Knitting & Textile Crafts · Canada

A calm reference for working with thread and yarn.

Cedar Harbor Lane collects the groundwork of hand knitting for people starting out in Canadian homes and craft groups: how stitches are built, which fibres suit a cold climate, how a written pattern is read, and how a first project is planned from gauge to finishing.

Multicoloured balls of knitting yarn displayed outside a needlework shop
Skeins sorted by weight and colour outside a needlework shop. Photograph: Wikimedia Commons (CC).
Three foundations

Start with the parts that every later project depends on.

Each article stands on its own but links to the others, because gauge, fibre and stitch choice are decided together rather than in isolation.

Stranded colourwork knitting showing rows of small repeating stitch patterns
Stitches

Basic Stitches Explained

Knit and purl, how they combine into garter, stockinette and ribbing, and why the back of the fabric matters as much as the front.

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Close view of raw Lincoln sheep wool fibre
Fibres

Understanding Fibre Types

Wool, plant fibres and synthetics compared by warmth, stretch, care and how each behaves on the needles through a Canadian winter.

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Balls of four-ply knitting yarn in several colours
Planning

Planning Your First Project

Reading a pattern, swatching for gauge, estimating yarn quantity and sequencing the work so a scarf or hat finishes the size you intended.

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How to read a pattern

Abbreviations are a shorthand, not a code.

Written patterns compress repeated actions into short forms. A line such as the one shown describes a four-stitch ribbing repeated across the row. Once the common abbreviations are familiar, most beginner patterns read in plain sequence.

Row 1 (RS): *k2, p2; rep from * to end. Row 2 (WS): *k2, p2; rep from * to end. k = knit p = purl RS = right side WS = wrong side rep = repeat * = repeat marker
Hands working a hat in the round on circular knitting needles
A beginner sequence

From swatch to finished piece.

Make a gauge swatch

Knit a square at least 10 cm wide in the pattern stitch, then count stitches and rows per 10 cm. This number decides every later measurement.

Match or adjust needle size

If the swatch has too many stitches per 10 cm, move up a needle size; too few, move down. The yarn label suggests a starting point.

Estimate yarn quantity

Use the pattern's stated yardage for your size, then buy from a single dye lot so colour stays consistent across balls.

Work, then block

Knit the piece, weave in ends, and wet- or steam-block to even the stitches and set the final dimensions.

Contact

Questions about the material

Use the form to send a question or a correction about an article. Cedar Harbor Lane is a small editorial reference, so replies are written by hand and may take a few days.

Public contact details

Editorial enquiries: editor@cedarharborlane.org
Postal: Cedar Harbor Lane Editorial, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

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Last updated: 2026-05-29