![]() The fibre community has tons of it’s own issues with racism, othering, exclusion, and many others that we need to work hard to improve. If you’re anything like us, you’ve been a lot of time online trying to find resources to help learn how to be a better anti-racism ally. Location: this is a store sample and can be visited in-shop (when we’re open) Finished with a 1×1 mosaic instead of the 2×2 as a result. I then kept going with the AD section until I started to run low, and then cast off. I did run out of colourway C before finishing the CD section, so I just added the remainder of colour A in place of colour C when I ran out. This is a great substitute for shawls knit in this way because an increase that uses the yarn from the previous row pulls the increase-edge in and causes it to buckle and curl. – did the increases as a backwards loop instead of a M1. We used one ball each of:Ĭhanges made to pattern: we didn’t exactly follow as written. It’s a nice squishy worsted weight that comes in tons of lovely colours. The yarn she wrote it for is a little pricy for some budgets, and we really liked making it with Knitting Fever’s Painted Sky. It gives the effect of your having used many many different colours. ![]() So not a variegated or gradient yarn, but one that “shifts” from colour to colour in a slower manner. This is (I think) the OG version of the shifting colour stitch, and while lots of folks have had luck making it with solid colours, it is designed to work with a yarn that slowly changes colours. Andrea Mowry has gotten a lot of mileage out of this stitch pattern, and she’s very clever with it. ![]() Yarn: Painted Sky in several different colourways, see notes
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