The Lilia Shrug

Let’s ring in the cooler time of the year! Sometimes when I go for a walk I want a little bit more than a scarf or cowl but not a full sweater. The modular nature of hexagons let me design just what I needed: A shrug that covers shoulders and arms enough to break a cool breeze, while at the same time offering plenty of freedom to easily move around.

I used one of my favorite yarns, naturally dyed organic Merino wool by Handspun Hope, in warm colors, and the flowery design combined with the rustic nature of the yarn made the perfect boho experience!

Another “one loom” design … the shrug is made using only the Original TURTLE Loom™ in R-regular sett for worsted weight yarns.

Click here to buy the pattern!

You can get the pattern (and the loom if you don’t have it already) at our Etsy store.

The pattern provides step-by-step photo-guided instructions for the shrug. It also contains bonus charts so that you can try your own flower colors or even design your very own shrug.

Please enjoy the beautiful photography by Gale Zucker. I thank Gale and model Sarah Shourds for this second-to-none presentation of my design.

Lastly, people ask me occasionally how I come up with the names for my patterns. I don’t have one source or one plan, and sometimes names just happen, like in this case!

Recently my husband and I shared a bag of Julio’s corn tortilla chips …

I noticed a cute picture on the back of the bag of the company founders, Julio and Lilia Garcia. I loved the sound of the Lilia name and decided to use it for my current design in progress, the shrug.

Doesn’t the real Lilia look absolutely sweet? I want to imagine that she might have liked a Lilia shrug … maybe not boho style, but of a thinner, lacey yarn with a gorgeous drape … we can dream, can’t we?

I hope that you will enjoy making your Lilia shrug!

A Tale of Two Blankets

Many years ago, my daughter was taking weaving lessons with a professional weaver and teacher, Charlotte Allison, in Fredericksburg, Texas. I was on taxi duty and spent a considerable amount of time waiting in Charlotte’s lovely home. One item captured my attention every time we visited: It was a Grandmother’s Flower Garden quilt, decoratively hanging over a quilt rod at the wall in Charlotte’s living room. “I wish I could weave something like that” kept going through my mind.

Charlotte’s quilt is a classic heirloom. She recalls the maker, her Great-grandmother Mary Mollie Lima St. Peter (1875-1946) from Arkansas.  Charlotte remembers “Though I was very young (perhaps 4 or 5), I remember being at her farm one time and playing with old dolls under a tree.  She hand-quilted out of scraps.”

The original quilt is made of printed flour sacks as was common during the time of the Great Depression.

It was this quilt that inspired me to develop my hexagon pin looms and the continuous-strand weaving method for hexagons.

Busy years went by and the thought of one day weaving Charlotte’s quilt never left me.

It took several attemps to find the “right” yarn for such a project. Last year, while preparing for Handwoven’s first Weave Together retreat, I met Susan Bateman from Yarn Barn of Kansas. In preparation for the retreat I sampled some of her yarns on my pin looms. Susan had just launched her own 4/2 cotton yarn line, Ad Astra, and long story short, I decided that this cotton would be the perfect match for my Grandmother’s Flower Garden blanket.

One design challenge was to simulate the many colors of the original print fabric, and Susan’s new cotton line was not only available in a vast array of colors, but the weight would also allow me to blend colors and get close to each original flower’s appeal.

Single-stranded, Ad Astra weaves up beautifully on the XF-extra fine sett looms. Holding two strands together and woven on the R-regular sett looms allows for color-blending and matching colors closely to the original quilt.

For my blanket, I used the TinyTURTLE™ looms in XF-extra fine sett (single-stranded Ad Astra) and TinyTURTLE in R-regular (double-stranded Ad Astra). However, you may choose your own yarns and use any sett that is suitable for your yarns to tell your family story in a Flower Garden blanket.

I had started weaving my flower garden quilt when Little Looms’ call for submissions with the theme “family ties” posted. Charlotte’s family quilt was the inspiration for my submission, but the relationship between our families had grown over the years from a teacher/student relationship between Charlotte and my daughter to precious “chosen family” ties with deep cares for each other.

The Flower Garden blanket will always have a special place in my heart. I feel humble and grateful to see it featured in Little Looms Winter 2025. We carry the print copy in our Etsy store.

I hope that the tale of two blankets may inspire you to craft your own!

Butter Yellow! – A Children’s Headscarf

My friend Becky and I were at a local yarn store earlier this year, discussing color choices for a project, and I decided to include a store visitor into the conversation. I asked a young woman who was knitting nearby for her favorite color, and she instantly and enthusiastically replied “Butter yellow!”

Becky and I looked at each other … butter yellow?

Long story short, I quickly caught up on the color trend that has been taking the fashion and home decor world by storm this year. I started seeing “butter yellow” everywhere!

The gentle, happy color grew on me, and when I found two “butter yellow” yarns that would be perfect for pin-loom weaving, I decided to use them for a headscarf idea that I’ve had for a while: Some of you requested a children’s size headscarf after I released the Rhinebeck Headscarf pattern last year.

The new design would use elongated hexagons and squares.

Just one ball each of Berroco’s Vintage Baby in 10011 Buttercup and Rico Design’s Ricorumi in 005 Vanilla is plenty to make the project.

The looms used for the headscarf are the Elongon™, 2”, F-fine sett , the Square, 2”, F-fine sett (this loom is also used to weave triangles), and optionally the Original Diamond, F-fine sett .

The headscarf will fit an adult as well … it will just not cover the head as much as the Rhinebeck version.

The pattern includes a blank chart, so if butter yellow is not your thing or you’d like to play with more than one color (or yarns) for the hexagons and squares, you can design your own!