What do you want to knit today?
-
Shawls
Cowls
Sweaters
Socks
Hats
Accessories
-
Beginner
Intermediate
Advanced
-
Meditative & Mindful
Challenging & Technical
Cozy & Practical
Whimsical & Playful
How to Knit the Pi Shawl
Stitch counts double at specific intervals. It's a mathematically satisfying construction, and once you see the logic, a perfect circle feels almost inevitable.
How to Knit a Semi-Circular Shawl: Shawl Making Simplified
Triangular shaping and crescent curves, worked as one piece. This is where the shawl series gets interesting, and where understanding construction starts to pay off.
Shawl Shapes Series: How to Knit the Half-Pi Shawl
Exponential increases and resting rows create a curve that doesn't fully show until after blocking. The half-circle cousin of the Pi shawl, and just as satisfying to figure out.
Dive into the Construction of the 3/4 Shawl
Three distinct sections knit as one continuous piece. This breakdown explains the geometry behind the 3/4 shawl's drape, so you understand what you're actually building.
Bias Rectangular Shawl Knitting Guide for Mindful Makers
A rectangle that leans. Increases and decreases push the fabric in a specific direction, and this guide shows you exactly why.
Elevate Your Knitting with the Winged Triangular Shawl Tutorial
Wrong-side increases create dramatic flared wings instead of a taper. Worth knitting just to see how differently it sits.
Shawl Shapes Series: How to Knit the Side-to-Side Shawl
Two phases: all increases, then all decreases. A triangle worked from side to side instead of from a center point. Completely different construction logic, same shape.
Shawl Shapes Series: How to Knit an Asymmetrical Shawl
A triangle that commits to one direction. Increases and decreases placed to create a dramatic slant. This is where the shawl series gets genuinely unexpected.
Shawl Shapes Series: How to Knit a Crescent Shawl
Crescent shaping comes from increases worked on alternating rows. This guide breaks down the (k1, yo, k1) double increase and where the twisted yarn over fits in.
Shawl Shapes Series: How to Knit a Triangular Shawl
The foundational shape in the shawl series. Garter tab cast-on, a center spine, increases on every right-side row. Once you've knit this, the rest of the series makes more sense.