Katie Rempe: Oh my gosh, Jim. It's the final episode of our spring
season!
James Divine: It's
the final episode!
Katie Rempe: happen? I know.
James Divine: like we just started.
Katie Rempe: How
did three months go by so fast already? It must be part of our charm.
James Divine: Wait, I think
that's the name of this episode.
Katie Rempe: Yes, that's right.
James Divine: So we started with casting on.
And here we are at binding off.
Katie Rempe: Light from Lantern presents Knit a Spell. I'm magical maker Katie Rempe. And I'm the maker of magic James Devine. Join us as we stitch together the symbiotic relationship between crafting and the craft.
James Divine: Your bind off is so charming. How many times do people say that? like, Gosh, I reaLly love that sweater because of the way that you did this bind off. It's so
charming.
Katie Rempe: I think there could be some charming bind offs.
Yeah.
James Divine: No, I think you meant putting a charm
into your bind
off.
Katie Rempe: Maybe it was a bit of a wordplay situation there, Yes. Oh,
James Divine: Do you put little tassels or dangles
or little bells
or something on your bind off?
Katie Rempe: you're talking about literal charms,
like a charm bracelet.
James Divine: That's what
I want. I want the right hand sleeve of my sweater
to have charm bracelet charms on
it.
Katie Rempe: Perfect. We will make it happen.
James Divine: Just the right side.
Katie Rempe: Yeah. So that when you're pointing to stuff, people will know
it. Ching, ching, ching, ching, ching,
James Divine: Yep. jingle, jingle!
Katie Rempe: It won't be annoying at all,
What is Binding Off
---
James Divine: Last week we talked about.
Blocking as a way to set the shape of the piece. But binding off is really the end of the knitting
process.
Katie Rempe: That's
right.
We probably
should have done those episodes in the reverse order, but I just love the idea of binding off after we started with casting on, and so I don't care.
James Divine: It's
all good. It's all good. It's perfect.
Magic of Finishing
---
James Divine: So the magic is in finishing.
How common
is it for us to start things
and not finish them?
Oh, isn't there a term
that you guys use?
Katie Rempe: You're talking about our
UFOs.
James Divine: Oh, that's right. Of course you love that term because you're an alien a file.
Katie Rempe: Yeah, and I like to knit things and not necessarily finish them.
So I have a lot of
unfinished objects, as it turns out.
Yes.
James Divine: objects, a UFO.
And here I am starting a new one because I'm bored with all those. I'm
an
Aries, so that's
a hundred percent
me.
Katie Rempe: I think, a lot of knitters will be on our side in agreeing that starting a project is
the part of knitting the project.
James Divine: yeah, that is the best part. And if you, listener, Are you a
finisher, I totally want to know
your secrets.
Is
it just your personality? Do you have a
way?
gets you
to go through the
dip of, Oh my God, this project is so dumb. Why did I take it on? And then finish it?
The magic of
finishing is the, hits of dopamine
and oxytocin that you get from actually finishing and saying, Oh my God, I
did it!
Katie Rempe: The hit that you get from starting a project is great, and I think it's because the whole project is like
a
mystery at that point. And then you reach the mid point and you're like, oh, I have to just keep doing it. And that's not as exciting, and that's where people lose it. However, If you can get through that, like you said, if you're one of these people who are like a one project at a time person, which I have known one, Ellen.
but
if you're the other one,
who's in the world, let us know
by emailing us.
Oh, Richard, okay.
James Divine: It's not
just his crochet. That he
will
Really be committed to and continue to do. It's also
books. He will
read, yeah, he will read a book that really bothers him and keep reading it to the very
end. Of course, complaining the whole
time, and I'm like, stop reading it.
Give that book away. Nope.
That's a man that has to finish things.
I admire
people
that can
do that.
Katie Rempe: It's the same people who probably have no yarn stash. Another thing I don't understand.
James Divine: Yeah that's not exactly true here, but.
Katie Rempe: Well, okay, good.
James Divine: So finishing something is super important. When we think about
the one to one metaphor
between
crafting and the craft, if you set up an intention, let's say you have an intention to get a promotion at work. Let's just use that as a mundane sort of example.
And you do a spell for, this. work promotion to help, support you
in your work and your excellence. And you just leave it open.
You don't have a plan if you're doing candle magic of how to, disposition, the candle remains, you don't have an idea
of like when it
ends, there can be this sort of loose end energy that's just floating around.
And it can seem very anticlimactic because it actually doesn't have a climax, and it doesn't really have a intention that you can then send out. Now there are
magical
work that
can work that way,
but we really love the idea of when you finish a spell, when you finish a ritual, it's done, it's finished, you put the intention
out there. And then
you have to let that intention, come to fruition by not messing with it anymore.
Before we knew that balloons were so bad for the environment, we would sometimes, and you can do this in your imagination, is imagine your intention put into a balloon and released up into the
atmosphere to then,
Be released into reality.
So part of the finishing is you want this
piece to come to fruition in real life.
So none
of your UFOs slash whips
Are actually real. They're all partially
done projects sitting
somewhere and they haven't come to fruition.
Katie Rempe: Totally. As we're talking about this, I'm realizing that I can see the reason that a lot of people fall out of love with knitting is because they are not finishing projects. And so they aren't getting the thing that they initially intended to start. We love starting projects, but it's usually because we want
that finished
thing. If we never, ever get to those, we're gonna fall out of love with this thing that just takes from us and then never returns anything. Not that it can't just be like a meditative thing, and if that's all you're doing it for, that's a different story. If you're just knitting to knit, you probably just have one project and you don't really care.
But if you're like us, and you're inspired by all these things, it is important to occasionally Go on a finishing spree. That not only, makes you feel good and has your stuff and then you can use it, you get your needles back, you get the opportunity to start something new later without the guilt, and like you said, you have all these works in progress out there, I see them as holes in your vase.
These are just open energy sources that are leaking,
which is another reason I think when people commit to pulling out old whips, it's like the little chain you didn't realize was taking it down,
James Divine: Right. Interesting. First, the lingo is really cute. So tink your
whips.
It's interesting to think about how those unfinished projects can pull on your own energy in a very subtle way and how powerful it is to decide to finish it either
by unknitting it or
tinking it or by actually knitting it and finishing
it.
So
When we talked about the different patterns, like in lace or the bubbles or the other techniques you can do
in knitting with yarn overs, things like that, how sometimes
you will say, yeah, and you get to practice
doing this
Particular, technique.
And I'm like, gosh, if I'm only knitting to practice, or only knitting a swatch that's not, doesn't have something that I'm really looking forward to using.
but if I'm
knitting something relatively
easy.
But it's
actually
going to be a something
That could motivate me a lot more because my desire for this gorgeous hat, or
this
amazing scarf, or whatever is relatively easy to do, could, really drive me to finish.
And I also think,
having the,
blocking, like we talked about last episode, how creative you can get with blocking. So each section,
each part of the knitting has
to be something that's either meditative that you're doing while you're at a lecture or in class or something, listening to this podcast.
I hope you're knitting while listening.
And or, exciting because now that you've finished this section,
now you get to
do the purple stripe. Or whatever it is,
Katie Rempe: If you can align your mindset to make every step along the way equally as exciting in different ways. Then you have got it made you will finish it. Once you realize you don't like this thing It's difficult to do. It's inconvenient. Whatever you'll find ways to put it off or it's just a swatch and you're like, I don't care about a swatch But as soon as
you said these swatches are a blanket in the future
it could be the same thing, but I say, Oh, that's a washcloth, and you're like, Oh, a practical use! Cool, I'm gonna use this now.
James Divine: That means I'm going to block it
every day because it's a washcloth.
LAUGHS
Katie Rempe: Wet blocked.
Finishing Magic
---
James Divine: In
finishing magic.
Like a magic spell
or a ritual
we
really do a kind
of bind off. We might even say this magic is done or this spell is complete. a ritual We might
want to release the circle by going around the circle in a particular direction and Opening up the circle so it's not too tight It's not standing the whole time.
The energetic bubble and within which we're doing our magic, we want to open that up so the magic can be released into reality. If we're doing a spell, we want to decide what
am I going to do with these remains? Which means the melted
wax and the herbs that's still part of the candle when we clean up the plate that
it's on.
Oh, do I want this to stick around? Do I want
to create
a ball of wax with all the
herbs
and stuff in it and put it, under my bed,
do I want to
put it
in a little silk sachet and keep it? Do
I want, to bury it under my steps? Do I
want it to be near me to continue to attract something? you're going to bury it in the earth, please use
beeswax or a natural wax. In any case, am I going to do something with that? Or,
Is this something
that I need to get rid
of? Is this something that is like, I am doing this to
cut a tie or to stop my repeated unwanted behaviors or things like that?
And in that case, how do you want to dispose of it? Again, be environmentally
conscious. If
you're using paraffin,
that's a petroleum product and should be disposed of properly. But
if
it's a natural wax, soy, or
palm or beeswax is the best. Gosh, you can put that at the crossroads.
You can release it into the recycling.
You can put it in the, in the compost, you can get rid of it. You can bury it somewhere away from
you.
Katie Rempe: throw it out in a
dumpster oh
maybe that's illegal. Yeah
James Divine: don't put it in someone else's dumpster,
but you could dispose of it in
a public place so like a park, you could throw
it away there.
Katie Rempe: You could also do that with the knitting. So if you decided like you're finishing, you bound it off, you hated it or whatever, and you want to get rid of it, you can bury that just as well, especially if it's a natural fiber. So
James Divine: It's a lot of energy to bury. Could be really powerful.
Katie Rempe: Yeah. I'd love to see what Grows out of it as a
Spell Squatch
---
James Divine: Gosh,
makes me think that you could actually create a
swatch that is specifically for
a spell. How cool would it be to say,
I'm gonna do
a
60
by
60 squat, swatch
Katie Rempe: I like Squatch. Squatch. You're going to
James Divine: do a 60 by 60 squatch,
Katie Rempe: Yep.
James Divine: And it's going to be in this color, and I am going to block it into a sort of stretched out
Diamond shape.
In that,
You could do all kinds of oils and
herbs and stuff, because who cares if,
it's not something to wear
And you could,
Block it out and then take that piece with all the intention you put into it every time you're knitting it you're intentionally, going through this mantra or you're, every stitch means something.
And then you could put
the herbs and crystals in it, tie up the ends, and
bury it.
That would be such
a powerful spell. It's a
way to also do a swatch.
With
intention.
Katie Rempe: about no wasted effort, right? You do this swatch for your project and so that's the intention of learning the thing for your knitting and then you have it for this other purpose and I also love the idea of like Maybe
this is something
that you're looking to grow. a Grow spell. So you make it out of green, you plant it in the ground, you put seeds on it, and then you tend to it.
And
James Divine: Put seeds
Katie Rempe: back, Yeah. Exactly. Yeah. Roll it in there, whatever.
James Divine: when you're binding that
off.
so you're finishing that
with the bind off.
that's especially a time when you're
saying,
You're removing the
needle with every stitch.
What a cool way to, put that intention with the bind
off.
So what I'm curious about, Katie, is
have done a bind off.
And, I only know one way to bind off, but if there's
two ways to block
or multiple ways to block, I know the answer is, yes, Jim.
Katie Rempe: Yes, Jim. There are multiple
ways.
James Divine: So, can we talk about those after the break?
Katie Rempe: I think that's a great idea. So stick around. We'll be right back.
Knit With Color Magic
---
Katie Rempe: Hey there fellow knitters! Are you ready to enchant your stitches with the power of color? Discover how in my online workshop, Knit with Color Magic. In Knit with Color Magic, you'll learn how to use color as an intention setting tool. This self paced workshop will teach you everything you need to know to get out of your color ruts and conjure bewitching combinations while adding intention.
You'll also learn how to build a strong and simple intention, how to translate intention into colors, and to develop and develop. A personal gir of color correspondences. With a simple shift in your mindset and some personal reflection, you can start knitting color magic into any project. And for a limited time, listeners of the show can save $20 off this workshop by using the code color 20 at checkout.
Find all the information in the description or visit light from lantern.com/knit with color magic to learn more. Merry make.
Intro to Palmistry
---
James Divine: So you've taken my intro to palmistry course, and I'm wondering, do you have any realizations as a result? I realized that this entire time I have been a Muppet who uses their hands to express and emote. After taking your course, I've realized I've probably been giving away my own unconscious motivations this whole time.
But only to the people who know the divine hand palmistry method. I gotta be in the know. And if people are familiar with the divine hand method, your repeated gestures with your hands. definitely give away your unconscious motivations. You can be a mind reader. Do you find that you can get insight into other people based on their hand gestures?
Oh yes. I'm hyper aware of, is it the right hand where it's more of your outer personality? Is it the left hand that's featured more of your inner personality? I am now overanalyzing. Especially as you come into election season, which seems to happen every year these days. It's so fun to watch for repeated gestures.
I highly recommend anyone who might be interested or curious in learning more about Intro to Palmistry to take Jim's brand new online course. It's self paced and it's available at introtopalmistry. com. That's where you can find out more information and sign up.
Bind Off Methods & Correspondences
---
James Divine: How do we bind off? Are there more ways to bind off? What are all the ways to bind off? Can you list them?
Can you tell us? Can you teach us?
Do it now.
I
want to hurry up and finish.
Katie Rempe: Typical
man.
All you have to do is make a wish that you wish it was done, and then you put it under your bed with five dollars, and then in the morning,
you still have five dollars, and you don't have a project
that's finished, but you save five dollars.
James Divine: What's the bind off you taught me?
Regular Bind Off
---
Katie Rempe: There's a regular bind off. I looked for the name of this and all I could find was Regular bind off.
So this
is the method that most people will use, which is probably the easiest one, I'm guessing. Not the most stretchy maybe bind off option, but if you plan to do it looser or you do it on a larger needle, you can get there.
So you start by knitting the first two stitches, and then instead of continuing to knit, you stop and you leapfrog the first one that you knit. Over the second one and then right off the needle and then you only have one and what that is doing is just wrapping It around this needle to secure it
James Divine: So you're making, You're making a knot
Katie Rempe: So you continue in that manner, leapfrogging one over the other until they're all off the needle.
And then you have your lovely finished project.
James Divine: that's
what I did
at
the end of
my swatch and
what
I'm familiar with.
Katie Rempe: That's the old reliable utilitarian use. If the long tail method is the one that you go to, this is the one that you go to in terms of the bind off. So this would be like the
complimentary.
So I have other ones here, but there are also many decorative bind offs too.
In fact, here, hold on.
Let me sing this quick song that I put together with the 132 different bind offs. Oh,
start with,
oh.
James Divine: No.
Katie Rempe: All
right, never mind,
James Divine: Okay. I was really hoping you actually did write
that song.
Katie Rempe: Maybe I will.
James Divine: Katie's actually a really good singer. If you ever get a chance to sing karaoke with Katie, it's a lot of fun.
Katie Rempe: It doesn't take much to encourage me to sing.
James Divine: Okay, so you said
the regular bind off.
Is not very stretchy
and I've noticed
that too. It's more like this line at the end and I think I've had garments that the end of the sleeve or the edge
of the sleeve sort of shrunk a little bit and it's annoying.
Katie Rempe: You like pull
it and there's not
James Divine: yeah.
Katie Rempe: yeah.
James Divine: Let's talk about
the next one.
Jenny's Super Stretchy Bind Off
---
Katie Rempe: If you are looking for what I would say is my go to it's the Jenny's Super Stretchy Bind Off.
Who the hell is Jenny?
Yeah.
James Divine: Is
she your friend? Hey, Jen.
Thanks for making
the bind
off.
Katie Rempe: that's right.
James Divine: If this stretchy bind off is named after Jenny, why don't
you make the regular bind off named after Katie? You could just
be like,
Katie Rempe: Katie's regular bind off.
James Divine: Katie's regular bind off.
Katie Rempe: I don't want to be regular.
Katie's basic bind off?
James Divine: The basic bitch bind off
Katie Rempe: That I like. Okay, that's a new shirt. We'll get them on the
summer.
James Divine: All right. Tell us about Jenny's super stretch bind off.
Katie Rempe: In this method, Jenny figured out that if you add yarn overs in between the stitches that you're binding off, that adds extra room in between each one and thus creating a default way stretchier
bind off in almost no more steps.
James Divine: I totally did that on accident,
Katie Rempe: Oh, did you?
James Divine: but I only
did one.
Katie Rempe: This is probably how she figured it out,
invention's
just an accident?
James Divine: Yeah.
Katie Rempe: cases?
James Divine: Okay. So
that's cool. just keep thinking about a sweater sleeve. But I'm also thinking about
the socks you made for me.
Did you just do those in
a spiral from the toe, but they're flat. like they're flat at the toe,
and
at the end, you just bind off at the end, but then you had to insert this heel.
So you must've done some fancy footwork
with my socks.
Katie Rempe: So this is a great point.
So I knit those socks from the toe cast on at the toe and then knit in a tube. Cause I did
an afterthought heel. And then bound off in the ribbing pattern. The regular bind off,
but I matched the knit to purl to ribbing in order to make it match and
still remain stretchy.
Yep.
James Divine: I
see.
Kitchener Stitch
---
Katie Rempe: What I had to do for the heel is pick up live stitches and then knit that little cup like an extra toe. And what do you have to do at the end? You have to Kitchener stitch them together.
James Divine: What?
Kitchener, like a suburb in Canada.
Katie Rempe: Huh. Maybe that's where it came from. I guess I'll do some research after this, but it's also known as grafting because that's what we're doing is we're
sewing
two sides of live stitches together to look like another set of knit rows and it just totally disappears.
James Divine: It does. I
could not understand how you did that with my brain.
Katie Rempe: It's magic. Instead of knitting the stitch, you're literally just going in and out of the two stitches to put them together as if you're just weaving right through them.
James Divine: That's cool.
Katie Rempe: one of the bind offs that is very prevalent in knitting.
But most knitters hate it because they have to remember and reference back to it. I've done it a million times. And so it is burned in my brain.
It's a way of stitching together live stitches seamlessly.
So instead of it
being like two finished pieces, like I knit a sleeve and it's all bound off, and now I have to seam it onto the armhole, that would just be like a different sewing. that wouldn't be like grafting the
James Divine: pieces
together.
Katie Rempe: I feel like this one is the most magical of the bind offs, because you are, like, really taking that time to weave in two parts. If you wanted to do a spell for two things, this is a great way of combining them, or a balance of a kind of thing, or a liminal space,
this is a good one to use.
James Divine: A lot of times you'll see the
dual colored candles, or you'll see two things needed to come together. So if you even were just using knitting as a spell, you
could take
two 30 by 60 swatches, and do this between those two on the long edge, and then you would have merged, those two colors.
Maybe one color is you, maybe one color is your partner, and
you want
to come back together, or maybe one is your
upper part of your femur,
and the other's the lower part of your femur and you want to knit
those together because you want to
heal your broken leg.
Katie Rempe: Oh, yeah. oh, or you could do the whole thing in one color and then when you go to graft it, you do that in a different color so that it is purposeful that you see the
stitch. Like you said, I'm stitching together my broken leg, I'm healing my connection between people, I'm whatever the
thing is that you want to
join together.
Okay.
James Divine: And a lot of times that joining is stronger like a bone never
breaks in the same place twice because
the healing is actually strengthening.
Tubular Bind Off
---
Katie Rempe: Good point.
Alright, next bind off is the tubular
James Divine: Oh
my god, totally tubular. I'm a kid of
the eighties.
Katie Rempe: Yeah, I got
James Divine: So is that what you use for tube socks?
Katie Rempe: Yes, so
this would have been one to use for like your socks. In this instance, it's really good for ribbing, for one by one ribbing or two by two ribbing, meaning like you knit one, purl one, or you knit two, purl two.
Because it mimics the ribbing and the stretchiness. So this is a good one to use for cuffs that have that ribbing.
James Divine: A lot of sweater cuffs are ribbed, aren't they?
But then the bind off, if you just do a regular
bind off with that,
there's stretchiness, but then the regular bind off is this yarn bracelet. That's tight.
Katie Rempe: It
is a yarn bracelet. That's right.
James Divine: Restrictive.
Katie Rempe: It doesn't match the ribbing pattern at
James Divine: right? It doesn't do the
back and forth
Katie Rempe: Whereas this, it'll look like you just folded the piece right over, and like it's a continuous fabric.
If you wanted to do bobbing and weaving, that's a nice one to do. Keeping a flexible attitude, again, this is a good one
James Divine: Since you have that flexibility, it's, I'm going to finish this
and it's going to be. Flexible and usable
and, yeah, that's
a really cool intention to do with that.
Katie Rempe: But it still remains elastic,
so it won't stretch out. It'll keep its shape,
stays on the course.
James Divine: Yeah, that's really cool.
3-Needle Bind Off
---
Katie Rempe: All right, and then we're gonna wrap it up with sort of similar
to the Kitchener stitch, this is the three needle bind off and right off the bat. We got the power of three.
So there's that.
James Divine: What the heck is that?
Katie Rempe: Imagine you're making Shirt and you get to the top and you've made your front and you've made your back and now it's time to seam them at the shoulder. In some cases, you will have these pieces on stitch holders to keep them until you're ready to do this part.
And then you'll put the front on needles, and then you'll put the back on needles, and you will hold those together. And then you'll use a third needle to knit a stitch from the front in with the back, simultaneously Binding off and seaming all in one step. Boom.
James Divine: So this is
two panels that you're intending to seam together. You can use this three
needle bind off.
Why would you do that
instead of the Kitchener?
Katie Rempe: Great question. The Kitchener stitch offers a completely seamless
look like it was just knit.
And that's great.
However, if you're using it at something like the shoulders, especially, it's really nice to have extra support there. And by doing the three needle bind off underneath, it will have that ridge that looks like a regular bind off and that adds support and structure into your
James Divine: Where you're gonna hang it up, in your
shoulders. The place where most of the weight is stressing the
Katie Rempe: Yes. Otherwise, it can look really slumpy
and frumpy and,
Sometimes you have like a poncho that doesn't have any of that shaping and you're always pulling it up, pulling it down, and that's why.
James Divine: That's so
cool.
So if this is
preventing a garment from sagging
Gosh, maybe this is like strengthening your shoulders to carry a burden
Or
the joys of life and to be strong as a provider for
people around you or for yourself.
That could be a great intention or idea with that
three needle bind off because it's strengthening and helping to prevent that sag. I could see how the stitches at the shoulder could loosen up and open up if you didn't have a strong,
Katie Rempe: Yeah. It's like a reinforcement. It's also something you could do for the top of a hat,
if
you were doing it all circularly, you can finish the end by just, doing it in half and then seaming it so that
it's like a flat top instead, and then it's like strengthening your crown chakra
James Divine: right. We did that
at the women's march where everyone was wearing those pink
hats. And you would see him
across, and get
those two points on either
end.
Katie Rempe: That's it. Yes.
Boom! Ugh, Oh, I'm so proud!
James Divine: So now I can no longer have a UFO sighting at
your house
because you finished all of your whip.
Katie Rempe: That's right! All of my whip.
James Divine: You've, You've whipped it out.
Katie Rempe: and much like our season now we're coming to the end of our UFO, where our whip is
being
whipped. We're whipping it real good.
Season Reflections
---
James Divine: Reflecting on this season really quickly, we had some amazing guests.
Katie Rempe: All of our guests were so great.
Knit A Spell Patreon
---
Katie Rempe: And thank you to all of our listeners, our Patreon supporters, and remember, just because we are no longer going to be on over the summer doesn't mean that we don't have a catalog of amazing episodes for you to watch, and plus we'll be on Patreon all year round.
So come and join us there.
James Divine: I can't wait. This summer is going to be gorgeous and amazing. Keep up with knit a spell and
keep on knitting.
Katie Rempe: Follow us on Instagram if you haven't, or join my newsletter where I do all sorts of updates on what is coming up. We'll miss you. But remember, you can always see us on YouTube! Woohoo!
James Divine: Yay.
Katie Rempe: Jim, don't tell all of our listeners, you're
really the reason I love
doing this.
James Divine: Oh, stop.
Katie Rempe: No,
I won't,
Because you're the
best, and I
James Divine: You're the best.
I would never do this without you.
Katie Rempe: A divine meeting.
James Divine: I can't wait till our
next season. What is the topic for our next season? In fact, What season is
it?
Katie Rempe: Oh, it will be season six
James Divine: seasons. Jeez.
Katie Rempe: I know
We'll be back with our fall episode on September 4th, when we will be diving into the topic of enchanted tools and containers, all involving our knitting.
James Divine: Wow.
Isn't that our favorite thing, is the findings and the bags? How
many?
project bags do you have? Be honest.
Katie Rempe: I have as many project bags, as I have projects going. So a few.
James Divine: And isn't it, if you go to a show or an event, isn't it a good giveaway that everyone gets? Even we have created a project bag for you that you can still
purchase. Yes.
Katie Rempe: That's right!
We'll put the links to Makers Mercantile who hosts it for us so that you can have some awesome swag to represent your favorite podcast about knitting and magic.
And also, remember that if you
join our Patreon, you get a free sticker after three months.
James Divine: you get to do
all of that
and you'll be well prepared for the start of Season 6.
Katie Rempe: Yes. We let all of our Patreon subscribers know every month what the month ahead schedule is going to be, what our guest stars we get them, and you guys
can influence it
as well from our polls, so we hope that you will get involved and let us know and share your feedback because we really appreciate you guys and your support.
So thank you again.
James Divine: Season five was awesome Thank you so much for everything and
we will see you in September.
Katie Rempe: See you September 4th.
James Divine: Bye. everybody!
Katie Rempe: Bye!
Outtro 2022: Thanks for listening. Thanks for listening. If you enjoyed the show, consider sharing it with a friend, leaving a review on iTunes and Spotify or following Knit A Spell on Instagram.
You can also subscribe to the Light From Lantern YouTube channel to enjoy full episodes of Knit A Sepll and see our happy faces.
You can also learn more about readings, classes, and events going on with your favorite Maker of Magic James Divine by visiting thedivinehand.com and subscribing to his newsletter. Then follow Jim's fun and interactive Instagram account @DivineHandJim.
Keep up with Katie the Magical Maker by subscribing to her newsletter at lightfromlantern.com.
You'll receive a free knitting pattern as a thank you gift, then follow Katie on Instagram @LightFromLantern for even more magical making tips.