If you only write patterns up to a size XL and never go any bigger, youâre not a good designer.
Come at me. I said it.
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@knitting-while-black
If you only write patterns up to a size XL and never go any bigger, youâre not a good designer.
Come at me. I said it.

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Amanita Mushroom Mugs, Bowls and Plates, Oil Bottles and Salt and Pepper Shakers, by Vanda Valerie on Etsy
Oh so pretty! đ
Last min baby shower gift
Me, avoiding Black Panther spoilers until I see it Sunday

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Kindness is Everything by Jaala Spiro (free pattern on Ravelry)
During the weekend's slopestyle competition, Finnish snowboarding coach Antti Koskinen was casually knitting at the top of the course.
Things That People Have Said To Me Since I Started Working In A Yarn Shop
âi need more of the rowan felted tweed, iâm making some first-world-war balaclavas and iâve run outâ
âiâm making my husband an x-files themed jumper for christmas and i canât find a good colour for the spaceshipâ
âdo you have any wool/acrylic blends on sale, iâm making hats for the seamenâs mission to give to sailors and i know they say to use acrylics because theyâre cheap but it gets awfully cold at sea and i worryâ
âi need some black wool for gloves, but it has to be flame-proof because iâm making them for the beltane fire-jugglersâ
âcould you see if you have another copy of this pattern for a baby shawl, iâve knitted it in different colours for all of my six children and twelve grandchildren but itâs started to fall apart a bit"
[from a blond, six-foot surfer dude]Â âyeah, do you have any really light needles, iâm going backpacking around argentina and i want to do some socks while iâm on the coach but there isnât much room in my rucksackâ
âwhich of these colours do you think would be best for a knitted corgiâ
âdo you have any patterns for dog hatsâ
like honestly you donât even understand how happy this makes me, like half the time these women are really self-deprecating about it - âoh this is probably a really silly questionâ, âyouâre going to think this is really weird but -â - and iâm just like no!! this is amazing!!! yes, we do have patterns for dog hats!!! please tell me all about why youâre knitting a dog hat!!!!Â
and i mean, some of the stuff they make is unbelievable. thereâs one lady who knits wedding-ring shawls, these enormous lace shawls they do on shetland thatâre about six feet across and made out of yarn thatâs basically thread, which you can pull through a wedding ring because theyâre so fine. and thereâs another lady who knits dolls about three inches tall and sheâs like eighty and sheâs done maybe two thousand of them and i found this out yesterday when she came in for a pattern for an entire knitted nativity scene, including the animals and the star. and thereâs all the ladies who knit clothes to donate to the refugees and tiny, tiny clothes for premature or stillborn babies at the maternity unit and hats for the seamenâs mission and jumpers for the homeless, and all the ladies making this incredible stuff for their friends or their relatives or just because they feel like it, and itâs just, theyâre my favourite, every single one of these people is my favourite
lovely.
Stranded colorwork is the knitterâs version of painting by numberâand just as simple. It's a great way to add patterning to your knit socks.
Hi my dears this is my son James! He is the kindest, sweetest dude I know. A loving big brother and friend he always does his best to help people smile but he is dealing with a pretty difficult situation. Jamesâ dad is struggling with mental health issues and it is deeply impacting their relationship. As a single mother I am doing what I can but I think a big show of love could help bring his smile back to its full brightness.
If you would like to help just take a picture near your most famous landmark with the following message:
âJames, Mommyâs love for you is so big it has reached all the way to (your country/state/province)!â
You can tag the pic or submit it and once Iâve received 50 Iâll be making him a book. If you donât want to take a pic a signal boost is also appreciated.

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I am the â70s child of a health nut. I wasnât vaccinated. I was brought up on an incredibly healthy diet: no sugar till I was 1, breastfed for over a year, organic homegrown vegetables, raw milk, no MSG, no additives, no aspartame. My mother used homeopathy, aromatherapy, osteopathy; we took daily supplements of vitamin C, echinacea, cod liver oil.I had an outdoor lifestyle; I grew up next to a farm in Englandâs Lake District, walked everywhere, did sports and danced twice a week, drank plenty of water. I wasnât even allowed pop; even my fresh juice was watered down to protect my teeth, and I wouldâve killed for white, shop-bought bread in my lunchbox once in a while and biscuits instead of fruit, like all the other kids.We ate (organic local) meat maybe once or twice a week, and my mother and father cooked everything from scratchâI have yet to taste a Findus crispy pancake, and oven chips (âfries,â to Americans) were reserved for those nights when Mum and Dad had friends over and we got a âtreat.âAs healthy as my lifestyle seemed, I contracted measles, mumps, rubella, a type of viral meningitis, scarlatina, whooping cough, yearly tonsillitis, and chickenpox. In my 20s I got precancerous HPV and spent six months of my life wondering how I was going to tell my two children under the age of 7 that Mummy might have cancer before it was safely removed.So the anti-vaccine advocatesâ fears of having the ânatural immunity sterilized out of usâ just doesnât cut it for me. How could I, with my idyllic childhood and my amazing health food, get so freaking ill all the time? ⌠My two vaccinated children, on the other hand, have rarely been ill, have had antibiotics maybe twice in their lives, if that. Not like their mum. I got many illnesses requiring treatment with antibiotics. I developed penicillin-resistant quinsy at age 21âyou know, that old-fashioned disease that supposedly killed Queen Elizabeth I and that was almost wiped out through use of antibiotics.*
âIf you think your childâs immune system is strong enough to fight off vaccine-preventable diseases, then itâs strong enough to fight off the tiny amounts of dead or weakened pathogens present in any of the vaccines.â
jesus, take this as a warning protect yourselves please. please vaccinate!
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Holy shit
Artist Daniel Rarela creates âLetter from a Birmingham Jailâ memes to stop people from whitewashing MLK
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fucked up how cooking and baking from scratch is viewed as a luxuryâŚ..like baking a loaf of bread or whatever is seen as something that only people with money/time can do. Iâm not sure why capitalism decided to sell us the idea that we canât make our own damn food bc itâs a special expensive thing thatâs exclusive to wealthy retirees but itâs stupid as hell and it makes me angry
bread takes like max 4 ingredients counting water and sure it takes a couple hours but 80% of that is just waiting around while it does the thing and you can do other things while itâs rising/baking plus im not gonna say baking cured my depression bc it didnât but man is it hard to feel down when youâre eating slices of fresh bread you just made yourself. feels like everythingâs gonna be a little more ok than you thought. itâs good.
bread is amazing and itâs also been sold to us as something really hard to make? Every time I tell someone I made a loaf of bread I get reactions like âyou made it yourself???â and âdo you have a bread machine then?â I havenât touched a bread machine in probably 10 years. You CAN make your own bread, folks, and itâs actually pretty cheap to do so. I believe the most expensive thing I needed for it was the jar of yeast. It was about $6 at the grocery store and lasted me MONTHS (just keep it in the fridge.) The packets are even cheaper. destroy capitalism. bake your own bread.
You can also make your own yeast by making a sourdough starter, so that cuts cost even more.
But you have to feed the starter daily/weekly and that means it grows quickly, but there are tons of recipes online for what to do with your excess starter. Cookies, pretzels, crackers, pancakes, waffles, you name it!!
Hereâs a link to The Home Baking Associationâs site. It has recipes and tips.
Make it even easier - âNo-Knead Breadâ. All YOU do is mix the ingredients together and wait until itâs time to heat the oven. The yeast does all the rest.
Hereâs @dduaneââs first take on it and the finished product. Weâve made even more photogenic batches since.
Kneading is easy as well; either let your machine do it, or if you donât want to or donât have one, get hands-on. Itâs like mixing two colours of Plasticine to make a third. Flatten, stretch, fold, half-turn, repeat - it takes about 10 minutes - until the gloopy conglomeration of flour, yeast, salt and water that clings to your hands at the beginning, becomes a compact ball that doesnât stick to things and feels silky-smooth.
Hereâs what before and after look like.
My Mum used to say that if you were feeling out of sorts with someone, it was good to make bread because you could transfer your annoyance into kneading the dough REALLY WELL, and both you and the bread would be better for it.
Then you put it into a bowl, cover it with cling-film and let it rise until it doubles in size, turn it out and âknock it backâ (more kneading, until itâs getting back to the size it started, this means there wonât be huge âis something living in here?â holes in the bread), put it into your loaf-tin or whatever - weâve used a regular oblong tin, a rectangular Pullman tin with a lid, a small glass casserole, an earthenware chicken roasterâŚ
You can even use a clean terracotta flowerpot.
Let the dough rise again until itâs high enough to look like an unbaked but otherwise real loaf, then pop it in the preheated oven. On average we give ours 180°C / 355°F for 45-50 minutes. YM (and oven) MV.
Hereâs some of our breadâŚ
Hereâs our default bread recipe - it takes about 3-4 hours from flour jar to cutting board depending on climate (warmer is faster) most of which is rise time and baking; hands-on mixing, kneading and knocking-back is about 20 minutes, tops, and less if using a mixer.
Here ( or indeed any of the other pics) is the finished product. This one was given an egg-wash to make it look glossy and keep the poppy-seeds in place; mostly we donât bother with that or the slash down the middle, but all the extras were intentional as a âready for my close-upâ glamour shot.
I think any shop would be happy to have something this good-looking on their shelf. Weâre happy to have it on our table.
Even if your first attempts donât work out quite as well as you hope, you can always make something like thisâŚ
can we have more posts like this in future please? this is really useful and could help those who are struggling
You got a clean jar and some full fat cream?
Make your own butter as well and really have a good time.
Got a $125 gift card for Amazon today and cannot wait to finally buy a set of interchangeable circular needles!!!

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#PinkySet
This has been such a busy and productive month, 4 cast on and 2 completed!
Really excited about this one because itâs for my son and itâs my first full size blanket! It was a toss up between The Ten Stitch Blanket and this Colorblock Bias Blanket but Kiddo preferred the look and texture of the Bias. Canât wait to see how our colorway shows up in this!
If youâd like you can follow my progress on Ravelry and if you try it Iâd love to see your progress!
Update on Kiddo's blanket. Work is approx. 43" wide and ready to start making it longer. I didn't like the edge at the beginning of the WS rows so about a quarter of the way in I changed it. I'm now slipping the last stitch purlwise on RS rows and ktbl at the beginning of WS. The change isn't very noticeable so I didn't frog anything but I'm much happier with the neatness of the edge.
So far I've used about 1.5 yarn cakes, the ends you see are from me snipping out knots where the joins were created in the cake. I decided to start new cakes randomly rather than trying to match the color changes, that fits with Kiddo's personality and seems to be working rather well with the overall work.
I'll update again when I finish this cake, happy knitting!