Friday, 1 June 2012

Lovilee Jubilee!

 
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Lovilee Jubilee!

Small people rocking their Jubitees!
See what I did there? I crack myself up!





I tried and failed to avoid being part of the mass hysteria that is the Queen's Diamond Jubilee celebrations!  The world's gone crazy. I said I wouldn't. I did.




A couple of weeks ago I saw this gorgeous collection of London fabrics by Makower and my Jubilee juices started flowing. I had been toying with the idea of customising some t-shirts for the children - something that they'd get plenty of wear out of - but wanted to avoid the obvious Union Flag theme. (Note the more traditional use of "flag" rather than "Jack" here - I am clinging on to this amid all the craziness and Jacking around!) The London Icons print was my ultimate favourite and I restricted myself to a measly peasly half metre.

When Jubilee fever hit me, it me hard, and I decided we'd all have team t-shirts.  One whole day (give or take a couple of hours for feeding the new arrival!), a few sketches of crowns and some clipart stars and hearts later and...KERCHOW! I was back in the stitchy seat for the first time since my maternity leave began and I had made my first batch of funky family t-shirts! The Biggie Smalls have two each, and The Husband, Tiny Small and I have one apiece too.  I must confess to being really pleased with the end result!  Roll on the parties for Team Knowles to don our fancy pants tees all together - maybe we'll get our first family-of-five photo at last?

On Sunday we're having family over for afternoon tea on the lawn (more likely to be renamed the swamp if the rain doesn't let up) and we're heading to friends for a garden party on Monday afternoon. Let's hope for a return of the lovely weather we had recently.

If unusual tees like these are your thaaang, head over to Magpie Clothing for a look at Verity's tees - she loves to hand stitch and has a unique range of birthday/age t-shirts with not a number in sight!









Friday, 20 January 2012

How DO you DO that?

 
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It's all in the making!
Last week, I was approached by a fellow fabric crafter who was keen to know more about how Doodlebroidery is created. Here's how it unfolded!

Doodlebroidery Cards
I received an email early last week from a lady who had seen some of my Doodlebroidery that was given as a Christmas gift to her friend and wanted more information about its creation. I explained to her, as I do to everyone who asks, that customers send me their child's drawing either by email or in the post, and I embroider an interpretation of the drawing onto fabric. Sometimes the fabric is for framing, sometimes it's an apron or a shopper, and more recently I've been preparing some small pieces to be mounted in cards. Then it's all gift wrapped and sent out.

PING PONG! No sooner had I sent my reply email than another popped into my inbox from the same lady. "Thank you very much for your reply," it read. "I don't think I was clear enough in my question, sorry. What I meant was which embroidery machine and software do you use?" Erm, software? Embroidery machine? Are these trick questions?

Framed Doodlebroidery
I was really, really flattered that she thought my work wasn't actually all mine, but that it was created by an automated machine; it felt good that she has such faith my translation of drawings. The thing is, it's not automated, not one stitch! Every part of every piece of Doodlebroidery is created using a simple domestic sewing machine. There's nothing complex or sophisticated about my machine - a bog-standard Brother JS-23 costing less than £70. In fact, although it was brand new when I got it, it was actually a gift from my sister to our Mum (who is an avid knitter) to get her started with machine sewing.  It certainly isn't a fancy, computerised embroidery machine! 

Stitching by numbers
All of my embroidery is done using a free motion embroidery foot, my two beady eyes and my two steady hands. A free foot works in much the same way as a standard presser foot, but instead of having the feed dogs move the fabric along in a straight line, it allows you to move your fabric around between stitches so that you can determine the direction and length of the stitch. Free motion machine embroidery has traditionally been used in quilting to create nice squiggly patterns rather than a traditional diamond shape, but it seems to have had an explosion in popularity in the last couple of years with many stitchy people using it as a way to "draw with thread". I begin by creating the outline of the image or drawing it with thread.  Then I do any "colouring in" and I usually finish by adding any necessary text. The last step is to frame if necessary then do a bit of labelling and gift wrapping before sending off the parcel. And ta-daaah! A unique piece of fabric art, done!

Thank you very much Friend Of Customer! You gave me a great chance to reflect on my work and a boost in confidence that was much needed in the post-Christmas lull!

Wrapped and ready
Tip
Fancy giving free motion embroidery a go? You might find it useful to have an embroidery hoop to hand to keep your fabric taut and either lower your feed dogs or cover them with a darning plate.  :o)

Sunday, 15 January 2012

Out with the old and in with the new - the one with loads of bits and bobs to talk about!

 
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Out with the old and in with the new - the one with loads of bits and bobs to talk about!
Well, it came and went - I trust you all had a peaceful Christmas and have had a happy start to the new year! 

Ours was lovely. We started on Christmas Eve with our (now traditional) trip to the panto with friends and a yummy lunch that I didn't cook; it was fabulous! The pantomime was a brilliantly entertaining version of Cinderella, performed by Far Out Theatre at Holmfirth Picturedrome. The stars of the show were without doubt Munter and Minger, Cinderella's ugly sisters, whose crazy flamboyance kept the kids giggling while their cheeky innuendo kept the adults entertained, too. There is something really special about a Christmas Eve performance that gets everyone ready for the festivities, and the offering from Far Out Theatre was so good that we will do our very best to get tickets for next year's show. Oh crikey, I mean this year's show don't I? Wowsers, 2012 already!  
An ugly sister, my best big girl, Prince Charming and Buttons.
Oh, yes they are!  :)
After the panto, we went next door to The Old Bridge for lunch. The party atmosphere in the theatre made for an extended show and we arrived for lunch much later than our reservation. Thankfully, the dining room was almost empty so the children were able to play and burn off some of the energy they'd be storing during Cinderella!  The last time we ate at The Old Bridge was the day after our wedding party and it was hard not to reflect on the differences between the two days: I seem to remember there being a great deal of sunshine, alcohol and grown-up conversations that moved smoothly and completely in the Summer of 2006, whereas the Winter of 2011 found me as sober as a judge, heavily pregnant with Number Three and scrabbling around on my hands and knees to play cars with kids while snatching snippets of conversation wherever I could!

My rascals with the bounty from their stockings <3
Christmas Day itself was the usual whirl of visitors and excited children, followed by dinner on our own for the first time since 2006. It was very strange to only be feeding four, but it was surprisingly peaceful and really lovely to have time to enjoy the day with our small people and the explosion of plastic that happened when we weren't looking! I didn't work at all in the week between Christmas and New Year, and so I brought in 2012 feeling quite refreshed and rejuvenated.We had a Noon Year's Eve party for the Small People and some close friends, followed by a lazy evening with a little sofa snooze while I waited for Jools Holland to do his stuff!

And here it is - 2012 in full throttle. Trimmings down, done! Back to school, done! Tying up the odds and ends for work, nearly done! Which just leaves the baby to get ready for. In four weeks, or thereabouts, we should be meeting Baby Number Three. It's so exciting for us all and although we have loads of stuff to get ready physically, we're definitely all looking forward to welcoming a new member of the family and ready to meet him/her.   I just have one little niggle...work.

Dinosaur hoody for a little man
who'sdelighted with it!
2011 was a great one for Hop Stitch Jump and Sock Monsters, and I even managed to do a little better than stay afloat. I learned some really cool stuff, launched some (I think) ace products, worked some ridiculous hours, and still got to spend loads of time with my Small People. I made at least 220 Sock Monsters (with some emergency last-minute help from some amazing people!), 40 superhero capes, about 80 pairs of hair clips, 21 hairclip holders, 15 dinosaur hoodies, 6 name plaques and 12 pieces of Doodlebroidery. Or close to that, anyway! All-in-all, it was harder than I expected but also more successful, so the balance was in my favour. Now my maternity leave is just around the corner though, I'm finding it tricky to stop all together.

An apron made for a Grandma
affectionately known as "Poppet!"
It's not that I've changed completely and want to work more than I want to be home with our new family, it's just that taking maternity leave from my own business feels really different from taking leave from another job. I've never lost track of the reason that I work nights or of the benefits of juggling fledgling humans and a fledgling business. When you are "employed," you know that your job will be held open while you're on maternity leave and that you are entitled to a proper break from work, but when you're "self-employed," and especially when you're a sole trader who has no employees to keep things ticking over in your absence, it's frightening to let go for a few months for fear of there being nothing to return to! Is it feasible that a business can be put on hold after a successful first year without there being serious detriment? For my tiny business that relies on social networking to communicate with customers and potential customers, how hard will it be to rebuild relationships with my followers and fans?

The Doodlebroidery created for the winner of my
December competition. Please see my FB page
for the original drawing and more examples.
The feedback I've received since Christmas from my customers and the people they gave gifts to has been phenomenal. It's so lovely to know that people like and enjoy my work.  Like most people I find it hard to sing my own praises and I pick over the tiniest imperfections in my work - the influx of positivity has come at a great time for me and Hop Stitch Jump. It's also given me a real boost and the confidence to think that maybe, just maybe, there might be a "proper" long-term future in this or something that evolves from this. I guess for that I'll have to wait and see! What I do know is that I'll be making the most of the days that I can work while on maternity leave (10 "Keeping In Touch" days as allowed by Government regulations) and hoping that when I return in the late Summer/Autumn I won't have to pick up from the very beginning all over again. Fingers crossed!

I've also had to do some serious rationalising and soul searching, and I know I'm going to have to consider the future of Sock Monsters.  It seems that since I first started making my favourite inanimate critters, their popularity has exploded exponentially.  Without eating too much into a topic broad enough for a blog entry of its own, there are so many "hobbyists" now who can make and sell sock creatures for prices much lower than I can charge. I am 100% confident that I source and use the very best materials. I am meticulous in my development and making and I pay for quality, from the socks to the super-safe stuffing, from the time I take to double-stitch by hand to colour-coordinated gift wrapping for every order. I run a legitimate business through proper channels and I incur expenses in line with that. Unfortunately, potential customers don't always see that and with times being as they are right now, price is often the only comparison that's made. Hmmm...food for thought for sure.

And there we have it - the end of one year and the start of a new one! Thanks to the great reception I've had so far, there is much promise for Hop Stitch Jump, but this year will bring its own, new challenges. Ooh-er missus, how will it all pan out? xx

Sunday, 20 November 2011

It's Competition Time!

 
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It's here - your chance to win a unique piece of Doodlebroidery! 
Doodlebroidery is my name for the process of turning your child's amazing work of art into something you can keep forever. Essentially, I use free motion embroidery to apply the drawing to pretty much any textile item you want; onto canvas to frame, onto an apron, shopping bag or even a hoodie, and they make the perfect keepsake gift.  Stuck for a special present to give your husband or wife this year? I can even embroider drawings that have been sat in the loft for twenty five years!  If you want to read a little more about Doodlebroidery, read the last edition of the Hop Stitch Jump blog here.


Right, on to the fun bit!  The idea of the competition is that you submit a child's drawing that you would like to have embroidered and sent to you ready for framing in time for Christmas. Seemples!  (Guidelines for the drawing are below.) Once all of the entries are collated, they will be posted to a new entry on this blog and my very own little doodler will choose the drawing that she likes best. Then I'll embroider the winning entry onto cotton ready for you to frame, and it will be sent out in the post! Your very own, one-of-a-kind, entirely original piece of fabric art - what a prize! :)


And there we have it - a competition, a prize and the chance to spend an afternoon with a quiet, crayon-wielding child!  Happy doodling, and please share with your friends
Guidelines for Entrants:
  • All entries must be received by email to catherine@hopstitchjump.co.uk no later than 8pm on Friday 25th November 2011.
  • Entries should be no bigger than A4 in their original format (210mm x 297mm).
  • Please include the following with your email:
    • your child's drawing as an attachment in .jpg format. Your image can be either scanned or photographed at high resolution and then attached to the email.
    • a description of the image - sometimes a little bit of interpretation can go a long way!
    • the first name and age of the child who drew the picture.
    • your name and postal address.
  • By submitting an entry, you give me permission to use your child's drawing, including the finished piece of Doodlebroidery, in my own promotional materials.
  • The competition is open to entrants worldwide. However, by submitting an entry, entrants from outside the UK agree to pay a small charge towards international postage.
  • Winners will be notified by email by Monday 28th November 2011.
  • The winner's prize will be dispatched using the Royal Mail Recorded service no later than their published last date (the Royal Mail website has been down for a few days, so I'll update this bit when it's live again!).

Saturday, 12 November 2011

Doodlebroidery: your child's drawings transformed into fabric keepsakes

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What a week for firsts! The blog is up and running (Huzzah!) and now a whole new product to reveal... 

My crazy kitchen whiteboard  :o)
With Christmas drawing ever closer, I've been plagued (as usual) by concerns about what to give some people as gifts. Last year we started a new Secret Santa tradition with one half of the family: my Mum, her partner, my sister and brother-in-law and me and The Husband all go in the hat and are drawn to buy for only one other adult. If you draw yourself or your partner, lucky you - it only makes the buying more fun! So that reduced the number of adults I needed to by for by three. My Dad's side of the family have all agreed that we adults won't buy for one another any more either, and instead we just buy presents for the Small People. (Nanna and Grandad are the exceptions to this rule - they deserve treats and pampering at Christmas!) This opting out of presents lark has meant I really have very few adults to buy for now. It's a bit of a shame really, because I genuinely love the whole process of thinking about what each person might like to receive and then searching for the perfect gift within budget. I kind of feel as though I'm missing out on the fun bit. Not to worry though, because we still give small gifts from the children to their grandparents...it feels odd otherwise! This still doesn't mean that I'll be hitting the High Street though - it would be a bit hypocritical from someone who's trying to make a living from selling handmade gifts! No, instead we try to get the children (who will be four, two and a rather large bump of unknown gender this Christmas) to spend time making presents for others. I'm also joining in this year and giving handmade gifts wherever I can. I pledged earlier in the year that I would try to stick to a minimum of half of the gifts I give being handmade; I’ve already ordered handmade for my little sister’s birthday too, so I’m right on track! (Hmmm, when should you stop calling your little sister "little?")

In the past the children have given painted mugs, calendars and homemade chocolates, but I got a bit stumped this year. I’ve spent quite a bit of time over the last month or so pondering the direction of Hop Stitch Jump and Sock Monsters. I’m not sure how long Sock Monsters will continue – I enjoy making them and they’re very fashionable right now, but the market seems to be getting saturated by makers of sock creatures in various guises – so I’ve needed to consider where the rest of the business might go. I’ve been compiling a list of “possible” products that I can develop and I’ve worked on samples of a few. One has really stood out, though and I’ve been itching to get stuck in. 

Since my eldest started Nursery in a school, her drawing has come on in leaps and bounds and she comes home from school clutching at least two new pictures every day. Thankfully I have a five foot magnetic whiteboard in my kitchen, which gives me quite a bit of display space, but I have been racking my brains trying to come up with a way to transform my absolute favourites into something new that will last longer than the paper versions. I’ve been a fan of the work of Wendy Tsao of Child’s Own Studio for a while and I’m inspired by her fabulous work turning children’s drawings into soft toys – go see, go now! And more recently I came across Scribble and Stitch, whose work is equally lovely. I love the idea of giving the pictures a whole new life, but I wanted to be able to share the drawings in a medium that would make nice gifts for adults too, and help me with my Christmas gift dilemma! With that in mind, I decided that machine embroidering the pictures would be the way to go for me, giving more versatility for my end product.

"Mrs Spittle and a rainbow"
And ta-daaah! Here are the first three fruits of my new “Doodlebroidery” range. I really have enjoyed turning these drawings into something that I think is pretty blooming special. I can’t tell you how much I hope this will take off, because I know I’ll never tire of working with children’s drawings.  


The first Doodlebroidery - on an apron :o)
The first piece of Doodlebroidery was "Mrs. Spittle with a rainbow," drawn by my four-year-old daughter for her teacher, and embroidered onto an apron to give as a Christmas gift. I especially like how she has three fingers on one hand and four on the other! I also hope there's not too much offence taken by my girl's choice of grey for her teacher's very blonde hair, and I wouldn't have gone for the combination of the coral apron with the orange she used for detail on the face, but hey, her teacher and her choice! :o) I'm pretty sure that Mrs. Spittle doesn't follow my blog, so I think we should be safe until Christmas ;o)


I hadn’t realised how much my budding artist would love to see her artwork on fabric. Well, I wasn’t so much the seeing of it; she was thrilled to be able to feel her work! “Oh Mummy, I love feeling my drawing on Mrs. Spittle’s apron!” I had forgotten for a while just how tactile children like to be with the new things that they encounter, and the slightly raised stitches must have added an extra dimension to her drawing! 

"Flowers for Nan"
Nan's shopping bag
Next up was a much more simple but very striking picture of flowers that my girl drew earlier in the year for her Nan (my Little Nanna). Now, Nan is pretty lucky that she has a full time man in the kitchen in the shape of my Grandad, so she doesn’t have much call for an apron, and she has a surprisingly clutter-free house for someone of her generation, so I was a bit unsure what to embroider this picture on to. We had a little chat about the things that Nan likes to do and we both came up with the same answer – she loves to shop! From there it was a no-brainer and I got stitchy with a lightweight, foldable cotton shopping bag that she could fit into her handbag. Before it was translated onto the bag, Beatrix asked me to swap the colour of the stalk and the head on the penultimate flower because she was so cross with herself for jumbling her colours up!

"Team Knowles"
I have to admit to being a little contrived with this next image. This Doodlebroidery lark was getting to be a bit of an addiction, and I couldn't wait for the next masterpiece to get my teeth into transforming onto fabric, so I asked my girl to draw me a picture of our family so that I could embroider and frame it for the wall. She set to work straight away drew the grass, the sky and then the family, working from right to left, which threw me a bit! The first figure on the right is her little brother Jasper, then herself, then me complete with a baby in my tummy, and finally Daddy. She drew the sunshine last, sat and looked at it for a minute and then gave it a smiley face too, something I haven’t seen her do before. For me as a Mummy, this is the ultimate family portrait, and I couldn’t wait to get it embroidered and framed. I love how each of the drawings of us has little differences - Jasper doesn't have toes, Daddy doesn't even have feet and he's the only one with blue hair, and Beatrix has sooo many fingers and toes! I am intrigued by my fancy finger nails,too – I can’t remember the last time I painted them in real life!

The short version of this tale is that Doodlebroidery has worked and I love it! No computerised scanning or printed transfers or technologically advanced sewing machine that embroiders straight from an email. Just an original masterpiece, me and my little machine, a free motion embroidery foot and a whole lot of fun create these works of art.

And so our tradition of handmade gifts from the children can continue! All I have to do now is think of something each of their grandparents would like to receive and we’re rocking and rolling. I can’t wait – I love wrapping the presents and distributing them on the run to Christmas. I love even more that we have started our own little traditions that I hope we’ll see every year for a long time: our Christmas Eve pantomime, the tradition from my own childhood of the cold buffet-style Christmas Eve tea, the Christmas Eve present box that we give the children with new pyjamas, bubbles for the bath, Christmas story books, a DVD and a soft toy and then visiting the neighbours with yummy treats. We’ve only lived in this house a couple of months, and I’m not sure how our new neighbours will react to our little family tradition of visiting them with homemade treats on Christmas Eve! We don’t do this because I’m twee and all “suburban wife”, but because it’s a nice, neighbourly thing to do. We all enjoy the hype built up by walking to the few houses closest to us and chatting about what that night and then Christmas morning will bring, and it helps to remind the children that aside from the “real” religious meaning of Christmas, the other major theme is giving. 

Two questions for you now I’ve reached the end: firstly, do you give handmade gifts? And do you have any family traditions at Christmas? I’d love to know! 

Catherine :o)

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Happy business birthday to me!

I was going to start by apologising for the length of this blog. After all, it’s my first one and I want you to enjoy it, not end up feeling like you’ve read an essay and are bored stiff! I’ve decided not to say sorry though, and instead ask you to bear with me just this once! It is long, but it gives a pretty full picture of how Hop Stitch Jump and Sock Monsters came to be, as well as a reflection of the beginning of my small business. So here begins the baring of my soul, and a promise that future blogs will be both less of an autobiography and more light hearted...honestly!
                               
No need for winter clothes!
So here I am, a year in and enjoying the variety of this challenge, although there’s nothing new there.  In my past life as a teacher, I was Head of ICT in a school and every day was different.  My career was very important to me and I dedicated myself to the children I taught. Then I became a mother.  It’s three years since I accepted that while teaching really is my vocation, the fact is that being in a classroom caring for children largely means working in the daytime and having somebody else care for my own small people (we have two and are expecting our third). There are some fabulous childcare providers out there and nurseries and childminders work so well for so many of my friends and their families that I was genuinely surprised when I had a constant niggle on my return to work after Baby Number 1 was born; I just found it so hard to devote myself to my job in the same way that I’d done before I became a Mummy, and I felt like a failure. I didn’t feel that I was doing anything as well as I could or as well as I used to; I was spreading myself too thinly and wasn’t able the best mother, teacher or wife that I knew I was capable of. Something had to give.  When the school that I worked in hit a really dreadful low in staff morale and there were a number of changes that meant going to work was harder than ever before, the decision suddenly became much easier.

Our penultimate Sunday of island life.
Giving up a career, even temporarily, is such a big step. The thought of it must make everyone’s head spin like mine did! How would we manage financially? Could I really care well enough for our children that I could give them everything that they needed to be well-rounded and confident small people? What would our family and friends think about our decision?  For us, there were other things to consider, too.  You see, we were living overseas on the back of my job and our accommodation was also provided by my employer, so we also had to consider whether we’d be able to settle back into like in the UK after five years away. Would The Husband be able to find work as easily as he’d done before we left for warmer climes? Where would we live? Would our family and friends still have space for us in their lives? Did we even have enough warm clothing to survive even a British Summer never mind a British Winter?!  I won’t bore you with the entire deliberation process but suffice to say we decided that I would give my notice at work, we’d return to England, find a house to rent half way between our two families and give it a go. So we packed a crate, sent all of our belongings 4500 miles on a ship and boarded a north-bound flight.  The rest, as they say, is history.



Our first year back in the UK was interesting, in a real “hit the ground running and get out of your laid-back island ways” kind of way. The Husband did indeed find a job, and our family and friends did still have time and space for us – the two great hurdles were easier than we had expected.  Once we had been “back home” for about 15 months, Baby Number Two arrived.  We now had twice as many mouths to feed and only half the income we’d been used to, but we were managing. Our reserves had dwindled though, and money for the extras and luxuries was a little more difficult to come by so we decided that once I’d had a maternity period with the new baby, I would try to find some private tuition work to top up our income for the goodies. Times were hard for everyone though, and despite my wealth of experience and my flexibility during evenings and weekends, tuition fees were just too much to find for most families and interest in my sessions was low: we decided that cutting back on spending was the way to go.

My first ever Sock Monster!
As tiny as they were at the time, our children were beginning to develop a rather full and hectic social calendar, which was brilliant for them but added an extra burden to our budget. Quite separately to this, Baby Number 1 and I had been playing with socks and making all manner of creatures and on the back of this, I made a Sock Monster for her. She loved him, I loved him and our friends seemed to, too. A few people suggested that I make them to sell and although I didn’t see selling as an option at the time, I did start to make them for gifts. In the first few months, the party invitations kept rolling in for the children and a few of our friends had babies – guess what they all received? Correct – a Sock Monster!  Little by little, the requests from friends came in when siblings also wanted a Sock Monster or they too were stuck for present ideas. And so a monster was born! Alongside this, I’d started making a few other little bits and bobs like hair clips and hair clip holders and name plaques, and I realised that I would need a broader business name aside from Sock Monsters.  After much um-ing and aah-ing, along came Hop Stitch Jump.



Hair clip holder
I began trading in October 2010 and have had the most exhilarating year. Like everyone who starts out on their own, I really hoped that things would take off for me, but I never imagined that I would have been kept quite as busy as I have! I can’t thank the people who have supported me enough: everyone who has bought items I’ve made, from orders for one-off single hair clips to corporate orders for 125 Sock Monsters, has played a part in helping me to get on my feet and stay there, not to mention the emotional and practical support from my family and friends! The statisticians and journalists are so keen to remind us that it’s all too easy to fall on your behind as a new business, and every order I’ve received has kept me from being another statistic. The Husband has been an absolute rock. The shout of “Shift change” when he gets home at 6.30 after a busy day at work signals the start of my night of sewing while he takes over with the Small People and the house. His support has been awesome during the nights he’s stayed up into the wee small hours to help me when my back’s been up against a deadline, plus all of the extra duties he’s taken on when I’ve worked at the weekend – juggling two Tumble Tots sessions and two under-fives’ parties in one day is no mean feat!

There have been times when I have been busy enough to contemplate organising daycare for the Small People and it took some real soul searching in trying to weigh up the balance.  Was having someone else care for them while I built up my own business really any different to having someone else care for them while I was in a secure job with the reassurance of someone else paying my wage? The last thing I wanted was to defeat the whole object of starting Sock Monsters and Hop Stitch Jump, and so the night shifts have continued and my Mum has stepped into help me out during the day in the weeks when I’ve had too much work on to be able to meet my deadlines by working in the evenings and weekends alone. She’s been great.


Looking back over my first year running a business (how bonkers does that sound?!), the strongest theme is my learning – it has never stopped and every day really has been a school day for me. Learning is not a new concept to any of us and having been a teacher in my previous life, education has always played an enormous role in my life; I’m just more used to being the imparter than the learner! Here is a little snapshot of what I feel I’ve learnt. I expect that much of it is very similar to the experiences of anyone who has dipped their toe into the pool of being self-employed, and no doubt there is a whole lot more for me to learn.

I’ve discovered that loads of people want to help you learn when you’re starting out. There are some really useful formal channels such as the soon to be disbanded Business Link, which has provided me with so much, from really important legal stuff to people to bounce ideas off to people to have a coffee with and who made me feel that I wasn’t the only one who needed fifty hours in a day. I think I’ve attended six or seven of their events and have found every one so useful – I for one will be very sorry to see the back of their public face. I never thought I would be glad of interacting with the Tax Man, but HMRC also offers some great training and practical advice for the self-employed. There have been some less official bodies of help, too, including online forums, networks of people I’ve met through the Business Link events, and advice from my family and friends, some of whom also run their own businesses and are creative. 

Most of the advice I’ve been offered has been readily and happily accepted, but when you have a clear picture of where you want to get and what you’ve done so far, it can be tricky to smile as you listen to people offer you suggestions for improving what you do, albeit that it’s all offered with the best will in the world. I can be a bit defensive if I’m honest and friendly advice on making my work better sometimes casts a shadow over many weeks of hard work in producing something to the point of “big reveal.” I’ve realised that it really is hard to step back and not take things too personally – it’s a bit like my first term in the classroom, when every wrong answer from a student made me feel as though I wasn’t teaching well enough and every grumble from a child who didn’t want to do the work I’d set made me feel as though I wasn’t exciting or dynamic enough. I feel much the same when potential customers moan about my prices or offer their idea for ways I can improve what I do. I guess I need to “Suck it up, cupcake!” and remind myself of another important lesson; not only will I never please all of the people all of the time, but I didn’t set out to in the first place!

Superhero capes
Having said all of that, I really do think I must be pleasing plenty of people! Apart from the month that I shut my order book while I worked on a massive order and then had a family holiday, I haven’t had a week without an order for something customised, and every time I put ready-to-post items in the online shop, they sell within a day or two. I’ve only just started to “get” that people really do want to buy the things I make! We’re fast approaching my second business Christmas and there are no signs of a let up, thankfully!  Orders for Sock Monsters are coming in steadily and reading through my emails, ready-made ones are likely to be popular. Corporate orders have been put to bed for the year (I think!) and I can concentrate on the fun, individual monsters. I have Hop Stitch Jump orders for a colony of capes, a herd of hoodies, and a cacophony of clips and holders! I’m also about to launch a new range of gifts that will see children’s drawing masterpieces transformed into useful textile keepsakes such as aprons, napkins, shopping bags, pillowcases…I seriously can’t wait for these, and hope they’ll be a great success!

And I think that draws me to somewhere close to the end of this first blog! (Are you still here? Hello? Please don’t breathe such a loud sigh of relief!) The only thing that’s left is to answer the questions that were asked on the Sock Monsters Facebook page:

“What did you find was the biggest challenge this past year?” Definitely, juggling my time! Man, I know what it’s like to be busy, I’ve helped to timetable a whole school of staff and students, I can organise, but this was a whole different story! I’m not the most natural night owl and time never stretches as far as I’d like!

“....and to balance that question, what was the high point during the year?” Customer feedback, without a doubt! Better than any sales figures is knowing that what you do touches people. Earlier in the year I had an email from a customer whose son had shown an interest in her browsing photos of Sock Monsters on Facebook – pretty surprising really because he had a serious fear of monsters, particularly those under his bed L  Seeing an amazing opportunity, his mum placed her order with me and the little man had his own Sock Monster within the week. It slept with him in his bed every night and he had no need to be afraid of night time monsters any more because he had his very own buddy to protect him! Another little boy who lives with Autism and who needs something comforting and reassuring in his tray at school for when the going gets tough has a Sock Monster lurking in there – could I be any more honoured?

My daily to do list!
“This time last year...... what do you wish someone had shared with you in a blog?” This was a really tricky one! I wish somebody had shown me the whole of the year in video snippets so that I could brace myself for the craziness. But really, I think I wish someone had told me how important diary keeping is in business. I don’t mean the kind of diary that tells me where and when I need to be each day and has a "to do" list a mile long, I mean the kind of diary that only the meticulous can maintain, but that we all wish we did! I have just decided that enough is enough and I have a Life Book. It rocks and it has space for everything! I am building up to the dream of going beyond beyond “pretty well organised” to being some kind of supreme being in the field of record keeping! I know it won’t work for everyone, but I find it useful to have one book that has notes of when I ordered new stock, the deadlines for big orders, the name of the lady at the council who’s in charge of renting business units, the hours I’ve spent working out pricing and filling in my accounts records, conversations I’ve had with corporate customers, ideas for new products and the name of the man on the radio who I’d like to follow on Twitter! Everything. All in one book. I don’t dare imagine what I’d do without it now! 

“How to set-up your own business on small budgets and find the time to do it?” I’m not sure that I’m entirely qualified to answer the time part of this question – it’s my toughest daily challenge – but I can give pointers for setting up on a small (or in my case, non-existent) budget. But not today. Today I have to remember that I said I wouldn’t go on much longer and I’ve almost written a dissertation! So another time, I promise!

This is it, the end! The final paragraph is here! “Huzzah!” I hear you shout! All that is left now is for me to thank you for reading this far and to promise you that my future articles will be more focussed and much, much shorter! Oh, and I need to thank you all. You are part of the Hop Stitch Jump and Sock Monsters team, and in no small part. Thank you for helping me be able to spend my children’s pre-school years with them; I love every minute with the crazy little critters! Ooh yes, and just one more thing – if you have any feedback to share about this blog or any aspect of Hop Stitch Jump or Sock Monsters, I’d love to hear it.

Now it’s goodnight from me and goodnight from me!
Catherine :o)