I was so taken by
Jane's Lyra (actually Neibling's Lyra, but Jane alerted me to the pattern's existence, so she gets my credit), that I dug out the magazine and some black Zephyr to swatch it. I was astounded that the pattern has lain, dust-covered, for years amidst a large stack of
Anna magazines. I subscribed to
Anna a long time ago when I was in my sweater phase and, after 10 years of staring at ugly sweaters, I stopped my subscription.
After I saw Jane's post, I unearthed them from underneath a pile of old notebooks and nearly fainted with delight. They are FULL of Neibling designs. I found about 20 of them, including the gorgeous Lyra design.
I am a disaster with a crochet hook and DPN's are not my favorite,* so I spent an hour inventing a nice, simple way to begin circular shawls.
This is picture-intensive and I hope I can explain it so everyone can give it a try.
Basically, you make a loop and knit into it. When you have the correct number of stitches, you can arrange them on either DPNs or, as I did, two circulars and start knitting. After a few rows, or whenever you feel like it, you just pull on the end to close the circle.
Aside from not having to find or use a crochet hook, tatting shuttle, or any other esoteric object, the advantage of this method is that you can make the central loop nice and large. Doing so makes it easier to manipulate the multiple needles you need for circular beginnings.
I have never seen this method anywhere, but if someone else invented it already, my apologies for restating your elegant technique.
Here we go:
Flop the yarn over your hand thusly:

Flip your hand over...

...And make a loop.

Insert the needle into the loop..

...And bring the yarn over the top. One stitch made.

Now go under the needle and wrap the yarn for the second stitch.

And then over...

..and under as many times as you need stitches. End by going under, not over. You'll see why when you start to knit. The exact number isn't important, because you can slip off the excess stitch(es) later.

Start knitting. I use two circs, but DPN fans can begin juggling their needles of choice:

Here I am starting the second circ.

And I am at the end of the round, ready to start the second one.

Three rounds finished.

Pull on the end of the yarn to close the hole.

I love those 99-cent bamboo needles, too!
*I loathe, hate, and detest DPNs.