
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this week’s Stranded Thought, Anne reflects on how knitting patterns used to look – and how our expectations of them have changed.
Back in the day, even complex sweaters were knit from a single folded page with tiny text, small diagrams, and very few words. Today, patterns are longer, more detailed, and often expected to explain not just what to do, but why.
In this Stranded Thought, Anne explores the difference between:
– Patterns as instructions
– Teaching as a separate craft
– And why not everything needs to be understood right away to move forward
She also shares a familiar moment from her teaching: when the explanation hasn’t quite landed yet – and why sometimes the best thing you can do is simply follow the next step and let understanding come later.
A thoughtful reflection on trust, learning, and letting the knitting lead the way.
By Anne Fjeld4.9
88 ratings
In this week’s Stranded Thought, Anne reflects on how knitting patterns used to look – and how our expectations of them have changed.
Back in the day, even complex sweaters were knit from a single folded page with tiny text, small diagrams, and very few words. Today, patterns are longer, more detailed, and often expected to explain not just what to do, but why.
In this Stranded Thought, Anne explores the difference between:
– Patterns as instructions
– Teaching as a separate craft
– And why not everything needs to be understood right away to move forward
She also shares a familiar moment from her teaching: when the explanation hasn’t quite landed yet – and why sometimes the best thing you can do is simply follow the next step and let understanding come later.
A thoughtful reflection on trust, learning, and letting the knitting lead the way.

38,535 Listeners

27,107 Listeners

11,592 Listeners

12,948 Listeners

3,917 Listeners

3,370 Listeners

24,554 Listeners

9,360 Listeners

1,677 Listeners

270 Listeners

41,666 Listeners

676 Listeners

11,309 Listeners

13,686 Listeners

13,197 Listeners