Sunday, January 28, 2007

I was sitting in the living room on Monday night and my fingers were freezing.  I thought "I need a pair of fingerless gloves."  So I checked out various patterns online and on Tuesday started this pattern:

This is the "Fetching" pattern from Knitty.com.  I knitted them in Debbie Bliss Cashmerino Aran that I had left over from the scarf I knitted George back in December 2005.  The color number is 300506 and I would describe it as Fir Green.  With this pattern, I cabled without a needle for the first time and picked up my first thumbs.  I had to re-do the thumb on the first glove because I had big holes.  Now they're done and I'll leave them next to my chair in the living room for the next time my fingers are freezing while I knit, needlepoint or read.

Thoughts

I've been reading the Knitting Curmudgeon's archives lately.  She writes a lot about people being afraid to try new things in knitting.  I realized that I can often be one of those people.  It takes me a lot of time to work up my nerve to try something new -  a technique, a pattern, a substitute yarn, etc.  I tend to doubt my abilities.  Some of my fear is left over from when I couldn't afford much yarn so I was afraid of messing up and destroying the yarn I did have. 

But some of it is a fear of losing/wasting time.  I don't know where this fear comes from, but it has a big hold on my mind.  I fear losing time to having to reknit an item, to surfing the web and getting nothing substantial done, to just wasting time.  And I waste a lot of time, often doing nothing.  And then I beat up on myself for wasting all that time.  I often fear that my life will just disappear into "wasting" time.  I need to work through that and actually get somethings done.

posted on 1/28/2007 10:40:16 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Friday, January 19, 2007

I started on a sampler using this book, The New York Times Book of Needlepoint by Elaine Slater.  Ms. Slater teaches the new needlepointer 10 different stitches.  She includes lots of diagrams of the wrong as well as right way to do the stitiches.

 

So far I've marked my 10-mesh canvas for 25 square blocks, picked out 5 colours from the DMC 3-ply Persian wool (3 oranges and 2 greens), and I've done my two squares of brick stitch.  I followed the directions for the first block:

And then looked at Ms. Slater's various examples and did the second block in my own simple design:

I turned the canvas a quarter-turn to work the block as Ms. Slater advised rather than trying to work it vertically.

I'm finding it harder to work with 3-ply persian wool then it was to work with the Appleton tapestry wool I used on the Plums canvas.  Ms. Slater has the learner use 3 strands for all vertical/horizantal stitches so I have to keep the 3 strands as flat as possible for the stitch.  I guess I'll get better with time - practice, practice, practice.

posted on 1/19/2007 8:25:33 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Monday, January 15, 2007

Back in November 2006, I finally did something I've been wanting to do on and off for years - I took a class on Needlepoint.  The only class I could find was at Churchmouse Yarn & Teas on Bainbridge Island.  I missed the first of the 3 classes, but was able to meet with the teacher an hour before the 2nd class so she could show me what they had done.  With the teacher's help, I picked out a pillow kit for my first project.  I was unemployed in November so I had plenty of time to work on the canvas.  In 3 weeks, I completed this:

This kit is Cleopatra's Needle's Herb Pillow Tapestry Kit : Fruits of the Forest Collection - Damsons.  Dimensions: 10" x 10", Wool: Appleton Tapestry Wool

I started working the canvas and thought I would probably grow bored with the stitching.  Instead, I was fascinated by the way the wool brought the canvas to life.  I couldn't stop stitching. 

I'm now working on a couple of other projects.  I feel as if needlepoint is allowing me to open up creatively.  I have ideas for color combinations and stitches beyond the tent stitch.  See what I've got:

This is DMC 3-ply Persian Wool in 29 colors.  I'm going to have lots of fun.

posted on 1/15/2007 10:47:53 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [1]
 Sunday, January 07, 2007

Boy, I have a lot of photos that George & I have taken since we got digital cameras.  I created a lot of new folders so I can more easily find what I'm looking for.  Here's a photo from June 2005.  It's of my niece Catherine (left) and her friend Mel (right) in the Temple Bar area of Dublin.  This was a trip I'd promised Catherine if she did well in high school.  Not only did she do well, she was a National Merit Scholar.  George said it was a good thing the trip wasn't pro-rated.  We would have been in Europe all summer!  As it was, we spent a week in Ireland and a week in London.

posted on 1/7/2007 11:45:12 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]

I knitted this premmie jacket for the daughter of a boss I had a few years back.  Unfortunately, the daughter died at 10 days old so I never gave the jacket to her dad.  I'm keeping it until someone else I know has a premmie.

This isn't a very good picture, but it's the best one I have right now.  I'll try to get a better shot before I put this up on my Finished Projects website.

posted on 1/7/2007 11:37:01 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]
 Wednesday, January 03, 2007

I've just spent the last 2 evenings finally arranging all the digital photos I have on my desktop from 2001 - 2006.  I created new folders by date(s) and events.  Now I can more easily search through the photos to find what I want.  Since this is now done (tho' I still need to copy some 2006 photos over from George's computer), I'll be putting more pictures up on the blog.  Here's an example from 2002 Jul 6:

Doesn't it look delicious if messy?

posted on 1/3/2007 12:10:03 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)  #    Comments [0]