Tag: crochet

Ida Wells

  • In Community

    I’ve seen quite a bit of content about how knitting has been used in resistance, to send secret messages, etc., but what stands out to me in this time is just how vital community is, and how knitting creates instant community.

    Two of my very best friends are people that I met because of knitting. They remain vital parts of my life, and one of them is the reason why I have kiddo.

    Knitting has made meeting new people easier through finding a crew to craft with. I’m currently a member of an anticapitalist group of crafting folks. We share resources and information beyond patterns and yarn; one member has offered legal advice to my partner, I’ve received donations for the knitting class that I’ll be teaching, and we have a mutual aid channel on the discord. We are there for each other and there for the community in ways that I have not seen in other circles, including an early life full of church-going. It’s far better than church.

    One of my goals this year is to grow community through craft, making, mending, growing, and building – anolog, physical, in-person – I want to know who is around me, I want to say “hi” as I bike, walk, or drive through the neighborhood. I want to know the skills and resources of trusted folks in my community so that we can all help each other as needed.

    The knitting community I have here is part of that. Teaching knitting, I hope, will help me to expand that to more folks.

    While I’ve been moving away from social media, I’ve kept my knitting account active. And there, I follow local mutual aid and community groups. It keeps me connected to what is here and now, what I can be part of in the physical.

    It is through community that we stay grounded. It’s where we see humanity in action. It’s where we can vision something other than what we were born into, where we grow our understanding of what is needed and what is superfulous. It’s where we understant abundance beyond our personal bank accounts, pantries, and closets.

    So, crafters can be radical and send secret messages and all that, but what is more radical than sharing resources? What is resistance if not chosing togetherness over devision and creating the world we want in real time and space? Not to mention, chosing something tactile over the digital landscape?

    Here’s to you, chosing to touch grass and/or yarn. I hope you find in-person community that feeds your soul if you haven’t already.

    Stephanie

  • It’s Official!

    It’s actually happening! I’ll be teaching my first learn to knit course this late-winter/early spring, and I couldn’t be more excited!

    As I film instructional videos and upload matterials for the course, I will be sure to share them here so that you can follow along.

    The course will likely start in February, so I hope to have everything completed and posted in January.

    I will go over basics like the knit and purl stitches, casting on and off, and how to read yarn labels so that you have the right matterials for what you’d like to make.

    I’ll begin thinking about a 2.0 class for the F/W26 season as well, so that folks feel ready to make themselves cozy items and/or gift knits.

    Here’s to more people learning this cozy craft!

    Have you ever taught a craft? If you have any tips for me, I’d be most grateful for them.

    Stephanie

  • Sharing the craft

    I learned to knit about 20 years ago. The practice hasn’t been steady. I made a few wonky scarves. I used a loom to make a couple of hats. I then learned crochet because I wanted to make stuffed animals (amigurumi) and knitting them seemed too complicated when I was still adding extra stitches by accident.

    The crochet helped me become a better knitter, and I picked the craft back up again several years later when I needed something to help me cope with a heavy course load – I’d knit while I listened to the audio book version of what I needed to read, with the kindle app open to the same on my iPad, taking breaks from stitches to highlight text that I wanted to refer back to or making a quick note. Knitting helped me remember, helped me relax, and gave my brain a break from academic work. I started my knitting blog, on blogger, around that time, as well as a knitting Instagram account, back in the days before it was sold and monetized.

    My guage became predictable during that time, and I started to grow my skills with the help of youtube tutorials and knitting blogs (I link to some of these on my Resources page).

    Knitting also carried me through my (first) divorce, helped me calm and regulate, and I started to explore more complexity with colorwork, lace, and cables. I made my first pair of socks, in worsted weight yarn, which I recommend for any first-time sock knitter.

    In 2017 I had a moth infestation take out most of my yarn, and that put my knitting on the back burner for a while. I would pick it up occassionally to make a hat or a pair of socks as a gift, but I didn’t want to do something large-scale after loosing a sweater quantity of good yarn ($$$), a big cozy shawl, and a number of other beautiful skeins I’d been dreaming of turning into more complex lacework.

    I knit even less once my kiddo was born mid-2020. I’d made a few baby things while I was pregnant, but this kid did not want me making any more, not until she was nearing 4 years old. I started back up again making a few things for Waldorf preschool life – slippers for inside play, a hat and a kercheif for outside winter play, etc. I started to knit for myself again, too – kercheifs and triangle scarves.

    This year has been my big return back. I frogged a cotton top that I had started in 2020 and worked it into a pattern I’d purchsed back in 2018 that was perfect for summer in my new town (hotter than I’m used to). I started a sweater – at last! – and made socks with tiny needles and sock yarn, when I’d only ever done house socks before. I made more slippers. I made a new hat. I knitted stuffed animals for the first time. And I have an extensize list of things to make before this year is up, too, both for girfts and for the kiddo’s winter faire at school.

    And while I have been knitting a way this year, I have had a request to teach, and a suggestion to share those same lessons with another group, as well.

    While I used to blog and share tutorials, I was not the most qualified to do so and am certainly surprised (and maybe a bit delighted) at my audaciousness at that time of life. I only shared what I knew, thinking that perhaps other beginners would enjoy the beginner perspective, and hoping it would push me beyond the crippling perfectionism that had me taking on new skills at a snails pace.

    I am still perhaps not the most qualified, but this year I noticed that I’ve grown quite a bit and am now able to do something that I could not before – I can accurately read my knitting. What I mean is, that if I make a mistake, I can look and see what I’ve done wrong, and I am able to go back and fix what is fixable. And because I’ve got a stead pace, tension, and gauge, I knit without really looking and make more mistakes than I did when I needed to pay close attention. These mistakes have relaxed me, made me more confident, and helped me to let go of the type of perfectionism that stagnates progress; I still strive for neat and beautiful stitches, but I no longer fear ruining things or being unable to come from what feels like disaster.

    So, I’ve decided I will say yes to teaching – at least the beginners – and I will help others to read their knitting and set them up to grow and maybe even become better knitters than I will ever be.

    Knitting has given me so much more than warmth on a cold day. In fact, my child would not exist if I didn’t knit (which is a story for another day). It is empowering. It is active rest (quite necessary for my AuDHD brain). It is good for my brain. It is good for my body. It’s a tool for sharing my love and affection. It is a way to have high-quality garments in the age of fast fashion. And on and on… Who am I to keep the knowledge of the craft to myself?

    My hope is that after teaching this class a couple of times, I will be able to publish the materials, and maybe even a virtual class, here. This way, more folks can access it and those who studied with me will also have the resource readily available and shareable.

    So, do keep an eye out for something in the Spring! In the meantime, I will share bits here and there as they come to mind.

    I wish you well!

    Stephanie

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    Parting Note: At this moment, I don’t know how to set up this blog as a newsletter, so you can also join me on Substack until then, but the ultimate goal is for all newsletter/blog activity to be on this platform where you are guaranteed your information will not be sold off.