A Knitter’s Pilgrimage: Why Yarn Shops Are More Than Shopping Trips

A visit to a yarn shop is never just an ordinary shopping trip. Yes, we may walk in thinking we need a skein of sock yarn, a set of needles, or “just one little thing” to finish a project. But let’s be honest: a yarn shop offers something far richer than supplies. It offers permission to pause.

In the middle of busy lives, a yarn shop gives us time for ourselves. It is downtime. Quiet time. Creative time. It is a place where we can step away from errands, obligations, and the noise of the world long enough to ask a wonderful question:

The Joy of Not Having a Plan

What could I make?

Sometimes we enter a yarn shop with a specific project in mind. We know the pattern, the gauge, the yardage, and the exact color we hope to find. But just as often, we wander in with no plan at all. That may be the best kind of yarn shop visit.

We touch a hank of wool. We pause over a color we would never have thought to choose. We notice the soft shimmer of silk, the rustic beauty of hand-dyed wool, or a label telling us the very breed of sheep that produced the fiber. And suddenly, creativity wakes up.

We think, What could I make with this? A shawl? A scarf? A hat? A gift? Something practical? Something extravagant? Something we don’t need at all, except that it would bring us joy? That moment — when yarn begins to suggest its own possibilities — is one of the small pleasures only knitters truly understand.

Finding Your People

Whether the yarn shop is down the road in your hometown or tucked along a side street in a place you’re visiting, there is almost always someone there who “gets” you. The shop owner. Another customer. A fellow traveler with yarn in her bag. Someone who understands why you are excited about a luxurious all-wool yarn, why you want to know where it came from, and why a label with the name of the sheep can feel like a treasure.

Non-knitters may not understand this. They may see shelves of yarn and wonder what all the fuss is about. But another knitter knows. Another knitter understands that yarn is not merely a product. It is possibility. It is texture, color, memory, skill, and imagination wound into a skein.

Yarn Shops as Travel Memories

When I travel, I love visiting yarn shops. Some people collect magnets, postcards, or souvenir mugs. I come home with yarn. A skein from Canada, Spain, France, or a little shop discovered by accident becomes more than something to knit. It becomes a memory I can hold in my hands.

Later, when I make a scarf or shawl from that yarn, I remember the street where I bought it. I remember the woman behind the counter. I remember the sound of another language, the basket by the door, the color that caught my eye, the thrill of discovering that knitters everywhere speak a common language.

Even when we do not share the same words, we understand the gesture of touching wool, smiling over color, and imagining the next project.

A Small Pilgrimage

That is why I think of yarn shop visits as a kind of pilgrimage. Not a grand pilgrimage, perhaps. No long mountain trek. No ancient road required. But still, a journey.

We go looking for beauty. We go looking for inspiration. We go looking for a little time apart from the ordinary. We go looking for materials that may become gifts, garments, comfort, or art. And often, we find more than yarn.

We find conversation. We find encouragement. We find new ideas. We find a renewed sense of ourselves as makers.

Why This Matters in My Books

This is one reason knitting so often finds its way into my fiction. In my novels, knitting is never just something women do to pass the time. It is how they remember. How they heal. How they create community. How they carry beauty through difficult places.

In The Prayer Shawl Chronicles and The Knitting Guild of All Saints, yarn becomes part of friendship, faith, grief, and comfort. In Knitting Through Time and Knitting Under the Orange Trees, knitting travels across centuries and continents, linking women whose names history may have forgotten but whose work mattered.

Because knitters know something important: A single strand can become something strong. A quiet hour can become a gift. And a visit to a yarn shop can become the beginning of a story.

I hope you have your own wonderful knitting story! Blessings, Cindy

Cynthia Coe is the author of The Prayer Shawl Chronicles and its sequel, The Knitting Guild of All Saints. Her newest novels, Knitting Through Time and Knitting Under the Orange Trees, explore how knitting spread through Europe and on to the Americas. Follow her here on the blog, at http://www.cynthiacoe.com, or on her Amazon Author Page.

As an Amazon Associate and Author, I provide links to products (including books I have written) and earn a very small fee if you click on the links and buy something. There is no additional charge to you!

Why You Shouldn’t Be Embarrassed to Do “Granny Crafts”


If you’re a 20-something who knits, crochets, or embroiders—this is for you. Granny Crafts aren’t just for grannies. They’re quiet, powerful tools for stress relief, creativity, and deep comfort through every stage of life.

Cindy Knitting with Cats

Dear Young Crafty Kindred Spirit,

Lately, more and more people are talking about how young adults are embracing so-called “Granny Crafts”—and I love it.

If you’re here because you knit, crochet, embroider, or sew—or want to—you’re in good company. I’ve been knitting since I was a teenager myself. But it wasn’t until college, when stress started to weigh heavy on my shoulders, that I really picked it up as a coping mechanism. I’d sit in my dorm room or in a quiet corner of the student center, needles in hand, letting the rhythm of the yarn pull me back from the brink.

Some days, you just want everything—school, jobs, relationships, even the noise of the world—to go away for a while. I get it.

You were born into the digital age. My own kids got their first iPods in middle school and were among the first to start texting. Now, we all carry around little rectangles that buzz and ping and demand our attention 24/7. But here’s the secret: you can turn it off. Just for a few minutes. Really. The world won’t end.

And when you do? That’s when Granny Crafts work their quiet magic.

There’s no algorithm here. No pressure to go viral. No rush to the finish line. When you pick up a needle or a hook, it’s just you, your yarn, and your own rhythm. You can work slowly. Thoughtfully. Or set it down and pick it back up a month later. Granny Crafts are deeply human—analog, if you will. They exist on your terms, not someone else’s timeline.

You may not know it yet, but you’re building something far bigger than a handmade scarf. You’re building a lifelong tool for patience and comfort. Someday, you’ll find yourself stuck in medical waiting rooms. You’ll sit through school pickup lines or kids’ gymnastics practice. You’ll be at hospital bedsides or nursing homes, offering your presence when there’s nothing more you can do. Except this: stitch by stitch, you wait. You love. You breathe.

Granny Crafts give you something to hold on to when the rest of life feels uncertain. They will anchor you when stress comes crashing in, and they will accompany you through every phase of adulthood with grace and beauty.

Welcome to the circle. You’re not alone.

With love and yarn,
Cindy
Knitter, writer, and lifelong lover of “Granny Crafts”

If you’re looking for stories of other women—young, old, and in-between—who have walked that road, I invite you to follow my blog and check out my novels. I write about knitting, community, and faith in a world that is often spinning too fast. Sometimes, we need the quiet power of yarn and human connection to slow it down.

Cynthia Coe is the author of The Prayer Shawl Chronicles, a series of fictional stories woven together by the theme of human connections made through prayer shawls and the craft of knitting. Her newest book is her first historical novel, Knitting Through Time: Stories of How We Learned to Knit. Learn more by visiting her Author Page at this link

New Knitting & Crochet Books Coming Fall 2023

Hello Crafty Readers! I’m blogging for the first time in a while. I just finished the first draft of a new novel in The Prayer Shawl Chronicles series, so my head and heart have been preoccupied with that these past several months.

My new novel will probably come out some time in 2024, but in the meantime, there’s plenty of new knitting and crochet books to keep all of us occupied. 

I review books for NetGalley, and publishers kindly give me pre-publication peeks of their new books. Here’s what’s on tap for us crafty types (all available for pre-order; click the links for more info):

The Knitting Pattern Writing Handbook by Kristina McGrath and Sarah Walworth (Storey Publishing). Highly recommended if you write your own knitting patterns or plan to in the future. This little book tells you all you need to know to put your own patterns out into the world. Concise, plain language. Invaluable if you sell patterns online; helpful if you just want to share patterns with friends or understand what all those abbreviations mean. 

A Year of Knitting Stitches by Tabetha Hedrick (Globe Pequot, Stackpole Books). This is an excellent collection of knitting stitch patterns. I’ve used a couple in the past and always found several stitches that became “keepers.” This will definitely sit on my desk next year; the perfect gift for a knitter.

A Year of Crochet Stitches by Jill Wright (Globe Pequot, Stackpole Books). This is an equally excellent collection of crochet stitches for those of us who enjoy making up our own patterns or just want something different and all our own. In this collection, stitches are nicely organized by type of stitch (e.g. all kinds of bobble stitches). Perfect for the intermediate and advanced crocheter and an excellent gift idea.

Oversize Fashion Crochet by Salena Baca (Globe Pequot, Stackpole Books). This is a collection of only 6 patterns of oversized sweaters, a poncho, and other bulky garments. While this is a limited group of patterns, I found them all do-able and attractive for the average crafter. The schematics and drawings of how to assemble the garments were particularly good. 

More blogging to come, now that my next novel is on the back burner for a bit!

Happy Crafting, Cindy

Cynthia Coe is the author of The Prayer Shawl Chronicles, interrelated short stories woven around those who make and receive handmade, prayerfully crafted gifts of prayer shawls. Click this link to order or for more information. 

Are Knitting Books Now Obsolete?

As a writer and lifelong bookworm, I love finding a new knitting book, newly published and on display in the bookstore. But lately, I’m finding myself less and less enthusiastic about newly published collections of knitting patterns, even if they are beautifully designed hardbacks with full color illustrations and photos. Nice to look at, but…?

As some of you know, I often have the special treat of reviewing brand new books digitally, well before they hit the market. In reviewing new knitting books, I’m seeing a trend that makes my eyes glaze over. Many – if not all – of these new knitting books assume I’ve never picked up a pair of knitting needles in my life. These books offer voluminous tips on how to get started, what tools I need, how to choose yarn, and even how to make the most basic of stitches. Lord knows I’ve covered that territory umpteen times before. 

So when I eagerly pick up a new knitting book, I inevitably skip large chunks of introductory material and skip straight to the new patterns. The patterns are usually fine; but do I want to buy an entire book just for a few patterns?

In the meantime, a plethora of interesting and innovative patterns are now available on multiple platforms for just a few bucks a piece. Why buy a book of info you don’t need, when you can buy only what you want for much less? 

And as for instructions on how to knit, it’s all about video these days. I rarely figure out a new stitch from two-dimensional illustrations on paper. But show me a quick video, and I’ve got it under my belt in no time.

I’m going to make a pronouncement (because it’s my blog and I can): Knitting instruction books are obsolete. If you want to learn how to knit, do a search and find a video. If you want a pattern, check out Ravelry, Etsy, or who knows what other platforms are out there in cyberspace. 

I love books, but time and innovation move forward. 

Happy Knitting! Cindy

Cynthia Coe is the author of The Prayer Shawl Chronicles, a collection of interrelated short stories about knitters and those they meet through knitting and sharing prayer shawls. 

As an Amazon Associate and Author, I provide links to products (including books I have written) and earn a very small fee if you click on the links and buy something. There is no additional charge to you!