Thursday, November 16, 2006
A couple of weeks ago I got it in my head that if I didn't knit myself a pair of gloves then I will not be able to live. It is because of Steph's Mermaid Gloves that my life hangs in such a balance. They've been on my knitting radar since I saw them in March but I wasn't ready to knit gloves then. Oh no. How can you knit gloves when you're still deciding whether or not you hate knitting socks? But miracles of all miracles, I mastered the sock, I loved the sock, and even wrote a pattern for the sock.
And now I am ready for the glove.
Isn't it exhilirating, if a little bit nauseating, when trying something for the very first time? Like Steph, I scanned the entire internet for free glove patterns and I don't know, I can't read off screens very well. Everything was a run-on sentence. Nothing made sense. The brain was in agony.
So I flipped through every knitting book I had, trying to find a pattern for gloves, and BINGO! there it is in my very-neglected Loop-d-Loop book, a pattern for gloves with the ruffled cuffs. Hooray! I will just ignore everything except how to do the thumb gusset.
Shudder. That thumb gusset. But remember: you are only frightened of what you don't know.

Luckily the instructions in L-d-L are pretty clear and readable, and so even though I'm not 100% I'm doing this correctly, it would appear that I am making a thumb gusset.
If I pull these off, the gloves will be MY GREATEST CREATION EVER MWAHAHA! Thank you Steph for doing this first!
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Now...onto a meme, from Lady Scout. I'm really bad at memes (have you ever seen me do one?). Just so you know.
1. How and when did you learn how to knit/crochet? Who taught you?
My mother is an avid knitter/crocheter/seamstress and I have asked her twice to teach me to knit. The first time I was 10. I was not ready to knit at 10. I had ADD (self-diagnosed twenty years later). There were other pressing matters like collecting Garbage Pail Kids and watching/pretending to be Jem and the Holograms. (Anyone out there in the same age group remember this?) So I retired from knitting after completing 3 rows.
Two years ago while at my parents' I spotted my mom's knitting basket. Something sparked and I asked her again to teach me how to knit. It was kind of out the blue, but maybe the feeling that knitting was becoming a not-so-strictly-geriatric hobby prompted me. All I know is at that moment I was ready. Actually the first thing she did was teach me how to crochet. Then how to knit. For the first two months all I did was crochet.
2. How has this craft impacted your life?
Well. My posture sucks. My hands are gnarled. I can barely see. I pretend to listen to my husband when he talks to me while I'm knitting. I pretend to care. (haha just kidding! i care. deeply. yes. so. what did you say?)
But I cannot stop. I've had many interests and hobbies over my lifetime, many many many, oh so many, and knitting is the ONLY ONE that I have stuck with, day in and day out. Voluntarily. I can watch TV and knit. Sit in a car and knit. Perform jury duty and knit. Work and as I wait for code to compile, knit. Every free second occupied by knitting! Time is never wasted! All the time I am productive, creative, fulfilled by knitting.
I am focused. I am never bored. I am never idle. And with one more thing to have in common, I am closer than ever to my mother.
3. Pick at least one person to talk about who you have met through the knit-world and why you are thankful to have met them.
Well this is easy. And slightly pathetic. I have met only one person through the knit-world, and she told me to write this:
"Scout taught you a lesson about having faith in humanity and trusting scary internet people you've never met... HA!"
Heh heh heh. It figures I have to drive across the nation to meet my first knitblogger. I'm very very glad we did, and afterwards I felt all gregarious and I told myself Once you're home, you will contact all the Boston area knitters you know of and have a sleepover! And then I don't know what happened. I got back home, the sun disappeared, and I reverted to all my mole-like ways. Sorry Scout!
So maybe I haven't met any one else in person, but there have been so many others who've done nice things without any prompting except that we have this crafting thing in common. For example:
- Bonnie sending a copy of Cafe Pasqual's cookbook, because she knew I was missing Santa Fe.
- Cirilia sending a skein of Regia yarn from her stash, after reading I had run out of that colorway for a complete sock.
- Veronica sending handspun cashmere after I spent $0.39 mailing her a pattern.
- Various readers sharing tips and advice, unsolicited.
- And all those who comment regularly even when I don't.
I'm in awe of the generosity, the thoughtfulness, and the time that people give to this knitting universe of ours. It's so cool.
Filed Under: General Knitting | Gloves | Mermaid