Sam Stone came home to his wife and family after serving in the conflict overseas.
It’s not all parades and cemeteries, you know:
I didn’t get much knitting done today, or anything else other than work. Boo. But we did eat some mighty fine pizza.
creativity, food, and way too little time – all coming together online
For a couple of years, I maintained a food blog called Luscious. I participated in Tuesdays with Dorie (if you’re a food blogger you know about that, I’m sure), and it was loads of fun. I’ve posted the occasional picture or story here, but I think it’s time to revive Luscious.
Lots of good food, some nice photos, and a few recipes. Good stuff. I’m trying to put the feed in my sidebar, but nothing is cooperating this morning.
Anyway. Off to such mundane tasks as laundry and making pizza dough for dinner. Hope your Memorial Day is wonderful!
paralyzed by gorgeousness.
This is what happens when you have yarn that’s just so perfect, you have to pick a pattern that does justice to it and shows it to its best effect. I am paralyzed. I have a bunch of madelinetosh in my stash, and want to make something really beautiful. I’m thinking of the Daybreak shawl, which has been made 43 times with madtosh sock. (Sorry for the ravelry links, if you’re not on rav. If not, why?!)
So I have 3 skeins of tosh merino light, in filigree, and my new skein of eyre light in jodhpur, but I don’t know how well they’d go together. Since I have 3 of the filigree and one of the jodhpur, I’m thinking the green would be the main color. What do you think, seriously?
I just can’t decide. I really ought to swatch them together. That’s the only way to answer this. Still, if the combo strikes you in some way – great or awful – please say so! I’m just as interested in the bad as the good.
gotta love her yarn, that madelinetosh
If you’ve read very many posts on my blog, you know I have a hard-core crush on madelinetosh yarns. Except for KnitPicks Felici, which I use for many a pair of socks, I knit almost exclusively with madelinetosh yarn. Amy, the dyer extraordinaire behind the business, just has a masterful way with color and yarn base. There’s a luminosity inside the yarn, a great deal of the time. Except for the yarns that are truly variegated, the colors have extremely subtle and delicate shifts in color – there but not there, really – which give the skein and anything knitted with it depth and dimensionality like nothing else I’ve ever seen.
So I’ve been a member of the yarn club twice (and have already signed up for the next round). This final delivery for the current session came today – madelinetosh eyre light is the base, a softly-spun single that’s 60% merino wool, 20% silk, and 20% baby alpaca. I chose the “natural” color family (rather than neutral or jewel tones). This color is named jodhpur, which of course calls to mind India and the richness of colors that characterize that country. To me, though, the color looks like the red dirt of home. I like it so much more than I thought I would when I saw it in the ravelry forums of people who got theirs before I got mine. Here, look:
I don’t know what I’ll make with just one skein of it – fingering weight, only 465 yards – but for now I’m just going to cuddle it, eat some Texas caviar, and dream of home.
texas caviar don’t have nuthin to do with them dang fish eggs.
I used to maintain a food blog, and had a lot of fun doing it. This salad, or dip, or whatever you want to call it, was always a favorite of the blog visitors, few of whom had ever heard of it. At room temperature, it’s tangy and spicy and fresh and meaty (from the blackeyed peas) and limey and hot and you think this is the last bite, but you just have to have one more. I present you: Texas caviar.

Ingredients:
4 cups of cooked black-eyed peas (or 2 16-oz cans), drained and rinsed of all juice
1 bunch scallions, thinly sliced (i use the green and white parts)
1 tablespoon fresh oregano
1 tablespoon Tabasco sauce
1 tablespoon Worchestershire sauce
1 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 bunch cilantro, chopped
3 canned or fresh jalapeño chiles, chopped (or more, add a habanero if you really like heat)
1 can Rotel tomatoes or 1 ripe, chopped tomato
3/4 cup olive oil
Juice from one lime
1 yellow bell pepper, finely chopped (red bell peppers are good too)
3 cloves fresh garlic, pressed or minced (or more….I usually use 6)
Mix everything together, and taste and adjust as you wish. Chill for four hours. Serve at room temperature with tortilla or corn chips.
It’s really, really, really good. Do you have a go-to dish like this, one that’s cheap and easy to throw together, that everyone always loves?
This is funny, coming on the heels of my last post, I know. But really, just get yourself ready because you’re about to be very very happy. I found this through Roger Ebert’s wonderful twitter feed (follow him, you’ll be happy about that too!):
Continue Reading–1 words totally
let me try to make you smile. come on…..
Three very different things that made me smile (I’m trying to start the day off on a positive note, since I still have my pissed-off author to deal with):
From the NYTimes: “There is a sublime silliness to Halsman’s images that can make you laugh or at least smile regardless of how often you see them. They may offer incontrovertible proof of Schiller’s claim that ‘all art is dedicated to joy.’ Evidently the simple act of getting off the ground requires giving in to something like joy. You have to let go. One of the purest examples of this joy is an image of Halsman himself, holding hands with a smiling Marilyn Monroe several feet off the ground. Facing his partner, he seems ecstatic, as if he cannot believe his luck.” Credit: The Estate of Philippe Halsman/Laurence Miller Gallery
Second: this line from Nabokov, which has haunted me since I read it yesterday. “The breaking of a wave cannot explain the whole sea.”
And third, one minkey down, one to go:
And a bonus thing that made me smile and feel all sorts of things, courtesy of an email from Marnie:
“have you seen marina abramovic’s endurance performance “the artist is present,” where she sits in chair for the entire length of her retrospective. there is a chair opposite her, and visitors sit and look at her and she looks back. the flickr group is so compelling: about 1/4 of the people are in tears.”
Here’s to an interesting Wednesday.
oh yeah? then how would YOU define it?
I go around thinking I know a thing or two, especially where words are concerned. I was one of those funny little kids who spent all her free time reading the World Book from A to Z, the Child Craft from beginning to end, the dictionary from AA to Zygyzy….read and repeat. Read and repeat. Then embroider a little pillowcase. Then back to the obsessive reading. I still love to read, and love dictionaries and reference books. My graduate research – and my dissertation – were all about the psychological import of the specific words people use. I love words and think about them a lot.
So imagine my surprise to listen to a great little TED Talk, by Alain de Botton, in which he defined the word snob in a way I’d never heard: a snob is someone who takes a small part of you and uses that to come to a complete vision of who you are. At first, I kind of jumped back a little and did some sassy back talk to Senor de Botton: IS NOT! That’s too simple, and anyway, that’s the definition of stereotype, so there. Ha. You’re wrong and I’m right.
But he’s right. That’s exactly what a snob is, isn’t it. It’s a topic of conversation on Ravelry, here and there – people self-identify as ‘yarn snobs’ and if someone talks about having used acrylic yarn, the yarn snobs sometimes come out of their dark corners to say unkind things. So those who don’t want to use acrylic yarn have decided that people who do use acrylic yarn are … well, a whole bunch of things. It’s very interesting to think about the word snob in this way, and I haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since I listened to the podcast in line at Starbucks 2 hours ago. Here’s the talk – it’s very nice, and is more about success and failure than about snobbery, though snobbery does have its place in the mix:
Today has been a really shitty day, there’s no other way to say it. One of my authors has decided that I personally betrayed him because of the way we had to price his book, and he has spent an awful lot of energy and pixels writing me the same email a dozen ways, emphasizing the personal nature of the betrayal. To soothe myself a little, since I am working at home today, I cast on 15 stitches and knit a few rows of stockinette in this luscious madelinetosh pastoral, colorway terrarium. I have to say, it did make me feel better:
And I’m nearly finished with one sock, will knock out the toe tonight and cast on for the other one, so I can work on it in the subway tomorrow:
I’ve decided to name this pair of socks “minkeys” – a play on pink monkeys, and also I hear it in my mind in the Inspector Clouseau voice and that just makes me giggle.
I hope you’re having a better day than I am!
don’t hide!
my spirit animal must be an ostrich. i know that’s not a fancy spirit animal, or an elegant one, but it does seem to be mine. if everything is A-OK, buddy i can face it and do what needs to be done. but if anything gets a little bit wobbly, i just hide my head and do a bit of psychic fingers-in-the-ears ‘la la la i can’t hear anything’. and then the hiding takes on a life of its own, and i begin to feel so awful about having hidden, and having avoided people, that it just gets harder and harder to do what needs to be done. and doing what needs to be done becomes increasingly heavy, since – you know – it’s not being done.
i love the spirit of amy herzog’s ‘fit to flatter’ series, for a great many reasons. the reason that’s relevant to this post is that she says ‘here’s what IS, and here’s how to work with it.’ that’s right: this is how i actually do look. actually. not how i wish i looked; not ‘how i’ll look when i lose 10 pounds;’ not how i used to look; not how the victoria’s secret models that i walk past every morning look (well, how they look with a lot of airbrushing and photoshopping). no. this is how i look, right now, and it is.
i’ve enjoyed the fit to flatter posts, every single one. i’ve enjoyed seeing actual photographs of real women, and how real women actually look – and they look great, they look like regular people. like me. on top of the ridiculous blight of advertising and overly skinny models, i also live in manhattan, which seems to have a greater-than-average percentage of fancy people. i am not a fancy person. i am an average-looking person, an average 51 year old who has given birth to 3 children, who has had major abdominal surgery, who has less-than-perfect posture, who can be lazy and just throw on whatever is convenient, who could certainly benefit from more exercise.
facing what actually is requires either a bit of courage, or an attitude stripped of judgment. i think it’s the stripped attitude that helps the most. step on the scale and just look. open your eyes, really just look at that number. ok, that’s what is. and open that email and just look at it – that’s it. and go ahead and open the envelope, open the mail, look at what it actually is. what’s amazing – and i do already know this – is just how powerful it feels to go ahead and do that. i always feel so righteous, like i can just keep doing it, it’s so much easier – working is always easier than not working – and from now on i’m just going to do it. i’ll adopt a new spirit animal, something that Gets. It. Done. i wonder what that would be.
flying the great circles
Well, anyway, I’ll be flying over the North Pole when I go to Laos and Cambodia in the fall. Want to see? I’m so excited!
That leg will be 15 hours, following a Great Circle, then I’ll change planes and fly 3 hours to Phnom Penh. I’m flying Cathay Pacific, which may well be a great airline, but it’s not Singapore Airlines, which is the airline I flew to Vietnam. But I don’t care! It’ll be my 2nd flight over the North Pole, I am a very very lucky girl. Here are the specifics, once I’m there:
I just finished watching The Big Sleep and spinning – what a nice morning! I slept in so late – 9:30! – and wish the day weren’t half over, but what to do. You need a lazy day now and then, right? Now I think I’ll make some bread, my favorite ciabatta recipe, and then do some knitting, and maybe a little more movie watching. One of my goals is to see all the AFI’s top 100 films, so there’s an abundance waiting for me. I hope you’re having such a lovely Sunday too!
finally! an FO to report!
Some people are much worse than me, in terms of having a lot of works in progress. I hear campfire tales about lone knitters who work on one thing at a time….urban myths? I don’t know. I don’t personally know anyone like that. It’s been such a long time since I had a finished object to post, because (a) I don’t get much time to knit, (b) the projects I’m working on are either large or cobweb lace, and (c) my subway knitting project was not as quick as a pair of socks, but was……..
announcing…….
my Baktus scarf!
- baktus
- wearing the baktus scarf
- and again…this way!
It was a lot of fun to knit, even though Noro Silk Garden Sock isn’t at all nice to work with. When I’m knitting in the subway, I have my briefcase bag slung over one shoulder, and a large bag hung on my other shoulder holding my laptop, odds and ends, and my knitting. This was unwieldy, since I had a cake of Noro and a skein of KnitPicks Essentials just tossed in the bag. As I went back and forth, switching colors, they’d get all wound around each other, and the other junk in the bag, and it was a hot mess.
So it certainly took me long enough, but at last I have some knitting to post on this “knitting blog.” Baktus is very warm and cozy, and I know I’ll enjoy wearing it when winter comes around again.
Project notes:
- my rav page
- US 4/0 — 1.25mm
- Knit Picks Essential Kettle Dyed
- Noro Silk Garden Sock
poetry about creativity – including murder?
There will be time to murder and create,
And time for all the works and days of hands
That lift and drop a question on your plate;
Time for you and time for me,
And time yet for a hundred indecisions,
And for a hundred visions and revisions,
Before the taking of a toast and tea.
~~T.S. Eliot, from The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
In placid hours well-pleased we dream
Of many a brave unbodied scheme.
But form to lend, pulsed life create,
What unlike things must meet and mate:
A flame to melt—a wind to freeze;
Sad patience—joyous energies;
Humility—yet pride and scorn;
Instinct and study; love and hate;
Audacity—reverence. These must mate,
And fuse with Jacob’s mystic heart,
To wrestle with the angel—Art.
~~Herman Melville, Art
OK, it’s imperishable or a world as Will
& Idea, a Hindu illusion that our habits continuously
Create. Whatever I think, it
Keeps changing from bright to dark, from clear
To colored: Thus before I began to think and
So after I’ve stopped, as if it were real & I
Were its illusion
~~Philip Whalen, from The Same Old Jazz
Her pencil poised, she’s ready to create,
Then listens to her mind’s perverse debate
On whether what she does serves any use;
And that is all she needs for an excuse
To spend all afternoon and half the night
Enjoying poems other people write.
~~Leslie Monsour, The Education of a Poet
Flesh of the sky, child of the sky, the mind
Has been obligated from the beginning
To create an ordered universe
As the only possible proof of its own inheritance.
~~Pattiann Rogers, from The Origin of Order
Have you read Veronica, by Mary Gaitskill?
Have you read Veronica, by Mary Gaitskill? If not that one, any other by Gaitskill? I get to select our book for next month’s book club, and while I’ve been eagerly waiting my turn, finding out that I’m up next has thrown me into a bit of a tizzy. I realized anew just how personal reading choices are, and while I’m pretty sure it would be impossible to pick a single book that would appeal to this whole crowd, I’d like to select something that would grab them. It’s a bunch of really smart professional women, and I’m the oldest, and the only mother. My boss is in the group, as are three co-workers and one former co-worker.
So I’m thinking Veronica might be interesting, but I’d sure like to hear from anyone who’s read it.
creativity boot camp. you know you want to do it.
Luckily I don’t have to shave my head, or worry about the current [flabby] state of my abs and pecs, because this boot camp is all about creativity. And it’s FREE. Sign up? I just did. It runs June 6-18.
I don’t know what to expect, exactly, but it might show up in my blog posts during that period.
My kids are extremely creative; my oldest daughter teaches 1st grade (and is Teacher of the Year, hell yeah) and she can whip up the coolest things without even thinking about it. The kids in her classes are lucky ducks. My second daughter is an artist (buy her work here please, at monkeyrope press…but you have to move quickly because her stuff is selling like hotcakes!). The work in her shop is her commercial stuff; she’s very much a conceptual artist too, but that work shows up in galleries rather than in her etsy shop. My son is just so gifted verbally, and he’s hilarious and creative without giving it a second’s thought.
Their father likes to draw, and I make a lot of stuff, so I guess they came by it honestly, but they took our meager gifts to new heights. I wish I were more creative; I’m a pretty good technician, but I wouldn’t say I’m creative, except with language now and then.
So here’s to boot camp, and to more creativity in the world!
you know what they say about women.
I saw this come up in someone’s twitter feed today – Roger Ebert, maybe? I can’t remember. Anyway, there’s a site called Never Marry a Woman with Big Feet [hey!!], and it’s a collection of international proverbs about women. You really get a sense of a culture’s take on women by looking at their proverbs, I must say, for example:
She who offers a half-cooked meal is better than she who offers her buttocks.
— Rwanda [not quite sure I get this one, but I think they really like food?]
The thicker the veil, the less it’s worth lifting.
— Turkish [a universal truth in some ways, certainly not just about women, although it's not true at all about Truth]
A woman’s beauty makes fish sink and wild geese fall from the sky.
— Chinese [the Chinese are now my favorites, unless I've totally misunderstood the meaning]
Every woman is beautiful in the dark, from a distance, and under an umbrella.
— Japanese [hey! that's a jerk thing to say!]
A woman who knows Latin will never find a husband nor come to a good end.
— all over Europe [oh, you wacky Europeans]
I personally like proverbs that I’ve learned from women – especially old women – and more especially, from old Texas women like my grandmother, who taught me “Don’t worry about the blind mule, honey, just load up the wagon.” Or one from my grandfather Big Daddy, about some female relative: “She’d talk your right arm off and whisper in the hole.”
I love those colorful old proverbs. Personally, I try to work in the one about the blind mule at every opportunity. Do you have a favorite?
please click through on this one!
Have you ever read something that just haunts you? Everyone has, probably, in one form or another. But this story truly haunts me, it hovers around the edges, it has even shown up in a dream. The Seventh Man, by Haruki Murakami, was read by John Shea at Symphony Space. I’ve attended the Selected Shorts readings at Symphony Space, and they’re almost always wonderful. I haven’t read this story, and even if I did, I heard it read first, and that reading may partially account for the haunting nature of it — but I suspect it’s deeply embedded in the story itself. John Shea’s reading of it is just magnificent – dramatic, loud, whispering, terrified, exhausted. It’s a relatively long listen – 40 minutes (I think….time just stops when I listen to it, which I’ve done 10 or 11 times).
I’ve typed and erased several attempts to introduce you to the story, to make you want to listen, but whatever I write just misses the boat enough to make me afraid you won’t. It’s really an incredible story. At Symphony Space, it was part of a program called “Deepening Insight” so it’s about the main character’s insight into the most terrible and affecting thing that ever happened to him. If you like to think about metaphor and meaning and transformation and life, please please please give it a try.
I won’t continue to tease; if you want to listen, here you go, and if you want to read it, click here. [note: don't be put off when you start listening - the program featured 2 stories, and this clip begins with a snippet of the 2nd story, followed by the introduction of John Shea, who will then start reading. Be patient, the story starts around a minute and a half.] If you want to keep listening, the 2nd story is included in the audio, too, after the Murakami.
I’d like to know about stories that have had this kind of effect on you. My reading time is pretty severely limited, and I prefer to read things that at least have the potential to knock me back like this. I love literary fiction – Cormac McCarthy, Salman Rushdie, Rohinton Mistry, Murakami – so I’m always interested in a recommendation of a powerful story. Got one to share with me?
i ain’t afraid of no ghosts
spinning wheel, got to go round
A long time ago, in a life now far away, I had a 48″ 4-harness floor loom, an 8-harness table loom, an upright Navajo loom, and a spinning wheel. My wheel was a LeClerc, and that baby and I went everywhere. It wasn’t good for traveling, because of its size, but that didn’t stop me from wedging it into the back seat and hitting the road. I went to a weekly spinning group in Austin. I spun at the Pecan Street Festival, at Aqua Festival, and other places and events around Austin. And I loved it. This isn’t my picture, but here’s what my wheel looked like, to give you a sense of it:
I miss it. I miss spinning, it’s so relaxing and meditative, and you just press that pedal and go…go…go…go…
But no using crying over lost wheels. I wouldn’t have room for it here in NYC, anyway. Instead, I’ve gone back to the beginning for a little drop spindle spinning. I bought a beautiful bunch of Lorna’s Lace wool top, in a multitude of blues, aquas, and purples. Here’s what I have, after a bit of spinning:
You can easily tell that I’m out of practice, and haven’t yet found my spindle legs – wait, that sounds strange. Haven’t yet found my spindle rhythm, that’s better. But it’ll be so much fun getting it back. I wonder what I’ll make with this yarn?
My NY people aren’t makers. They look at me with bewilderment. What are you doing? Why are you doing that? Why are you making yarn, is it cheaper or something? Such a huge gulf between makers and non-makers.
Oh! I almost forgot to show you today’s “stash enhancement” (as I just saw someone euphemistically call it – I love that. I didn’t spend money unnecessarily, I enhanced my stash!): Madelinetosh pastoral, in a colorway she calls terrarium. It’s olive green, and brown, and gold, and little flashes of pale blue. REAL PURTY.
what makes YOU happy?
This was the newest post on Dropped Stitches, and it just caught me at the right moment to think about the question myself. What makes me happy?
great big blue skies full of mountains of white clouds

the smell of bread baking

certain songs that make me so happy i cry. and they’re often unexpected, like the ending of Say You’ll Be There, by the Spice Girls. (SPICE GIRLS!!! really? I’m 51 years old with way too much education!)

that shift in the light and air when fall has really arrived

brownies

my kids’ voices and hands, any time
the plane lifting off the ground

the smell that means i’m home
those moments when i feel peace inside myself
You play along, too! It’ll make you feel good.
in the bleakness of night, i go to extremes. don’t you?
If you ever find yourself awake in the middle of the night – I mean, waking up in the middle of the night after being asleep – this experience is probably familiar to you. Thoughts can seem entirely profound: life is to be lived! I never truly understood that – life is to be lived! And then, in the light of day, the profundity just isn’t there. Well, yeah, life is to be lived. And thoughts can seem entirely bleak and hopeless, too. Problems so huge, woes unresolvable, pressures unbearable – but when the day comes around, they really don’t seem so awful. I finally learned to say that to myself when I’m lost in the dark: even though it feels hopeless, you know it’s going to seem much better tomorrow, during the day, even if that really doesn’t seem possible right now. It doesn’t stop the paralyzing thoughts, but it does help me make it through to the morning without totally freaking out. I have had the experience of profundity gone banal, but much more often, it’s the bleakness of problems that haunts my middle-night waking, and it’s a very strange state. I lie there in a kind of suspended way, with thoughts swirling all around me, like electric chaos. My eyes are open, but I don’t feel anchored in any way.
Why is that! What is it about the middle of the night that can drive thoughts to the extremes like that? I don’t think it’s just the quiet, or the dark; I have gone into my office during the day, closed the door, and lowered the blinds so it’s pretty dark, and find that my thoughts just get clearer. I think the push to extremity must come from something within us, something about the contrast from the sleeping state. Maybe something FROM the sleeping state. I don’t know – do you have any ideas about this?
That Carolyn Kellogg is clever!
I’ve experienced this myself, and I always feel disappointment when I read another blogger say something like “I’m done, I’ve said all there is to say and I’m retiring my blog.” Maybe you’ve felt either or both sides of this, too. So I just saw a wonderful revision of a poem speaking to this issue, on the LATimes blog (and click to read the post, because it’s actually about the closing of a great blog):
Do Not Go Gentle Into That Internet Fog
by Dylan Thomas
remixed by Carolyn Kellogg
Do not go gentle into that internet fog,
Writing should burn and rage complete
Rage, rage against the dying of the blog.
Unwise men think sentences do bog,
But what can be said in just a Tweet?
Do not go gentle into that internet fog.
Good men at laptops watch agog,
Their words sucked into a Facebook data sheet
Rage, rage against the dying of the blog.
A wild man who drinks the German grog
Leaves updates, a 4G phone — he’s indiscreet!
Do not go gentle into that internet fog.
Grave men crave followers and flog
And flog for more with desperate heat
Rage, rage against the dying of blog.
And you, dear poets, know writing is no slog
The ebb and flow of words is sweet
Do not go gentle into that internet fog,
Rage, rage against the dying of the blog.
– Carolyn Kellogg
click through for a gorgeous song
Do you like very sweet and beautiful harmony? Two girls with voices that mesh so softly and beautifully? Guitar? Ukulele? Feist? (of course you like Feist, 1234, Mushaboom, So Sorry, Sea Lion Woman, Inside and Out, My Moon My Man, Sesame Street for heaven’s sake!)
OK, these girls are not Feist, of course, but they’re singing one of her songs and I have now listened to it 7 times in a row. I place it here so I can always find it, and I hope it makes you feel the same sweet happiness:
I love those girls.
in which organizing gets me out of cleaning
So here was the deal. My mission for the day was to completely redo my bedroom, which is a MESS. It’s cluttered, I have zero storage, no closet, too-large pieces of furniture, stuff stacked on every flat surface, wedged into every little space, and since I live in Manhattan (on the street level), there’s a general coating of grime that creeps in no matter what I do. There’s one large armoire, one large chest, two desks, a queen-sized bed, a built-in bookcase. And a little bit of floorspace. My desk has a bookcase above it, and there’s stuff stacked on the desk, on top of the bookcase. It’s awful.
On my desk were my newest yarn purchases, and I paused to fondle them for a bit — like you do, you know. I looked around at the leftover balls of yarn stuffed in between books, and got my brilliant idea: I know! I can’t really start working on our bedroom until I do something with all. this. yarn. Right?
So I pulled it all out, photographed many of the surprises I found, updated
my stash page on ravelry, organized, weighed the partial skeins, numbered the plastic bins where I store all the yarn, and noted the specific bin on each ravelry stash page. OH DON’T I FEEL ALL RIGHTEOUS! If you’re a raveler, you can see my stash page here. You know how wonderful it feels to get everything all organized. Especially when it allows you to avoid doing something you really don’t want to do.
On that note, I think I’d better go clean the kitchen, you know, it’s a mess and I’ll be able to focus on our bedroom once that kitchen is cleaned.
Sushi tonight with DD#3. Tulips delivered at work from DD#1. Nice phone chat with DD#2 this afternoon, with a promise of another chat tomorrow – and a phone chat with DD#1, too. It’s a lovely Mother’s Day weekend.
Fraggle Rock or Janelle Monae? How about Fraggle Rock AND Janelle Monae?
You’ll have to decide which is which:
The thrill of knitting, sung by the Doozers on Fraggle Rock:
And it’s really too bad I can’t embed this video because if you saw even a single frame, you’d click through to watch. So please take my word and at least give it a try: Janelle Monae (ft. Big Boi) singing Tightrope. When Marnie was here last week, I thought we’d watched it on YouTube but it’s not there now. Thank you Marnie for introducing me, and you’re welcome, to anyone who clicks through and finds a new true musical love.
yarn – lots and lots of new yarn!
squeal! joy! rapture! What is more fun to a knitter than getting new yarn? NOT MUCH. (Sure, there are the children and family, yay them we loves them, of course….) But new yarn! That makes me clap my hands and do little jumps up and down. Pretty! Soft! And pretty – gotta say it twice! Want to see?
Of course you do.
You know I talk a lot about madelinetosh. I love her yarns, her deep and rich colors, the yarn bases themselves. So I’m a member of the yarn club, which means that in a 4 month period, I get three surprise packages. I know what kind of yarn I’ll get, I just don’t know the color. This time I got three skeins of pashmina (pashmina, people! merino, silk, and cashmere!) in this beautiful color she calls mineral. It’s yummy, and I can’t wait to have enough time to knit with it. What should I make?
Even though I don’t like Noro, I took one more chance because this was on sale. And boy am I glad I did – unlike the sock yarn, which might as well be made of straw, this one is s-o-f-t. Soft soft soft. It’s 45% silk, 45% mohair, and 10% wool. Soft wool. I got 2 skeins each of these gorgeous colors:
And now let’s turn to KnitPicks. I promised Marnie a pair of socks; I’ve knit the other daughters a couple of pairs of socks each, so now it’s her turn. Felici is not just incredibly soft, it stands up to a lot of wear! My pair just might be my favorite socks — I definitely wear them when I need comfort. Marnie graduated from Smith College and knows her way around feminist thought, so why not pink!
And one more from KnitPicks – Stroll Tonal, fingering weight. Two skeins of this golden beauty:
Why oh why do I have to waste all those hours in sleep? Think of all the knitting I could get done.
i’m smitten by madelinetosh
OH MY, is this an easy one. If you look through my stash, or my completed projects, or even just this blog, you’ll see that I’m in a passionate love affair with madelinetosh. It’s not perfect, I’m not blind to the less-good parts, but I’m so smitten by the colors, the fiber, the sheer pleasure of working with the yarns, I’m willing to overlook the other bits. You know, like you do with anyone you love. Sure, they can be snippy before they’ve had their coffee, but they’re so good to you when you’re in trouble, so a bit of snippiness? Small potatoes.
Over time I’m sure our relationship will deepen, my love will continue to grow. She’ll grow and change, I’ll grow and change, but when love is this real, you just know that somehow you’ll grow and change together. Here we are at our current stage of love and adoration:
I’m on my 2nd journey with the yarn club, and that’s such a great experience. A package shows up and I have no idea what will be inside, except I know it will be amazing. Here’s what I got with the last shipment:
Amy, the incredible color artist behind this brand, has such a way with color; each skein is flavored with delicate hues surrounding its primary color. The yellows have bits of gold, and sunshine, and daffodil. The pine greens have bits of near-black, and teal, and pine. And don’t get me started on the reds. She also has a great flair for naming her yarns, and for working in abstraction; I can’t think of any specifics right now, but she’ll name something like Emily Dickinson, something like that. Now what color(s) would that be? I can tell you it’s different from Proust. I enjoy that.
For true love, you have to be able and willing to acknowledge that all is not perfect, even if it’s perfect enough. It can be hard to find the yarn you want, and it’s in such demand you have to act fast or it’s gone. There is a great deal of variability in each colorway because she dyes it in small batches; while this is wonderful and not a problem if you’re knitting something small, it can make it very difficult to knit larger projects, like sweaters. {Note of warning to any new readers of my blog: look at all the skeins together, in good light, before beginning a sweater. I got down to the sleeves on a cardigan only to find that my 2 remaining skeins were a kind of harsh blue black, while all the others were soft shades of charcoal, dark to lighter gray. SCREWED. Luckily, I found a couple of ravelers who were willing to share their stashes with me, and luckier still, their skeins matched my charcoal skeins.} Also, madelinetosh offers a nice range of bases, but protect your heart and don’t fall too hard in love with any of them because you might get hurt. Madelinetosh pastoral, a gorgeous silk and merino blend, just disappeared, much to the anguish of ravelers in the madelinetosh lovers forum. A couple of my favorite projects were knit with pastoral, and I wanted to knit more more more. Alas.
But then again, perhaps this is a good reminder of the transitory nature of life. Don’t cling, don’t hold tight, that is the way of suffering. Let go – let it pass through you, acknowledge, appreciate, and let it go. See? Madelinetosh even helps put life into perspective.
Click here for other bloggers’ stories about their favorite yarns: knitcroblo7































































































construction projects
a few new features in Thrums world.
I’ve added a couple of things to the blog, and I thought I’d make a little formal introduction. See up there, on the menu bar under the masthead, where it says Home, About, To-Do, and now….F.O. Gallery! If you’re a knitter, you already know this, but if you’re not, F.O. means finished object. We also have WIPs (works-in-progress), and we frog, which means we rip out our work. I’m not going to have a Frogged tab, though I certainly could! And the WIPs show up here on a regular basis in my posts. So if you’ve got some time to spare, take a stroll through the galleries. They’re broken down by year, which isn’t a big deal because I’ve only been knitting consistently since 2008.
I also added a widget to let me feature recent comments, there on the right sidebar underneath the popular posts. So that’s fun! Hi, my friendly commenters, I’m always so glad to hear from you. If you’re a new (or long-term!) lurker, come on out of the shadows, leave a little note. I’ve found some wonderful blogs this way, and I’d love to visit yours.
And finally, if you’re ever in the mood for some music from the fabulous 1970s, but you just don’t know where to turn for a quick hit, stop by and scroll to the bottom of the sidebar, just underneath the flickr widget. There you’ll see my Grooveshark playlist of a few faves from the 1970s — and I don’t care what anyone says, it was a decade of fabulous hair, great style, and groovy music. I even had an afro!