With a new year comes the arrival of my new and highly anticipated website. I am so excited to finally be able to say that. It has been a goal of mine for some time and I am thrilled that it has finally come together.
For simplicity I will also be blogging over there too - so as to keep everything in one place but I will keep this site live as well just so that folks can find old posts and old links still work.
You can find my new website and blog over at www.louisetilbrookdesigns.net
Do come over and say hello...
Louise Tilbrook Designs
Welcome to Louise Tilbrook Designs. Here you will find information on my current patterns as well as those in progress and information on ongoing events and knit-a-longs. I love to design socks with an emphasis on stylish, unisex textures and fun, easy-to-remember patterns. Many of my designs are offered in both toe-up and cuff down formats - perfect if you would like to try your hand at an alternative type of construction. Please grab a coffee, pull up a comfy chair and have a browse.
Thursday, 7 January 2016
Sunday, 3 January 2016
2015: My year in knitting
Every year I like to keep track of how much I have knit and how many projects I have made. No real reason why other than it gives me a pleasing sense of tying up loose ends and starting the new year with a clean slate. It also allows me to conveniently forget about the large basket of WIPs by the sofa and cast on for a shiny new guilt free project.
Every time I finish a project in Ravelry I add the year tag - 2015 so that I can easily search them all and tally up my progress.
This year, thanks in large part to Stash Dash I got through 27,000m of yarn and completed 40 projects.
For specific details on any of my projects please see my Ravelry page here.
My categories of projects stack up as follows:
Shawls. 16
Socks. 10
Garments 5
Kids socks 2
Hats. 2
Blankets. 4
Cowl. 1
How about you? Do you keep a tally of your annual progress too?
Every time I finish a project in Ravelry I add the year tag - 2015 so that I can easily search them all and tally up my progress.
This year, thanks in large part to Stash Dash I got through 27,000m of yarn and completed 40 projects.
A random selection of 2015 projects |
My categories of projects stack up as follows:
Shawls. 16
Socks. 10
Garments 5
Kids socks 2
Hats. 2
Blankets. 4
Cowl. 1
How about you? Do you keep a tally of your annual progress too?
Friday, 1 January 2016
Happy New Year 2016
We are currently on a family holiday, renting a gorgeous country cottage in our beloved English Lake District.
The time between Christmas and New Year is sacrosanct to us. A time to regroup and enjoy just being together in our little family unit.
We don't do very much. Days are lazy and unstructured here but we do manage to get out every day for a walk in the fresh air - often with rain but not always.
Today was New Years Day and we did what we usually do - a bracing walk around the Lake in Buttermere.
Fun,fresh air and a pub lunch. Happy days
I hope you have had a great start to 2016 too and I will be back soon with lots of sock related plans for the coming year.
The time between Christmas and New Year is sacrosanct to us. A time to regroup and enjoy just being together in our little family unit.
We don't do very much. Days are lazy and unstructured here but we do manage to get out every day for a walk in the fresh air - often with rain but not always.
Today was New Years Day and we did what we usually do - a bracing walk around the Lake in Buttermere.
Fun,fresh air and a pub lunch. Happy days
I hope you have had a great start to 2016 too and I will be back soon with lots of sock related plans for the coming year.
Tuesday, 15 December 2015
Finishing strong in 2015
The end of
the year normally approaches me with something approaching the speed of a
bullet train and the solidity of a brick wall. The normal glitter-fuelled near
hysteria of kids at the end of term, school pantos, carol services and more.
Add that to the usual domestic chores labelled ‘getting ready for Christmas’
and it is easy to see why planning for my design business takes a bit of a back
seat.
Last year I
made the cardinal sin of committing myself to a big commission with a delivery
date of the first week in January – no prizes for guessing what I spent my New
Year holiday working on. I didn’t even dare drink too much for fearing of
messing up the increases and having to rip it out.
But this
year I am determined to be different. If not super organised than at least I
aim to approach the end of the year with some business ends tied up and some
firm plans in place to start the New Year out on a firm footing… and some calm,
fun knitting for myself wouldn’t go amiss either.
I have been
following along with Tara Swiger and her Holiday Sanity programme and I have to
say that has really helped in terms of focussing my attention on tasks that
need doing. Then I saw an amazing Instagram post from @BohoBerry, followed through to her blog and had a complete “Yes!” moment. her original blog post talks about setting goals to end the last quarter of your business or personal life in great shape but I thought it worked just as well as we enter the last few days of the year. Rather than disappear in a frazzle I thought it would be great to come up with 16 things that were achievable for me to do in the last days of 2015.
16 Things: Ready to start 2016
So, this
morning I sat down with a strong coffee to make a list. Some of them may be a
trifle vague and I admit that I did get a little de-railed towards the end with
my sudden intention to Knit Yellow Socks. But I don’t think that’s a bad thing
– we all need a little sunshine in our lives
Monday, 14 December 2015
New pattern release: Priory Socks
I am pleased to be able to share a new sock pattern release with you today.
Many of you may have been fans of the online magazine Knotions, back in the day. I know that I certainly was and I was really pleased when I saw that it was being brought back.
I was even more pleased to be able to submit a new sock design to it, and over the moon when it was accepted.
The Priory Sock pattern was inspired by a visit to the wonderful 12th century former monastery - Bolton Abbey in the heart of England’s Yorkshire Dales. They are toe-up and feature an elongated cable design which creates subtle arches reminiscent of the high arched windows – so much a feature of this historic building. Even though it looks impressive the majority of the sock is worked in a rib pattern with infrequent cable crosses.
There is also a garter stitch short row heel which I think fits in really well with the design.
Alongside the Priory socks there are 6 other patterns. There is a great sweater by Elizabeth Helmich (Couting Sheep on Ravelry) and a matching beret. Rachel aka ThornMaiden Designs has a cute beret and matching mitts.Woolly Wormhead has a great hat pattern and as well as producing the magazine Jody aka Savannahchik has also designed some great fingerless mitts.
All the patterns are free to download here and there are some great articles and designer interviews too - well worth a look.
Many of you may have been fans of the online magazine Knotions, back in the day. I know that I certainly was and I was really pleased when I saw that it was being brought back.
I was even more pleased to be able to submit a new sock design to it, and over the moon when it was accepted.
Priory Socks ºLouise Tilbrook Designs |
The Priory Sock pattern was inspired by a visit to the wonderful 12th century former monastery - Bolton Abbey in the heart of England’s Yorkshire Dales. They are toe-up and feature an elongated cable design which creates subtle arches reminiscent of the high arched windows – so much a feature of this historic building. Even though it looks impressive the majority of the sock is worked in a rib pattern with infrequent cable crosses.
A different kind of heel - garter stitch is surprisingly comfortable |
There is also a garter stitch short row heel which I think fits in really well with the design.
Alongside the Priory socks there are 6 other patterns. There is a great sweater by Elizabeth Helmich (Couting Sheep on Ravelry) and a matching beret. Rachel aka ThornMaiden Designs has a cute beret and matching mitts.Woolly Wormhead has a great hat pattern and as well as producing the magazine Jody aka Savannahchik has also designed some great fingerless mitts.
All the patterns are free to download here and there are some great articles and designer interviews too - well worth a look.
Monday, 7 December 2015
What knitting means to me.
A recent
difficult weekend really gave me pause to reflect on this question and made me
realise the importance of this craft of ours, in my life. I wrote this piece as a private, cathartic act after the event and in truth it was never intended for publication.
By happy circumstance though I read of Kate of A Playful Day blog and her Cyber Hug initiative for Monday Dec 7th. Raising awareness of the mental health charity Mind, and recognising that for some people our craft is a very real way of improving their mental health. We use the term 'sanity-saver' quite loosely but for some it is just that. Whilst my own experience is nowhere near is dramatic it does describe a time when knitting came to my aid.
You can read Kate's introductory post here. And if you would like to join in and share an image of something you have made and how it helped you please use the hashtag #makegoodfeelgood.
Combine a
total of 12 hours of motorway driving, a very sick and frail old lady and
stressful family politics and by the end of our trip my emotions were raw, my
heart in tatters. Trying to keep everything on an even keel for our children,
trying to sooth a distraught husband, trying not to succumb to road rage on the
A1 when faced with road closures and a 50 mile detour.
By Sunday
evening I was a mess. Mentally and physically.
Fortunately
my husband realised that my floodgates weren’t going to hold much longer. He
put yarn in my hands, a pot of tea on the table and took the children out of
the house for an hour.
Holding back
tears of frustration, anger and sorrow I picked up the needles and began to
knit – very slowly. Not my usual rapid, slick, efficient movements where I
slide stitches effortlessly and often without really thinking or looking. But
slowly, painstakingly wrapping yarn and forming each stitch as though it were
as fragile as I was feeling.
Slowly, my
emotional turmoil receded as all my attention focused on yarn and needles. I
was dimly aware that my breathing and heart rate were slower and calmer – and
that tick in my left eyelid stopped too.
Stitch by
slow stitch I literally pulled myself together. The very opposite of
unravelling a sweater. The formation of each stitch helped me to order my
thoughts and brought me back to myself.
The hour
flew by. At the end of it, my shawl was only a few rows longer, but I was in an
infinitely better place, mentally, than when I started and I was ready to face
the world again.
Because you are fellow crafters the shawl in question was the Urban Hints shawl by The Wool Kitchen using her gradient yarn. It comes highly recommended !
Friday, 4 December 2015
RAK Yourself
It's the old airline
adage of 'putting on your own oxygen mask before helping others'. Most of find
the time to make a kind comment or gesture to those around us but how often do
we extend that same kindness to ourselves. I'm sure I'm not the only one whose
inner voice can be a little harsh, a little nasty and sometimes just downright
rude.
My inner voice feels free to speak to me in a way that I would never dream of speaking to anyone else. And yet, more often than not I tolerate it. I don't question it.
This serves as a
welcome reminder to me that my RAK challenge isn't all about making others feel
good, it can be about allowing myself to feel good too.
So, today I am going
to tell that pesky inner voice to pipe down and play nice while I sit in my favourite
craft corner and play with yarn.
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