An entry dedicated to knitting ONLY

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Left: Rowan Tapestry for the Japanese Cape Sweater. Ordered from yarn.com. I'm back into neutrals again. The color is "Country" with bands of the softest greens and browns. Beautiful.

Middle: Brown Sheep's Wildfoote sock yarn. Purchased from a yarn store in Taos this past weekend. It had teeny tiny selection, but this is the first time I've heard or seen this sock yarn. Two different colored yarn plied together. Cheap too! 200+ yards of superwash wool and nylon for just over $6. I couldn't resist. Like the name too. So old English. I'm going to name my next cat or child Wildfoote. Whichever comes first.

Right: Trekking XXL also from yarn.com. I ordered this before I came upon the Wildefoot. They look kind of similar, but there are more colors in Trekking, and it's softer. I've never worked with it before so I'm curious. It's destined to become a pair of man socks.

The pottery mug: It's Duck's handsome new coffee mug, handmade and handpainted at Rainbow Gate. We found this beautiful store over the weekend and my mom went beserk. She looooves pottery. Turns out, I do too. We were there for over an hour and she bought a very nice dinner set for six in all the colors of the rainbow. Duck picked out the goose mug, I picked out a few things as gifts, but nothing for myself because I couldn't make up my mind, mesmerized into indecision by all the different combinations of colors and paintings. There were a few mugs with cats on them, you'd think that would be a no-brainer, but I am more into REAL cats than I am into painted cats or cat whatever knick-knacks. Just so you know.

ANYway...

Ripple Weave Socks and Correction
Tell me the truth. Can you discern the ripple pattern in this sock?

I've used the Wildefoot for the Ripple Weave sock from Fall 06 Vogue Knitting. It might be a bad choice. :(

By the way, there's an error in the chart, which I haven't seen a correction for on the website yet. The 3rd row should look like this:

 

Capelet Sweater, or A Lot of Number Crunching That May Not Interest You
Thanks to Japanese reader Izumi for helping me to further make heads or tails of the Cape Sweater pattern. It is the total antithesis of Debbie Bliss patterns which are all words and no charts. This is all charts and even though I can pick out the basic words, the numbers still don't add up...

The top image are instructions for decreases the cape portion, worked bottom-up. According to Izumi, 31~1 for example means, "On row 31, decreases 1 stitch once."

But there are 4 numbers total. Bear with me here as I think while I type:

31 ~ 1 ~ 10 ~ 1

First number (31) indicates row, second number (1) indicates stitch, fourth number (1) indicates how many times. What I don't know is what the third number (10) is for. Is it stitch position? If so...

The chart below is the charted version (I believe) of the decrease instructions. Green portion is for my particular pattern. If 10 means 10th position, on the chart it looks like you do a decrease after knitting 16 stitches. And then there is a little note that I think says you repeat the *k16, dec* pattern 9 times.

The numbers aren't adding up.

OH WAIT!!!!!!!! Epiphany as I'm typing this! The numbers do add up! That 3rd number tell you how many times to repeat the decrease. You are really repeating that decrease on Row 31 10 times in all! The chart illustrates the first K16, dec. Then another K16, dec and that is where it says to repeat that 9 times. So 10 in all. OK so that is what the 10 means.

YES? Hmm I'm still not 100% sure....Like if the 2nd number tells you how many stitches to decrease, and 3rd number tells you how many times to do it, what's the point of the 4th number now?

And, why does the second dec. instruction say

24 ~ 1 ~ 11 ~ 1

while on the chart the second repeat row begins on Row 55?

But 79 rows in all MINUS 55 = 24.  So 24 on the chart means 24th from the top? But 31 doesn't mean 31st from the top...Whut.  

And what's with the multiple dec instructions for Row 8? (Or is that 8th row from the top?) (ERGH)

Heh, are you even following me at this point?

OH WAIT ANOTHER EPIPHANY! The math also works out this way: 31 + 24 = 55. The first number is the number of rows to work AFTER THE LAST ROW YOU DECREASED. So after row 31, work 23 more rows straight, then decrease on the next (24th) row. Or in other words, decrease on row 55 as illustrated in the chart.

YES!

Dang. I'm spent. Too many ways to write the same thing. Might have been easier for me to ignore the words and just follow the chart.

Just like it's better for you to ignore the words here and just stick to the photos. That's what I would've done anyway.

I LOVE NEW MEXICO
OK I lied about keeping this entry to knitting. Just look at these bizarre rock formations.

We took my parents to the Kasha Katuwe Tent Rocks. It was an AWESOME surprise, and is now my favorite U.S. park. Better than Bandelier (which is just next to it), better than Zion, and possibly better even than the Grand Canyon!? Maybe it's apples and oranges. I say that only because Tent Rocks is accessible, small, but still incredible. And not overrun with other tourists. 

I've never seen such rock formations. It is ODD. We were able to hike into it, at some points the foot trail was no wider than your foot, rock walls soared and closed in all around you, it was intimate and breathtaking. It takes a lot of effort to actually go into and especially to hike the Grand Canyon. With the Tent Rocks, you drive a few miles from the city and BAM you're right into the thick of it. We're going to make this regular, after-work hike.

Man. I can tell it's going to be hard to leave when the time comes. I'm working on convincing Duck we need to stay an extra week than he thinks we do.

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The sunsets are astounding

Friday, September 22, 2006

That is Duck's tiny little head in the foreground,
with the menacing, roiling clouds threatening
to engulf him completely.

Taken this evening from atop Fort Marcy Park.
Thanks to blogless reader Josie for recommending this spot!

My parents are coming tomorrow, yay!

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Everything in terms of yarn

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Entrance fee to Bandelier = one skein of Koigu
Entrance fee to Pecos = half of skein of Sundara Yarn

You better be enjoying all this culture.
It's costing me a sock and a half.

***

Sterling silver and turquoise bracelet handmade by local artisan
one skein of Yarntini + one skein Habu Silk Mohair

Lovely souvenir from Santa Fe...or more sock yarn?

***

Two fat burritos from the Santa Fe Baking Co. = one skein of Kidsilk Haze

That's one tasty bargain!
But then, KSH lasts longer...

***

Drinks, dinner and dessert for two at Mu Du Noodles = 10 (!!) skeins of Silk Garden from WEBS

I ordered the Vietnamese cod,
but I'm eating a pretty sweater.

Yes. These days, everything is in terms of yarn.

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Ladders are scary. Fried dough are tasty.

Monday, September 18, 2006

Duck models knit-wear for the first time! And does a lovely job.

The sock is Lichen Ribbed Socks from Knitting Vintage Socks. I followed the pattern as written but went up to size 3 needles for a more man-sized fit. The yarn is Regia 6 ply in "Crazy Midnight." I do not have enough of this yarn to make the second pair because I was stupid and thought that one skein was enough to make a pair of man-sized. Booo! Does anyone out there have this yarn in this colorway? I don't even need a full skein, just half, just half!

Veronica sent me this Japanese knitting book as part of her Freebie Friday. See!

I have my eyes on the sweater pictured on the right, without the wrist-warmers. It's an intriguing capelet/sweater hybrid, and I likes it. I'm thinking of using Rowan's new Tapestry, but first I need to figure out what the yarn and gauge specifications are for this sweater. Are there any Japanese readers out there who could help me out?

And has anyone had a chance to use Tapestry? If so, what are your thoughts?

***

We just had Cultural Weekend this past weekend. On Cultural Weekend you visit museums, visit national parks, visit pueblos, eat new cuisine, and burn to a flaky crisp! This weekend there was not a single cloud in the sky, and the sun was all ARRRRR! and my skin was all SSSSSsizzle!

We drove to nearby Bandelier National Monument on Saturday.

Cliff-dwelling Indians used to live here, all high up in the rocks. We were able to shimmy up a series of ladders, up 140 feet, to see where and how these people lived. I didn't really shimmy up though, because that implies speediness. It was scary, even though these national park-sanctioned ladders were made of sturdy logs/branches and tied/nailed securely against the rocks and I dared not to look down.

Back in the day they probably made ladders out of twigs and twine and just propped them casually against the wall, and went up and down on them all day long carrying boiling water and elk horns and other sharp objects. Is it any wonder that they're extinct.*

One thing is for sure, if I were them I would not have survived long. I would not have been able to climb the ladders fast enough to escape the grasp of a hungry cougar, and I would not have climbed down the ladders fast enough to escape any errant fires running rampant from the kivas. I would be doomed.

* Heh I kid around. I speak callously and ignorantly only to express my own irrational fears of climbing ladders. Along a sheer rock cliff. On a windy day.

The views in Bandelier were really spectacular, and even though I was a big chicken when it came to climbing the ladders, it was definitely a really cool hands-on experience. And did I mention the views were amazing?

So imagine my confusion and anger when back at the visitor center, I read these consecutive entries in the park guestbook:

"We paid $12 to get in, and were charged another $1 for the guide. Robbery?"

and underneath that

"Not worth $12."

WOW! WTF? What were these people expecting, a laser light show? Mr. Toad's Wild Ride? Bon Jovi?

The following are most definitely not worth $12:

1. Renaissance fairs
2. an evening showing of Hope Floats
3. any John Tesh CD

all which these hags have probably paid for.

And by the way, the entrance fee was per car, not per person. Whoever wrote those entries were older women (flowery, cursive handwriting as proof), were probably friends, probably came in the same SUV, probably with their husbands, so really they paid $3 each.

So nonsensical. I mean this is nature! Beautiful, soaring cathedral cliffs millions of years in the making, ancient carvings and dwellings you were actually allowed to climb into, the great outdoors! Trails were clearly marked, facilities were clean, guidebooks were informative!

And there was this squirrel that looked like a baby werewolf, all chubby and black with a white underbelly and tufted ears and claws and the bushiest whitest tail you've ever seen! I'd pay another $12 just to see that squirrel again!

Duck wrote his own entry underneath theirs. He called them idiots. No he called them idiots. Out loud, under his breath, he called them much worse.

Anyway. Don't listen to those old bats. Bandelier rocks, and is 120% worth it.

On Sunday we visited the Pecos Pueblo. I have no pictures to post of that visit because I am too anxious to talk about this instead:

Hello, I am Sopaipilla! Eat me! I am delicious!
Taken at Guadalupe Cafe.
We've been here twice already and so far it's my favorite place.

I was wondering why at each New Mexican restaurant we've been to, every table had a squeeze bottle of honey, next to the usual salt and pepper shakers. It's for the sopaipilla that comes as a side with your main dish.

SOPAIPILLA! My new best friend, if you are so inclined to eat your best friend. If you've been to any American state fairs, it is like the unassuming but delicious fried dough. If you've been to New Orleans, it is like the beignet. It is very much like the beignet actually, in that it is crispy on the outside, chewy and doughy along the edge, and hollow on the inside. However the sopaipilla is lighter, fluffier, and is eaten with generous drizzles of honey instead of confectioner's sugar.  I LOVE IT! I could eat them all! And it nicely cools your palate after a spicy plate of enchiladas.

In fact, I will be eating them all again, tonight. Can't wait.

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Knitting some. Eating more.

Thursday, September 14, 2006

This is where I knit...

...and this is what I'm knitting.

Man-sized ankle socks! Manklets! But these aren't for Duck (sorry Duck, you lose again!). These will be a Christmas gift for some other manly member of the family. I'm doing real good with the early Christmas gifting, people.

So the yarn is Regia 6-ply and it is horribly, horribly itchy and raw on the fingers. Love the striping, but officially hate the handling. The last time I knit with this stuff was back in April, and in between then and now my hands have come in contact with bunny-soft Sundara Yarns, Koigus and Yartinis, that I don't think I want to knit with this new wool ever again.

***

Santa Fe continues to be sunny and delicious to eat. Despite Duck's bumpy bullfrog of a cold sore brought on by the green chile (I'm looking at his lip right now and it's in that lovely in-between stage of bubbling and scabbing over, like someone back-kicked him in the face and then rubbed Crisco all over the wound. Hi Duck don't hate me! I'm just being honest!), we have not shirked away from eating more, oh no.

Look at this. Death in a Ziploc Bag. We purchased these roasted chiles at the Farmer's Market near the apartment. Whole Foods sells them too, albeit for exorbitant rates. We made a dinner with chicken and diced chiles - accompanied with generous helpings of cheese and sour cream - and for lunch today I chopped one chile and tossed it into the pasta sauce. Hot but manageable and very very delicious.

Last night after work we biked into the Plaza to catch the sunset at a rooftop bar. We took sidestreets through residential neighborhoods and were in the Plaza in less than 5 minutes.

We probably could have made it there in less time if
1) we hadn't gotten a little lost. Roads here are very Bostonian in that many end unexpectedly in dead ends or curve around back again
2) we weren't already out of breath in the first 30 seconds. This air still takes some getting used to, but the upside is that by the time we get back home I'm actually going to be in shape. For the first time in my pathetic, slothy life!

Here I am at the Bell Tower Bar at the top of the La Fonda Inn, having a drink and reading the NYTimes while we wait for the sun to set. The light changes were fast, dramatic and beautiful.

Afterwards we had dinner al fresco at The Pink Adobe. It was a little pricier than what we were expecting, and almost left but I'm glad we didn't because hawow!

I ordered:
Crawfish Enchiladas
Two blue corn tortillas filled with crawfish tail meat and goat cheese, topped with green chile crawfish bisque.

I scraped every last bit off the plate, and if you know me, I never do that. I always get completely, cannot-possibly-eat-another-bite full right before the last bite.

And if you know me, you also know that I hardly say no to crawfish or goat cheese. Put them together and it's guaranteed. I've just never had them together, and it would never occur to me to eat have them together.

French meets Cajun meets Southwest meets my mouth. It was 100% delicious.

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Sunset

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Taken this evening from the Bell Tower Bar at the La Fonda Inn.

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Hello from Santa Fe!

Monday, September 11, 2006

The sky is blue, the walls are orange, and the green chiles are hot hot HOT. We've been here 2 full days and so far the sun and the spicy cuisine have kicked our butts. Loving it here so far!

I just mailed the yarn to the contest winners, who were:
#1: Diane the blogless of the Seattle area
#2: Jen of JenLa
#3: Alexandra of artisokka.com
#4: Erika of redshirtknitting.com

Hooray! More updates to come. Lunch is a-callin'...

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