Category Archives: Making

What I’ve been up to

What’s #WellMaking all about?

Welcome to the Craftivist’s Garden. I’m an advisor for this exciting new project by Craftivist Collective with Falmouth University and Arts for Health Cornwall that is about collecting data so that we can prove to policy makers that craft is good for you. Of course we know this already, but you try standing up in the House of Commons and saying that, which is what MP for Penryn and Falmouth Sarah Newton would have to do. We thought she could do with some ammunition in the way of data. We need your help to spread the word, and the crafting before our finale next January. Download the app here.

The project was launched last night in London to great fanfare, some good cake and some lovely people. (Lots of quiet stitching and reflecting went on too as we made flowers for the Craftivist Garden.)

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This is the flower that I made (while thinking deep thoughts)CraftivistGarden

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Genevieve of Floss & Mischief was there

 

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Hilary of Craft Blog UK

 

 

This is the lovely Sarah Corbett of the Craftivist Collective explaining all about her new project.

Sarah says, “If you’re based in the UK, we’d love you to join in and hand-embroider, knit or crochet a flower for our #wellMAKING Craftivists Garden, while reflecting on the importance of wellbeing and what we need in order to flourish as individuals and as a society.”

Dentelle in Bayeux

IMG_2716A short holiday in Normandy couldn’t pass without a visit to see the Bayeux tapestry/not a tapestry. Research on that one continues, but in the Cathedrale square I came across this antique shop called Napthaline (like moth balls) and had a great haul. The owner was retiring so everything was going.  These are some of the things that I bought.

I didn’t know what these interesting things were. They are beautiful translucent colours.

mystsery itemsLike all self respecting tourists we drank coffee in a street cafe and made bracelets out of elastic bands.IMG_2650

Cooking up a sweat (er)

AprilShower3Knitting is a lot like cooking. When I’ve been in the kitchen all day the last thing I want to do is eat what I’ve made. Sometimes I can barely taste it anymore after all that sampling and, yes  AprilShowerJaegerpatternsokay, licking out the bowl too. Similarly, after a long time working on a piece of knitting the last thing I want to do is wear the thing. It’s always the wrong shape, the wrong colour or just the wrong me.

This means that my nearest and dearest have been the happy recipients of my labours over the years. My sister Jane was the one who grimaced least, so ended up with most of the jumpers. When she moved continents recently I salvaged whole piles of hand-knits in need of some TLC.

This Patricia Roberts vase of flowers was actually knitted by my Mum. It was called April Showers, though you wouldn’t know it. Being a busy woman, she didn’t have any truck with silly things like rain drops and so missed these out of the finished thing.

What’s fun is trying to match the sweaters with the original patterns. I’m sure some of them Wheatsheafhave gone the way of small things, but I seem to have stashed away quite a few, and now I’m moving into my own studio (did I mention that a few times already) I have the space to sort them out.

Looking through the old patterns, some of which I inherited from my Mum and Grand-mum, I was astonished to see ones that were from mainstream publications that would steer clear of ‘that sort of thing’ these days. I have a pile that come from the Guardian newspaper. Every week you could write off and they would send you a pattern, these ones are all from Jaeger. One of Jaeger’s brochures announced ‘Life Is Full of Surprises, Why Isn’t Your Wardrobe‘. I’m not sure I want that many surprises…

This Wheatsheaf Aran pattern was by Wendy yarns and given away with The Sunday Times colour supplement in Wheatsheaf31984. (When did they stop being ‘colour supplements’ and start being magazines?) I think my sister sent off for the whole kit. It’s astonishing that it has survived,   although it’s looking a bit peaky now, thirty years later. Perhaps newspapers will again wake up to the fact that some of their readers are knitters and start doing this again? We could knit a petition.

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Knitting in The Great War

Comforts

WWII patterns

Land and Sea

Rare WWI book of patterns

I’m busy researching knitting during WWI. There is so much material available about WWII but not so much that has survived since 1914. I’ve been to look at the Coats UK archive, the Knitting and Crochet Guild stores and the British Library. Lots of patterns seemed to be in newspapers though there are a few pamphlets available. I bought this Beehive booklet on eBay.

Crimean-Balaclava

Moustache warmer

Of course knitting for soldiers wasn’t new even then. People had been knitting during the Crimean war (like this stunning helmet liner with matching moustache) and the Civil War in America.

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Pattern pamphlet of the British Red Cross Society

The best non-commercial example I’ve found is the British Red Cross pattern book and it’s rather intriguing ‘Cap Scarf’. This ‘comforter’ is a hat and a scarf. It’s made as a double layer so you can pull it over your head. What a great idea, though certainly one for the machine -knitters. Knitting machines did exist, especially stocking machines for quick sock making.

My next challenge is to find the origin of Kitchener Stitch. Apparently Lord Kitchener really was a knitter and made socks himself. Do you think he really found time to invent grafting? If you have any evidence about that one please let me know.

Irish Lace Renaissance

Mag 55 Cover_0 lacmakingRowan mag 55, Spring Summer 2014 is out, including my first article for Rowan, Irish Crochet Lace Renaissance (there might be some quite nice patterns in there too…)
Lace is going to be the big thing this year, and crochet is a great way of trying it out if you’ve never done it before – what with only one stitch to drop instead of a whole row. The interesting thing about Irish crochet is that it is made in small modular sections making it easier to manage. IMG_1913

 

 

These are some of my own efforts with crochet lace. IMG_1881IMG_1915