Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011. Show all posts

Saturday, 31 December 2011

Goodbye 2011


One of the great things about writing a blog is that you can look back over the year with relative ease and remember exactly what you got up to over the last 12 months. My blog reveals that 2011 has been filled with sewing, great big boxes of new fabric, finding new sources of inspiration and rambling on about stuff that seemed important at the time.

Personally though, a number of things stand out for me; the endless summer holidays and our annual trip to France, my youngest starting school, meeting lovely blog friends for the first time, and a new addition to our family, Meg.

no Mallards were hurt in this photo

For me though, 2011 will be the year that I finally gave up my day job. Leaving me free to work on M is for make, pick my kids up from school every day (I'm sure the novelty will wear off soon) and finally take a break from the exhausting juggling act of the last few years. It's hard to explain how important this decision has been to me and my family, which is maybe why I haven't written about it sooner. But there it is, a wonderful and happy end to 2011 for me.

I hope to have more time to sew, write and find exciting new fabric for you in 2012. What will it bring for you?

Happy New Year to you all,

Kate
x

Sunday, 9 October 2011

The Knitting and Stitching Show at Alexandra Palace

horses follow the highway code too

Yesterday I had a day out in London with Amy and Florence to visit the Knitting and Stitching Show. I think I am now sufficiently recovered to write about it after a night's sleep - it is a full on experience at an amazing venue. Due to tube closures Amy and I started part of our journey on foot and being a complete tourist, I had to take a photo of this pedestrian crossing for horses in Green Park. Even the sign that lit up to cross the road was a horse - how brilliant is that?


Amy had warned me that Alexandra Palace is up a hill, and it really is, I'm so glad we took the shuttle from the tube, there is a fantastic view at the top. The entrance hall was festooned with this amazing knitted bunting, there was a story behind it, but it escaped me.

The place was totally overwhelming, full of so many stands which themselves were full of stuff. Stuff for knitting, stuff for stitching and other stuff that I'm not really sure why it was there like leather handbags and awful paintings.

Highlights for me were the larger stands where a lot of time and thought had been put into setting them up. I think this reflects on my reason for being there which was to look rather than buy.

Coats Crafts fabrics

Coats Crafts knits

Coats Crafts with all their lovely knits and fabrics (such as Amy Butler) had a very grand stand and reminded me of the bit quilt fairs that you read about in America where all the designers launch their new collections. (I dream of going to one of these.) As did the big sewing machine manufacturers, along with magnificent freeform embroidery machines. Amy had a go on this amazing (it was £9000 after all) machine.

Amy driving a £9000 machine without wheels

I felt that the smaller stands where things were actually being bought were rather more biased towards knitting rather than stitching. But there were a handful of gorgeous fabric shops there whose stands stood out from the rest like the Eternal Maker and Raystitch. It even had me looking at fabric that I stock in a different light. Also as Florence mentioned there was a frenzy around the Liberty fabrics on sale at the Fabrics Galore stall where I felt sorry for the poor man cutting fabric there who appeared to be trapped in the stall by fabric. I wonder he spent all 3 days there. I would happily have bought some Liberty fabric but was rather overwhelmed by the incredible choice. And the huge crowds there doing the same thing.

women - EVERYWHERE

I don't think I have ever seen so many women in one place, the occasional husband that had been dragged along (why would you do that to a man?) must had felt lost and bewildered in a sea of handknits and handbags.


I have no idea what these jumpers were about but I found them cool, funny and scary in equal measure. I think I may have nightmares about the ginger cat.


Amy is planning to buy a knitting machine and finally had a chance to use one at this stand, it was amazing how much knit you could produce with little effort. For me it brought back a whole host of happy memories of my mum having a knitting machine when I was little and making amazing jumpers for my sister and I. I particularly remember a blue jumper with a siamese cat on and one with my name repeated across it.

squint and this photo looks better

I thought the Selvedge stand was really beautiful and have captured it in an awful blurry photo. This was towards the end of the day and I wonder if I had got the shakes at this point. It looked really pretty and I rather wish some of the other stalls had gone to so much effort, but Selvedge did have a lot of space to play with.

the Selvedge stand

They had these gorgeous, very fine crocheted blankets, I think Amy got a good photo of them, so check her blog soon. Florence has also written about the day here.

After the show we had chips and wine in Covent Garden before heading home. This was the first time I have met Florence and it was a total delight to meet her for real, she is as lovely as you would imagine and more. We have only communicated before in the land of blogs and twitter. I also met Amy nearly a year ago now after following her blog.  M is for make has introduced me to such lovely people, it still feels like a really unusual (and modern) way to meet.

Have any of you been to the Knitting and Stitching Show, what was your experience? Or have you met up with virtual friends - were they what you expected?