Showing posts with label great american afghan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label great american afghan. Show all posts

Friday, March 29, 2013

Spring is Here! (even though it doesn't really seem like it)

Despite the still-frozen pond....
I can feel it.  Spring is in the air.   This week, the days were a little warmer and I got outside with the doodlebugs for some great walks.  Busses!  Cars!  More Cars!  Planes!  and, wait for it....Even. More. Cars!  The gasps of delight at everything that passed by was hilarious.  And who knew watching furniture guys unload a chair at some random house could be so riveting?  Even though we've still got snow on the ground up here on the hill, and we're still waiting to see buds on the trees, the warm air is encouraging and we just know more is coming.

And Spring also means Easter.  Today and tomorrow are bread-baking marathon days.  Some for the baked french toast I'll be making for Easter brunch, and some for giving away.  My sample loaf last week went over well with my taste testers, so I'm using the same recipe.  Stay tuned for an update on all this yummy goodness!

Spring, however, does not mean I stop knitting with wool!....

In Knitting News:
My Meadowlark is done!

Picture with me in it to come when I have a photographer...
I re-read the directions, which said that the i-cord down the front edges was optional (yay!) so, of course, I opted out.  I actually really didn't think the i-cord would look as good on the fronts since it is supposed to be drapey/wavey.  Like this:
The i-cord would make it sturdy and not-as-drapey.  But it's great to give the arm holes some shape:
Before i-cord
After i-cord.  See?  Neater.
Also, lots of progress on my Bloody Mary Cardigan... the back is done:
I'm excited, although I'm slighty concerned about my yarn amounts.  I should have 100 extra yards.  However, I've used almost a whole skein (of my three skeins) on the back.  I still have the two fronts, two sleeves, button bands and collar to do.  I think I'm worrying too early.

I also finished Square #10 from the Great American Afghan book:
This makes 5 sqaures completed, one in each color. This gives you an idea of my color scheme:
I'm a little not sure about it now.  I don't know why.  I'm trying to imagine it done, and I feel like it will be really busy.  I'm thinking that I will use the darker color for the border to reign in the other lighter colors.  Ha!  Can you see how I'm already thinking about the border when I still have 20 (twenty) more squares to knit and that could take ages?

I also became obsessed with the Lightspeed shawl/scarf-y thing:
Sample picture from Ravelry.com
So here are my colors:
(That's navy blue on the right.)
I'm starting it today when I run out of my Bloody Mary yarn -- I have to go to The Spinning Room yarn shop to wind the next skein on their ball winder since it is a jumbo skein!

In Book News:
The Last Time They Met by Anita Shreve:  I suffered through this one. 
The Amazon description is:
"From the last time Linda and Thomas meet, at a charmless hotel in a distant city, to the moment, thirty-five years earlier, when a chance encounter on a rocky beach binds them fatefully together, this hypnotically compelling novel unfolds a tale of intense passion, drama, and suspense. "  My take on it:  It was non-hypnotic, depressing and blah.  I just didn't enjoy the story line. 

I have had mixed personal reviews of Anita Shreve's books.  Some I have liked, some I have not.  I loved Light on Snow (see my blog review here).

In Other News:
I am going to participate in the NaBloPoMo (National Blog Posting Month) in April, which means I will be posting every day for the whole month.  That's the goal anyway! The idea of this is to get writing and re-juvenate my ideas for the blog. The theme for April is "Fresh" since spring gives us a fresh start etc.  My posts may or may not have to do with the theme (they don't have to), and I'll just see where it takes me.  So, just warning you (or delightfully informing you, if that's the case) that there will be a lot of posting going on.  After that, I'll go back to my regular programming.  If you are not signed up to receive email notifications when there is a new post, you can do so by going to the sidebar on the right! 

Monday, March 18, 2013

No words

The other day I had to take a 19 month old's word for it.....without any words.  It is a daily struggle to prevent one toddler from taking the other's toy.  I'm usually on top of it, intervening to teach them that they can't do this and how to wait their turn.  Or decide when it's time to share and play with it together.  Even when I'm giving them some independent play time and I'm knitting or checking email, I usually see what's happening out of the corner of my eye.  The other day, though, I dropped the ball.

Benjamin and Michaela were playing while I sat on the couch and checked my email.  Suddenly, it got very quiet.  I looked up and both Benjamin and Michaela were looking at me: Benjamin holding a toy; Michaela frozen, reaching for it.  This was clearly an Auntie-Liz-will-be-the-one-to-say-who-gets-it situation.  Since they are not talking yet, aside from a few words here and there, no one could rationally explain to me who was playing with it and who took it or, more likely, who wanted it but couldn't have it.  But I wasn't looking when it happened!  So I said, "Who had it first?"  Michaela put both hands on her chest indicating herself and looking very hopeful.  I said, "Benjamin, give it back." And he did.  Hopefully, Michaela really did have it first (she is usually the taking culprit).  But, I took her "word" for it this time.  The days of words are coming fast, though, and I hope I'm ready!

In St. Patrick's Day News:
We went out to breakfast and this is what I got:
This was called Lazy Leprechan's Benedict.  White toast, bacon, over-medium eggs and green hollandaise.  It. Was. Yummy.

Then, since St. Patrick's Day is alot about eating, I put corned beef in the crock pot with onion, red pepper flakes, beef broth and worcestershire sauce:
Ugh.  That's a pretty unappetizing picture.  My food stying could certainly use some help.  But it was also yummy, with roasted potatoes.

On to Knitting News:
Lots of progress on my Bloody Mary Cardigan!
 
Isn't it pretty? That is 15", on my way to 22" before I need to do something at the armholes.  I love it. 
 
I also worked on my afghan square:
....also coming along nicely.

I'll be back to working on my Meadowlark vest today - I got carried away with excitement about finally finding a cardigan pattern. 

And, finally, in the aftermath of all my recent knitting stumbling blocks, an appropriate quote:
Fall seven times, stand up eight.
-Japanese Proverb
 


Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Houston, we've had some problems.

Remember the last frantic post about all that knitting I had planned and ready to start immediately?

Well, until today, I have knitted exactly 7 rows of my Harumi cardigan since then. That's it.

First was the issue that my A Fine Fleece: Knitting with Handspun Yarns book with the Flyingdales pattern in it did not arrive on Friday. Or Saturday. Or Monday.  I guess I got a little excited, ignoring that the shipping information that said it would be delivered between March 8 and March 25.  That's crazy, but I figured since it was coming from Pennsylvania, it would get here by March 8.

Then there was the issue that I realized the cover pattern for the other book I bought....
...is made with a bulky yarn, not worsted weight. Problem being that the only bulky yarn I have is Lamb's Pride Bulky, a very dense wool/mohair yarn which will make me incredibly HOT when I wear it. I know from whence I speak since I made my Heather Hoodie Vest with it and have only worn it once because I roasted it in. And it's only a VEST. No sleeves.  So I have to find a bulky yarn that is a little loftier/less dense and not a wool/mohair blend.  Ugh. I was trying to use my stash!

Ooh wait! I did make some progress on my Meadowlark.
Joined the left front to the back/neck.  It's a crazy picture.  You are looking at the back with an armhole on the left and the left front laid out flat-ish.  But, then I was at a "picking up" part that I didn't feel like doing so that got put down.

And I only got 7 rows of my Harumi cardigan (mentioned above) done because of all the ridiculous/confusing/ complicated instructions involving adding repeats when you've increased a certain number if stitches. There are two different pattern repeats to keep track of, and 5 sections across the row, and some of these changes take place on the right side and some on the wrong side, and not on the same row. Oh! My brain just kept getting cramped and I may need a spreadsheet.

Needless to say, I was feeling very unproductive on a weekend that I had time to be productive.  But then.... today came.  Good 'ol Tuesday.  A good recovery-after-a-Monday-day. Today, my book came!  So, tonight I will cast on for my Flyingdales.

And today, during naptime, I worked on my afghan square.
However, I did run into some snags with one of the charts.  I didn't seem to have enough stitches but I counted them and I did.  Then I looked at the chart and counted the squares - right above where it says "26 sts" across.... and there were 24.  Go ahead and count them if you like.  I looked at the pattern to see if I was missing some stitches that I was supposed to add in addition to the chart but no, not the case.  Then I looked at the chart on the original pattern.  Aha. I had copied the chart to blow it up since the one in the book was miniscule.  I thought to myself when I copied it, "Wow, I just nearly got the whole chart when I copied it."  I just needed to add the numbers down the left side.  Well, what I really did was get the whole chart, minus exactly two columns. The copy didn't even make a half a column to clue me in. Der.  At any rate, since it was Tuesday and not Monday, I didn't let it bother me and I'm on my way now.

And soon, but not today, I will get the hang of the Harumi pattern and get that unfinished thing done in time to wear it for spring.  I hope.  It's cotton, so maybe on a cool summer night too....that would give me some extra time.

So, Houston, we're back on track.  Next post:  a book review and two little easy as pie (but they aren't pie) recipes!

Friday, March 8, 2013

I'm in deep.

I'm not quite ready to admit I'm over the edge, but I'm in deep.  I'm knitting 80 million things and I'm about to start another as long as the book comes in the mail today and I want to start even another one because of a book I had to get last night.

First, I finished another afghan square from the Great American Afghan (#14):
...and just cast on for #10:
 I know, that picture doesn't tell you anything.  You can't see the square or the color of the yarn.  I'll get back to you on that one.

In the meantime, I finally got out another of my unfinished projects, the Harumi Cardigan, and finally got the "hard" part going.  "Hard" meaning, putting stitches on holder, putting in markers and getting set up to work on the patterned part:
And I've made some good progress on my Meadowlark vest:

Then, there's this book I got last night:
I love the cover pattern and want to knit it right now.  This book has been staring at me every time I've gone to The Spinning Room for the past very long time.  I just kept thinking that I have so many other patterns, surely there was another one I could  knit that I already have or that wouldn't cost so much.  But then, the other day my friend Jana emailed me a picture of this book saying"Just noticed this on the cover of an Ella Rae book & thought it looked like something you would wear. Maybe it's just because its purple..." Ha! No kidding. So, then I was at the shop last night to teach a class and there it was, just staring at me again. So I bought it. Thanks for being an enabler, Jana. (See you tonight for dinner!)

But more than that sweater, I had totally forgotten that on the inside was this awesomeness:
....which I also want to knit right now.  It really is a sickness.

But ALSO????? I've been trying to find a pattern to knit with this great aran yarn I got at the New York Sheep and Wool Festival in Rhinebeck:
I wanted to do an "aran" sweater -- with lots of cables, but quickly realized this 1540 yards was not enough to do and all-over cabled sweater.  So, I found this:
This is a project picture from Ravelry of the Flyingdales sweater.  I will modify it to make a crew neck collar.  It's got cables but also stockinette so I won't run out of yarn.  The pattern is only in A Fine Fleece: Knitting with Handspun Yarns which I got for a steal on Amazon.  It's coming in the mail today.  I hope.  Because I really don't have anything else to knit.  Ha.

Do you need a project car update?  The doors are primered!:


And finally, poor Phoebe has now become known as Phattie:
She went to the vet last month since she seemed a little skinny.  It turned out she has a hyperactive thyroid so they put her on medicine.  We go back to the vet today for a follow up and I'm telling you, I think she's gained a pound and a half in a month.  Which is a lot for her since she was only 7 1/2 pounds to begin with.  They may need to tweak her medicine!

Friday, March 1, 2013

4:00am

I've been up since 4:00am.  I hate it when that happens.  You know when you wake up in the middle of the night, and you see the time and think, "Man, that's early.", and then you put your head back down to go back to sleep and then this one little thought gets in your head and forget it - you're whole brain starts going and the next thing you know your wide awake thinking, "Stop thinking! Go back to sleep.", and that only makes it worse, so then you are up?  You think about reading but the book you want to start is 860-ish pages in paperback and putting the book light on a book that size just wasn't going to happen.  And then you think, "Well, I may as well be productive with these thoughts since I'm just laying here doing nothing."  And then you get up, go downstairs, say hello to the cat, take some blog pictures even though it's still dark and you wanted to have good daylight for your next round of pictures but it just can't seem to wait until it's daylight.  Then you turn the computer on to start the blog and get sidetracked by a Knitpicks email that says they are having a sale on sock yarn and you have to stop yourself from making a middle-of-the-night-but-not-really impulse buy since you have sock yarn coming out your ears.  I'm sure you can relate.

In unrelated news, my little doodlebugs turned 19 months old yesterday.  They love to have The Cat in the Hat   read to them, and think it's hilarious to shake hands when we get to the part, "How do you do?  Would you like to shake hands with Thing One and Thing Two?".  They shake hands with me, then they shake hands with each other.  When my brother-in-law came home yesterday, we were just reading that part and they shook hands with him too.  So funny.

In Knitting News:
Some progress on the back of my Meadowlark-that-I-keep-wanting-to-call-Watershed, which is also a pattern I want to knit someday:

I also started another Great American Afghan square.  I couldn't seem to help myself.  It's #14.
Got almost half the square done during naptime yesterday.  I couldn't believe how fast it went.  It was much easier than I first thought it would be based on the chart:
Doesn't that look intimidating?  It's really very easy.  Just knits, purls and slipped stitches, and each line is has a fairly easy pattern to memorize so it just speeds along.

In Book News:
Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple: Loved. It.  So much.  I heard about this book from the Books on the Nightstand podcast.  I'm including the picture link for Amazon because I love the cover of the book.
I couldn't figure out how to describe the book, so I'm putting in the Amazon description:

"Bernadette Fox is notorious. To her Microsoft-guru husband, she's a fearlessly opinionated partner; to fellow private-school mothers in Seattle, she's a disgrace; to design mavens, she's a revolutionary architect, and to 15-year-old Bee, she is a best friend and, simply, Mom.

Then Bernadette disappears. It began when Bee aced her report card and claimed her promised reward: a family trip to Antarctica. But Bernadette's intensifying allergy to Seattle--and people in general--has made her so agoraphobic that a virtual assistant in India now runs her most basic errands. A trip to the end of the earth is problematic.


To find her mother, Bee compiles email messages, official documents, secret correspondence--creating a compulsively readable and touching novel about misplaced genius and a mother and daughter's role in an absurd world."


I couldn't put this book down. Finished it in 2 days. Written in mostly an epistolary format, using the above mentioned emails, documents etc., it just pulls you along and draws you into this intriguing family. It is very witty, heartbreaking, and also heartwarming.
Done with blog.  Still dark out.  Starting 860-ish page book in the living room with regular light, not a book light.

Friday, February 15, 2013

Sweet Valentine(s), a little knitting and a book review

Yesterday was Valentine's Day and my two sweet little Valentine's gave me this:
And lots of hugs and kisses.  Then I helped them make a stickered, scribbled, hand-print traced Valentine for their mommy and daddy!

My main-squeeze sweet Valentine took me to dinner at a new-ish Italian place, Cafe Calabria.  It was yummy!  I had tortellini carbonara -- tortellini, bacon, garlic, cream sauce.  But it made horrible leftovers.  Note to self: Do not take a cream-sauce-based dish home to reheat in the microwave.  You will end up with rubbery tortellini and droopy, rubbery bacon in a pool of oil.

In Knitting News:
I haven't been knitting too terribly much. I'm still stuck on what to start next.  And I haven't knit on my knit-a-long socks because it takes some concentration, and extra tools, to add the bling (beads) so it makes it hard to be a portable project to do during nap time.  So, I've been working on another afghan square.  I'm working my way through what seem to be the easy ones....
I don't have the Great American Afghan book in front of me and I can't remember which block number this is.  But if you have the book, it's the one that looks like this, minus the what-I-think-is-weird i-cord "stitch" edging.  Mine is just going to stay plain-jane without that embellishment.

In Book News:
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce.  I loved. Loved. LOVED this book!  Couldn't stop reading it last night until I was done, then had to watch 2 cooking shows before I could fall asleep.  Now that's a good book and definitely one that I will think about for a long time.

Harold lives in England and is recently retired, but life is pretty dull and his wife seems irritated with everything he does.  Then, one day he gets a letter from Queenie, a former co-worker, whom he has not seen in twenty years.  She is in hospice and writing to say good-bye.  This letter throws Harold for a loop. He writes her a short response and steps out to the corner to post the letter.  But once he gets to the box, he thinks maybe he'll just walk a little further to the next box, and then the next.  Then, events happen that convince him that he needs to hand-deliver the letter to Queenie.  By the way, she is several hundred miles away.  And thus begins his journey, his pilgrimage - both physical and emotional.  I can't say enough how this book just drew me in and took me along, routing for Harold, hoping he gets to Queenie before she passes, feeling for him as he experiences all kinds of emotions, thinking about his past, gasping at some of the twists the story takes.  Highly, highly recommend!

Thursday, February 7, 2013

One Day Vacation

Last weekend we went on a one day vacation to one of our favorite spots, Geneva, NY.  We stay at a hotel on Seneca Lake and this time we had a great view!
Late afternoon....

Morning....
We took advantage of their mid-winter overnight package deal and got this too:
Mmmmmm.  Wine and chocolate.
On our way there, we detoured up to Sodus Point and Lake Ontario.   Also, some VERY pretty views:



It was a nice day and a beautiful drive and when we got home we felt like we had been away for longer than a day.  You can't ask for more than that out of a one day vacation!

Was there knitting in the car, you ask?  Yes!  On the way home.  We took the scenic route on the way there, so there was so much to look at that I didn't knit.  But on the way home we took the boring speedy thruway, so I knit away.

I knit almost a whole afghan square (#20 in the Great American Afghan pattern book) on the ride home:
And the night before, while watching American Pickers at the hotel, I finished my first afghan square (#3):
Ooh, these pictures are terrible. Doesn't do the colors justice.  Daytime photos next time...
I also worked on my mystery socks but didn't get a picture yet.  I'm almost caught up with the clues.  the next one comes out tomorrow and I hope I'll be caught up by then.  After that, I am going to pick up one of my languishing unfinished projects.  Honest. I'm heading to the crap craft room right now to figure out which one...
Actually, I may have to wait until after snowmageddon.  Batten down the hatches everyone!