The Timaru Herald

Knitter spins big yarn in new business

- KELSEY WILKIE

Hamilton woman Jacinta Stevenson doesn’t like to do things on a small scale.

With knitting needles a metre long and 45 centimetre­s thick, her knitting business called Plump & Co is creating a new trend and proving size does matter.

As well as selling giant knitting needles and crochet hooks for customers to create their own chunky knitted masterpiec­es, she also runs workshops, teaching people how to handle the large wool.

The workshops help people get used to the scale, she says.

Despite their Wonderland appearance, she says the needles are surprising­ly easy to use.

Stevenson, who was taught to knit by her grandmothe­r, says the size makes knitting accessible to everyone.

‘‘I’m not the world’s best knitter; with this scale, everything looks beautiful. It still looks pretty when rules.

‘‘Traditiona­lly in knitting, people feel they have to follow a pattern. We encourage a bit of rogue knitting.’’

The idea for Plump & Co began when Stevenson was a university student, studying textile design at Massey University.

In her fourth year of study she created an installati­on piece, using ripped fabric to create an oversized ‘‘yarn’’.

After graduating she worked in you’re not following the the corporate world for a time, but she missed being creative, and began knitting once more – at first as a hobby, then as a business.

Stevenson thought there might be a market for a new kind of knitting – to tap into a global trend, especially among millennial­s, for all things handmade.

Her goals for the business include managing growth, ensuring supply and strategic planning. There is potential to grow here and overseas, particular­ly in Australia and the United States.

Road out for weeks

The Manawatu Gorge will be closed for four weeks after slips blocked the section of State Highway 3 about 9.30pm on Monday. NZ Transport Agency highway manager Ross I’Anson said the road would be closed until May 25. The biggest slip was at the Woodville end and was of about 3500 cubic metres.

Body recovered

Police have recovered the body of a person discovered in the Coromandel bush. Hunters came across the body near Te Puru Forks, about an hour and a half walk from Te Puru Creek Rd, about 1pm on Tuesday afternoon. The discovery was made not far from the Te Puru campsite where missing woman Ann Louise Bunning, 56, disappeare­d three months ago. She left all her possession­s, including her handbag, at her campsite.

Crash kills youth

A two-car crash in the Waikato settlement of Mangatepar­u about 5.40am yesterday killed an 18-yearold youth from Thames and left two injured.

Dead climbers named

Conor Smith and Sarwan Chand have been identified as the experience­d New Zealand climbers who fell to their deaths when they attempted a route on the South Face of Marian Peak in the Darran Mountains, Fiordland, on Sunday. Their bodies were recovered on Tuesday.

Cop on murder charge

An Invercargi­ll policeman allegedly shot his wife and a man she was with on Anzac Day. Constable Ben McLean, who is in Southland Hospital, has been charged with murdering Verity Ann McLean and the attempted murder of Garry William Duggan. A hospital bedside court hearing took place yesterday. McLean, who had no visible injuries, was remanded in custody to May 18. The 47-year-old was married to Verity McLean, who police found dead after Tuesday night’s shooting. Duggan is in hospital in a stable condition.

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Jacinta Stevenson demonstrat­es plus-sized knitting, using oversized metre-long knitting needles and felted yarn.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Jacinta Stevenson demonstrat­es plus-sized knitting, using oversized metre-long knitting needles and felted yarn.

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