk. And we love the newly sandy beach – I even had a paddle!

During the past few years, as well as increasing my adventures to yarn shows and publishing quite a few patterns, I’ve also been getting increasingly involved with music once more. Now I sing in one choir and lead another. I have instrumental pupils again as well as teaching knitting. This pleases me.


My lovely wife is walking up Snowdon at the weekend. At night. They register at 11.30pm and there is a big list of stuff they have to have (including a head torch!). She’s not going alone; her sister is walking up too, along with about 140 other people. They expect to be back down at about 6.30am. My role is to drive them there and home again afterwards and that is fine with me – I’m better at walking in the daylight! The walk is being organised by Macmillan. If you feel like making a donation to a very worthy cause, then here is the link:

https://defeatthepeaksnowdonatnight2025.enthuse.com/pf/sue-finch: Milestone

Next month I will be back in the learning seat as I take a week-long introductory course in tech editing knitting patterns. It seems only logical to put my attention-to-detail brain that homes in on any error (unless it’s my own, in which case I can be quite blind to it) to use!


Last week I finished the poppy I was knitting and did some more on my 4-ply version of What Do Points Make? I will photograph the latter for next week’s post. For now, here is the completed poppy. It isn’t the same pattern as those being made at Mum’s care home, but I don’t think they minded too much.


I am currently working on two new designs. One uses four colours and will be revealed soon – I’m knitting up two samples in different yarns. The other one is a submission involving cables and the softest yarn I’ve used for a while. I can’t tell you any more about that at the moment as the yarn hasn’t even been launched by the company yet, so I’m extra lucky to be able to experience it in advance – it’s a bit like a film critic being able to see a film before the release date, I suppose.


I got my contributor copy of The Knitter today and saw the gorgeous photos of my Lorelai wrap. It looks super and Issue 218 is still available in the shops! There are a host of gorgeous designs in this issue – well worth a read.


If you are anywhere near Mold and enjoy yarn based crafts, do come to Yarn Gathering on Sunday September 14th!

We will have dyers, weavers, spinners, designers and more at the Daniel Owen Centre in Mold with lots of amazing things to see, learn about and buy. Entry is free and Yarn O’clock is likely to be opening her shop for a couple of hours too!

I realise today’s post has a lot of different things in, but that’s because today my head has a lot of things in it! I promise to show you the progress on my What Do Points Make? next week and you could show me the progress you are making on your knitting or other creative endeavours in the comments – I’d love to see!

Until next week, take care. Kx