Kvosin by Stephen West in 100% yak down from The Rocking Yak
Kvosin by Stephen West in 100% yak down from The Rocking Yak
I have never done a KAL before, but it is something that I’ve been thinking of doing. I saw that Stephen West is launching a series of new patterns with KAL & thought I’d join in the fun.
The first KAL begins on Friday 2/8/13 & will be the Kvosin hat. With poor old winter knocking at my door, I decided that I needed to make myself a new warmer hat. This will be just the one. I love the combination of texture & colors. I also love that it is constructed sideways. I’ve always knitted hats in the round, & I love having the opportunity to break out of that box!
I’ve chosen my yarn for the project. I’m going to be using The Rocking Yak’s 100% Yak Down yarns in natural brown, cream, indigo, plant dyed yellow, & plant dyed green. I can’t wait to get started. Let me know if you decide to join us!
Today’s post was written by guest blogger, Lise Solvang of aHandKnitLife
I asked her to share with us about her Knitting in Recovery program, One Stitch at a Time.
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“Patterns”…what an appropriate place for me to start on this part of my own
healing journey. It’s the name of the recovery home for women who struggle with the addiction to alcohol and drugs where I am arriving to lead a knitting circle.
Still very new to recovery myself, I am anxious, yet hopeful and proud, to be amongst these women who suffer from the same disease that I do. To any outsider, we would seem very different, at least in appearance, attitude and speech, but the reality is that we are not. We are each trying to live with the same patterns of substance abuse. It is only the physical places this disease has taken us that might be poles apart.
After years of wanting to be done with the knitting part of my life…the part that drinking put to ruins…my familiar needles are in my hands again. These same needles that brought up the painful feelings of shame and guilt I lived with in secrecy and isolation for so long, were now going to become a significant part of my own healing.
I hand them out in pairs to each woman all circular knitting needles, to Bella, who is excited and curious and can’t wait to have something to “busy” her so she can stop smoking…Laurie because she had to be there, Stephanie who knew a little, and then to Susan, who wouldn’t accept them that first day, saying, “Don’t put any needles in my hands, I’m afraid of what I could with them.” I’ve never thought of knitting needles as a potential weapon before, but this is a new place for me to teach and I am here to learn too. I bring my chair down to join them in a circle, a significant step towards being ONE and the same.
Knitting happens to be one of very few things that is best learned one-on-one in person. I interweave my hands with Bella’s, to guide her into a timeless motion that is to be repeated hundreds, thousands, hopefully millions of times into the future. I literally hold her hand through the struggle and fight of “getting it right” as we so repeatedly do in life.
I find that a “No Rules “ approach to knitting has a welcoming and sometimes humorous effect. No stigma is attached, no fear of failure, conquering something new becomes easier, a sense of empowerment replaces.
As in life, there are a few basics that need to be followed, other than that, leave it open to interpret and apply in your own way. There are no mistakes in knitting, only “design elements.” Dropped a stitch?…drop another one…that just means you’ve created your own unique pattern.
We’re starting simple, knitting hats and purses in the round. It astounds us all that one simple knit stitch can create such a vast variety of designs and beauty. Bella starts out well, then drops some stitches, adds some stitches, perfect again, then continues with a different yarn. She’s knitting her life, she says, going through some tough times, experiencing joy, a door opening towards something brand new. Not wanting to change or “correct” a single stitch, she comes to love her purse and love her life exactly the way it is enfolding.
Laura finds herself unraveling her hat every Tuesday at five o’clock before I get there at six, to start anew. This is where knitting differs from life, you can go back and “correct mistakes.” Over the weeks though she is able to recognize that progress, not perfection is the key, and can finally see the beauty in all the design elements, not mistakes, made.
During these months of sitting together knitting, a deep sense of belonging arises. A close-knit community is formed from the heartfelt conversation. Stories bring laughter and joy one day, tears and shared frustrations another. And sometimes the stillness and peace that follows comes to replace the rush and push of our everyday routines. Focused on the craft at hand, we open up in our own way, raw and honest, yet somehow safe…together.
The holiness of handwork aids in the opening of the heart chakra. So used to priding ourselves on our self-sufficiency, we normally cut ourselves off from this shared source of abundant wisdom and help that others are willing to give us. Here, the communal circle allows us to do our own heart work, the work of healing our selves and each other. This state of openness transcends our own ego boundaries as it allows us to stay out of our judging minds, even for a little while as we create something that is our own.
Weeks and weeks go by before Susan finally trusts herself enough to pick up knitting needles. With the support and faith of every woman around her she knits a hat for her husband, even weaving in a strand of her own hair, an old Norwegian tradition to ensure everlasting love. I don’t think I have ever seen a happier and more proud woman, skipping her way towards the rest of her life. Then their mandatory session is over and I have to let it go, trusting that I have played some small part in a bigger pattern of creation.
Stephanie contacts me months later to let express her gratitude for the way knitting continues to open up new possibilities for her, “Knitting to me is a way of experiencing my own life. Early in my recovery process, when I first started back knitting, I would unravel and start all over if I didn’t get a stitch correct or if it didn’t “look right.” Eventually I saw that this was the way I approached my life. I was always reaching for perfection and if it didn’t come, I ended up going back and starting over (with the starting over looking like relapse and going back into rehab). It wasn’t until I saw this in my knitting and decided, actually decided, to make whatever came and appreciate the beauty of it, “mistakes” and all that I was able to move forward in my own recovery…in my own life. Knitting helped me to see that whatever I make is beautiful as long as I make it with joy and abandon with the gift that was given to me by the Creator’s hand.”
Stephanie is tapping into the recipe for human contentment and happiness. I’ve begun to research in an attempt to understand the inexplicable, and discover that there are three connected elements that make for happiness:
All I know is that, today, when I’m knitting there is nowhere else I’d rather be and nothing else I’d rather be doing. Today I get to be a proud, happy and sober woman. I find the peace of mind necessary to see clearly the miracle of my own existence in this moment, and the preciousness of those I love. I see the goodness found in daily life and the many, many ways my life is graced.
I knit to meditate, to quiet myself, to reach transcendence, to create art, to play, to touch, to heal.
Stitch by stitch and moment by moment, we create the fabric of our lives and the pattern that is to become us.
What?! You say you’ve never heard of curved knitting needles before? Well, that is because Joe over at Joe’s Fiber Tools is the first to make them, & the only place to get them is right here in the shop!
The curves are a new product & I have to say I LOVE them. They feel so natural in my hands. The curve puts my hands at a more comfortable angle & the ends of my needles are no longer constantly hitting whoever or whatever is around me. Being a mom with 2 kids & a cat that is kind of important to me. I don’t often have much room surrounding my lap.

To order a pair for yourself (or for a friend) visit the shop!
Don’t forget I still have a Valentine Truffles Giveaway going on. To enter, just click the “Follow The Fiber Nest” button on the side bar. Once lucky follower will will 6 truffles!
I just love it when the kids at school are so willing to share . . .
This week my children brought home with them strep throat & have been ever so generous in sharing it with dad & I. My day Wednesday was cut short by a teeth grinding migraine. Thursday found me with a lingering headache & a flaming sore throat. My daughter was up the entire night crying with an earache. You know it’s bad when your 9 yr old is waking you up every hr with crying all night long. Friday morning we went to the doctor first thing when the office opened. The poor thing has an ear infection & strep throat. She finally did sleep – most of the day, which was great because then I too could catch up on knitting, sleep.
I have found that I have a love-hate relationship with illness. On one hand it isn’t any fun to feel crummy, but on the other hand, I love the slower pace that it allows for. I don’t one bit, mind laying in bed for a day knitting & drinking chai tea. I don’t mind how my children find it within themselves to “get along” in order to help mom. And, I certainly don’t mind being left alone in my quiet room to knit I mean rest in order to get well again. Today, I am feeling much better.
Since this is the time of year when people seem to feel under the weather, I though I would share a recipe for my favorite chia tea concentrate.
What is your comfort food for days when you are feeling under the weather?
How many times have you found yourself online drooling over knitting patterns on Pintrest & then asking yourself “Why am I not knitting right now”?
Check out my knitting boards to see more of my favorite finds!
Share a link to your knitting board in the comment section. I’d love to see what is inspiring you.
In my own personal journey with handcrafts, there have been two influential people who have brought me to the place I am at today. To these two people, I am eternally grateful for their gift of time while teaching my hands the skill of knitting. I have felt honored as they impart to me the traditions of the craft, as they walk beside me in support of every knitting endeavor I’ve taken on. In response to this gratefulness, I would like to host a series of blog posts in tribute to handcraft mentors. I know I am not the only one who has had the privilege, and the benefit of having this kind of mentoring relationship. In these posts I would love to offer you the opportunity to pay tribute to those in your life who have played a mentoring role in teaching you handcrafts. Whether it be your mother, grandmother, a good friend or unexpected teacher, I want to meet them. I want to read your story & learn about the traditions that have influenced your own handcraft work.
The first post in the series will be my own tribute to my knitting mentor. After that, I will post the stories that I receive from you in tribute to your mentors. It is through these relationships that have made the traditions of handcrafts so meaningful, & rich in history. Let’s honor the time old traditions of passing down the skills of handcrafts together!
For more information on how you can participate, click HERE.
The first 4 people who send in their story & have their tribute published on The Fiber Nest will receive a gift to give away to your mentor or keep for yourself!
Feel free to contact me with any questions ~ I love to hear from you.
With snow covering the ground, I have been spending more time with my needles in hand. I’ve enjoyed creating a collection of patterns & designs that have inspired my winter knitting. What has inspired your knitting this season?

1. Heliconian by Pam Powers
3. Thrummed Mittens by Helene Driesen
4. Montera Embroidered Button Jacket by Pam Allen
5. Seed Stitch Tall Cowl by Diana at Knit & Bake
6. Shades of Winter by Ewa K. Andinsson & Ingalill Johansson
7. Ondori Winter Knitting Goods
8. Small & Clever by Pickles
9. Cottage Sock Slippers by Lion Brand Yarns
10. Bird House by Marie Claire *french pattern
11. Malabrigo Loafers by Julie Weisenberger
12. Bulky Hat by Eveli Kaur

As I was looking for some handmade stocking stuffer ideas on Pintrest, I came across these felt hankie holders made by Martha Stewart.
It gave me the idea to create some knitted ones. Here is a pattern I came up with while making some.
Materials:
worsted weight stash yarn in 2 (or more) colors (or any yarn that you prefer for the project)
a pair of straight needles US9 ( or an appropriate size for your preferred yarn)
a yarn needle
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Using an i-cord cast on, cast on 20 stitches in the contrasting color (cc).
Switch to the main color (mc) yarn and knit in stockinette stitch for 6.5″ ending with a knit row.
With the cc yarn purl on row.
Bind off using an i-cord bind off.
Turn the knitting wrong side out and fold so that the two i-cords overlap slightly in the center and sew the top & bottom shut with a mattress stitch.
Weave in all the loose ends.
Embellish with a crocheted edging, or embroidered designs. You could also add some ribbon or buttons.
