Thu - January 1, 2009
Wed - December 31, 2008
Because I Just Really Wasn't Knitting That Much for Awhile There
Someone pointed out to me recently that my last
blog entry had snow in it. Well, it seems we've come full circle now, haven't
we!I really did just stop knitting
there for awhile. Since we moved out of the city I've been wanting to spend my
time out in my garden, or out in my kayak, or at the beach (I did finish the
other tiger sock as my beach knitting this summer) and not inside sitting
around. (If I could knit and hike I'd be all set but really, I'm so clumsy that
it takes everything I have to just walk without falling down). And then the
election really sucked out all of my remaining available brain cells. Thank
goodness that all went well in the
end.However, it's winter again (as
evidenced by what's falling outside the window again), we've already
missed two days of school and the knitting mojo appears to be creeping back.
There's a pair of socks on the needles for the first time since Labor Day, two
sweaters that are each more than half done on other needles, and a package just
came from Peace Fleece with yarn for sweater number three. I know the rest of
you are usually searching for the softest merino but some part of me feels like
it's not really knitting if it's not scratchy and full of straw. That's
probably why I live here on the rockbound coast (none of that sissy sand for
me).So what's on the
needles?
I never expected intarsia to be the
thing that got me knitting again but this is the project that I sped through.
Winter Star Jacket by Di Gilpin from Interweave Knits Winter 2005. The yarn is
Elspeth Lavold Silky Wool in blue, gold and gray. This has a back, a front and
should have its other front by the end of today. This, and a Librivox download
of Willke Collins's The Woman in White and suddenly I was knitting
again.Most of the fall was taken up
with this:
That's Wedgette by Norah Gaughan which
is a free pattern on Ravelry or the Berrocco website. The lacy skirt is knitted
from side to side and then the bodice is picked up from there. (I like to use
the word "bodice" when Eli's descriptions of Star Wars become too involved--my
lesson that different people have different interests seems to be falling on
deaf ears). The pattern is being released in pieces and the sleeve part hasn't
been released yet which is fine as I seem to have stalled on the endless
stockinette of the back of the bodice. The alpaca is lovely and all but I'm a
bit bored with it. Oh sorry, Frog Tree DK Alpaca in grey. I've changed the cap
sleeve shaping because after years of trying to stuff these shoulders into
fitted sleeves (you'd think I would have learned this the first time around in
the late seventies) I've realized it isn't going to happen. So I changed this
to a modified dropped sleeve and I won't have to give it away (sorry, Daphne,
this one is mine). I know it doesn't look like much tossed on the floor like
that but the blocked ones I've seen on Ravelry are lovely. Please go look at
someone else's and imagine mine looking just like it but in grey.
I've also started Caroline again with
the same sleeve cap modification--that's about half done as well though I'm a
little stalled because I haven't figured out how long to make the sleeves before
they're felted (I know, swatch, measure swatch, felt swatch, do the
math).Socks? Harry Potter house socks
from Charmed Knits in the Griffindor Colorway from Van Calcar Acres. No
pictures yet and not enough light to take them today in the
blizzard.Anything else? Not really.
It was a mostly uneventful summer. We did go to Canada and Michigan for ten
days. This time we drove (last time we took Amtrack as Eli is mad about trains
and we knew we weren't all going to fit into one sleeper car much longer) and it
was wonderful. Eli made a little backseat nest and read (he is in that little
window of time when you are able to read in the car without getting seasick) and
when he wasn't reading he listened to his ipod or we listened to Harry Potter on
audiodisc. I had forgotten how beautiful upstate NY is--mostly like here but
greener and fuller as there are no ocean winds to make life difficult and we saw
the Erie Canal and Eli swam in an outdoor heated swimming pool on a chilly night
in Seneca Falls and we spent another night in Niagara Falls and did all of the
tourist things and then went on to Detroit and saw Greenfield Village and the
Henry Ford Museum again and stayed with family and really had a wonderful time.
I should have told you about it at the time. Ah
well.Oh look, the snow is coming
down diagonally now.We are
supposed to go to the New Year's Eve parade in two hours but I'm not sure that's
going to happen. Oh, I almost
forgot the requisite picture of the
cats!
And the requisite picture of the
child!
This was actually two days ago--it
wasn't really that warm but the children thought it was. We had just walked up
from the beach, out of the wind so maybe in
comparison.Happy New Year to the two
of you who are still reading! Perhaps we'll chat again soon.
Posted at 01:57 PM
Sat - April 5, 2008
Tue - April 1, 2008
It Does Look Like Something
And not cat
yak.
It looks good in the sun, n'est ce
pas?Detail:
Swallowtail
ShawlMalabrigo Laceweight, color: Water
Green.I didn't screw it up, it's
finished and it may make me go back to
Icarus.It is a little small, even for a
scarf, but it may just lie around the house or go to my friend Daphne, the
person who gets all of my too small
knitting.Next?Good
question. I'm still working (slowly) on the chicken sweater. I have the yarn
to start Caroline again and there's some sock yarn I want to use--I just have to
get out the swift and ball winder for those projects. I'd like to start the
thrummed mittens again. Did I tell you about the thrummed mitten? I bought
pattern, yarn and roving for a pair of thrummed mittens back in January or
February when it was wicked cold (snowed yesterday, by the way) and none of my
handwear was cutting it. It was Farmhouse Yarns, lavender and yellow (not a
usual color choice for me but just beautiful) with plum colored roving and I
knit the first one, twisting a 24 inch circular into a magic loop (since I don't
knit many socks on a size 9 I don't own a longer one). Also, something happened
to this poor needle once (actually two things)--it got sat/stepped on so there's
a slight bend in the needle part, and something got spilled on it that corroded
the finish somehow (it's an Addi Turbo). So this needle was both bent and
sticky and also, too short. Making this mitten was painful--but it was a
mitten, with big yarn, on big needles, so honestly, it's just not that many
stitches and I put up with it because I wanted the mitten and I didn't want to
go back to the yarn store. So finished this mitten, loved this mitten, so
warm, beautiful colors, and did I mention thrummed? So cool and I was wearing
it everywhere because who really cares if your mittens match, you can always
keep one hand in your pocket. I was having dinner with the aforementioned
Daphne and I wanted to show it to her so I stuck it in my jacket pocket. Can
you see where this is going? I don't know why I didn't wear it. Anyway I got
to Daphne's house--no mitten. I went back to my car--no mitten. When I got
home--no mitten. Driveway, yard, street, no mitten. So my motivation for
knitting the other mitten has been minimal. And the worst thing? I NEVER TOOK
A PICTURE OF IT! I bought another skein (some Sheep Shop) and more roving to
make some for Eli too but I'm a little bitter about thrummed mittens in general
right now. But I digress.So, I've
decided I'm between projects here. It's that time of
year.
Posted at 08:17 PM
Sun - March 30, 2008
Wed - March 26, 2008
Sun - March 9, 2008
Mon - February 25, 2008
TS Eliot Lies--It's February
They couldn't add an extra day to April or
October?
Posted at 04:29 PM
Sat - February 2, 2008
Blogger's Silent Poetry Reading 3
The Lanyard
The other day I was ricocheting
slowly
off the blue walls of this room,
moving as if underwater from
typewriter to piano,
from bookshelf to an envelope lying on the
floor,
when I found myself in the L section of the dictionary
where
my eyes fell upon the word lanyard.
No cookie nibbled by a French
novelist
could send one into the past more suddenly—
a past
where I sat at a workbench at a camp
by a deep Adirondack
lake
learning how to braid long thin plastic strips
into a lanyard,
a gift for my mother.
I had never seen anyone use a
lanyard
or wear one, if that’s what you did with them,
but
that did not keep me from crossing
strand over strand again and
again
until I had made a boxy
red and white lanyard for my
mother.
She gave me life and milk from her
breasts,
and I gave her a lanyard.
She nursed me in many a sick
room,
lifted spoons of medicine to my lips,
laid cold face-cloths on
my forehead,
and then led me out into the airy light
and taught me to walk and
swim,
and I, in turn, presented her with a lanyard.
Here are
thousands of meals, she said,
and here is clothing and a good
education.
And here is your lanyard, I replied,
which I made with a
little help from a counselor.
Here is a breathing body and a beating
heart,
strong legs, bones and teeth,
and two clear eyes to read the
world, she whispered,
and here, I said, is the lanyard I made at
camp.
And here, I wish to say to her now,
is a smaller
gift—not the worn truth
that you can never repay your
mother,
but the rueful admission that when she took
the two-tone
lanyard from my hand,
I was as sure as a boy could be
that this
useless, worthless thing I wove
out of boredom would be enough to make us
even.
- Billy Collins
Posted at 12:49 PM
Thu - January 3, 2008
And the Winner Is . .
Swallowtail Shawl in Malabrigo Lace, Water
Green.
I do like this pattern and
this yarn.
Posted at 08:02 PM
Tue - January 1, 2008
New Year, New Headgear
This year's New Year's Eve project was
Calorimetry.
There is something obscene about this.
What's the feminine version of
"phallic"?I have been knitting a lot,
in spite of not writing about it. I've finished: the Ladybug Sweater,
the Car Sweater,
Wonder,
Caroline
andKai's
Cable Sweater (again)
since last we
spoke.The car sweater just needs to
have one sleeve sewn in and then it and the ladybug sweater off to the new
twins, Bren and Emory who were born on the last day of November and who we
finally met last weekend. It will be awhile until those sweaters fit
(apparently Norwegian babies are larger) so no hurry and Jenn, their mom, saw
them in their almost finished state. They're both Dale patterns; Ladybug is
true to the pattern, Cars is heavily modified--different edging (hem instead of
ribbing), different colors, different patterning on the
sleeves.Kai 2 (from Natural Knits)
went to someone I work with who is due in about three
weeks.Caroline (from Louet's website)
was great fun to knit, not so much to crochet the edging. Euroflax may be
lovely but it's like crocheting with garden twine. The sweater was also a fun
experiment in felting. I've ordered more yarn to make it again and the original
has found a new happy home with my petite friend Daphne. Actually, the problem
had more to do with the fact that I have shoulders, and no sweater (or shirt,
for that matter) with cap sleeves ever really fits me. The rest of it was fine,
but the shoulders were uncomfortable. I'm going to make it again, probably a
size larger, and modify the sleeves. The Louet Riverstone is wonderful yarn and
this knits up very quickly.Wonder is
from Rowan #40 knit out of Lopi. It was an impulse knit, started in August when
I had been working only on Baby Dale sweaters and socks and I wanted to work
with bulky wool. Yarns in the Farms had Lopi on sale and the rest is history.
It was an awfully fast knit, too, (anything is after a Baby Dale) and I enjoyed
it though I think it looks weird on me. I haven't decided whether I'm keeping
it yet or not.Calorimetry was lots of
fun to make, I love the yarn (Noro Kochoran in color 10, blues, greys and
greens, from last week's sale at Woolcott) and kept me wicked warm last night
during the First Night parade.As
always, check JoBleudeMaine on Ravelry for progress
pictures.I'm in the odd position of
having nothing on my needles. Socks? Swallowtail Shawl out of some Malabrigo
Lace that I also got last week at Woolcott? Roscalie vest from In the
Hebrides? I spent the day reading patterns looking at other people's
versions of those patterns on Ravelry, and sorting out all the needles that
needed to go away after all the finished projects. Back to work tomorrow (where
someone will undoubtedly announce her pregnancy as I have finally finished
everything on my list of impending babies to knit for and make the decision
easy). No more Baby Dales in the near future--Kai's Cable Sweater for everyone
from now on.
Posted at 05:08 PM
Sun - November 4, 2007
Wed - October 31, 2007
Mon - October 15, 2007
Swamped
For the first time ever my excuse is that I've
been consumed by work. Remember I started a new job in February? You know,
right before we bought a house and moved. Well last spring was just finishing a
lot of projects that someone else had started and basically getting through the
rest of the year until June. Now, it's all about deciding what projects I want
to do, and how to do them, and then doing them. It's not that I'm spending more
time working, it's just that I'm thinking about work when I'm not there instead
of thinking about knitting. This is new for
me.Also, I fell into the Ravelry hole.
I'm JoBleudeMaine if you feel like friending me. It took me awhile to friend
strangers and I still haven't friended any big name people because that just
feels too junior high somehow but I finally realized that the point is just to
have a quick link to the projects of people whose knitting you like and it
wasn't actually just a way to court rejection. (Think I'm stuck in junior high?
You're glad I restrained myself and didn't blog about the whole "if you don't
get any comments I don't know why you bother to blog" thread of last spring. I
honestly don't care about comments but that whole thing brought out the worst in
me.)Anyway, Ravelry is great--it's fun
seeing what everyone is doing with the same yarn and patterns and what people
are hiding in their stashes.Knitting?
Why yes, a bit.
Another Baby Dale. This is a heavily
modified pattern--changed ribbing to a hem, changed colors (this is meant to be
navy blue background with different colored cars and I'm doing stripes like in
the ladybug sweater.) Somehow I twisted it when I first joined it and didn't
really catch it until I had finished the facing so it went into a heap for
awhile. However, the baby is imminent so I started it again about a week ago
and have been doing pretty well. I'm trying to use up the leftovers from the
Lady bug sweater so I would be using more yellow and orange but I'm not sure I
have enough left. (It's not that I'm cheap--most of these colors have been
discontinued.)It finally warmed up in
late August so I got the urge to knit with bulky wool. I found this pattern in
a Rowan book and Yarns in the Farms had Lopi on sale so I started this
completely on a whim. I got a lot done until I put it aside for the baby
sweater.
I'm partway through a sleeve as well.
It goes very quickly after all that Baby
Ull.Here's a closeup of the
collar.
Ladybug sweater is done but I haven't
put it together as I want to sew for the steeks of both of these sweaters at the
same time.I seem to have temporarily
lost my sock mojo though I did start the second Traveller's
Stocking.I just ordered the yarn to
knit Caroline
from Louet.I noticed I was thinking
about yarn this morning on my way to school so I imagine the tide is
turning.
Posted at 06:15 PM
Wed - September 19, 2007
|
Categories
Archives
XML/RSS Feed
Calendar
| | Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
Blogroll
Blogs I Read
email
Visitors
<< New England Knits >>
Statistics
Total entries in this blog:
Published On: Jan 01, 2009 05:30 PM
|