I would
knit the item because I liked the pattern or the pattern intrigued me.
Not exact matches
The mother cat, not only doesn't get mad that her kittens are using her
knitted items on a snowman instead of themselves (my parents would have gotten made at me for playing with something they put time into making), but when the kittens are cold at night
because the warm
knitted items are on the snowman, she says, «Don't worry, I've got something that'll keep you warm: me!»
In retrospect, I'm glad I made a lot of non-maternity
items work for me during my pregnancy (
knit skirts, long cardigans, and larger shift dresses)
because it gave me some wardrobe flexibility when I returned to work.
Perhaps your
item was made by Hollis, who rides a bike covered in yarn and cares for the chickens, goats, rabbits, and honey bees on Governor's Island; or Charmaine, who first discovered
knitting at four years of age while examining illustrated diagrams in the World Book Encyclopedia; or Inga, who made her first
knitted poncho at age seven, which she later transformed into multiple pairs of socks
because «yarn should not be wasted.»