THERE are surely worse ways to spend a day. It's barely gone noon and while most people are stuck at their desks, Rachel Henderson is already in the pub, getting settled into her favourite corner. She's a regular at the hip Leith watering hole Joseph Pearce's and all the bar staff know her by name. Even the owner pops over to say hello. Yet, far from being a closet daytime tippler, Henderson is here to work. She's surrounded by a colourful mountain of wool, assorted sewing paraphernalia, a stack of knitting patterns and a little suitcase containing almost every size of needle imaginable.
Last Christmas she created a quirky offshoot bespoke label of Rachel Henderson Crafts, called Rachieroo, for which she designs jewellery, including flamboyant statement brooches. Henderson regularly teaches in schools, provides adult education classes and is in the process of writing her third book, which focuses more on felting and crochet. Most recently she has started selling her own starter packs (Yummy Wool Kits) which are packaged up to look like delicious cup cakes.Many big stores have seen a considerable rise in demand for craft materials. Tesco recently reported a 198-per cent increase in sales of sewing machines since this time last year, selling two every minute, with sales of Singer and Brother models up by 50-per cent. John Lewis, meanwhile, has seen an annual increase of 17-per cent in haberdashery sales, with fabrics having their strongest year in half a decade.Although she learned how to knit as a child, Edinburgh-based Henderson, who grew up in Dalgety Bay, Fife, only started doing it seriously six years ago after spotting an advert in the local newspaper for a knitting consultant for wool and pattern supplier Rowan Yarns.These days her preferred title is "craft professional" (which sounds quite formal for such a bubbly person) and she is also a dab hand with a crochet hook and a felting needle.Henderson may come over as being quite girly but her shrewd business acumen has seen her tap into the burgeoning trend for traditional crafts such as knitting, crochet, felting and S-I-Y (that's sew-it-yourself for anyone out of the loop). Earlier this month it was announced that staff at NHS Highland have been learning to knit as a way of staying healthy, with the fruits of their labour set to provide material for a Homecoming Scotland project, which plans to drape knitted items over the railings of the Skye Bridge."It was really itchy to wear."Teething difficulties aside, once I fi nd my rhythm, my needles clicking away between sips of tea, it's easy to see why Henderson is hooked. There's something amazingly satisfying about seeing the beginnings of a scarf grow out of the wool. I'm initially clumsy and drop a couple of stitches (okay, about eight), but once I get going an almost zen-like calm descends as I zone out .Currently, Henderson is obsessed with making tea cosies."Knitting is my hobby, but it is also my job, so the last couple of years I've taken a sabbatical from knitting for fun and tried to revisit other things I did when I was at art college, such as felting and crochet. When you do it as a hobby and a full-time job it can get a bit too much, especially when you're designing as well. Having taken a break from knitting, I have rediscovered what I love about it.""They were really intricate, so it was quite tricky to do, " she says. The most exotic location in which she has pursued her craft is the Nigerian capital Lagos ("my friend and I took our knitting with us and ended up teaching people how to knit"); and, never one to waste an opportunity, she has even swapped pub knitting for knitting on planes ("Obviously I can't take needles on board these days so I use my bamboo crochet hooks instead").While Henderson doesn't like making garments from scratch ("too time consuming") she has been branching out lately by customising charity shop finds in quirky ways. "I'm good at taking something old and reinventing it, " she says.Working from a studio in her spare bedroom proved lonely, though, and it was this which prompted Henderson to set up a pub knitting circle. "It can be uninspiring working alone in my studio all day so it's nice to be able to bounce ideas off people, " she says. The group was a hit and soon Henderson was approached to publish a book, Pub Knitting, containing a series of hip but easy to make designs. Her repertoire has since grown steadily, with knitting now just one part of what she does.For a start, she is cute and endearingly sweet (but thankfully not overbearingly so), her sunny nature like that of a children's television presenter. She's the right side of trendy, too, dressed in a pink woollen cardigan, button-down shirt, jeans and cowboy boots, her blonde hair pinned back from her face with kirby grips. In each ear sits a tiny red button earring, a cheery and kitsch nod to her creative vocation. On anyone else they might look twee, but Henderson manages to turn them into a natty style statement.Not only are they fun to knit, she says, but all her friends are clamouring for them as gifts. Other retro items in demand, says Henderson, include leg warmers and fingerless gloves, which are also fairly easy to make. "They are great because you can use chunky wool, so they don't take long to knit, " she says. "Some of my friends have just started knitting and I advise them to go for scarves as those are probably the best first project. Hats and handbags are also good to get started on ."We get off to a shaky start. Henderson has to cast on for me as I'm completely clueless, then the fluffy blue wool sheds over my black dress, affecting the air of Cookie Monster from Sesame Street. While she is off getting her photograph taken, I have a colossal sneezing fit after a piece of loose wool fl ies up and tickles my nose, making the people at the next table jump in alarm. Who knew knitting could be such a high octane activity?It's a logic I'm about to put to the test, although I'm a bit rusty with the knitting needles. The last time I turned my hand to anything under the umbrella of crafts, Russ Abbot was still considered the height of sophisticated Saturday night television. Fortunately Henderson, 28, is a patient teacher and gives me a set of thick knitting needles and chunky wool to make the task easier.For Henderson, knitting is a full-time job. Soon after graduating from Gray's School Of Art in Aberdeen seven years ago, she landed a job as a knitting consultant and hasn't looked back. These days she sells her designs to shops across Edinburgh, has published two books (including the aptly named Pub Knitting in 2005), runs regular workshops for schoolchildren and hosts a monthly evening where she and friends meet to knit, catch up on gossip and have a drink (albeit usually tea). If knitting were to have a poster girl, it would surely be Henderson."One of the reasons I really like doing my own books is because I can design things which are commercial and lots of people would love to wear, whereas if you are working for the catwalk, most of the stuff is very exclusive and not as accessible. " She admits to not always having been a style-setter when it comes to knitwear. "When I was eight I had a baby pink batwing jumper made from acrylic wool, " she says cringing.Despite her creative fl air, Henderson has no desire to see her designs on high-fashion catwalks.After a year in the job, whipping up examples of the knitwear fi rm's designs, teaching workshops and honing her techniques, she branched out, setting up Rachel Henderson Crafts to sell her self- designed accessories in shops around the capital.Henderson makes for good company. We sit companionably as she chats away about the strangest things she has ever knitted - two tiny Fair Isle sweaters small enough to fit a paper mache snake for a pilot episode of a children's TV show (which never aired).
Many big stores have seen a considerable rise in demand for craft materials. Tesco recently reported a 198-per cent increase in sales of sewing machines since this time last year, selling two every minute, with sales of Singer and Brother models up by 50-per cent. John Lewis, meanwhile, has seen an annual increase of 17-per cent in haberdashery sales, with fabrics having their strongest year in half a decade.