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Soul Craft Tickets are now on Sale!!

December 5, 2017 thecraftsessions
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Hello lovely crafters,

A quick blog post tonight to remind you that tickets to Soul Craft have gone live!

We know that some masterclasses will sell out very quickly so if you want to get into one then please book early! We hate disappointing you.

And if you miss out on the class of your choice then please join us at the Festival anyway. There will be many many opportunities to meet and chat with our wonderful teachers and speakers, and much to be learnt from our demonstrations and speakers.

There is so much happening on the weekend we hope you will feel spoiled for choice!

We can't wait to meet you all.

Felicia x

In Soul Craft
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Soul Craft Program Is Now Live!

November 29, 2017 thecraftsessions
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Gee I'm excited. As I sit here typing away, I have a big smile on my face. Releasing the program is such a wonderful moment - after all these years of thinking "imagine if...".

Imagine if we got to hear stories from makers we love about how making has changed them. Imagine hearing from producers trying to do good things in the world. Imagine hearing from teachers about what working with community looks like. And imagine if we got to spend a whole weekend thinking about, talking about, and celebrating craft in all it's glory.

Excited is an understatement.

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So a couple of quick things to note before I give you some links.

1. My apologies but there is no way to see all the goodness that will be happening over the weekend as there is at least four things going on at all times and that is not including the exhibition, the food, the market and so on. There will be clashes. It is inevitable but hopefully the choices ahead of you will fill you with joy.

2. There are two programs;

- The scheduled Festival Program which includes speakers, demonstrations and craft dating. This is all available to you as part of a Festival Day Pass. There is no need to book into anything - it is all included.

- The Masterclass Program which includes all the crafts we love - knitting, sewing, quilting, weaving, embroidery - and a range of incredibly talented and generous teachers. I am so chuffed to have all these women on board - they are such an incredible group! Masterclasses are purchased individually but please note that purchasing a masterclass gives you entry into the whole festival on the day of your class.

3. The full list of our teachers and speakers can be found here including where to find them on socials.

4. We need to talk about tickets! We know that many masterclasses will sell out very quickly, and we also need to tell you that we have a limited number of day passes available, so please buy early if you are interested. Tickets go on sale Tuesday December 5th at 5pm sharp! Good luck lovely people!

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Thanks so much for all your enthusiasm online over the last week. I am thrilled you all love it as much as I hoped you would. Let me know what you think of the classes/speakers/demonstrations in the comments. I'd love to hear. What is your favourite? What do you not want to miss?

Any questions - anything at all! - email hello@soulcraftfestival.com.

love

Felicia x

In Soul Craft
1 Comment

Soul Craft Festival - Our Brand New Event!!

November 10, 2017 thecraftsessions
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Hello my lovelies.

I have absolutely thrilling news for you today. After two long years of dreaming and planning, today we are launching our latest event - Soul Craft - A festival celebrating craft and connection!

This festival is unlike any craft festival out there in the big wide world today, so to explain what it is I've made you a little video.

Chatting to you all seemed a bit simpler than asking you to read a load of text.

Soul Craft is a festival for those of us who dream about making.

Soul Craft is a weekend long celebration of craft and connection presented by The Craft Sessions; created to bring the craft community together with lots of space and time to talk all things craft.

The program is two full days of all our favourite textile crafts in one big happy mix, from sewing to embroidery, knitting to natural dyeing, weaving to quilting. There will be ongoing speakers, panels, demonstrations, international and national guests, community projects, exhibitions, and a marketplace.

We want to celebrate the richness craft brings to our lives; how making supports us in our everyday, connecting us to ourselves and others and how it enables us to live the good life. Our vision is to create a space where we can come together and meet others in the craft community in real life, rather than online, and spend time immersed in making.

As always at The Craft Sessions, our focus is on traditional domestic, textile-based handcraft and on the community that surrounds what it is that we do.

You can find more the details over at our brand spanking new website www.soulcraftfestival.com

Giveaway

To celebrate the launch of Soul Craft - after two years of dreaming, scheming and planning! - we have a double day pass to the festival to giveaway. Either leave a comment on this blog post or on our instagram post for a chance to win. We'd love it if you could tag your friends too, as we really want to spread the word.

We will close the giveaway at 8pm Sunday 12th November Melbourne time!


Over the next few weeks we will be sharing all the details that will make this festival so special - our teachers and speakers, both national and international, ticket pricing and sales, the full program and all the fun things we have in store. We know that you will love the crafting utopia we have pulled together for you, and can't wait until next week when we will share all the details about the tickets AND our international guests!!! Can't wait.

We are really happy to answer any questions you have in the comments, so ask away....

love

Felicia x

70 Comments

The Perfect Beginner Knitting Project - In My Opinion :)

November 7, 2017 thecraftsessions
Steph's gorgeous work - photo by Steph.

Steph's gorgeous work - photo by Steph.

A few months ago I taught my lovely babysitter Steph to knit. She and I had talked about a few times over the years, and when I heard she was jetting off yet again, I finally got organised to get her started.

I went to the store and purchased her three skeins of Woolfolk Luft in the Black L06 colourway and a set of circular 60cm Addi Turbos. I know that sounds a little extravagant for a first project but a. Steph is ace and b. making is a sensual experience. Making something is all about the senses - we feel knitting in our bodies - and if we don't enjoy the sensations of knitting when we begin then why would we continue to knit? I wanted to make her first knitting experience a joyous one - one that would result in a beautiful product, and make her happy - so I purchased some of the most delicious yarn I could find.

I've talked many times about how materials matter and I passionately believe it to be true, especially when you are new to the sport. Now obviously, Woolfolk Luft is taking good materials to the extreme, and not all new knitters need to start with Woolfolk ;), but in this case I wanted to thank her with something special.

So, as Steph was looking after my smalls for one last time, I asked her to come 30min early so I could teach her before we had to head out the door. I'd already got the cowl started for her by casting on, and knitting the first row of the Purl Soho Lovely Ribbed Cowl - which I believe is the perfect newbie project! We had 20 minutes to chat all things knitting.

And here we get to the opinionated point of the blog post!

Teaching Steph to knit reminded me that I have always meant to post about what I believe the perfect project for beginners actually is - in my opinion. And I keep forgetting!

You see, I believe that a lot of beginner knitters start with the wrong type of stitch pattern. And that worries me. It worries me because maybe they won't stick with knitting because they think it is too hard, or maybe they will get confused and think it is stressful. And people need knitting, and the world needs more knitters. Knitting brings so much joy to the universe.

Beginner knitters are often encouraged to start with garter stitch - and they often get flumoxed. Which makes sense - as garter gives you no indication if you are getting your knitting right or wrong as you can't tell. Garter stitch is a red hot mess to look at, especially if you are new and you don't understand how it works. Initially looking at garter is like looking at a plate of spaghetti and trying to find a pattern in it.

If they are lucky, some beginner knitters will be encouraged to start with stockinette stitch - which I still don't like - but it's an improvement on starting with garter.

Stockinette is simpler to look at and understand, which means that some folks will be able to see if they have made a mistake, but it doesn't teach you to recognise the stitch you have on the needles - as you are repeating whole rows of one stitch then the other stitch, paying little attention to what you are doing. Stockinette also feels like a waste of an opportunity to learn about reading your knitting from the very start - especially as you would have needed to learn both a purl stitch and a knit stitch.

My hypothesis: Rib is the perfect stitch pattern to begin your knitting career with, as it teaches you to read your knitting from the start.

I believe that the perfect beginner knitting project is some form of 2x2 or 3x3 rib. Through knitting rib you learn that there is a V at the front of a stitch and a purl bump at the back! It is simple, repetitive and beautiful. And by learning the structure of our knitting from the getgo then we knit with less fear and we are more confident knitters.

A few years ago I wrote a post called The Secret To Becoming A Great Knitter and it was all about learning to read your knitting, about understanding your stitches and what they looked like - for freedom, and for joy. In that post I describe how to understand your stitches and how to read them; what they look like and how to recognise them.

Reading your knitting is something you can learn from the very start of your knitting career, as Steph has just proved.

Steph had her 20 min lesson before she started her evening's babysitting, and then we went out for a couple of hours. She had knitted till we got home, then we talked about where she was at. She did take a little film of me demonstrating a knit stitch and a purl stitch, which she took with her on the plane in case she forgot, but that was her whole lesson. About 30 min total.

Fast forward a couple of months and she has a cowl. A beautiful usable wearable cowl.

Photo she sent me via an insta story! xx

Photo she sent me via an insta story! xx

This cowl gave Steph repetitive practice of the two basic stitches in knitting. She watched, and tried to learn what they look like, and she was successful. Look at that pretty cowl. No counting, no keeping track.

A simple clean rib shows the newbie knitter what stitch is what. There is a simplicity and grace to it that builds confidence.

People teach garter to newbies as they believe that it's simpler - I believe this is based on the idea that the person only has to learn the knit stitch, and not a purl. Which makes sense, but it is a false economy. Garter is confusing to look at - one row sits on top of the other disguising the stitches. Many experienced knitters can't fix mistakes in garter as it is such a hullabaloo of a stitch pattern.

Yes, learning rib will mean they will have to learn two stitches rather than one, but actually a knit and a purl are incredibly similar in their form, so it's not difficult to learn both. In each case you simply insert the needle tip, you wrap your yarn anti-clockwise through the middle of your two needles, and then you pull your needletip through and pop the stitch off. The only difference between a knit and a purl is whether you insert your needletip from the left or the right. With a bit of practice and concentration it isn't much harder to understand two stitches rather than one*.

If we pay a bit of attention, rib gives us a basic understanding of what a knit stitch looks like on your needles, and what a purl stitch looks like on your needles. By the end of knitting the cowl you know that the front of the stitch looks like (a V) and what the back of the stitch looks like (a bump). Knitting then makes sense, as do the two basic stitches.

This is why I love rib stitch for beginners so much. Steph had so much confidence that she was off to the shop to buy yarn for a TCS Simple Hat. She is almost done already and is waxing lyrical about the joys of knitting. We have another convert!

I'd love to hear about your early knitting experiences and whether this approach would have been helpful?

And if you want to learn to knit, buy some beautiful materials and try this cowl. It is a total winner.

Felicia x

* I have one exception to the rule of teaching rib to newbies and that would be for small people. Small people don't necessarily have the capacity to pay enough attention. Instead with small people, my preference when teaching is to use circular needles and get them to knit a hat in the round..... I'm happy to finish off the top, or instead you can do a square top which kinda make ears. They love the ears.

In Best Of, Thoughts On Craft
18 Comments

Making An Elevated Life

October 27, 2017 thecraftsessions
Carrie doing the thing she does best!

Carrie doing the thing she does best!

So about six months ago I included a PS. on a blog post about how I had written an article for the absolutely beautiful Making Magazine. The article was entitled Craft As An Elevated Life and was all about how craft elevates us from the everyday by supporting us, and connecting us.

Fast forward to the Dots version of Making coming out. At the time I was in America, and was two days away from meeting the lovely Carrie (the founder of Making) who is going to be my roommate at Squam. I've never met her before and was so bloody excited, as we have "known" one another since the early days of Ravelry.

Anyhoo, on my way to Squam I stopped off in California to see my lovely friend Kellen, and one of the many fun things we packed into our two days was a trip to the beautiful Cattywampus store in Ojai. They have Making Mag and the Dots issue has just been released! I pick it up and start flipping through, once, twice and then again. No article. 

I tried to be brave, but I was thinking Oh My God!! She! Didn't! Like! It!

It seemed like she had when I sent it to her. She sent me back a lovely enthusiastic email. What could have gone wrong???

When I got to Squam I met Carrie and adored her from the moment I met her. And not in an internet "I ADORED her" kind of way but in a real "She is ace!" way. She's funny - a good woman with an eye twinkle.* The conversation eventually came around to Making and I bravely asked about the article trying to keep any trace of sadness from my voice, being super casual..... "oh did my article not fit what you wanted". I'm laughing as I'm writing this because I actually have no idea exactly what I said. I do know that somehow I managed to sound not too crazy.

Anyway Carrie looks and me a little shocked and says "Of course! I loved it!! But it was always meant for the next issue!!".

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Queue massive relief from me, as I love the article I wrote for her. The article was my best shot at describing how craft elevates our lives and gives us meaning, because it really does!

Anyway it appears I didn't read an email properly and got the wrong issue.

If you haven't picked up Making yet, then please pick up a copy of this one. It is such a beautiful magazine - each project, image, recipe and essay are written with such intention. You can see the love Carrie (and now the lovely Ashley!!)  are putting into it.

The photos below are from my week at Squam. I was doing some work on my book, writing at the beautiful Tamworth Lyceum, and got lost on the way back to camp. I love getting lost and this is such a beautiful place to get lost in - it feels a little surreal as it feels like you have stepped into a movie set. The houses and the setting of Squam lake are all so picture perfect it is ridiculous. All white paint and green lawns. That said, my favourite houses were the ones that were a little ramshackle-ish and falling down.

Most of these photos were taken out the window of my car as I wandered through the wilds of New Hampshire.

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If you've seen the article what did you think? Did it capture how craft fills you up?

Felicia x

* My friend Kellen has that too!

In Travel
15 Comments
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Welcome! I'm Felicia - creator of The Craft Sessions and Soul Craft Festival.

This blog aims to celebrate the connection between hand-making and our well-being.
These posts aim to foster a love of hand-making and discuss the ways domestic handcrafts elevate our everyday.

I love the contributions you make to this space via your comments and learn so much from each and every one. x

Thoughts On Craft

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Another #theyearofthescrap #ellenscardigan using some #oldmaidenaunt alpaca silk from many years ago. What I love about this little cardy is it’s simplicity and how little yarn it uses. Perfect for scrap knitting. I now have a little pile of ba
New blog post: Craft as elevating the mundane! I think this idea is so important. 🌿 'Making is about enriching the moments of our lives; it’s about making the mundane (and not the extraordinary) more abundant and that bit more lush…. el
Block 8/12 - I’m so excited to be back making this for my smallest for her 10th birthday. It’s a #stash_less #theyearofthescrap quilt that is based on an incredible #geesbend quilt. And it’s all scraps and precious bits and pieces.
Another #theyearofthescrap #ellenscardigan using some #oldmaidenaunt alpaca silk from many years ago. What I love about this little cardy is it’s simplicity and how little yarn it uses. Perfect for scrap knitting. I now have a little pile of ba New blog post: Craft as elevating the mundane! I think this idea is so important. 🌿 'Making is about enriching the moments of our lives; it’s about making the mundane (and not the extraordinary) more abundant and that bit more lush…. el Block 8/12 - I’m so excited to be back making this for my smallest for her 10th birthday. It’s a #stash_less #theyearofthescrap quilt that is based on an incredible #geesbend quilt. And it’s all scraps and precious bits and pieces.
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Featured
Making Fast Fashion: Some More Of The Grey
Apr 19, 2022
Making Fast Fashion: Some More Of The Grey
Apr 19, 2022
Apr 19, 2022
Is My Making Fast Fashion?
Apr 12, 2022
Is My Making Fast Fashion?
Apr 12, 2022
Apr 12, 2022

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