The March issue of Simply Knitting is hits shop shelves across the UK today! We've got 24 fabulous knits tucked between the covers. With Mother's Day coming up, we've got some great ways for you to treat your mum, and we've also got a brilliant set of free bag handles and four patterns to use them with.
Click for a larger image.
Spring is on the way but it's still pretty chilly. Wrap up warm with our chunky coat shown on the cover or try a gorgeous textured tunic. We've also got great knits to keep the kids warm with a pretty girl's hoodie, a smart but casual boy's jumper and a sweet hat and wristwarmers set which is sure to appeal to teens and grown women alike.
We've got a fab cover gift for you this month: a set of brilliant bamboo bag handles. They're easy to attach, practical and sturdy – and we've got four fab bags for you to knit.
Click for a larger
image.
Emma King designed these three stunners, and you'll find another way to use your handles in our Quick & Easy Knits section.
Click for a larger image.
If you've got a celebration coming up, we've got some great gifts – and some lovely treats for yourself, too. Our cute ankle socks are quick and simple, and easy bibs make a great gift for a new parent. If you're feeling the cold, wrap up warm with a funky neckwarmer or smart scarf. And there's lots more!
This month, Alan Dart has drawn his inspiration from In Stitches, our monthly comic strip drawn by Malcolm Bird and created a super cute Sox the cat for you to knit.
If you've got a cat at home, it's easy to change the colours to match your own kitty and he's a great gift for any animal lover.
Other great things to look out for in issue 64 include:
New spring yarns!
Rachael Matthews welcomes Japanese textile artists.
We find out about the Handknit Heroes knitting comic.
And don't miss any of your usual favourites: we're testing the best British wool yarns, we've got great books and patterns for you to try and our experts have lots of great tips.
Wednesday January 27, 2010
Sudoku competition not live
The sudoku competition is currently not available to enter online owing to a technical glitch. Thank you to everyone who's let us know. Unfortunately the person who sets up the online competitions is on holiday, and so we will not be able to get it running until next week. All other competitions that should be active right now appear to be, and the phone lines appear to be working for all competitions, sudoku included. We are sorry for any inconvenience, but once it's working you'll be able to enter the sudoku online for several more weeks, so you will still have lots of time to enter.
See the magazine for full competition terms and conditions.
Tuesday January 26, 2010
Inspirational Knitters
In the last fifty years knitting has typically been cast as women's work or, more lately, a strictly female hobby.
This is hard on the guys who knit (and we love our guys who knit) and
it's not a coincidence that it's not taken that seriously and that
knitting is often used as a metaphor to mean something dull, easy or
old-fashioned while at the same time people often suggest that it's too
difficult to learn, or that if you knit you must have a lot of time on
your hands.
Well, we know what knitting is really like – it can be dull (remember
the third foot of that first garter stitch scarf?), easy (when you know
how!) or old-fashioned (like this beautiful book) but it's also a vibrant, changing hobby with lots of exciting
designers and yarn-makers creating things that make you go 'ooh!' – and
which you can make all over again, in your own way, in your own time,
in your own home.
It's brilliant, really.
And as March 2010 plays host to both Mother's Day (14 March in the UK)
and World Women's Day (8 March) we'd love to turn this stereotype on
its head and celebrate the wonderful women who taught us to knit and
helped us on our way. We'll be posting some of our stories, but you can
help us get started by emailing us (if you'd like to share a photo, perhaps) or
leaving a comment below.
Simply Knitting
is the result of a lot of hard work by a lot of women – more women than
men, funnily enough – over the years and you can see two of them at the
top of this entry: editor Debora Bradley and her mum, Audrey. "Mum
taught me to knit and without that I'd never have found myself working
on Simply Knitting," says Debora, "but she has also always
encouraged me to try new things and to go as far as I can, both
personally and professionally. It's important to remember, even if it's
just once a year on World Women's Day, that we are standing on the
shoulders of the generations which came before, the suffragettes who
won the right to vote, the feminists who fought for equal pay as well
as our own personal heroes."
Monday January 25, 2010
FREE 4 fab bag patterns to knit!
If you fancy knitting one of these beautiful bags by Amanda Jones, then you'll need a pair of funky bamboo handles to finish the look – and we've got just the thing for you as your free gift with issue 64 is a pair of bamboo bag handles!
Issue 64 is on sale on Thursday 28 January 2010 and each issue comes with one pair of bamboo bag handles, as well as four more patterns to use them with, giving you eight bag patterns in total.
We first printed the patterns for these four beautiful bags in issue 54 but we thought they'd be perfect for our new set of handles. Cast on today and you'll be ready to add the handles when you pop to the shops next week!
As the new handles are a U rather than an O shape, we asked technical editor Kirstie McLeod for the best way to attach them to Amanda's bags. "Instead of leaving the hem at the top open, as for the O-shaped handles, place some ribbon or stiff fabric between the two layers to make it firmer and sew it shut," she recommends. "You can then sew the handles on easily, attaching each leg of the U to one end of the ribbon."
This pattern is available to download as a PDF
document. It won’t open unless you have Adobe
Acrobat Reader installed on your computer. You can download this
program from the Adobe
website for free.
If
you have Acrobat Reader and it’s still not working, try right-clicking
the link and clicking “save as”. Save the document onto your computer –
make sure you can find it again! – and try opening it from
there.
Friday January 22, 2010
Vintage treats
Miriam McDonald Simply Knitting's Production Editor
I love a lot of early 20th century stuff, from the 1920s to the 1950s in particular. Films, fabrics, shoes... even perfume. Kirstie has a stash of vintage magazines and pattern books, from an amazing crochet sample book done by a distant ancestor of hers to patterns from the 1970s and 1980s. We were looking through them on Wednesday. I loved the 1930s needlework magazines in particular, which cover all sorts of techniques as well as knitting and crochet. Embroidery's not my strong point, but the pretty table mats and cushion covers are so lovely!
It's interesting to see how knitting patterns haven't changed much over the decades. We sometimes hear from people who think charts are a modern innovation, but I've got a 1930s pattern that uses charts (for a very natty man's Fair Isle scarf, glove and sock set, which my husband would refuse point-blank to wear). There are more words and fewer abbreviations in the early 20th century patterns, but the terms are all virtually the same, and most knitters should be able to follow them. In fact, when we get enquiries about vintage patterns in the Simply Knitting office, it's not usually about the patterns themselves but about finding a substitute yarn.
I feel a spell of vintage knitting coming on, once I've finished a few of my current projects... Have you made anything from a vintage pattern? Do you simply enjoy looking at them? Maybe I shall make the Fair Isle set anyway and wear it myself!
Thursday January 21, 2010
Competitions – Simply Knitting issue 64
Simply Knitting
issue 64 hits the shops on Thursday 28 January 2010. Enter our great
giveaways and competitions by using the links
below.
Going for Gossamer Apologies (The Knitter, Issue 14)
We would like to apologise for any confusion as a result of a mistake in Issue 14 of The Knitter, regarding the delightful lace-weight Heirloom Gossamer yarn from Artist’s Palette Yarns. We showed yarns dyed by Juliet at Artist's Palette Yarns, but the base yarn was actually designed by and custom-spun for Fleegle, not Juliet as we incorrectly stated. Fleegle’s beautiful yarn is also available, directly from her at The Gossamer Web.
Friday January 15, 2010
Traveller's Yarn – knitting blog review
Traveller's Yarn is a knitting blog which really lives up to its name. Keen knitter and owner of an online shop, Yarn Workshop, Ingrid is currently blogging from Paris – but back home, she's still settling in after moving from Hong Kong to Sydney.
With plenty of finished objects, pictures of yarn, dyeing talk, yarn gossip and natter about notions to satisfy our yarn cravings and updates on her travels, Ingrid has created a fun blog with a wide outlook and it's a great way to do a bit of virtual travelling to somewhere warm on a wet British winter day.
Read a great blog? Write a great blog?
Tell us what it is and why you like it, and you might see it here
next Friday.
According to the article, Norma Bousfield knitted a brightly coloured jumper for her grandson last year, and it was such a hit that she's knit eight more for the rest of her family.
The Mail Online is treating it as a light, festive story – which it is, of course – but knitters, we know that there's a lot of work – and a lot of yarn – in nine adult-size sweaters, so we appreciate how much effort Norma has put in.
We love this story because it showcases knits that many people would disparage but which are clearly being enjoyed and because it shows off Norma's skills. While most Mail Online readers will probably focus on the colours, we've been focusing on the colourwork trying to figure out how many different techniques she used – she's clearly a very talented knitter!
It's also a great lesson to take to Knit Night – whatever your personal tastes, there's always something to admire in a well-knit sweater.
New year, new yarn diet
Miriam McDonald Simply Knitting's Production Editor
When I first started knitting, I had a basket, the sort you store logs in. The idea was that all the yarn I needed was going to fit in the basket. For a while, that was true, but discovering bargains online and at shows, learning to knit socks (and telling myself that one skein of sock yarn couldn't possibly count as 'more yarn') and even getting given the odd ball of discontinued yarn from work has expanded the stash massively. Now it takes up the basket, a box and a couple of plastic bags, so my new year's resolution is to go on a yarn diet. I am not buying any more yarn for six months.
I have plenty of sock yarn in the stash that I'm really keen on, and that's going to be easy to use, as are the three bags, each containing enough yarn to knit a specific garment. (All sale purchases – who can resist a bargain?) The garment designs are all still ones I like, so that yarn will get used. However, I learned to knit during the big 'novelty yarn' craze a few years back, though, and my tastes have shifted a little so that when I look at some of the stash I wonder how I'll use it now. Likewise, some of the limited amounts of unusual yarns might prove tricky to use, such as the three balls of Louisa Harding Castello. If you have any ideas what to do with that, please share them! Currently a lacy scarf looks the most likely option.
Have you tried a yarn diet? Did it work? Did you learn to love the strange oddments at the bottom of your yarn basket? It's going to be an interesting six months...
Wednesday January 13, 2010
Most used handknits
Elizabeth Bagwell Simply Knitting's Reviews Editor
It's snowing again and Bath looks beautiful. And while the snow is causing its share of problems for people around the country, one small thing is cheering me up as I slog through the drifts to work (it's uphill both ways, of course!) – my handknits are getting a lot of wear.
My mum, brother & boyfriend have been wearing things I made them, and so have I. I've been wearing my oops-that's-way-too-big super cosy cardi around the house, woolly socks (handknit, of course) and a hat I crocheted when I leave it.
However, I've noticed a real gap in my collection: MITTENS and A HUGE SCARF. I've been alternating between a scarf my grandma made me and one from H&M and my gloves were – yep – store bought too. I've got plenty of dainty, lacy efforts for warmer winter days but I need to dig out my 20mm needles, double strand some yarn and cast on something like a duvet to wear around my neck!
I'm also on a quest for the perfect mitten pattern – flip top would be ideal, but it needs to have no colourwork or fancy bits – otherwise I won't have it finished by the next once-in-a-lifetime cold snap – so suggestions are really welcome!
All you have to do is knit a hat, gloves or scarf and send the team at Arthritis Care four photographs of it. If you're shortlisted, they'll want to see the item in person, but for now you don't even need to walk to the post office! You'll find all the information you need, including the rules, on the Arthritis Care website.
As the competition is raising funds Arthritis Care, there's an entry fee of £2 per item. The competition closes on 15 February 2010 so it's time to start stitching – or have a photo shoot with your favourite knit from 2009!
Friday January 08, 2010
Raining Sheep – knitting blog review
After the hurly burly of the winter holidays, the new year feels like a fresh fall of snow, smoothing out the lumps and bumps into a blank white slate, ready to be written on.
If you're feeling as comtemplative as we are, then the gorgeous photographs and thoughtful words over at Raining Sheep are a great place to settle for a while.
Browsing backwards through the archives is like flicking through a colour palette of the seasons – for a foretaste of spring freshness, visit last year's posts from April or May, or if you're happy to stay with the present, enjoy the muted stillness a snowy January brings.
Read a great blog? Write a great blog? Tell us what it is and why you like it, and you might see it here next Friday.
Thursday January 07, 2010
Ruffled Neckwarmer, issue 63
We've unfortunately missed off the explanation for how to crochet a bobble on this pattern.
To make a bobble: work 3 dc into next space until 1 loop from each dc remains on the hook, yo and pull through all 4 loops on the hook.
Appolgogies for any delays to your project – we hope you'll enjoy this pattern!
Wednesday January 06, 2010
Your Family Tree Awards
If you've seen the banner at the top of our website, you may be wondering what the Your Family Tree Awards are. They're run by our sister magazine, Your Family Tree, and help make sure that the websites, companies and products that have done the most for family history over the last 12 months are fully recognised.
This year, they're asking their readers to decide who wins the prizes! So if you're a keen family history buff yourself or have a genealogist in your family, have your say. Click on the banner below and cast your vote.
Tuesday January 05, 2010
Happy New Year!
Elizabeth Bagwell Simply Knitting's Reviews Editor
Hope you all had happy holidays and are enjoying 2010!
It's New Year's Resolution time, and I've been thinking about what I'd like to accomplish this year – apart from knit a lot, of course!
I'd like this to be an adventurous year for me – there are lots of new things I'd like to try (not just knitting!) and I'm looking for some suggestions. Are there any techniques you've tried and really loved? In 2009, I tried Jeny's surprisingly stretchy bind off which really does what it says on the tin and the No wrap no gap shortrow heel is now my go-to heel for simple socks but I still haven't found a way to stop myself yanking the floats too tight when I do Fair Isle, so my 'Flame Thrower Socks' from Knitting Socks with Handpainted Yarns are languishing in the UFO pile. Tips gratefully received!
Thursday December 31, 2009
Simply Knitting Issue 63 - on sale today!
The February issue of Simply
Knitting is landing on shop shelves across the UK today!
We've got 23 gorgous knits
tucked between the covers and we're already thinking about Valentine's gifts for you to knit as well as lovely ways to treat yourself.
Click for a larger
image.
We've got three gorgeous women's tops in this issue, so you'll be able to find one to suit your style. Choose from the trendy cropped jacket on the cover, a smart cowl-neck jumper or an elegant silver tunic.
If you feel like indulging in a quicker project, try our slouchy socks or Fair Isle hot water bottle cover – or pick your favourite of the 11 patterns in our Quick & Easy Knits section!
Click for a larger
image.
Just because the holiday season is out of the way, doesn't mean we're ready to stop knitting for the ones we love. The 11 patterns in
our Quick & Easy Knits section include super-sweet designs and some romantic knits for Valentine's Day. Knit a simple card for a friend or say 'I love you' with a pair of heart-motif socks. We've also got fun, quick gifts for the whole family, from dads to tots.
Carrying the romantic theme further, Alan Dart has designed a pretty pair of lovers for us this issue. Pierrot and Pierrette are absolutely charming with their matching outfits and wistful faces. They'd make a great gift for a teenage girl waiting for her first Valentine's card, a newly married couple or anyone with a romantic streak!
Other
great things
to look out for in issue 63 include:
We test the best circular needles around.
Get kids crafting with help from Craft Club.
The story behind a knitted wedding cake...
And don't
miss any of your usual favourites: we've got fab new yarns, great giveaways and loads of books, patterns and websites for you to try out!
Tuesday December 29, 2009
Say it with yarn
There's nothing quite like making something for someone and finding out they love it literally to bits.
While many knitters knit for all sorts of occasions, there seems to be a big focus on Christmas knitting. We'd love to know which holidays, festivals or occasions you'll be knitting for next year – and if there are any you'd never knit for at all!
Thursday December 24, 2009
Competitions – Simply Knitting issue 63
Simply Knitting
issue 63 hits the shops on Thursday 31 December 2009. Enter our great
giveaways and competitions by using the links
below.
Future Publishing closes down between Christmas and New Year. Because of this, there will be no-one in the Simply Knitting office to answer the telephone from 24th December 2009. We will be back in the office from the 4th January. The website can be set to update automatically, so if you see new stories come up here, we're still not in the office!
I usually answer the Simply Knitting emails, and I'm off from the 22nd, so it is unlikely you will receive a reply to emails between now and the 4th January (at the earliest; I will be dealing with those I am personally able to answer on the 4th, but if your query needs to be passed on to another member of the team please be aware that they may not be able to reply immediately on the 4th).
SUBSCRIPTION QUERY? We don't actually deal with those - they're handled by the subs team, so email simplyknitting@subscription.co.uk or call 0844 848 2852 and they will be able to help you. I believe they are in their office between Christmas and New Year, so you'll get a faster response too than if you contact us.
BACK ISSUE QUERY? Again, we don't handle those in the Simply Knitting office. You can see all available single issues HERE. If an issue isn't shown, it is not available as a back issue.
Have a great Christmas (or other holiday, there are plenty to celebrate at this time of year).