Knitting sisters raise more than £2,000 for Northamptonshire charity

Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement.

The sisters are already knitting like mad for 2023

A University of Northampton staff member with a knack for needlepoint is turning woollen wares into charity cash in memory of a much-missed relative.

Debbie Brumby has been a Midwife for 22 years, but since the end of 2021 has worked as a sessional clinical assessor for the University of Northampton Test of Competence Centre.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

But when she’s not busy assessing the skills and knowledge of non-UK trained nursing and midwifery professions, Debbie and her sister Angie Rose are busy with the knitting needles raising funds for good causes.

Angie Rose (left) and Debbie Brumby with their charity cheque for the Memory Cafe and some of their festive woollen wares.Angie Rose (left) and Debbie Brumby with their charity cheque for the Memory Cafe and some of their festive woollen wares.
Angie Rose (left) and Debbie Brumby with their charity cheque for the Memory Cafe and some of their festive woollen wares.

The siblings have been knitting and crocheting since they were children, schooled in crafting excellence by their mum, who was herself a “prolific knitter.”

Fast forward a few years, and the sisters are running a veritable cottage industry of woollen wears they sell to support county charities.

Angie says: “In 1995 my daughter Donna died in a road traffic accident, leaving us absolutely devastated. Debbie and I set up Donna’s Angels in her memory, at first as an informal group for Donna’s family and friends to help them cope with the fallout of losing someone we held – and continue to hold – very close to our hearts.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“This group evolved into something more powerful as we wanted to keep her memory alive but also to capture her spirit of generosity and charity by supporting the local causes she supported. It was a natural decision that Debbie and I would put our knitting knowledge toward this.”

Each year Debbie and Angie select a different charity to focus their fundraising. Last year’s was Kettering’s Memory Café – a space with activities and advice for people with dementia and their carers.

Their last round of designs were Christmas-themed covers for the traditional festive food, the Chocolate Orange, (including an Orange) plus woollen table decorations. Debbie and Angie made – and sold – a finger flummoxing 600 items.

Debbie continues: “We started the Christmas ‘batch’ in September as we aim for quality and quantity. Each one took up to an hour to create, so it did take over our lives a bit! Knitting so intensively does make your fingers ache after a while, but you only notice it when you first start. Like anything you enjoy doing, you just get on with it.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“When we handed over the cheque, seeing the faces of the people at the café was amazing. The managers of the café told us how many activities and trips the money will fund, which made all the hard work worthwhile. And we both know Donna would be over the moon about that.”

From those sales, Debbie and Angie raised £1,600. Added to their other charitable activities in 2022, this meant £2,300 for the café.

Yvonne Robinson from The Rotary Club of Kettering – co-organisers of The Memory Café – added: “This huge amount will give us the ability to do so much more for our wonderful carers and people living with dementia in the form of excursions and entertainment.”

After a brief break for Christmas and New Year, Angie and Debbie are back with their knitting needles preparing for their next challenge – Easter chicks to raise funds for Kettering Food Bank.

For more about Donna’s Angels and to buy the knitting products, see their Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/35395772669.