Skip to main content

Fruity Knitting Podcast

I do enjoy the Grocery Girls podcast found under the same name on YouTube.  They offer a campy, light-hearted, product-placement filled 1.5-2 hour video every couple of weeks.  But having said that every now and then I love a good old traditional, proper knitting video and the Fruity Knitting podcast fits that requirement.

Andrea in Shetland

Andrew and Andrea are a married couple who have lived in Offenbach, Germany (a suburb of Frankfurt) for over 17 years. Both were born in Australia.  For me the most endearing part of this is the lovely Australian accents.  That accent seems to make everything classy, distant and official.

Andrea is a skilled knitter, is a very good seamstress and a professionally trained singer.  She loves to make form fitting jumpers (sweaters) for herself and her family.  Andrew is relatively new to knitting and as a contrast to Andrea, his projects are more simple in design.  He recently completed a hiking jacket, designed by Andrea made with Hebridean conservation wool.

Andrea loves Alice Starmore designs, here are a couple from her Ravelry page.

Henry VIII - Alice Starmore design (photo from Ravelry)

Anne Boleyn - Alice Starmore design (photo from Ravelry)

In additional to showing off beautiful finished objects the Fruity Knitting podcast has a segment called Knitters of the World, where excellent knitters of all types show off their vintage, stranded or cabled knitting from their own home.  Another segment has Andrea interviewing known experts in the knitting world like Susan B. Anthony, Gundrun Johnston, and Ann Budd as well as several European experts, Nancy Marchant, Tom of Holland, Marie Wallin, and Ysolda Teague.  It is clear Andrea does a lot of preparing for these interviews because she asks the type of in-depth questions knitters want answered.

Finally Andrea shares in each episode a few knitting tips or tricks or how she modifies patterns to suit her fashion aesthetic that makes watching worthwhile.  Often this is done at the beginning of the episode as she and Andrew talk from their living room couch, but there are also excellent video tutorials created by Andrea to show the viewer how something is done.

The Fruity Knitting podcast will also take you to wool festivals in Germany, Scotland and Shetland (which will be coming out soon).  The length of each podcast is about 1.5 hours and they upload every couple of weeks.

I highly recommend checking out The Fruity Knitting playlist and select an interviewee of interest.  I am sure you'll agree it is time well spent, if you love to knit.


Comments

  1. ⚠️⚠️CRYPTOCURRENCY SCAM ALERT 📢 🚨

    This is to inform the general public that there are lots of cryptocurrency investments scam out there, this investments scam promises you lots of profits return and it all turns out to be a scam, but here is good news to individuals who have been victims of this type of scam.

    You could still recover your money back from the scammers, all you have to do is contact ⭐PYTHONAX⭐ and hope that the scammers still has your money.

    ⭐PYTHONAX ⭐ are a group of talented and experts on tracking down scammers, this is possible by using transaction history and identification info, website location to help scammed victims recover thier money back.

    Don't be scared or shy to make contact with ⭐PYTHONAX⭐ as your identity isn't required and you can choose to be anonymous while you are been attended to. You will need to provide informations about the scam, informations that would help track down the scammers.

    The informations required are simple stuffs like Means of contact with the scams (Emails, social media handles or phone numbers), transaction records (may or may not include screenshots) and details of the scam process used by the scammers.

    ⭐PYTHONAX⭐ can also help with other issues like-:
    ❌Buying and Selling scams.
    ❌Binary Options and Forex Scams.
    ❌Dating and Romance Scams.
    ❌identity Theft Scams.
    ✅Computer & Phone Hacks.
    ✅Social Media and Emails Hacks.

    Use the emails below for contact-:
    Pythonaxhelp@protonmail.com
    Pythonaxservices@protonmail.com













    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Anatomy of a Sock

I've been knitting socks for a relatively short time.  One of the disconcerting things for me as I started following patterns for socks is the pattern designer assumes the knitter (in this case that would be me) knows all the parts of a sock.  So I thought I'd devote a post to improve my own knowledge about the anatomy of a sock and maybe some of you will learn something about the humble yet necessary sock as well. Here's the names of the parts of the foot as I know them. #49 ankle, #50 heel, #51, instep, #52 ball, #53 big toe, #54 toe, #55 little toe, #56 toenail. There are some parts more important for this discussion; first the heel of a foot is generally used to refer to the entire C-shape from the ankle to the instep.  Speaking of the instep, it refers to that curve near the bottom of the foot.  And what seems to be missing in the design above is the sole which generally refers to the bottom of the foot in total or plantar aspect in more technical terms...

Ode to the Cat

It has been six months since Mike, the cat's, passing.  I think of him every day and miss him especially when Paul is away.  Mike was a being in the house with me and we were close.  Grieving his death has been muddled with my Dad's passing and sometimes I feel guilty about that happening.  As time passes the ache becomes less hurtful for both and I am starting to get mostly good memories in its place. Recently I helped celebrate Pablo Neruda's birthday with Jami, my poet and overall very creative friend.  Guests were asked to select one poem written by Neruda to read to the small group who gathered for the celebration.  I picked this one: Ode To The Cat -- Pablo Neruda There was something wrong with the animals: their tails were too long, and they had unfortunate heads. Then they started coming together, little by little fitting together to make a landscape, developing birthmarks, grace, flight. But the cat, only the cat turned ou...

Knitting-Related Guinness World Records

I had to share some of the Guinness World Records connected with knitting.  It is amazing to me the type of skill, stamina and unique characteristics these record holders have in common. How about trying to knit with these SPNs?? Ingrid Wagner and her large needles and knitted swatch The largest knitting needles measured 3.5 m (11 ft 5.8 in) long and had a diameter of 8 cm (3.15 in). Ingrid Wagner, a rug and art creation artist, from the UK used the needles to knit a tension square of ten stitches by ten rows at the Metro Radio Arena, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK, on March, 10 2008.  (And I complained about getting certain SPNs stuck in my clothes.)  See how this swatch was done with merely 5 people managing the needles.  And what about the yarn?  It is truly ex-bulky.  It looks like they're knitting in a warehouse, but with a wingspan of almost 24 feet or 7 m, you'd need all that space.  Or h...