Join us for a book signing with Cecelia Campochiaro for her new book, Reversible Knitting, during the 2026 Bay Area Yarn Crawl.
Date: Sunday, March 15th, 2026
Time: 11am-11:30am
This is a free event! Add this event to your cart and check out to RSVP.
Add a copy of Reversible Knitting to your cart here and we will have it ready for you to be signed by Cecelia when you arrive.
Please join us after the book-signing for a class with Cecelia. Click here to learn more.
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Reversible Knitting takes a fresh look at reversible stitch patterns for hand knitting where both sides of the fabric look the same. Reversible Knitting includes a stitch dictionary with over 300 stitch patterns and extensive general information about working reversible fabrics. This book builds on Cecelia’s first book, Sequence Knitting, which is about making reversible textured fabrics by repeating a fixed sequence of stitches.
Every stitch pattern in the book has a chart and row-by-row written instructions. While the dictionary is written for flat knitting, it is easy to use the charts to adapt any of the patterns to working in the round.
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Cecelia Campochiaro appeared on the knitting scene in 2015 with her debut book, Sequence Knitting. Knitting was a casual pastime until she had an ah-ha moment in 2010 and realized that interesting textured fabrics could be created by the simple repetition of a sequence of stitches.
Sequence Knitting is about texture, and her second book, Making Marls, is about color. Making marls, the act of working multiple strands together as one, is an old technique, but has rarely been written about as an important technique in handknitting.
Reversible Knitting is Cecelia’s latest book and began as a sequel to Sequence Knitting. In this book she tackles how to create a wide range of patterns that look the same on both sides. While there are other books that have been published on this subject, none are as comprehensive.
Cecelia lives in Silicon Valley, where for many years she developed specialized microscopes used in computer chip manufacturing. Textiles, photography and the arts have been a lifelong passion running in parallel with her technical life. Today she is fully dedicated to the fiber world and “unventing” new ways to make amazing knit fabrics.







