More lambswool scarves
All the following scarves are handwoven in lambswool. They are £95 each - see How to Order for ordering and delivery information.
Stargazing scarves

When you're out on a windy hillside looking up into the night sky, it can get a little chilly.
Stargazing is a collection of warm lambswool scarves with a geometric pattern that I developed as an offshoot from my Permutations project.
The scarves are handwoven in a contemporary style without a fringe, using supersoft lambswool spun in Scotland .
Last remaining Stargazing scarves are available in the colour combinations shown.
Corvus |
Andromeda |
Lichen scarves
Lichen Blue/Gold |
Lichen Green/Pink |
Wavelength scarves
This collection of lambswool scarves is based on designs derived from sine waves and is an offshoot of my project When Waves Collide. The scarves are named after the sites of historic UK radio transmitters.
Penmon
Ottringham
Stagshaw
Flight scarves

Flight scarves. For available colours - see below.
These contemporary unfringed winter scarves are woven by hand from supersoft lambswool, spun in Scotland.
The design is a deflected doubleweave pattern based on the idea of flight.
The design is a deflected doubleweave pattern based on the idea of flight.
Flight to Nairobi (red/blue)
Flight to Vancouver (purple/grey)
Flight to Lhasa (blue/dark purple)
Remote Islands scarves
This collection is inspired by Fair Isle knitting. I’ve taken some of the traditional motifs and reinterpreted them as woven rather than knitted designs, using the interplay between warp and weft to achieve a similar complexity of pattern and colour.
Even within the Shetland Islands, Fair Isle is remote. Inspired byJudith Schalansky's Atlas of Remote Islands (Fifty Islands I have not visited and never will) each scarf in the collection is named after a similarly inaccessible island, from St Kilda in the Atlantic to Pitcairn in the Pacific.
Floreana
(Galápagos Islands, 1,050 km West of mainland Ecuador, Pacific Ocean)
St Kilda
(60 km West of the Isle of Harris, Atlantic Ocean)
Graduated scarf
This warm extra-long winter scarf is handwoven in lambswool. It has a subtle graduation from dark to light from one end of the scarf to the other, using bands of darker and lighter colours.