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In 2006, I bought Kay Gardiner and Ann Shayne's Mason Dixon Knitting book the week it came out. I read it cover to cover, like a novel. I had been back to knitting casually: a hat here, a scarf there, perhaps a baby sweater, since my third child turned five in 2003 and was given a knitting kit for her birthday. And it was nothing like the knitting I had done as a child when my Grandmother taught me, or even as a teenager, or more rarely, in college. It was easy to find great yarn and books of patterns I couldn't wait to knit. I constantly had a project on the needles. I had gone through the holding two or three different yarns together to knit a scarf phase, a felting phase, and a regrettable exercise with some questionable yarn that resulted in a confetti textured baby sweater for a friend's daughter that I still have serious pangs of guilt about. I was ready to move on, but not quite sure what to.
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Ravelry, the knitter's Mecca, wasn't in existence when I purchased my copy of Mason Dixon Knitting. It was that long ago! And the book changed my entire approach to knitting. The patterns were useful, lovely, even heirloom quality items. I was instantly drawn to all of them. I was particularly drawn to the afghans, but the projects seemed to large for a working mom with three young children. The Bubbly Curtain called my name as well, but seemed similarly large and unmanageable, despite its practical appeal. So I settled on a much smaller Moss Stitch Linen hand towel, and purchased the yarn for it, Louet's Euroflax Original sport weight 100% linen.
I moved on to new projects, but I never knit the hand towel. Inspired by Kay and Ann and their adventurous approach to knitting, I made a cotton dress for my daughter and designed a simple skirt pattern in a riotous array of Be Sweet yarn that my daughter wore every day for a month after I finished it. Seriously. Every day. I was made brave as I read and reread sections of the Mason Dixon knitting book. The casual can-do approach to knitting inspired me to pick up projects that had previously seemed out of reach. I knit my first pair of socks, fell in love, and knit several more. I knit a Clapotis, even though it took me months. It was a wonderful time for me as a knitter! But still, I never picked up the linen yarn, which was dazzlingly white and very pretty.
Earlier this month, I went searching for that yarn. Suddenly, I had to knit the hand towel. I reorganized all of my yarn, which lives in cubbies in a walk in closet in my studio. There it was, in the back of one of the cubbies with my Sanguine Gryphon, waiting for me.
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It's wound now, and ready to be my September 1 project. I know from experience that knitting with linen can be a bit slow for me, so I suspect I'll knit this on and off with other projects. But I am so excited to be knitting it at long last. And so grateful to the long ago discovery of a book that his given me so much and continues to give.