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Sunday, November 28, 2010

Want free phone coaching? Call in tomorrow!

Happy phone photo with knitted iPhone cover

I'll be interviewed on BlogTalkRadio from 7:00 - 7:20pm EST tomorrow! I met Bonnie, the host of Read My Lips, in New York last month, and we're going to be talking all about knitting! Why it's great, what it can do for your life, and how to get started.

My readers and students can call in to a special phone number: 646-478-0719. Please tune in to the show!

KNITFreedom has moved!



Hooray! I figured out how to do it - KNITFreedom blog has now moved to KNITFreedom.com/blog! Don't worry - all the videos, posts, and instructions that were here have been moved as well. (They're still here, too - don't worry.)

There's a whole pattern and knitting kit store, tech support, and more. See you there!

Friday, November 19, 2010

More Garter-Stitch Magic! On KUTV!


It's happened again! The Magical Garter-Stitch Scarf brought happiness and joy to the people of the world (and especially to me) yesterday when it appeared, in its super-bulky form, draped around the neck of the lovely KUTV 2News This Morning anchor Mary Nickles.


Are you an amazing knitter? How I love to see those words splashed across the TV screen. I love it because it really gets the point across that knitting is worth being amazing at, and that you can do it!

I showed Mary how to knit on size 35 needles, and she had a lot of fun with it.


Actually, now that I take a close look at this screenshot, I see that this is a Magical Meeting of the Garter-Stitch Scarves! I am shown here wearing the original Magical Misti Alpaca Scarf. Watch out, boys!


About Mary's scarf: I knitted this fun turquoise scarf in about three hours the night before (unfortunately for me it was the three hours between midnight and 3am!), using Thick 'n' Quick Merino by Euro Yarns, held double, on size 35 needles.


Materials:
Yarn: 280 yards of bulky yarn, held double (so: 140 yards of the doubled yarn)
Needles: US Size 35 needles
Finished Measurements: 4.5 inches wide by 7 feet long.
Instructions: CO 7 stitches. Knit every row for 7 feet. Bind off.
Finishing: Don't bother to weave in your ends! Let them blend with the fringe. For fringe: Cut 16 pieces of yarn, each 28 inches long. Using a crochet hook, attach 8 pieces of fringe to each end of scarf.

The amazingly over-the-top fringe is my favorite part of this scarf, because it really shows off the thick-and-thin texture of the yarn better than the rest of the scarf.


Speaking of thick-and-thin texture, I've got a wonderful design project coming up! I've teamed up with Camilla Emond of Magnolia Handspun to create an original design for her brand-new thick-and-thin handspun yarn.


This is so exciting, but when I saw the yarn she sent me, I thought, "Oh no! Thick-and-thin! What am I going to do with this?!" It takes a very simple and very clever pattern to show off yarn like this to its best advantage. What I did with the Thick 'n' Quick Merino for the TV appearance was truly an act of desperation, not good design. So for Magnolia Handspun, I've got to come up with something really special.

Do any of you, my lovely readers, have a favorite thick-and-thin pattern that you'd like to share? Please post a link in the comments!


A closer look at Magnolia Handspun. It's glittery!

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

I'll be on KUTV 2News This Morning!

Hi Y'all - NEWS FLASH!



Just a quick (and AWESOME) knitting-related update - I'll be on KUTV 2News This Morning (Salt Lake City) tomorrow morning (Thursday) at 7:48 am Mountain Time.

I'll be teaching the anchors how to knit! (In three minutes). Tune in if you are local!

Next blog post: Why you should not be knitting with your sock turned inside out.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

How Knitting Rescued Me, and A Knitted Christmas Ornament


Knitting really did rescue me! As I prepare for my first knitting-related interview, to be broadcast on TheLastYearOfYourLife.com, I'm realizing that there is a really cool story behind KNITFreedom, and I wanted to share it with my lovely readers! I really believe in this business and as I try to make it work, teaching people to become Knitting Superstars over the internet, it helps to remember why I started this anyway...

I learned to knit just after I graduated high school, using a book called The Complete Idiot's Guide to Knitting and Crocheting. I read every single page, following every instruction and illustration, until I got to the end of the book. I made every project, one by one, in the exact order described. With terrible yarn, I have to say! But we've all got to start somewhere.

Knowing that hardly anyone learns or reads books like this, it's helped me to think of how I want to put together my own knitting courses. Since I specialize in teaching intermediate knitters, I didn't worry too much about this in the beginning. Now that I'm starting to reach a wider audience and teach beginners as well, I'm trying to make sure every project is hip and awesome, and I give yarn suggestions that are reasonably-priced but that you won't hate once you know better.

About seven years after I learned to knit, I forgot I knew how to do it. How could this have happened? Unbeknownst to me, I developed a full-blown eating disorder. Given my rigid upbringing and inflamed by ideas in magazines and on TV, and the general mid-twenties success-test, I'm not surprised. What was weird was I didn't even notice!

Dieting became my full-time hobby. I thought that weight loss was the one thing to by which to measure one's success - the one thing to talk about, think about, and plan about. (Lack of food will do this to anyone - it's scientifically proven.) I only realized something was going on when my beloved roommate finally cried, "Can we talk about something else??!"

Luckily, my family was able to support me in going to an Eating Disorder clinic, where I learned the habits of normal eating and normal socializing. And there was the craft woman. She brought scrapbooking projects, collage crafts, and other stuff I couldn't care less about. The day she brought knitting needles and yarn was an epiphany.

As she was showing all the girls how to cast on for a felted purse, I was thinking, "Wait, I know how to do this already! How could I have forgotten?" On my next break, I got yarn for the Flap-Top Mittens in Melanie Falick's Handknit Holidays, and completed them within a couple weeks. I also started helping the other girls - picking up dropped stitches, reminding them how to cast on (and showing them a better, easier way), encouraging them... this all came so naturally to me. I loved it!


I "graduated" soon after, and returned home to Bozeman, able to eat normally but lacking a job or purpose in life. I was knitting like crazy, and spending so much time at my LYS, Stix, that the employees started recognizing my voice on the phone! I learned Magic Loop from Beverly Galeskas' little pamphlet, before any of the employees took any notice of this awesome technique.

By the time they offered me a job, my phone number was already written on the employee contact list! For the next year, I lived and breathed yarn. I helped so many people learn to knit, and (even more fun for me), learn to fix their own mistakes. I started re-writing people's patterns that they brought in, saying, "Why would they have you do it this way? This is so hard and confusing! Why don't you just... take a seat while I re-write this for you..."

My passions for helping people and doing stuff better had started to bloom.

Next week: The Grand Search

Now: A fast holiday ornament project you can do in the round (on Magic Loop of course) with a little leftover yarn. This isn't my pattern, but it's a great one that lets you practice lace AND Magic Loop at the same time - let's see how good your skills are!


This pattern is by Judy Sumner and is a free download. If you get stuck, post your comments HERE or in the KNITFreedom Group on Ravelry, so we can all learn from your questions!

Other good news: I'll be appearing on Salt Lake City's KUTV 2News This Morning next Thursday! I'll be teaching the anchors how to knit! More details coming as soon as I have them.

Monday, November 1, 2010

How To Get Away With Not Planning

When it's time to start a knitting project, we usually sketch out the basic plan and its objectives like this, right?


Not. As involved, expensive, and labor-intensive as knitting is (labor of love that it may be), it may be hard to believe how many people jump into a project without any planning. Like, all of you, right? I know. It's okay.

MOMFreedom has joined KNITFreedom here in bracingly autumnal Salt Lake City for a few days of strategic planning, and it has really inspired me... to never make you guys go through this!!!

Knitting is an expression of creativity and joy, and it's no wonder that many people don't stop to check their gauge, measure themselves, or even hold up a color in front of their faces to see if if looks good. I can relate - when I see that gorgeous model leaning on mast of a yacht, wearing nothing but a summer dress made of super-bulky wool, I don't want ANYTHING to stand in the way of me having THAT EXPERIENCE. Out comes the credit card. What could possibly go wrong?

Voyageur Dress by Wenlan Chia
Twinkle's Town and Country Knits

How about ending up looking like this?


It's possible that lack of planning precipitated this sad state of affairs. But it doesn't take much to avert knitting disaster! To that end, I will leave you with three painless tips that, if followed, should leave you looking like the gal on the boat. Or at least like your lovely radiant self at your best!
  1. Look at your favorite sweaters - the ones that look fabulous on you - and see if the one you are about to knit has the same shape and/or features. If you look great in deep V-necks or boat-necks, don't make a turtleneck.
  2. Hold the color of the yarn up to your face and see if it makes you go, "Oooh! I look great!"
  3. Measure your gauge after you start! If you aren't going to make a gauge swatch, at least hold a ruler up to your stitches once you're a few inches into the project. 



That wasn't so bad, was it?

If you'd like to learn more basic skills like checking your gauge and blocking, download my free video knitting dictionary here.

Find more videos on my YouTube channel here!

And, as promised, Regis and Kelly's policy on knitting: NO WAY. Aw, snap! Of all the media producers I met with in New York, the LIVE! with Regis & Kelly show was the only one that had a strict anti-knitting stance. Many more totally got how cool knitting is, and invited me to contribute to their shows.

Happily, I will be sharing how knitting can make you awesome on Bonnie D. Graham's Read My Lips radio broadcast on BlogTalkRadio on 11/29, at 7:00pm EST. Mark your calendars! (But don't worry - if you don't want to plan that much, I'll remind you).