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Knit the Sky: Cultivate Your Creativity with a Playful Way of Knitting

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Look up from your knitting needles and explore with the world around you! That's the mantra of Lea Redmond, the creative instigator behind Knit the Sky. Challenging herself to capture the changing colors of the sky in her knitting, Redmond loaded up her yarn basket with shades of blue, gray, and white and set out to knit a strip reflecting each day's shades. In 365 days, she imagines having a one-year weather report in the shape of a scarf. This is just one of 30 adventurous knitting challenges she shares with readers in this whimsical, inspiring collection. These are knitting projects like no other, as the goal is not just to have a finished project but to have a one-of-a-kind piece that tells a story about the knitter's life experience. Some of the projects invite the knitter to engage with others: friends knitting two scarves at once on the same needles, or a grandmother sharing a "basket of berries" with her grandchildren through matching basketweave-patterned hats. Others encourage contemplation: a knit 1, breathe 1 meditation stitch; creating an heirloom scarf for a yet-to-be descendent; or using a map to a favorite place as the basis for a pattern stitch. Accompanied by basic instructions for all the needed stitches, techniques, and patterns, Knit the Sky is a complete creativity starter kit for any knitter looking for a fresh approach to the craft.

168 pages, Hardcover

First published August 25, 2015

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158 people want to read

About the author

Lea Redmond

61 books53 followers
Lea Redmond seeks the extraordinary hiding in the ordinary and wants to share it with you. She makes things, books, and activities that invite humans of all ages to be curious, playful, and kind.

Lea is the author of Knit The Sky, Wonder Hunt, Paint Chip Poetry, and the bestselling Letters To My… series of keepsake journals.

As the Postmaster of the World’s Smallest Post Service, she has charmed thousands with her tiny mail transcriptions.

Lea gathers people for workshops, letter writing, and other poetic services in her Tearoom of a Thousand Wonders in Oakland, California. Keep in touch at LeaRedmond.com.

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5 stars
85 (36%)
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95 (40%)
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39 (16%)
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13 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 70 reviews
Profile Image for Belinda.
561 reviews20 followers
April 13, 2015
This book is utterly charming. It's not your standard knitting pattern book - it's a pattern book that doesn't contain a single photo of a finished object! Instead, it's about approaching knitting in a different, free kind of way. For example, the first project is the eponymous "knit the sky" scarf. You buy seven colours of laceweight yarn is shades of blue, yellow and grey and every day for the course of the year you knit the colour of the sky, combining the two colours that are the most accurate. At the end of the year, you have a visual record of a year's worth of weather.

The other patterns in the book are the same vein. There's a mood cowl, where you knit your mood for a month based on the colours of that '90s favourite, the mood ring. There's a baby blanket, where you knit one tiny square every day you're waiting for the baby to be born. Not all of the patterns are for me - basically, anything with bobbles is a no go! But, as a firm follow-the-pattern knitter, this book definitely opened my eyes to a new knitting attitude. Well worth reading and I think friends and family will all be receiving Christmas socks this year in colours determined by my mood!
Profile Image for Story Circle Book Reviews.
636 reviews66 followers
October 5, 2015
If you are looking for a traditional knitting book with lots of patterns and photographs, then you will want to look elsewhere. If, however, you are looking for ideas to spark your creativity and get you started knitting in a whole new way, then you want this book.

The description of Knit the Sky immediately captured my imagination, appealing to my lifelong dedication to journaling with words. "Record the beauty, emotions, and experiences of everyday life—not in your journal but with your knitting needles!" I am hopeless at "art" journaling, but this? This I could do! What a neat way to combine two of my loves—writing and knitting.

The book itself is lovely, with a textured cover and simple, colorful drawings throughout. It is well organized, with each project introduced in an interesting, engaging manner. Redmond often uses personal stories to inspire the reader, which adds to the personal feeling of the book. Some of the projects immediately got my imagination running, like the Patchwork Postcards, Knit the Sky, Nectar Collector, and Out on a Limb (which I am doing right now!). There are one or two that don't appeal at all to me personally, but I appreciate the ideas and imagination behind them.

I immediately began to see how I could use my knitting in conjunction with my journaling to record my experiences and observations, which I find very exciting. My knitting can enhance and amplify my writing, and my writing can do the same for my knitting! Both my journaling and knitting have been enriched by my new practice.

Redmond does have simple instructions in the back of the book to help get you started with the projects, but don't be afraid to branch out on your own and use your imagination to make each project your own. Just as two people often tell the same story in completely different ways, so your project with tell your unique story.

What are you waiting for? Get started knitting the sky!

by Khadijah A.
for Story Circle Book Reviews
reviewing books by, for, and about women
364 reviews3 followers
June 2, 2021
Cool ideas, and i did enjoy it - still, could have been a magazine vs a book.
358 reviews5 followers
April 5, 2015
I reviewed this for NetGalley.

I've knitted for over forty-nine years and I have read numerous knitting books during that period so I think I can have an educated opinion.

This book, in my opinion, is really excellent. Not because of complicated patterns (twenty color colorways ala Alice Starmore, or some of the more complex and outre Vogue patterns) or famous designer names, but simply for the unique joy and simplicity of playful and creative knitwear design.

Ms. Redmond's book is pure fun. It is a refreshing change from complicated, tedious knitting patterns. I enjoyed myself and had a number of new ideas for knitting different items. Knitting needs to be fun, whether one is a novice or has been knitting forever (as I have been). This book brings play back into something that has become too serious at times.

I highly recommend this book for knitting inspiration and enjoyment. Thanks, Ms. Redmond, for making knitting playful again!
Profile Image for Angela.
224 reviews1 follower
June 28, 2015
I received a copy of this book for review from NetGalley.

I'm an advanced knitter and am always on the lookout for new ideas to challenge me or to add a little whimsy to my projects. Even though the main idea for this book has been around for quite some time, I hoped this book would add a little something extra. Unfortunately, there was just not enough there to keep my attention. The illustrations are beautiful. The patterns seemed overly simplistic and, in some cases, confusing.

This might be a good starting point for a new knitter not familiar with or access to knitting social groups online.
Profile Image for Debbie is on Storygraph.
1,674 reviews146 followers
October 10, 2016
I have been knitting and crocheting for years, and it is one of my favorite hobbies. So I was very interested in reviewing a knitting book which seemed to have some new ideas for using knitting as a way to connect with the world and community.

Unfortunately, I found the book fell very flat. Perhaps a more beginning knitter would find something worthwhile here. Instead, I thought concepts in the book a bit gimmicky and not appealing, particularly for somebody who is used to making more complicated patterns.

Secondly, I thought the book was laid out very poorly. It was very whimsical and lovely, but not very practical. I understand that the concept of the book is to not be beholden to patterns or what the finished product should look like. That does not mean that what patterns there are should be hidden at the back of the book as the THIRD appendix. This is particularly vexing since I imagine most of the consumers of this book will be beginning or not so experienced knitters, and would want the pattern front and center.

I appreciate what the author is attempting here - to get knitters to be more mindful when knitting, and be more open about their hobby while connecting with those around them. But I fear I am truly the wrong audience for this book, and I can't see other knitters I know picking this book up either. I can see something like this being more popular with a high school or college student who is learning to knit and has not really advanced past simple scarves and hats, but is looking for a project that is a bit more interesting than plain garter or stockinette.

Review copy courtesy of the publisher via Netgalley
Profile Image for Bella.
756 reviews15 followers
April 5, 2021
I adore this book. I have to admit I haven't knitted anything from it yet, but it is just beautiful. I love the illustrations. I love the author's focus on the knitter's relationship with their knitting.

Projects include knitting scarves/cowls in different colours based on the knitter's mood or the sky or weather, or even the colours of houses around the knitter's suburb.

I wouldn't recommend this as a beginner 'learn how to knit' book. The basics are included, so a beginner could use the book, but the projects are more about having fun than learning new skills. There is a project to knit a pencil skirt using actual pencils, another to knit a ring out of thread using sewing pins, another to get up early and knit the sunrise - not projects you want to be solidifying your k1p1 skills on!

So saying, I would recommend the book to anyone who is seeking knitting (or even crochet - there's no reason you couldn't adapt the projects) inspiration. Or to anyone who wants to look at gorgeous illustrations and imagine the possibilities ...
1,911 reviews49 followers
January 2, 2019
This is the most unusual knitting book I've ever read! The author is truly focused on knitting-as-a-process, rather than as a craft for the production of garments. Her ideas were completely original, such as knitting a scarf over a period of 1 year, with a line or two in the colors reflecting the weather on each particular day. Or knitting while on the subway, changing colors every time you switch from, say, the green line to the red line. I particularly enjoyed her idea of hiding small treasures in the balls of (leftover) yarn that a knitter might donate to charity or communal yarn stashes.
The illustrations in this book were lovely, dreamy....

I have to say that I don't see myself actually doing any of the projects in the book, because I'm definitely all about the destination (I knit in order to end up with a lovely sweater) than about the journey. But one never knows.... I might feel inspired and surprise myself !
Profile Image for Erin Shepard.
11 reviews
January 13, 2025
This was so cute! I had a bunch it would be a really nice book about creativity in general, not just about knitting, and it was. It was a really sweet book filled with great ideas and beautiful illustrations that brought back a lot of childlike curiosity and wonder. The creative method taught in this book and the daringness to come up with a plan to step out of your comfort zone, concoct recipes for how to go about a project. I think it really bridges the gap between art and craft by bringing a “happening” in a Kaprow-esque sort of way, for example, using a cowl project to meet the neighbors and document their houses. Performance art at its finest.
Feeling really inspired and would love to take on a few of the projects mentioned and use it’s methods in future creative pondering of my own.
Profile Image for Kimberly.
653 reviews10 followers
January 2, 2017
I have been a knitter for over four decades, so when I see a book with a knitting reference in the title, I smile.

The entire title is : Knit the Sky: A Playful Way of Knitting. It gives crafters a new way to look at life around them, through their knitting needles. There are a total of 32 creative crafts in this book which will stay with the knitter for a lifetime. There is a day-by-day scarf, made up of the colors of the sky, Or a unique growth chart for a baby which will be finished when they turn 18. It is such a beautiful and idea inspiring book.

Lea Redmond uses all of her creative skills to help others open their shells and knit away.

I loved this book and I am so glad that NetGalley and Storey Publishing gave it to me in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Monica.
573 reviews4 followers
August 16, 2017
This is an unconventional pattern book. Instead of offering a picture of a beautiful finished project and then giving steps to achieve said project on your own, this book instead offers ideas for approaching knitting in a creative way. Redmond reminds knitters to draw project inspiration from anything important in life, saying "Anything in life that is special or important can become the perfect seed for one of these knitting projects... Sometimes creativity is tidy; usually it is not." I've had an amazing experience practicing the "knit one, breathe one" technique as a morning meditation practice. And I can't wait to incorporate some of her other ideas into future projects!

Profile Image for Ann Goodman.
18 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2017
Inspirational, heart-warming & just lovely.

I don't buy books that often but couldn't resist the idea of this book. It did not disappoint and I think it's the type of book to thumb through again & again. I'm not sure I will make all of them but that's not altogether the point . Reading this inspired me and made me smile for ages as I thought through the possibilities. I love the creative process in each project, some will take effort & commitment others can be knitted relatively quickly . I'm going to clear the decks of my plethora of 'wips' & choose a couple to start a bit of exploration.

Thanks, Lea, I love your book x.
Profile Image for Elianastar.
98 reviews3 followers
April 4, 2020
Loved the first project...

... doubt I’ll actually make any of the other projects, but I didn’t purchase the book for the projects. I bought the book for the INSPIRATION... to look for ideas to THINK differently about my crafting projects, all of them. I crochet, knit, jewelry, photography, a little sewing & am preparing to try my hand at metal stamping (watching videos & collecting supplies).

The book contains many uniques ideas for “inspirational” projects but also has caused me to do what I was hoping it would: tweak me out of status quo creativity.

Might not be for everyone. It came up in one of my Kindle-thrift emails &, for me, is well worth the modest cost!
Profile Image for Fernleaf.
378 reviews
March 13, 2019
A fun book of inspiration for knitters. Redmond offers an array of ways to take knitting beyond the pattern and connect it more directly to daily life, whether that is knitting a few rows each day to track the sky or making a round of your block and knitting the house colors she suggests ways to break out of the pattern and express more creativity. For someone who struggles with creativity this is a nice reminder to have.
128 reviews2 followers
December 31, 2019
I like the idea of this book. It begins with Knit the Sky and continues on with 30 other ideas of the same type. As a new knitter I don't have a stash of yarn built up yet and these ideas don't appeal to me anyway. It'd drive me crazy to try to remember to look at the sky every day and knit that color-it's too much pressure for me.

But I can see how it might appeal to others and I do give credit to the book for what it is-a clever, original book full of ideas for fun knitting.
Profile Image for Gail Richmond.
1,910 reviews6 followers
February 16, 2021
Simple craft ideas for using knitting in unusual ways, for instance, knitting a long scarf with one row of stitches for every day in a year using yarn the color of the sky that morning or day. I think of this as a resource book for fun kinds of things to do with yarn when regular knitting becomes routine.
Profile Image for Daphne.
393 reviews7 followers
July 24, 2024
This is more a book on the creative process and the essays and tips could easily be applied to painting or any other area where someone is stymied or looking for a way to jump start their creative process. There are knitting patterns in the back. This book is great for any handcrafter who is seeking new ideas for colors or patterns or just to reconnect with the enjoyment of their craft.
Profile Image for rachamanda13.
7 reviews
October 8, 2025
This book opened my eyes to how expressive and spiritual of an experience fiber arts can be. These projects have inspired me to look at my work as a diary, an extension of me, a connection to the universe. Nobody has to know that my uniquely-patterned blanket or scarf mirrors my soul, but I know that, and that is magical!
Profile Image for Kyra Ferguson.
15 reviews16 followers
October 1, 2017
Beautiful ideas

Love the ideas presented in this book. One idea of the family heirloom reminded me of the time I discovered an unfinished cross stitch started by my grandmother in the basement, and I asked my mother to teach me how to cross stitch so I could finish it.
Profile Image for Carolyn Page.
820 reviews37 followers
December 18, 2018
It really is everything the title says...do you feel like knitting a scarf comprised of the colors of the sky of every day for a specified period of time? What about a blanket of your moods? A great book for stash-busting!
Profile Image for Laura.
3,907 reviews
July 23, 2018
I loved this look at knitting - although not really a pattern book has amazing ideas for more mindful and connected knitting. loved some of these ideas
Profile Image for Carolyn Manlove.
484 reviews2 followers
March 15, 2019
Absolutely loved this book! I always saw my knitting as a craft. She has shown me how to make it art!
Profile Image for Eliot.
Author 2 books15 followers
April 29, 2019
Neat but Not My Thing

There are definitely some fun and creative ideas for gamifying your knitting, but if you’re a follow-the-rules/pattern person like me, it’s not for you.
432 reviews1 follower
February 9, 2020
I like the whimsy of this book. It has made me think about knitting some projects that are more about the experience and the memories than about how complicated a pattern I am able to knit.
Profile Image for Rianne.
57 reviews5 followers
October 16, 2016
I've just purchased this book and am delighted by the meaningful and whimsical project ideas included. I love a handmade piece that had a good story attached; this book provides inspiration for several such projects, both small and large. I also enjoyed the bright and beautiful illustrations in the book. (No photos of finished projects - your piece will be uniquely yours!) My only reason for for rather than five stars is that some of the instructions are vague and confusing. The purpose is that you take them and make them your own. That said, I personally would like for the direction on some projects.
Profile Image for Sarah.
118 reviews18 followers
December 29, 2015
This review first appeared on my blog: http://www.craftsfromthecwtch.co.uk/2...

I can't recall how I first heard about Lea Redmond's Sky Scarf but lots of these projects were popping up on blogs around the time I started knitting. As a nature-lover, the idea of documenting the sky each day - with a different colour yarn - is quite appealing (and may have subconsciously influenced one of my own projects where I chose colours from the Sussex Sky during the course of one autumn day). When I saw that Lea had written a book with 31 different projects, I was keen to take a look. My copy was kindly supplied by Storey Publishing but as always, all opinions are entirely my own.

This is a high quality 21 x 18 cm hardcover book (or ebook*). As well as being an inspiring read, the illustrations (by Lauren Nassaf) and little stories that accompany the projects make it a lovely thing to pick up and flick through, which is precisely what my children keep doing.

Knit the Sky begins with an invitation to look up from your needles and to bring your attention to the world around you. Yes, it is a book of knitting "patterns", but they are patterns with a twist - your own sense of 'whimsy and adventure' are required! In fact, this book is a proposal to explore ways to creatively engage with your knitting. There are no pictures of finished projects. There are no 'rules' and in fact some of the prompts don't even tell you what sort of item you should make - you are simply given a starting point and the rest is up to you.

You see, Knit the Sky is all about connecting with your world, your feelings and the things that inspire you. Knitting is a very personal experience, and you are encouraged to use it as a method of journalling and transforming "snippets of beauty into little loops of yarn" in the way an artist might record things in her sketchbook.

There are so many ideas in this book, especially when you consider how many ways you might interpret the prompts. I will tell you about just a few of my favourites so you can discover the rest for yourself:
The Mood Ring Cowl - a colourful cowl that tracks your mood over a month.
Mind The Gap - the perfect commuting project; match your yarn with the underground/subway lines you are riding on, switching as you change trains.
The Inch-by-Inch Scarf - a unique way to measure a child's height/growth, which can be gifted to them to mark their passage into adulthood.
Wabi-sabi - choose a technically challenging project which will take you out of your comfort zone and into the realm of mistake-making. Don't hide the mistakes - embellish them.

As well as the detailed prompts, Lea talks you though how to invent your own project. Starting with an idea, brainstorming details, translating it into a knitted object (the aesthetics and process) and finally, bringing it all together as a coherent design.

The appendix includes some knitting techniques, pattern stitches and a few actual patterns (for basic mitts, leg warmers, socks, a hat...) which can be used as the canvas for your own ideas, but I doubt you'll want to stop there. After all, the (knitted) sky is the limit.
Profile Image for Bruce Gargoyle.
874 reviews140 followers
April 21, 2015
I received a digital copy of this title from the publisher via Netgalley.

Ten Second Synopsis:
A different kind of craft book where the focus is on the process, not the final product.

The greatest thing about this book is that you can replace the word “Knit” in the title with any crafty word you please and you can still get an enormous amount from the book. For in Knit the Sky, it’s the process, not the finished product, which is the important thing. Mad Martha doesn’t know how to knit, but I had to listen to her enthuse over the exciting projects in this book and how she could convert them to crochet. There seemed to be only one or two projects in the book that really are specific to knitting – one in which friends cooperate to knit two scarves on one pair of needles springs to mind – but with a bit of creativity, crafty crafters could easily modify these projects to get around that. Even if you don’t do any crafty endeavour yourself, the book promotes a way of looking at and interacting with the world around you that inspires mindfulness and memory-making.

Another handy thing about the projects here is that the author has suggested numerous variations on each project to inspire you to have a go. For example, with the titular project – knitting a scarf comprised of individual stripes capturing the colour of the sky each day for a year – there’s the ingenious and touching suggestion of instead creating a baby blanket comprised of squares representing the colour of the sky on each day (or near enough to!) of the baby’s time in utero. We experienced a mild thrill of terror at the idea of the “Neighbourhood Cowl” in which the crafter is challenged to go visit all the neighbours on their block and then knit a stripe in the colour of each house, in street order. Then there’s the family projects, like the heirloom idea of beginning a pattern or simple project, and then leaving it safely encased somewhere for future generations to find and complete, and the almost unbearably cutesy idea of the grandparent creating a basket-coloured (or basket-stitched!) woolly hat for themselves, and a berry-coloured woolly hat for each of their grand-offspring!

In all honesty, this book made Mad Martha’s heart sing for the potential it has to promote connection amongst people – family, neighbours, complete strangers – and the flow-on effect of crafting as a means to achieve Utopia.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 70 reviews

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