Friday, and a day off, so I make my way to the i-knit London Weekender, getting off at St James's Park and walking over a few streets.
I'd booked the class on Celtic Knotwork by Alice Starmore, whose work I have admired since I first saw "The Celtic Collection"
I don't know what I had imagined - she has a ferocious reputation - but she was charming, friendly and helpful, patient with those having troubles. Her accent has that Gaelic lilt, quite different from Scots but with the odd trans-Atlantic nuance. In the picture you can see the wonderful purple cardigan she was wearing, the shaping achieved alongside the Celtic braids and cables. It is a lightweight Aran and certainly looked quite different from the boxy affairs in Celtic Knitting", especially on her svelte figure. She was wearing Westwood - either that or her tartan skirt had got caught up in her underwear, but no - it was Westwood.
This was my first ever knitting class, so what did I learn? To be fair, other people all around me were having lightbulb moments, as they realised how those closed motifs are started and ended. And I did grasp for the first time what was meant to happen at a crucial point in the manoeuvre. But I had basically got my head round the method when I started my throw, or at least by the time I had finished it some eighteen months later.
No, what I learned was how to make use of an OHT without someone using the dreaded word "PowerPoint." I learned something about how she began to design knots and a little about their life on a croft. I also learned that she will be seen using natural dyes on an episode of "Coast" some time in the future, using a cauldron they unearthed in the garden of their croft, which sounds remarkably like the one I have standing in the centre of my garden which came from my parents' Cumbrian farm.
Sadly, I didn't learn how to translate source material from Viking crosses into knitting patterns. But it was worth every penny to have Alice Starmore declare my knitting sample excellent.
My very first knitting class was with Alice Starmore also, in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, many many years ago. She is a wonderful teacher, very gentle in her guidance and a lovely lady. It was a lightbulb moment for me, she said you need to learn to read your knitting, simple concept but you really can't be a good knitter without reading your knitting. So glad you enjoyed, j9knits
ReplyDeleteYou should print that on a label and sew it on the blanket. Which is gorgeous, BTW.
ReplyDeleteWow...I am glad I purrowled over here from Jean's knitting to look at yours. It is lovely.
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