Thursday, October 23, 2025

Applesauce Cowl

The last quarter of the year is already here!?! It feels like every year I get older the years go by faster and I wasn't fully prepared for that to happen. With the last quarter of the year comes my last design as the in-house designer for Leading Men Fiber Arts. It's been such a pleasure working with Steve and Andy while exploring their beautiful yarns and awesome community. 


So, time to share with you...the Applesauce Cowl! None of my other Leading Men designs worked with a gradient and I really needed one to shine. Applesauce Cowl uses slip stitch cables and simple ribbing for a highly textured and visual cowl. 


I originally used this stitch pattern on my sock design Applesauce Socks and thought the crossed slipped stitches would work great in a cowl design! The original sample used 6, 20 gram mini skeins for 120 grams total but I fully plan to knit another sample in a single skein (variegated this time) and use only 100 grams. 


The slip stitches in this pattern are specifically written without using a cable needle which makes it a great travel project. No cable needle means you don't need to keep track of it! Pretty much any fingering weight yarn you are comfortable wearing around your neck will work for this design. I wouldn't recommend a self-striping as it most likely won't line up with the pattern. 

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Curved and Squared Shawl

It's fall season which means it is very busy here at All Knit Up Designs. Fall season = show season, so for the last 3 weekends (and headed to my next one) I've been vending at fiber festivals! But, just because I'm out and about in traveling the PNW doesn't mean I haven't been working on a pattern. 

Going to fiber shows is one of my favorite parts of my job, I love spending time with knitters and getting to chat about my designs. When I talk with fiber folks at a show I take what they say into consideration. I had a few people mention that they don't love or wear triangle shawls, which is mostly what I design. I have a few different shapes like Wrapped in Color with 3/4 shaping or Me Before Brioche with crescent shaping but not nearly as many as I have different shapes of triangle shawls. I decided to take the feedback and add a few more crescents to the mix. 

Curved and Squared is my newest crescent shawl and it is a sister pattern to All Squared Up with a mitered square bind off, so another scrappy shawl to add to your collection! Curved and Squared uses a welted pattern in the body, which is a 4 row repeat with only 1 purl row and perfectly easy to memorize. 

The body of the original Curved and Squared sample is two skeins of fingering weight yarn at approximately 847 yards and then 13 colors for the mitered square. I opted to reuse colors in my sample because I was using a mini skein set from Road Trip Sock Yarn but you could use 3 grams of 32 different colors for a fully scrappy version. 

If you're intimidated by the mitered squares you can check out my tutorial here for a more in-depth explanation on how to knit them. The mitered squares are really where you get to play with color in Curved and Squared, so dive into your scraps and see what different colors you can combine for your wearable art!