Nine ways knitting can help weave calm and joy into your life
Looking for motivation to help revive a former hobby or to help you get started with your first ever stitches? Picture: Alamy/PA
Swimmer Tom Daley inspired many people to dust off their old knitting needles after he was spotted stitching between dives at the Paris Olympics last year, and his new Channel 4 show has helped reignite this wave of creative enthusiasm.
Each week we are blown away by the contestantsâ incredible skills, imagination and wonderful woolly masterpieces.
If you are looking for that extra bit of motivation to help revive a former hobby or to help you get started with your first ever stitches, then here are nine ways knitting can weave calm and joy into your lifeâŠÂ
Knitting can have a profound impact on your mood.
âBefore I started knitting I was in a depressed state,â shares Shelby Fuller, founder of London-based knitwear brand Elizabeth AnâMarie, who started to teaching herself how to knit in 2014.Â
âI had lost my love for colour and I would basically just wear black all the time. However, when I started to teach myself how to knit I remember one of my friends asked me how I was and for the first time in a while I could actually say yeah, Iâm OK.Â
âIf youâre doing something thatâs a little bit challenging, you solely concentrate on what youâre doing and can switch off from whatâs going on around you,â says knitting designer and teacher Monica Russel, founder of The Knit Knacks.Â
âSo, itâs got that ability to take you away from a situation for a short space of time and that can be very cathartic.âÂ

âWhen you pick up a skill like knitting or crocheting, or anything that is crafty, it helps your mental health because you are putting your focus into something for yourself instead of for someone else,â says Fuller.Â
âFor example, if you are working a retail job for someone else and go home and knit or crochet that is time purely for yourself.
âI think the happiness it can give someone is knowing that this is mine and no one can take this away from me.âÂ
âLearning a new skill gives you a sense of achievement and satisfaction,â says Russel. âYou can choose your own colour and pattern, and can customise what youâre going to knit, and can feel very proud of what youâve achieved. I think peopleâs confidence also grows as they carry on developing and learning new skills.âÂ
Encouragement from others can also help boost that confidence.
âWhen you make something, and then someone just says, thatâs so nice, whereâd you get it from, and you say you made it and get that positive feedback, I think that can definitely help with self-esteem,â adds Fuller.
âDoing repeat patterns within a row or a garment is very methodical and I think that can have a very calming effect,â says Russel.Â
âIt can help relax people, and some would say knitting can be a form of therapy. Itâs not for everybody, but it works for some people.âÂ

âGetting together with friends or family doesnât always have to be about eating or gossiping over a drink,â says Fuller. âIt can also be fun to do something different and creative, like knitting. Helping each other create something can also help foster connection.âÂ
âKnitting classes are a great way to meet new people doing something you enjoy and helps build a community,â says Fuller.Â
âThe last class I did was so fun because of all the characters that came. I had a blast and laughed a lot during those two hours. The ones that were more advanced were great and really helped some of the beginners which was lovely to see.âÂ

âI think one of the main benefits is that creativity,â says Fuller.Â
âIf you are someone who has a creative mind, donât just sit on it because it will drive you mad. I think thatâs why I picked up my knitting needles for the first time all those years ago, I couldnât just sit during the summer holiday doing nothing. I needed to do something creative.âÂ
âKnitting doesnât have to be serious, it can be fun as well,â says Russel.Â
âDonât be afraid to experiment and try out new things.â
