Happy Feet
I finished the experimental slipper socks.
The "experimental" part consisted of placing the foot decreases at the top, rather than the sides. This resulted in a little wonkiness, with the front of the cuff riding up higher than the back.
"Eat Cheese or Die!" Sometimes it's about knitting, sometimes it's not.
I finished the experimental slipper socks.
The "experimental" part consisted of placing the foot decreases at the top, rather than the sides. This resulted in a little wonkiness, with the front of the cuff riding up higher than the back.
Posted by
Cindy G
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10:15 AM
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Demolition has started on the building that burned. My gut still feels a little tight when I look at it. It's cold and bright and dry today, and even from a block away there's still a tang of burnt wood in the air.
The new coffee shop is open, just outside of the cordoned off area. The owner was feeling almost as if she should have closed "out of respect", but I think the community needs a place to be able to drop in, and talk, and start picking up threads.
Posted by
Cindy G
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2:11 PM
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Because I would really like to see these terrific quilts in person.
Posted by
Cindy G
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9:30 PM
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We had a very lovely Christmas. The best part was having our dear daughter home for several relaxed days, and her very nice fellow joining us for dinner at "the in-laws next door" on Christmas Day.
So who needs gifts? But the gifts are nice, too, and these are some of my favorites.
Clockwise from top left: two adorable little hand knit sheep ornaments (Fair Trade from SERVE, Int.), a sweet print by an artist named Joan Arnold, Double Knitting by M'Lou Baber, The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes, and a calendar with pictures of cats wearing hats. I'd say that the family knows my (occasionally quirky) tastes pretty well.
It's worth clicking to make this bigger. The faces are so charming.
Posted by
Cindy G
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1:23 PM
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After flipping through various lace books, I think my first shawl for the "10 in 2010" will be rectangular, using the "Celandine" pattern from Mariannne Kinzel's first book, probably in sport weight or heavier.
Posted by
Cindy G
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10:41 AM
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Labels: 10 in 2010
Early Monday morning, a building downtown burned. Sadly, there were four people inside and none made it out alive. I didn't know any of them personally, but in a town this small you are never far removed. I know a sister, a cousin, and have an acquaintance with parents. My heart aches for them all.
The building is a total loss.
It's a wonder that the fire didn't spread farther, as it started sometime before 3:30 am.; but our part time police officer happened to be on duty and spotted the smoke and called the volunteer fire department. The guys were there in five minutes, with crews from surrounding towns arriving shortly after. God bless every one of them.
As it is, most of the downtown is blocked off.
There's yellow police tape running all the way around two blocks on either side of Main Street/Hwy 78 to re-route traffic, because there's some concern that the burnt building might collapse.
This makes it hard on the businesses in that area, though the ones at the ends are accessible and open, as I discovered today by stepping over the police tape near the bank. It might all be rather adventurous if no one had died. I really wish no one had died.
Posted by
Cindy G
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2:33 PM
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I've been thinking about knitting a lot.
ckknitter invited me to join a "10 shawls in 2010" group on Ravelry. First I had to think about whether I could really knit ten shawls in one year, and I thought probably not. But I visited the group and learned they set out to be a friendly, flexible bunch (no shaming if you don't complete the challenge, you just don't get a chance at any prizes). And I thought it would be fun to see what beauties everyone else comes up with. So I joined, with the mental reservation that I would just do what I could.
So now I have been thinking, "What should I do for the first one?" More specifically, who will it be for, in what shape, what size and with what yarn? What do I have in my stash with sufficient yardage (the game calls for minimum of 250 yards for eight of the ten, and 500 meters for the remaining two)? Will I go with an existing pattern, or just wing it?
I have until Jan 1 to think. Then it's time to cast on.
Posted by
Cindy G
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1:02 PM
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Labels: 10 in 2010
Every once in a while it works in your favor.
I decided that it was high time I made the second funky slipper sock, so I grabbed the yarn and my somewhat sketchy notes, cast on and got about halfway through the ribbing before it occurred to me that I really should have checked the first one to see what point in the yarn color repeat I started with.
Lo and behold:
Not a perfect match, but pretty darn close. I'm off by about one round. I think I can live with that.
Posted by
Cindy G
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12:34 PM
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This teeny, teeny pair of mittens came in a Christmas card from the inimitable Molly Bee. They are so cute, and so amazing. Thank you, thank you! I feel honored to have them.
They are now on the tree, which went up this weekend.
Posted by
Cindy G
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9:52 AM
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The blue, mesh-y scarf was one of those projects that seemed endless. And I'm kind of "meh" about the results.
Posted by
Cindy G
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9:47 AM
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Then we raked off the roof, then we shoveled the driveway again. That heap is about half of what came off the roof. I know it looks as if "we" means Mr S, but I got a good two hours in myself. This is about half of what came off the roof.
Posted by
Cindy G
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11:14 AM
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Matt Yglesias posted a link to a list of 100 Best Last Lines from Novels It's pretty cool (partly because it reminds me of how many things I haven't read, and that maybe I should go and read some of them).
I, myself would move the Huck Finn up to #2 or even #1.
100 might be too many. When speaking of literature, a "best" list that includes Richard Brautigan and Margaret Mitchell is probably too long. On the other hand, I got a kick out of "Candy" rounding out the group at #100. I'm assuming the humor of that one is entirely intentional.
Posted by
Cindy G
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9:37 AM
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The holiday greens are up, looking almost out of place in Monday's balmy sunshine. It's nice that most of the businesses are participating.
Posted by
Cindy G
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8:04 AM
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Again. For some reason, the cats find it absolutely imperative to wrestle the hearth rug into submission at least once a day - usually more.
What I found when I went downtown was thisBad picture, but lovely new coffee shop, the "Pecatonica Grapevine". Actually, it opened last Friday, so I've already been in twice, once for coffee and once for a bottle of wine. (The wine is in the back room, which isn't as shady as it sounds, very charming display area actually). I'll get a better picture sometime after the Christmas decorations go up (probably tomorrow).
That storefront had been empty for a couple of years, so I'm grateful to Christine for opening her shop, and plan to give her as much business as possible.
Posted by
Cindy G
at
6:08 PM
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Since trying to tone down the yellow yarn didn't work so well, I decided to go all out for bright.
I like it.
I also decided to make a slipper sock to wear over other socks in the house, particularly in my knitting room. It's directly over the garage, and the floor gets really cold.
And since I was being wild, I put the "gusset" decreases at the top of the foot. The toe decreases start at the center top and center bottom, move toward the sides and finish in the "regular" position. Why? Just for the hell of it.
Now I need to make the other one.
Posted by
Cindy G
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1:05 PM
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Time to face facts,
I'm not feeling the love for this combination of yarns.
I've ripped this back, and will try combining the yellow-orange yarn with a different carry along.
Posted by
Cindy G
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9:02 AM
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I've been plugging away on the lattice looking scarf, but no new picture because the bit I did yesterday looks pretty much identical to the bit I did last week.
I did finish the new toes for my old socks.
Posted by
Cindy G
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11:15 AM
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I pulled out most of the Nasturtium vines nearly a month ago, after the frosts had turned them to mush. A few little green leaves remained snugged right up against the house.
Yesterday as I was coming back from the Post Office, something caught my eye.
Well bless its heart. A Nasturtium in November.
Posted by
Cindy G
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8:59 AM
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Bob, seen here in his Cheshire Cat manifestation, has a loud and assertive purr.
He revs up the engines before he hits your lap and you can hear him coming. It gets louder as he attempts to climb up to your shoulder and purr directly into your ear. There are times when it gets, quite frankly, just a little annoying. More than once I've pushed him off with a "That's enough, Bob!"
Merlin, on the other hand, is more reserved.
Posted by
Cindy G
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8:58 AM
1 comments
Someone knit their kitty a witch hat.
see more Lolcats and funny pictures
Posted by
Cindy G
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8:38 PM
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I did a quick "on the needle" wash of the swatch scarf. As anticipated, the pattern stitch did open up, indeed rather more than I had anticipated.
It makes a rather cool lattice look, and I think I'll go ahead and finish the scarf (despite the somewhat ragged looking edges). But for a blanket I would definitely drop the needle size.
Moral of the story: always wash and block your swatch. Which I did. Because this is the swatch.
Posted by
Cindy G
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8:27 AM
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Hi kmkat! This what the back of the scarf looks like. Different than the front, but not bad.
I'm working on Size 10 needles (a tighter knitter would probably get the same gauge on 13s). The fabric has a reasonable drape and nice elasticity in both directions. The garter borders are rather loose at this tension, but I think will be presentable when washed and dried. I could see going down a needle size and still getting a fabric that isn't too stiff.
Like magnusmog, I think it would make a cozy blanket.
Posted by
Cindy G
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2:01 PM
1 comments

This is pretty much the same pattern stitch that I used on the little crochet looking hat, except I went up several needle sizes and worked only one plain round (instead of two) between pattern rows - and of course, worked it in a single color.
Here's the pattern stitch (multiple of 3 plus 1):
Row 1: k1,* yo, slip 1, k2, pass the slipped stitch over the two knit stitches; rep from *
Rows 2 & 4: purl
Row 3: *slip 1, k2, pass the slipped stitch over the two knit stitches; rep
from *, end k1.
Slip stitches purlwise with yarn in back. Watch that the yarn overs don't get ahead of the slipped stitches. Otherwise easy as pie. I find this one simple enough to be relaxing, but requiring enough attention not to be totally boring.
I added a 3 st garter border at each side. It's still attempting to curl a little, so maybe I should have gone to 4 or 5 sts. We'll see if blocking helps. I'll be curious to see it it stretches out much after washing - I'm using Cascade 220, so it might.
I think this pattern could make a nice baby blanket, or work well in cotton for a market bag (I'm not planning on making either one in the near future, but you never know.)
Posted by
Cindy G
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10:12 AM
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Posted by
Cindy G
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9:18 AM
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are 4-7. Also, the time hasn't changed back from Daylight Savings.
I get the safety concerns and all, but damn, Trick or Treating in broad daylight just seems lame. (Actually, having "official hours" seems sort of lame, too. I'm getting old and curmudgeonly.)
Posted by
Cindy G
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5:19 PM
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In 1843, Miss Lambert gave directions for working a "Star Pattern Shawl" using a pattern stitch that boiled down to:
Row 1: *yo, sl 1, k2, pass the slipped stitch over the two knit sts; rep from *.
Row 2: purl
The directions were complicated just a little by the fact that she shapes the shawl with an increase at the beginning of each right side row. She notes: "As the increasing adds an irregular stitch, some rows will have one and others two knitted stitches at their commencement." Unfortunately, she doesn't specify which rows will have one and which will have two. They were also complicated by the fact that she changes colors every row.
At this point I abandoned Miss Lambert (for the time being, anyway) and spent a day playing around with different combinations of a yarn over and this particular decrease, knitting in the round rather than flat.
I'm not sure yet whether I'll actually use any of these in a finished object, but it was an interesting exercise.
Posted by
Cindy G
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9:19 AM
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Posted by
Cindy G
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8:44 AM
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The sock at the bottom had a big old hole in the toe, so I re-knit it.
The one at the top isn't quite worn through, but as it has a spot that's thinning I decided to fix it, too, and be done with it. I've run needles through the stitches of the "pick up" round. I'll cut the toe off a couple of rows above that.
It would make sense to then unravel back to the row of stitches on the needles. I discovered on the first sock that the knitting is just felted enough to make unravelling difficult, so I let it be. I don't know if the resulting couple of rows of double thickness will be uncomfortable when worn. Time (and wearing) will tell.
Posted by
Cindy G
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2:57 PM
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The AP (via Yahoo news) reports:
"A Minnesota man has pleaded guilty to driving his motorized La-Z-Boy chair while drunk. A criminal complaint says 62-year-old Dennis LeRoy Anderson told police he left a bar in the northern Minnesota town of Proctor on his chair after drinking eight or nine beers....
Police said the chair was powered by a converted lawnmower and had a stereo and cup holders...."
Lake Woebegon lives!
And I must confess that my first reaction to this story was relief, because the dateline was Duluth. So many of the doofy stories like this on Yahoo do seem to be set right here in the Badger State. Which reminds me that when I moved to California from Minnesota, I had to listen to unending repititions of the "land of fruits and nuts" line. Yeah, like Midwesterners are all monumentally sane and that's why they drive drunk on motorized recliners and bar stools (the latter was in Wisconsin as I recall.)
Well, the winters are long, and I guess a guy's got to have something to tinker on in his garage...
Posted by
Cindy G
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5:57 PM
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but yesterday afternoon was lovely: sunny, almost 70 degrees, a gentle mild breeze. A fall day couldn't be more perfect, and this year there have been few like it.
The cats took full advantage of an open window - there probably won't be too many more opportunities before winter.
I went outside and puttered - a little pruning, a little cutting back, some just sitting on the front step and enjoying the air around me.
Posted by
Cindy G
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8:50 AM
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Mostly because that's the only color I was absolutely sure I had enough of to finish both. Well, I do have some bright plum, but that looked kind of gaacky when I held it up to the other colors.
The mittens look very long and narrow, but there is a lot of width wise stretch. I pushed the ribs in as much as possible while they are drying. They will relax outward a bit as soon as I pick them up.
Posted by
Cindy G
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11:05 AM
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In it's most basic incarnation, anyway.
These are tubes of 2 x 2 ribbing. About half way up I put 8 sts on a piece of scrap yarn, cast on 8 sts and kept going. At the top I worked a few rounds of fairly rapid decreases. (Well, I did on the first mitten. I'm not quite to that point on the second one yet.)
The yarns are leftover odds and ends of worsted weight wool. I just changed colors whenever I felt like it on the first and made the second to match. When I changed colors, I worked the first round all in knit, for a smooth color transition, then went back to k2,p2.
I haven't decided what color the thumbs will be. At first I thought about the dark blue used at the cuff, but looking at the picture I'm now considering medium green.
Posted by
Cindy G
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10:44 AM
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Since I seem to have no bright ideas at the moment, and no snazzy pictures, (and besides the sun is finally shining and I would rather be outside today) I have no blog post of my own: good, bad or indifferent.
But I highly recommend Karen's thoughtful essay at Hissy Stitch. It's well worth a read.
Posted by
Cindy G
at
12:38 PM
1 comments
kmkat asked about the yarn in my second triangle. It's Cascade "Heritage" sock yarn, 75% Merino Superwash, 25% Nylon, color 9928. After blocking, the gauge is 17 sts = 4 inches. I'm estimating it took me about 420 yards. 
The finished length from the top edge to the lower point is 23 1/2 inches. The width across the top edge is 46 inches.
Hmmmm, think I should iron that shirt?
Posted by
Cindy G
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12:24 PM
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