Friday, April 28, 2006
Monday, April 24, 2006
The Wedding.
The next day O. slept in while I went to the bride's house for an excellent lunch; we hung out and chatted while sewing combs into the headpiece of her veil. The bride, two of the other bridesminions, and I all went to college together and have been friends for, oh, 13 years now, and it's always great when we can all be in the same place for a while. That evening was the rehearsal and dinner, at which the bride gave us all presents: sock kits! How awesome is that, and how well does she know us by now? :) Mine is the blue-striped one in the middle.
After a long evening, many Cosmos and glasses of pinot grigio, and lots of photographs (by the pros, not me), it was time for bed. (Well, after another quick trip to the diner. We were still eating on Mountain Time.) I set the alarm for God-help-me in the morning, and woke up an hour early. Imagine a long string of profanities unsuitable for a Catholic wedding.
We dragged ourselves to the salon to be Beautified. Beth has documented the process; take a good look, it isn't likely to happen again. They put my hair in these giant roller things and spritzed madly and then stuck me under a giant helmet and the bride and I shouted at each other for a while and ate bagels. Then eventually the stylist pulled me back out and stuck a hojillion bobby pins straight into my head. Ow. Beth suffered something similar, while Chris cleverly escaped with her sleek bobbed hair intact. She couldn't hold out forever, though, and thanks to Beth's make-up kit we were all soon wearing more cosmetics than I wore to my own wedding.
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After some fussing and tidying we lined up and paraded into the church, only a little late. Well, kind of late, but that's okay. None of us tripped in the aisle, and we all made it to our assigned places and sat down.
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The most interesting thing about the reception, aside from the terribly yummy cake (lemon with vanilla frosting and raspberry jam) and the chance to see another college friend and her insanely adorable daughter, was that it was held at the Spinning Wheel Inn!
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After much dancing and picture-taking and watching the newlyweds be ridiculously happy, it was finally time to depart. We spent a lovely evening at my mother-in-law's house, had her excellent blueberry pancakes for brunch, and flew home. We're very tired, and I'm afraid I may have caught a cold, but I wouldn't have missed this wedding for the world and I wish them every happiness.
Sunday, April 23, 2006
I'm back
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Tuesday, April 18, 2006
Weekend report
We went on a hike along the Towhee and Homestead Trails, where we saw not only the homestead, but also a towhee! The sand lilies and pasque flowers were blooming, as were the plum trees, so that the air around them smelled wonderful. It was a really nice hike and I'd recommend it to anyone.
After the hike, we went to the aforementioned pizza place downtown, stopped in at the bookstore for a trail map and wildflower guide, and then, well, I'm all about the chocolate-peanut-butter-swirl.
And of course, I knit: the back of the Bonny pullover is finished! I'm well into the endless rows of seed stitch on the front, and it's going well now that it's become my commuter knitting.
On Thursday we're heading out to the Big Giant Wedding (as the matron of honor calls it) and posting may be sporadic. The hotel supposedly has wireless internet, but I'll likely be too busy doing bridesminion duties to post anything. However, there will undoubtedly be lots of time spent waiting around (rehearsal, hair salon, etc) and so I'm taking plenty of knitting. I'm thinking of turning the blue-green Koigu into Pomatomus. Mostly because it's just so much fun to say, however you say it. Pomatomus!
Sunday, April 16, 2006
Where to knit
- traffic jams in Connecticut
- during physical therapy (bad knee)
- my parents' farm in Kansas
- a friend's chateau in southern France
- a Princeton genetics lab.
Friday, April 14, 2006
I think I may have a problem
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A double-treadle classic Lendrum wheel. And a fair bit of spun singles from hand-carded fleece.
This is what happened after I got home from class.
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I used some prepared Corriedale roving I'd bought at the store, since I wanted to practice spinning, not carding. I'll work on my carding over the weekend and spin up more of it. Maggie (our teacher) was right; hand-carded rolags are easier to spin than commercially prepared fiber, but it was nice to have some stuff to practice on.
I spun for another ten minutes this morning before I left for work. I had to tear myself away. If it weren't for the time required to card all that fleece, I'd be worried about running out of fiber by the end of the weekend. I love it.
Thursday, April 13, 2006
Blue and green
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Monday, April 10, 2006
To market, to market
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Sunday, April 09, 2006
Yarn galore
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We went on to A Knitted Peace in Littleton, which is a really nice shop, but I didn't find anything that really needed to come home with me. After lunch at the Greek deli, we ventured out to the sprawling suburb of Highlands Ranch to String, which was having a great big sale and was packed with knitters. String organizes yarn mostly by color, which is interesting and looks great, but it was a bit hard to find exactly what I wanted (worsted weight, and enough for a sweater). Still, they have a fantastic seletion. I ended up with three skeins of apple-green DB baby cashmerino, one of my favorite yarns; not sure what it'll be, but it can join its friends in the big bag of stashed cashmerino.
On the way home, we stopped at Shuttles, since, you know, we were right there. Emily convinced me to try out Cotton Fleece, so I picked up one skein for swatching purposes. And then I went home and passed out. Whew!
In the evening, I took over half the living room with books, knitting needles, and yarn, trying to figure out what the heck to do with all this stuff. If I knit the pink wool to the suggested gauge, I won't have enough for a sweater. I'm still working on it; I may have to come up with my own pattern, and knit it loosely - but I think it'll look kind of cool. The Cotton Fleece is actually a lot nicer than I expected when knit up, but it's DK, not worsted, so it won't work for Eris. So, change of plans: perhaps a ChicKnits eyelet cardi for the summer, and maybe in the fall I'll make Eris in Beaverslide wool for winter wear.
Next up: are the alpaca wristlets done yet? How are those socks going, anyway? And who's going to the Estes Park Wool Market?
Baa
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In our next installment, we find a lot of new yarn, and our heroine encounters some challenging gauge problems...
Wednesday, April 05, 2006
New ideas
I have actually been working on the wristlets, and should be able to finish the second one in the next day or so. The sock toes are both done and I'm wrestling with the two-socks-on-one-circ technique. Wrestling is really the appropriate word, since it takes me a bit of shoving and yanking to get everything lined up properly. I think they'll be cute socks, though.
And I've been mulling over yet another project, a big one... I think I need a lightweight cardigan. For summer, you know, something nicer than the Old Navy hoodie I usually keep on hand to combat excessive air-conditioning. I was poking around various websites looking for a pattern, and then realized, duh, I already have several cardigans on my "to make someday" list. I love the Mariah and Bristow patterns, but they seem like they'd be better in wool, and they look like they might take a while. Which leads me to... Eris. It's gorgeous, and after the tricky cable neckline it should go pretty fast, right? I'm thinking maybe Cotton Fleece is the right yarn, but I'm not sure, and of course there's the problem of color... maybe I'll branch out from my blue, blue, blue habits and use something extravagant like pink.
Warning: all of these knitting thoughts may go straight out the window after tomorrow's spinning class!
Monday, April 03, 2006
Socks, and more socks!
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Yarn: Mountain Colors Bearfoot in Lodgegrass. Pattern: Basketweave rib from "Sensational Knitted Socks," knit toe-up from a figure-8 toe with a short-row heel. Needles: 2.25mm Crystal Palace circular (magic loop technique), but I had to cast off the leg on a US#9! Verdict: best socks ever. I love the subtle colors, the perfect fit, the durable yet fuzzy yarn. I only wish that Bearfoot came in more colorways - the stuff at the LYS is gorgeous but it's all very dark and wintery.
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Saturday, April 01, 2006
Stash!
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Yep, it's a swift and winder, purchased for super cheap at Jo-Ann.com. I set it up as soon as it arrived yesterday afternoon and since then I've wound, um, more than twenty yarn-cakes. It's hugely gratifying to take tangled messes of yarn and turn them into tidy little bundles. So, since I had to pull all the yarn out of storage anyway, I took pictures:
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The sock and lace yarn. Back row: Trekking, Stahl Zimba Top, teal Cherry Tree Hill Supersock, Winterberry from Sunshine Yarns, four skeins of KPPPM, the leftover Rock Creek and Bearfoot, and a tiny bit of Koigu. Front: Misti Alpaca, KnitPicks Alpaca Cloud (stream, moss, autumn).
The yarn belonging to works in progress. Back: Douceur et Soie (Wrapped in Tradition from Wrap Style), Shetland/Gotland from Shilasdair (Paloma sweater). Middle: more Paloma. Front: cashmerino (Bonny), Shetland Spindrift (North Sea shawl).
And everything else. Most of it you can actually see the labels on; yes, that's Mission Falls cotton in the front, from the sale bin; a lot of teal Rowan 4ply Botany on the right (also on sale), which may someday become socks; the top left is all cashmerino odds & ends; and actually most of this is stuff left over from other projects. But I'm sure I'll find a use for it all someday.
And that's the tour of my yarn! Thanks for stopping by. I'm going to go take pictures of the newly finished Bearfoot socks, start in on that blue Koigu, and put away all this yarn. And have some lunch. Bye!