Thursday 31 July 2008

Hard act to follow…


Everything is going to seem rather mundane around our place for a bit now, after yesterday’s excitement.

Still I have a few more pics, as promised.

DD1 showed off her finished baby hat and booties at last weeks TAFK (Tuesdays Are For Knitting) session, customized of course, in her usual just-the-right-finishing-touch way – see the wee buttons? These are for a little boy who will arrive later this summer, just in time for wool-wearing season! The bootie pattern is from Bernat, and happens to be in the 2009 Knitting Pattern-a-Day calendar, and the hat is the Umbilical Cord hat from the original Snitch and Bitch by Debbie Stoller



I'm still working on the Green OnLine socks, aptly named Clown socks for how the colors seem so garish to me! DD2 has claimed them when the are done.









And a stack ‘o squares, 10 done, for the baby blanket in progress. Knitting loves crochet so the edges are being detailed as you can see. As well I'll use crochet to join them in to a lovely little blanket. several of my TAFK members have also done squares, so I'll have some more joining to do shortly.

I know, I have a short attention span, so yes there are several projects on the go…..


And apologies to this Susan , with whom I am supposed to have a knit-a-long for this item, I have had to start the EZ BSJ ahead of her since I was suddenly presented with a deadline a mere 3 weeks away!! Susan, all I can say is watch your stitch count – I’ve already ripped it out once!!

And brewing in the back of my mind is the fact that here is still time to submit something to the 2010 Knitting Pattern-A-Day calendar, which isn’t due until October 15, 2008, 10:00 pm EST.

Now back to your regularly scheduled knitting. There is nothing more to see here.

Knit on…..

Wednesday 30 July 2008

Now that's kinda cool!!!!

Well you have all seen this before, I'm sure. The Knitting Pattern-A-Day Calendar - and that's what it's going to look like for 2009.

How do I know about it beside that fact that it is on Amazon.com? Well I got one. Yes. Delivered. By courier.

I didn't know it was coming. I was annoyed by the silly sticker on my door which arrived during working hours, which of course I would not have arranged. And I didn't remember ordering anything anyway. Which it turns out I didn't.

So how come I have one before it is even released?? Let's think about that. Took me a minute too.

I HAVE BEEN PUBLISHED!!!!!!

Let me tell you there was a few minutes of freaking out around our place this evening!!





And the very gorgeous DD2 is the November 27th calendar girl!!!

Do you remember this picture from a ways back, like over a year ago??











Well later this year you'll find it in here along with the pattern. And look closely - DD2's picture even made the calendar jacket!!









A million thanks to Susan Ripley and the
Knitting Pattern-A-Day team at http://www.knittingpatternaday.com/index.htm for making my day!!

I am so doing my happy dance right now!!


Knit on.....


ps. you should give it a try, there's lots of time. Why? This is why: http://www.knittingpatternaday.com/knittingcrochetcontestrules.htm





Thursday 24 July 2008

I’m sure I’ve been busy ...

I’m sure I’ve been busy doing something, but most weeks I can hardly remember what I’ve done the day before! The days of summer are flying by at an outrageous pace, and what sun we’ve seen seems like a rare bird. Still, it must be sun enough – just look at my begonia gone wild:

We’ve have been busy with household maintenance chores that were not done in the spring as usual. The G-man is still busy finishing the basement; the doors arrived yesterday. It will soon be time for picking the paint color, a job for DD1 as she is an interior decorator by trade, with an amazing eye for color!

And DD1 has not been idle either, despite her bi-weekly torturous chemo regime. I don’t know how she does it, and frequently worry that she is over-doing, but that’s the mother thing to do! She is doing very well in her battle with Hodgkin’s, although the days of recovery from the chemo are stretching longer each time, and are becoming a bit harder to bounce back from. Still she is amazing in her strength to keep on keeping on. Truly I am in awe of this girl of mine!

On her good weeks, between medical appointments, she has gutted the main bathroom and installed new lighting, a gorgeous mirror, new shower curtain and painted. New flooring as been ordered too, and will be installed in due course. I may splurge on new faucets too! I am very excited to see the finished room, as this bathroom has been in quite a state with nothing done to it since we moved in 5 plus years ago, and it was very, very tired indeed and in need a facelift.

I have been painting baseboards and patching in various rooms, a tedious job, but all the daily living has taken its toll and there are too many nicks and scratches to ignore any longer. And lastly the exterior house touch-up painting needs to be done too. Does it ever end?

In knitting activity, there was a full house of Tuesdays Are for Knitting crew in attendance this week, some just there to socialize and of course the hard-core knitters like myself and that Susan who can’t imagine knitching without knitting at the same time! A very good time was had by all! There were the cutest cupcakes for Heather’s birthday, but we gobbled them before I got a picture – yes, they were quite yummy!

The stash busting projects are coming along nicely, and my charity blanket has 9 squares of 12 completed. Knitting loves crochet too, and I have edged the plain squares with more stash yarn for a updated granny effect. . pictures to follow when the lighting is better.

And I was going to report 2 hats and 2 pairs of mitts ready for Anita but DD1 has claimed the darker green variegated set, so I’ll have to whip up another set.

News Flash !!!!!: Don’t forget about the Third Annual Ottawa Knit Out 2008: http://www.agriculture.technomuses.ca/english/activities_events/index.cfm Sunday August 3, 2008, 12 - 4:30pm at the CANADA AGRICULTURE MUSEUM, MEMORY PARK, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, ON – I’ll be there, will you??

Knit on……

Tuesday 8 July 2008

Scrap-ghans….

I love the idea of no waste at the end of a project. I thrill at useing up every last piece of string, and cannot tell you how pleased I am when the clipped ends pile at the completion of a project is less than a fistful.

I always wind up the last bits at the end of a project, to the point of ridiculously small balls that seem too small to do anything with. In fact earlier this year, when I emptied my craft room in the frenzy that accompanied DD1’s urgent return home, I purged my stash of precious little balls to the waste bin, not being able to justify the even now limited storage. Of course, as with all things let go in haste, the squirrel in me is severely regretting my hasty purge. Now I need those little balls to add to my mitred squares for the scrap blankets that I am making for Anita:

However, I think It won’t be too much of a problem. I still have a great deal of plastic bins filled with full skeins of stash afghan style yarns. And so, I will just have to get to knitting them up! And you know exactly what will happen as each skein gets knitted up. Yup – those little balls will appear to replenish my collection. Like I said, it will not be much of a problem!

It’s a never-ending cycle. Buy yarn. Knit yarn. Wind little balls. It makes me happy to see those little balls reproduce. And each time I pull out a familiar color I can reminisces about the original project that produced the little ball of color.

What is the fascination with these little balls? Well I just love scrap-ghans! I love the thrifty use of seemingly useless bits and pieces and the wonder at the time it must have taken to piece all these bits together.

Let me show you a prime example of what I’m talking about:

I received two of these gorgeous blankets some 20+ years ago from my ex-mother in law, Betty, for the DD’s beds when they were quite little. The blankets have survived numerous moves and were one of the few important things other than the gorgeous DD’s and my beloved Jack Russell terrier Buttons, salvaged from that first marriage! It was Betty that first put a crochet hook in my hand, and I am forever indebted to her for instilling in me my love of yarn!

The blankets, although slightly worn with time, but holding up extremely well (a credit to their maker who always produced beautiful quality items), are as charming as the day Betty put them on the DD’s beds, and I marvel every time I pull them out at the commitment and foresight it took to produce all those squares. Each blanket has approximately 220+ squares! I remember that at the end of each her project’s, after the last tails was darned in, out would come the crochet hook and the bag of little coloured balls to which she would add the newest ones, and little brightly coloured granny squares would magically appear, bordered by the lovely cream colour.

I never really thought about what they would create, or how they would look when all joined together. But I learned that even the smallest ball of color could add just the right bit of umph! to an otherwise bland square. I certainly had no concept of how many squares would be required, but I surely now understand why this would be the type of blanket produced over a long period of time, since a knitter or crochet-er would have to complete a large number of other items first to generate enough scrap balls of yarn to produce and collect such large numbers of squares.

So I have been making my own squares for a while now too. I have shoe box full so far, but probably not enough for a full Scarp-ghan yet. From half skiens and leftovers. These are solids, destined to be bordered by something, probably black to make them pop. Of course you know I'm keeping the leftovers from these wound up in little balls for, well, you know.

Google key words like scrap blankets or scrap-ghans or scrap knitting or crochet for some more inspiring examples. Go look at Sanna’s recently finished Mother and Daughter patchwork blanket for some wonderful inspiration.

And so with another recession looming on the forefront, climbing gas prices, and my creative spending subsequently being severely curtailed in favor of another commodity that I am very partial to, food, I intend to go back to my roots and that of my grandmothers, and do what women have always done in times of economic lack: use it up, wear it out, make do, or do without! When it comes to yarn, I’ll be using it up alright, every last little bit of string, you can be sure of that!

Knit on…….

Friday 4 July 2008

Warm fuzzies….

It was just what I needed. A diversion. A reason. A purpose. A cause!

Charity knitting always does that for me. It takes me away from my own trials and tribulations and causes me to stop and count my blessings, however small they may be these days, and become aware that there are always, always, always those who are less blessed and in need.

On that accord my fingers fairly flew yesterday, during coffee breaks, lunch hour, during the commute, and over tea with a friend on the patio. Oh I do love such immediate gratification!

Needed: one teenage hat, please.

Delivered: one teenage hat, thank you.

No. No really. Thank you!

Thank you for asking for one, or several. Really. I enjoy making them. It was fast, and easy, and made me feel good all over to know that it might in some small way brighten someone’s day, and at the very least keep them a wee bit warmer next winter. I consider a privilege to be asked to help, and will do my best to do my bit.

And I hope you won’t mind if I get a warm fuzzie or two along the way. In this big wide world, it is not often that anything we do has such genuine impact on anyone any more.

Why yes – I certainly have started another one already…. I have plans for matching mitts too, of course!

What? Pictures?Oh yes - sorry, hummm.. Where is the damn camera?....

Knit on…….

Thursday 3 July 2008

Clowning around…

So after last week, a little clowning around was required, and I would say this second pair of OnLine lacey socks fits the bill. Or at least the colorway does (my picture taking skills do not do the colors justice - they are truly vibrant and verging on violent!)!!

DD1 and I both found the colors too jarring as they knit up, but DD2 has been quite happy to claim them for as suitable for her personality (we are not sure what that says about her given the aforementioned violent comment....), and so they will be made to fit.

The pattern is a freebie from www.JemsYarn.com called Lace Ribbed socks. I searched for a pattern like this because although I working on improving my lace knitting skills so I can get back to Sanna’s yarn and finishing up the Citrine Socks I have in my WIP pile, I still confess to liking a bit of ribbing to keep socks firmly attached at the ankle. I do hate me a baggy sock!!

I am enjoying the simple lace repeat, it’s about all my poor brain can handle at the moment, although the heel setup was less than stellar, but I muddled through, and the result is satisfactory and I’m clicking my way to the toe. The second one will be just as quick.

Oh yes – the gorgeous orange OnLine Holiday lace socks from last week are done, but I messed up at the toes and the damned Kitchener stitch (I was hurrying to finish!), and so a re-do is an order before I model them for you. But I still love, love, love them!!

And in an effort to right the equalibrium of my world, I have taken on some charity knitting in hope that I can generate some good karma to surround me. Once again I am hooking up to support Anita at www.findingfortygatheringknitting.blogspot.com and help her fulfill her quest to send teenage hats, mitts, sweaters, socks, and baby blankets to the Innu Community in Labrador. I’ve got one hat already half done. Check out Anita’s site if you can help her out too!

Knit on….