2026 So Far

January 28th already? A month almost come and gone. Plans not started, some still taking shape, others showing little green shoots. It’s a work in progress.

I ruminated on my word for this year for some time. Knowing its flavour, but not the precise ingredients. I was pondering the taste of it, back in December, when I felt the need to recentre myself, reclaim my drive and get back to enjoying me, wholeheartedly.

So it makes perfect sense now that my word for 2026 is intent.

Not INTENT, all shouty, harsh capital letters that scream a challenge at me to focus on the path ahead, but an understated intent. Lowercase i, with its gentle message to make better choices where possible for head, heart and hands. (The prolific maker in me just couldn’t acknowledge the part my hands have to play in my everyday life and sanity.)

With that in mind, it’s time to pull up my socks and get back to my biggest flop of last year. The Appleoak Fibreworks One-Year Professional Dyers Course, which I started in 2025 and never truly got my teeth into. Despite its name, participants actually have two years to complete the course, which is rather helpful given the amount of information included.

I enrolled on the course as a way to build on what I already knew about natural dyeing. Document more, clarify my knowledge, document more, improve my techniques, learn more, document more and not skip past the areas or colours (purple) that hold little interest to me. Did I mention document more? I am the world’s worst at taking notes, legible ones, in a notebook, the same notebook, that I can refer back to later.

I did complete most of the reading and a good bit of the coursework throughout the year, but I’ve decided it might be best to start again, as there were aspects of the dyeing that I messed up. Most notably, my indigo vats, which I had to remake. We were given a new topic each month, with the actual dyeing beginning in March with Tannins. It was an incredible amount of work and it’s the one chapter that I’m fairly confident I did correctly, but my note taking was next to useless, so I’ll have to repeat everything again.

Before I get there, I’m going to have to do an inventory of my dye stuffs and materials to see if any of them need re-stocking. The costs involved with taking the course are not insignificant and I don’t think I had budgeted well for the extra items I needed along the way. At least by working out what extras I’ll need to complete the course now, I should avoid anymore nasty suprises.

There has, of course, been fibrecrafting, although nowhere near as much as usual. Much of my making time has been given over to researching things on the computer or in books and there is only so much spare time in the day. The time that is additional to what is required for ordinary use (as per the dictionary) must also come when one has the energy to put it to good use. In other words, sitting down a little after 9pm most nights isn’t conducive to getting too much knitting done. This is one area where change is ongoing. I love knitting, my brain prefers it when I knit and my hands hate me when I don’t.

None of my current WIPs was doing it for me, though, so I finally decided to cast on a Lento, using yarn from my stash. My plan to make a workhorse jumper that I can throw on with my uniform of long sleeve t-shirt and dungarees, has gone slightly awry when I saw how amazing the two yarns I’m using look together.

Just look at the beautiful blue.

The jumper is feeling just a little too classy for everyday wear currently.

I also need to get this basic asymmetrical shawl cast off. It’s been on my needles since December 2025 and I could really do with it this Winter.

Before I forget.

I was delighted to receive the Long Draw issue of Ply Magazine on Monday. Courtesy of my beautiful daughter, who renewed my lapsed subscription for Christmas (love that woman). Long Draw is a technique I would love to master, in the hopes of eventually spinning a jumper’s quantity of fluff.

I guess I should sign off now and see if I can’t squeeze a couple of rows in on my Lento before bed.

Happy Making

Legacy

I closed the doors on my shop for the last time in 2015. At the time it felt like the right thing to do and despite being a bit nervous of what lay in store for me, I’ve never looked back.

The online magazine Olann and that I went on to produce with my friend Deirdre became the focus of my creativity. when the last issue went live in December 2018, I didn’t know at the time it would be the end but my first grandson was born in January 2019 and my priorities changed. 

With the birth of grandson number two in 2021 the priorities have well and truly altered. I love being a Nanna, I absolutely adore being a mum and lets face it, I had my daughter when I was 17, so it could have gone completely sideways. It didn’t though, I’m pretty confident my kids would agree with me but life for me at least was tough. 

I won’t go into the details but suffice to say it’s only on reflection I’ve realised how tough it was. I also think, in the main, my children, especially the two older ones, didn’t know.

So why am I saying all of this? It’s because there’s been a shift in my brain over the last little while. I’m not sure if it’s because I’m now in my 50s, seeing my mum age, the grandchildren or the terrible reality of Covid and the world after but I have become aware of my own mortality and more importantly the legacy I will pass on to my three beautiful children and their gorgeous babes.

There has always been making, there will always be making but I’d like to think that along with the shift in my head, it’s become a little more purposeful.

There is still room for fun. Most definitely. I stumbled upon the photograph and pattern in a copy of one of the magazines I was passing on and it has now been added to my ‘to knit’ queue.

Some of the other projects are being made with more of a nod towards making memories. 

The doctor/vet set I spent a good while making for my oldest grandson is I hope, a good example of what I’m trying to achieve. Whilst the items might not survive until he has his own children, I hope the memories he has of playing with them does. Somewhere in those recollections he’ll find me and that’s what I’m after. 

Legacy is my word of the year.

When you look up the word legacy the definition on the Cambridge Dictionary Website says;

  1. Money or property that you receive from someone after they die:

2. Something that is a part of your history or that remains from an earlier time:

I’m going for the second because the first has been fairly unachievable so far.

So I’m planning the things I make for my family, with one eye on what will become their past. There’s room for me in that second definition too though. 

I loved writing my blog. I enjoyed having a record of what I was making and the things I did in pursuit of my hobbies. So when I found the magazine that’s in the photo at the top of this post, I thought “Why not?”. 

So it might be a bit different this time round and it definitely won’t be as often as in the past, at least I don’t think it will but I’m going to get back to blogging. Just for me, so I have a record for myself. If some one out there is reading this and wants to stick with me – great! Hi, hello, sending you much love. If not, that’s ok too. In this day and age of YouTube and Patreon I’m not sure if anyone even still reads blogs. 

I do but as we’ve established already, I’m in my 50s.

So here’s the start of my records:-

Things I’ve been working on in January 2024

2024 is the year I am going to improve my spinning and fingers crossed, learn how to spin Longdraw.

I’ve agreed with myself, to spend 30minutes per day spinning. I’m trying my best to do this first thing in the morning, shortly after I wake and before I walk my dogs and it seems to be working (for the most part anyway).

The Bluefaced Leicester fibre from Hilltop Cloud in the photo is my first ever intentional spin. I’ve split the braid in three lengthways and am doing my best to spin the fibre consistently. I may still card one third to spin as I’d like the colour changes to be a little smoother but we’ll see,

I’ve knitted and gifted a little baby hat in blue merino. Note to self, the pattern was the one you wrote when Arthur was born and his head was tiny.

I’ve ripped out and restarted Andrea Mowry’s The Weekender. I originally knit the third size, in January I’d been knitting the first and I’m still not happy. I’ll be frogging it again and reducing the number of stitches.

I’ve sewn, embroidered and crocheted several items for Art’s role play set. Including blankets, sheets, pillowcases, white coats, bandages and a name badge.

I’ve restarted the black jumper ordered by grandson number one.

I’ve cut out all of the letters to make grandson number twos song banner.

I’ve been working away on a patchwork quilt.

I’ve completed a new Hipster Hat for myself.

I finished spinning and plying some Suffolk Fiber but I still need to wash it.

I’m about two thirds of the way into knitting a sock for me. 

Is that everything?

Oh! There’s another Hipster hat on my needles for a friend too.

Plans for February

Finish as many of the things above that I can.

Make plans for the garden and order some seeds.

Plant my Sweet peas, Aubergines and peppers.

Cast on a cardi or a jumper for grandson number two.

Potentially cast on a Gan by Ailbíona McLochlainn for myself.

Possibly make a few more bits to go with the doctors/vets set.

Dig out my drop spindle and have another go.

Keep spinning for 30 minutes a day.

Try to write another blog post before the month February is over.

Happy Making

x

The Reson I Needed – Perhaps?

Well this is strange?

My much-loved blog has been sorely neglected now for well over a year and a half 😳

There is a long list of reasons for the hiatus, but I won’t bore you with them now, except to say that I have, on many occasions, woke with every intention to post later that day, but…… Instead, I will explain the reason why I am finally here.

Kelly McClure aka @bohoknits recently posted a photo of her little boy Cameron wearing a gorgeous woolly hat on Instagram. Nothing particularly unusual about that, Kelly is, after all, a knitwear designer. Except, Kelly had tagged me in on the photo because the hat in question was the Folkestone Beach hat I had designed for Olann and back in 2017.

Sadly, Olann and is no more and I never did get round to sorting out he designs I’d written for the magazine (another thing I’d put on the longfinger). Anyway, following Kelly’s post, a few of her followers mentioned that they’d love to knit the pattern themselves.

So in a bid to listen to what the universe throws at us sometimes, here is the Folkestone Beach Pattern.

Folkestone Beach is a versatile, pixie-shaped hat that will suit everyone from newborn to teenager. The bobble detail pops throughout the hat to create a contemporary textured design, reminiscent of the shingle on Folkestone Beach.  

Materials

Yarn: DK  Preemie: 53 metres/58 yards, Newborn72 metres /79 yards, 
6 months
: 102 metres /112 yards, 12 months: 121 metres /132 yards, Child/teen: 143 metres/156 yards

Shown in: Peter Pan Merino Baby (100% Pure Ultra Soft Superwash Wool: 116 metres/127 yards per 50g) Shades: Preemie 3031 Cream, Newborn 3044 Duck Egg, 6 months 3038 Apricot, 12 months 3036 Raspberry, Child/teen 3040 Lime

Needle size: 4 and 4.5mm or size to obtain gauge/tension. You can use DPNs or circular needles, whichever you’re most comfortable with.

Notions:  Stitch markers, tapestry needle

Size

Finished measurements

Preemie: 12 inch circumference
Newborn: 14 inch circumference
6 months: 16 inch circumference
12 months: 18 inch circumference
Child/teen: 20 inch circumference

Tension

5½ sts x 8 rows to 1” over pattern

Special Stitches

MB: Knit the next stitch, but do not lift it off the left-hand needle. Instead, place your knitted stitch from the right to left-hand needle. You have added 1 stitch. Repeat this action and add another stitch. (You have turned 1 st into 3, all on your left-hand needle).  Knit the new 2 stitches, then knit the third stitch through the back loop.  Pass the first two stitches over your third stitch.

Pattern notes:

If knitting in the round with interchangeable needles using a smaller needle in your left hand can help with slipping the stitches off easier.

If you pull the stitches immediately before and after the MB stitch, the bobble sits higher.

When working the row after your MB row, try to draw the stitches either side of the bobble tighter, to help your bobble pop.

Chart

Pattern

Row 1: Knit

Row 2: Knit

Row 3: *K1, MB, K4, repeat from * to end of row

Row 4: Knit

Row 5: Knit

Row 6: Knit

Row 7: *K4, MB, K1, repeat from * to end of row

Row 8: Knit

These 8 rows form the pattern, work number of rows as per instructions indicated for the size you are making.

Instructions

Using smaller needles cast on 60 (72, 84, 96, 108) stitches

Join to work in the round and complete 6 (6, 6, 8, 8) rows of 2×2 rib

Change to larger needles

Beginning with row 5 (1, 1, 5, 5) of pattern, work 23 (27, 35, 39, 43) rows in total. Your last row will be row 3 of the pattern.

Crown Shaping

Row 1: *K10, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 2: Knit

Row 3: *K9, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 4: *K4, MB, repeat from * to end

Row 5: K*8, K2tog repeat from * to end

Row 6: Knit

Row 7: * K7, K2tog repeat from * to end

Row 8: K1, MB, * K4, MB, K2, MB, repeat from * to last st, K1

Row 9: * K6, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 10: Knit

Row 11: * K5, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 12: *K3, MB, K2, repeat from * to end

Row 13: * K4, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 14: Knit

Row 15: * Knit 3, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 16: *K1, MB K2, repeat from * to end

Rows 17 and 18: Knit

Row 19: * K2, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 20: * K2, MB, repeat from * to end

Rows 21 and 22: Knit

Row 23: *K1, K2tog, repeat from * to end

Row 24: *K1, MB, repeat from * to end

Rows 25 and 26: Knit

Row 27: K (for preemie size K2tog and finish)

Row 28: *MB, K1, repeat from * to end

Rows 29 and 30: Knit

Row 31: *K2tog repeat from * to end

Finishing

Cut yarn, leaving a long tail and thread through remaining stitches.

Fasten off and sew in ends.

If you do block the hat, be careful not to squash the bobbles.


You can download a pdf version of the pattern here (please let me know if you spot any mistakes)

Hope to be back again soon

Happy Making

(By the way, that’s Thom on the stairs watching me)

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Having said that, my grandson, when he gets here, will also need cardigans and I’m not sure buying them is on when he’s gonna have a nana that knits?

It’s only excusable to a point, right?

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No surprises there then?

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