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7 Pragmatic Tips to Teach Children How to Knit Ages 3-6

See?  Smiling.  They’re having fun.

People will sometimes come into The Yarn Spot or A Tangled Skein, or when people find out I’m a nanny and a craft instructor, and they will ask me a common question: “How young can you teach children to knit?”  This will be closely followed by, “How do you teach children to knit?”  This series of posts will address some of those questions.  (This also happens with crochet, but I say knit because people assume very often, even when I’m crocheting that it’s knitting.  Depending on my mood and their level of interest, I’ll sometimes correct them.)

Sweetness has been knitting since a few months after I met her, so around 3 1/2.  Light is 2 1/2, and is already showing interest.  She has her own needles, and will ape what Sweetness and I are doing, but she doesn’t quite have the attention span.

As follows, a sweet list of 7 tips for teaching very young children:

Make sure they’re interested.  If you are teaching them to knit at a young age, the desire has to come from them.  At three or four, they only way they will be interested in learning is if THEY are the ones who came up with the idea.  Don’t try to force learning on them.

Keep it Short.  Lessons should only go for at most 10 minutes.  Keep it short.  Stop while they still want more.  The longer you go at it, the more likely they’ll get frustrated and loose interest.  I know it’s tempting to keep going when it’s going well, but you want to end each lesson with a sense of satisfaction and accomplishment, not frustration.

Have them sit on your lap and hold the sticks with you.  Sweetness was (and still is, but it’s a close thing) small enough to fit on my lap when we started.  I would hold the needles with her and do the stitches.  Later, she took over the right hand, and then the left hand.  I still would do the wrapping of the yarn, while she figured out what was going on with the sticks.

Show them several times, then have them “teach” you.  This does two things.  One, you can listen and hear how they are thinking about the stitches and the movements they are doing, and then use the language they are using.  If they think of it more like a wrap instead of a yarn over, call it what they call it.  The proper language can come later.

Take turns.  Have them do a row, then you do a row.  This does two things.  First, you can correct any mistakes they made on the last row, like wrapping the yarn the wrong way and creating twisted stitches, picking up dropped stitches, or evening out their tension.  Second, their square grows faster this way.  Don’t be afraid to do a few rows after they’re done, to keep it growing.

Give them short needles.  Long straights, or even circulars, can be hard for small kids to manage.  I normally use a pair of double pointed needles, 8″ long, and put rubber bands at the end.  This way, if we loose one, I got 3 to replace it (packs of DPNs normally come in 5) and the shorter needle is easier to manage.

Focus on the skill, not on the result.  At 3-6 years old, children are still developing fine motor skills.  They’re first knitting may not even be usable.  Don’t focus on making anything in particular other than a square.  Just focus on getting the skill down.

Please, don’t set their sights on a scarf.  So many people come into the store with kids, saying that they want to knit a scarf and it’s their first project.  I always try to steer them to some different options – some of which I’ve listed HERE.  After the first 6-10″ a garter stitch scarf gets really boring.  Children are young.  The amount of time it takes for an adult, never-mind a child, to knit a scarf is LONG.  Give them a more attainable short term goal.

What type of advice would you give someone who was teaching a young child to knit?

Sneak Peak

104Hello Yarnies,

Working on some new patterns.  This one is scheduled to come out in the fall (I know, it’s strange that you have to think about making a pattern a full season and a half before it’s supposed to come out).

Sweetness was kind enough to model it for me.  It’s made from an angora/lambswool mix yarn.  It promises to be quite warm!

What do you think?

~Jen

Tension in Knitting, Crochet and Life…

So life right now has been a bit of a balancing act for me. I’m working at The Yarn Spot, babysitting, and trying to figure out if I can really make a career out of being my multi-directional self. I feel like I swing between too much and too little. I get tense and uptight worrying that I’m not going to make things work, then I relax and let things roll and don’t quite motivate the way I should.

It’s kind of like knitting or crochet… too much tension and your fabric will be too tight (I even saw one sweater where the person couldn’t get their head through the hole), too loose, and the fabric has no form, flopping down over your head like a three-times-too-big hat.

How the heck do you find a balance?

Well, I can’t really tell you how to go about it with life. I’m making some discoveries about myself, and others, and I’ll share those thoughts with you, but I’ve got it far from right. On the other hand, I can share with you my thoughts about knitting. You see, today we had a customer come in. She had switched from throwing (where you feed the yarn out of your right hand) to continental (or picking, where you feed the yarn out of the left hand, kind of like crochet). Her tension was all wonky, and she couldn’t get a consistent gauge. She was an experienced knitter, but this new method of knitting, while faster in the end, was not working for her right now.

We tried a few methods of wrapping the yarn around her fingers to try and get more friction. I showed her my way where I weave the yarn through my fingers and then loop it over my pinkie, and then I showed her the way another one of the employees in the store does it, where she wraps it around her thumb. In the end, the customer did neither way, but combined the two to get her tension where she wanted it.

I guess that’s what I’m trying to do with my life right now. Combine my passions… for children, for books, for yarn, for writing, for designing patterns, for crafting all into one seamless whole.

*grins* We’ll see how it goes.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In other news, I’m going with the Boyfriend to New Haven this weekend to visit with friends. Not sure what’s going to happen, but I’ll try and take some good pictures to show you! We’ll be taking the train, so the Boyfriend will be pleased.

When I get back, I’m planning to put together a tutorial on holding the yarn when knitting continental, and different ways to modify it for loose or tight knitters.

I’ll keep you updated, Yarnies, for when I get back.

New Classes for this Fall

Fall is upon us, and with all this cool weather coming it’s the perfect time to get back into knitting or crochet. If you live in the Metro DC area, come check out these great new classes at The Yarn Spot. In the next upcoming days I’ll give you some sneak peaks at the different projects we’ll be working on!

Crochet with Jennifer Beginning Crochet IA great introduction to Crochet!
Chain, single crochet, double crochet and more. Learn how to make a coaster and a small purse.
Date: Wednesday, Oct. 13 & 20
Time: 6:30-8 PM
Cost: $60
RSVP by: Monday, Oct. 11
Class Size: 3-8 people
Register NOW!
Beginning Crochet IIWhere we expand our skills.
Expand your skills with basic lacework, different needle sizes and basic finishing techniques. Make some lovely lacework jewelry and a narrow headband.
Date: Wednesday, Nov. 10 & 17
Time: 6:30-8 PM
Cost: $60
RSVP by: Monday, Nov. 8
Class Size: 3-8 people
Register NOW!

Intermediate Crochet I
A great way to expand our skills! Must know how to single crochet, double crochet, chain and slip stitch. Learn how to Fillet Crochet and learn Foundation Crochet. Make a project bag to hold your current designs!
Date: Wednesday, Dec. 1 & 8
Time: 6:30-8 PM
Cost: $60
RSVP by: Monday, Nov. 29
Class Size: 3-8 people
Register NOW!

Intermediate Crochet II
Must know how to single crochet, double crochet, chain and slip stitch. Learn how to make Picots, Bobbles, and crochet to the front and back. Make a pillow sham to show off your skills!
Date: Wednesday, Dec. 15 & 22
Time: 6:30-8 PM
Cost: $60
RSVP by: Monday, Dec 13
Class Size: 3-8 people
Register NOW!

Toe Up Socks with Jennifer
Date: Tuesday, Nov. 2, 9, & 16
Time: 6:30-8 PM
Cost: $90
RSVP by: Sunday, Nov 31
Class Size: 3-6 people
Register NOW!