So, I’ve started knitting. Did I ever tell you my Granny has
won prizes for her knitting? Perhaps I’ll do the same one day. Follow in her
footsteps and produce a masterpiece so beautiful, so intricate, that it’s
worthy not only of a Waterstones book voucher or a box of Malteasers but
perhaps of its own cabinet at the V&A. For the record, I have no idea
exactly what she won, but let’s face it, it’s unlikely that my creations will
turn heads. Since starting work at Woman’s
Weekly, I’ve made two cats, a pig and a steadily-growing strip of bunting. I’m
proud of them all for varying reasons, the main one being this: I am far from a
born crafter. Don’t believe me? I think I need to set the scene a little more.
So it will come as no surprise that secondary school was
something of a rude awakening. I mean, it didn’t start off too badly. Regardless
of the attainment grade (we won’t go there), I always received ‘A’ for effort
and my parents displayed my full-sized paper-mache chicken with pride on the
kitchen shelf. However, as the years marched on, the criticism became harsher.
I say harsher, when perhaps I should say more realistic. My year eight ‘African
jewellery’ that consisted of a single bead threaded onto some manky ribbon was
met with raised eyebrows by a rather formidable teacher, whilst the sketch of
my left hand holding a pencil merited a comment which has since become
legendary among my friends: ‘C. It looked better last week before you painted
it’. And the time I got an AA for my innovative sewing machine skills when I simply
tie-dyed a Tesco t-shirt? I put that purely down to a dippy Textiles teacher
who, when she wasn’t floating around in her loose-fitting kaftans, spent most
of her time hiding in the materials cupboard.
But knitting, well, that’s a different skill entirely. Like
many little girls, my granny taught me to make a scarf for my teddy bear, but I
very quickly grew tired of the pastime, moving on after the thirteenth dropped
stitch to bigger, more exciting things like turning the living room into a dog
rescue centre. When the knitting craze swept through secondary school, I watched
friends and peers with balls of wool in their trademark Jane Norman bags, yet brushed
off any encouragement to have a go, preferring to busy myself playing Neopets
in the library or writing the next school assembly.
And then, Woman’s
Weekly changed my life. A bold statement, I hear you cry, but it’s not
entirely inaccurate. Of course, I adored my job, but when the weekly makes and
beautiful knitting patterns were displayed in conference, I couldn’t help
feeling mildly unworthy. Why couldn’t I make novelty fruit and veg or turn my
hand to a knitted Usain Bolt? Clearly, my fingers just weren’t quite fast
enough.
As I sit with my ninth piece of bunting half-finished on my
lap, I reflect on the days of sticky art tables and dyed orange fingers (the top
marks Tesco project wasn’t without risk), I realise that this is perhaps the closest
thing to crafty I’ve ever been in my life. Stuffed animals, bunting... What’s
next for this intrepid knitting enthusiast? The other day, I found myself
excited about a knitted cactus! And as I chat patterns with my granny and contemplate
whether or not I’m capable of making myself a jumper without mismatching arm
lengths and unintentional holes passed off as deliberate design decisions, I can’t
help thinking one thing, and one thing only: I’ve been well and truly Woman’s Weekly-fied!