Esther Chilton’s writing challenge this week is toys. You can join in here: https://estherchilton.co.uk/2025/04/23/writing-prompts-62/
Reena’s creative writing challenge this week is creative non-fiction. You can join in here: https://reinventionsreena.wordpress.com/2025/04/24/reenas-xploration-challenge-378
This piece fits both topics perfectly.
The Story of the Pink Panther

When I was a young girl I did not like to knit. I like to sew. I liked sewing so much that I designed an entire wardrobe for my younger sisters and my Barbie and Cindy dolls. I also hand sewed a dress for myself with a dropped waist and a frill around the bottom of the skirt. I liked to create. I created a dolls house out of a wooden tomato box and decorated it with doors, windows with views, and curtains all cut out of old magazines. But, I did not like to knit.
Unfortunately, the nuns thought that all young ladies should know how to knit. Not just passably. Oh no, they wanted us to knit well. To this end they ceaselessly gave us knitting tasks of greater complexity involving adding and dropping stitches, measuring, changing pearl stitch to garter stich and vice versa. They even made us learn ribbing and how to turn the heel of a sock. Oh, the incredible unkindness of it all to a girl who hated knitting.
The last knitting assignment I had was to knit a Pink Panther. The toy in question was not small. No, it was an significant trial of knitting reaching a height of 60 centimetres … if you followed the pattern. The assignment did not, however, give a required size for the horrid task. It provided a pattern and said a knitted Pink Panther had to be handed in on a certain date.
I left it and left it. Suddenly, it was the day before the knitting assignment was due. I spent the entire morning at school contemplating different ways of managing the disaster. Mom wouldn’t let me stay at home the following day and even if she did, I couldn’t do all that knitting in one day. And then inspiration struck.
When I got home I went straight to my room and got started knitting. I knitted and knitted and by the early evening, the Pink Panther parts were made. After dinner, I sewed the toy together and stuffed it. I sewed on the face. By bed time I was finished. I had a perfectly knitted and stuffed, 15 centimetre high Pink Panther. The pattern divided perfectly by 4.
The following year, the instructions were amended to include a required size of 60 centimetres. I still regard this as one of my greatest school triumphs. I wasn’t even marked down. Sister Agatha knew when she was outwitted.
Tiny pink toy
Creative thinking triumphs
Earned a perfect score
Good for you, Robbie! I can’t knit or sew, and it was never required in my schooling. I did have to sew something in junior high home ec. I can’t remember what. 😊
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In retrospect, these learnings served me well through life. If only it hadn’t been so ‘good wifey’ at the time.
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Yes, I can understand that.
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🌞
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Like you I much preferred sewing. Om was left handed and I’m not so when she tried to teach me to knit, I just couldn’t figure it out. It was not a requirement at school. I love your ingenuity, it’s something my daughter would have done!
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Ha, your clever daughter 💛. I would have been left handed but was made to use my right hand. Now I just have horrible writing with either hand.
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Ingenious!
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Hehe, I was always able to make a plan. It saved my naughty skin many times.
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I sympathise. I knit all the time now, but second year juniors, at St Peters’ C of E, one term was allotted to knitting. Our class teacher was Major Drew, but while he took the boys for technical drawing or whatever boys did, we had to go next door to ‘Old Cannon Ball’ ( Miss Cannon ). A few of us were so useless we were not allowed to make potholders and had to to knit doll’s scarves. I can still see the thick yarn, mine dull red and the girl next to me had yellow which got grubbier each week. However hard I tried I would end up with twice as many stitches on the needle and it never got longer.
Soon after, one winter’s afternoon, Mum showed me how to knit and I suddenly caught on and knitted a fair isle doll’s scarf.
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Ah, I sympathise. I can knit very well. I just despise it. I find it very boring. Mum is a fantastic knitter.
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I neither knit nor crochet, so I applaud this tale with great enthusiasm – ❤
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You either love them or hate them. Thanks, Annette.
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Fun story Robbie!
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Thank you, Brad 😊
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Good for you, Robbie! Quite a remembrance and quite an accomplishment!
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Thanks, Dave. Give me a problem and I’ll solve it 🌞
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This is a wonderful post, Robbie. You had me smiling. I never got the hang of knitting, so it sounded like cruel and unusual punishment to me. 😀 That said, I love your pink panther! Hugs.
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I could knit, I just didn’t like it. I’ve never been good at doing tasks I don’t like. I push against it and make my life difficult.
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The pink panther looks great, Robbie. That you did it in one night is amazing.
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This is a picture, Tim. My toy was lost during one of our moves. It would have been 1/4 the size.
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Oh, you got Sister Agatha good! The pink panther turned out great. Why did the nuns require students to do so much knitting?
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Because good wives knitted jerseys, socks, scarves, hats, and baby clothes. South Africa pre 1994 was ultra conservative and old fashioned.
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My mother was that kind of knitter, but I don’t think she had to knit for school.
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What a wonderful story! How very creative you were to get this done so well. Well done.
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Thank you, Dwight. I was always a problem solver. 😆
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That is wonderful. I am much the same!
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I’m pleased to know that.
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I would rather sew too Robbie.
Your pink panther looks great 👏👏
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I got that picture from Pinterest. Mine was much smaller but technically very well done 😘
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🥰
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I’m sure the nuns were used to you outwitting them! (K)
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In retrospect, Sister Agatha was very supportive of me. She gave me a lot of very interesting books to read like I am David. I didn’t appreciate her enough.
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I think that’s true of a lot of people from our past. We don’t appreciate them at the time.
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I’m glad I never had to knit at school. The short time I spent trying to learn was bad enough. I can’t sew either, except for the most basic repairs and hemming. Clever of you to figure out how to get the project done!
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Thank you, Audrey. It was naughty 😊. I’ve always been a problem solver 😉
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I’d made an album with small samples of embroidery, painting and a tiny sweater stitched on to the pages. You brought back sweet memories of how we treasured those things.
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That sounds lovely, Reena. I liked embroidery.
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I love this story, although I can never knit or sew 🤭
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I haven’t done either for years.
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That is amazing! I’m hopeless at both! I love The Pink Panther, so this is right up my street. Love him 💗
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Good for you, Robbie, for outwitting the teacher. And good for her for appreciating cleverness instead of marking you down.
I hated knitting when growing up. My grandma taught me as we didn’t learn it at school. We did sewing.
When a new girls’ school opened, and we were moved there, the cookery rooms weren’t ready, so we had what they called ‘craft.’ I made a little felt dog, but then the teacher said she would teach some of us to tat. My friends and I all decided to learn, and I’ve made a few things since. One friend tats all the time, and every year we all get a lovely tatted Christmas tree decoration.
My mother taught me to crochet. She was great at it and crocheted tablecloths, table mats and lots of things like waistcoats, fashionable in the 1960s.
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Too funny. I love it.
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Wonderful read, brought a smile- you crafty smarty – do you still knit?
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Cleverly done! And I like your creativity to make a doll house out of a tomato crate. That’s a neat project. 🌞
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Ha! I love how your creativity arose to meet the challenge! Well done! And they couldn’t deny that you’d met the assignment. 🙂 Thanks for sharing, Robbie.
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It’s an awesome pink panther. I loved to watch the cartoons. And I loved to knit too though no one taught me or made me do it. Our home economics class wanted us to embroider, and darn.
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Hi Sadje, I’m glad you like knitting. It’s a great skill to have. I loved embroidery.
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Thanks. Now my fingers get tired if I try to knit
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Hi, Robbie- I unfortunately cannot knit or sew, I admire all who can! ❤
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Ah, I can do both but knitting bores me 😉
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Yay for Robbie!
I’m impressed you remember the sister’s name. I went to Catholic school until Jr. High. I remember only 1 name – Father Carnlough. (hope. you’re having fun in the bush!)
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Father Muike, who appears in my book Through the Nethergate, was also from this time. Sister Anne was the school head. I have a good memory 😊
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Interesting! I’ll have to read “Through the Nethergate” one day.
I have a good memory too, and I remember lots from that time. However, the nuns… they were so mean to me. I think I blotted them the honour of being remembered.
You have a lot more than a good memory! 🤗
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enjoyed this post and wow – your pink panther came out so well and you really pulled it together – how inspiring. I made a denim frog and some kind of holiday tree – and wish I still had them both – but they are long gone. I also made a small bookshelf in metal shop and was glad I was able to do that
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Hi Yvette, that’s great to know. These practical skills are so useful.
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So true!
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Very clever, Robbie! Well, you followed the instructions (sort of)! Love the story!
I like crocheting, but knitting wasn’t my thing either. I am not good at sewing, but I about managed to do the tasks required at school. I wasn’t the worst at those things, but was (and still am) terribly clumsy. It sounds as if I was quite lucky, really.
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Hi Olga, I demonstrated the need for precision with instructions 😂. I think my school was very old fashioned.
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You were the clever one, Robbie. I love the story!
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Smart and nicely done.
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How delightful!
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what a great story! you knit amazingly, especially considering you didn’t enjoy it!
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Thank you, da-AL, I’m pleased you enjoyed this story.
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