Hey, congrats to me!

Monday, March 31, 2008

For I have just knit the ugliest pair of button bands ever in the history of knitting.

Don't come any closer

Don't come any closer. I am ugly.

Poor Rambling Rose. What did you do to deserve such inelegant, pigeon-toed button bands?

Help me

All I did was pick up the selvege (slipped stitches) along the front panels, like we do when we pick up the slipped stitches along the gusset of a sock heel. Why did it pucker so much here? Did the ribbing of the button bands pull the fabric in? Should I have gone up a needle size? Should I occassionally knit into the front and back of a few of the slipped stitches to increase the pick-up count? Will you do this for me?

As far as mistakes go, this is pretty fixable. Easily fixable. In all the time I spent screaming "EFF! EFF ME! EFF me in the effing HOOHA," I could have ripped out the bands and redid them three times over. But for some reason I just so don't want to do it. I don't want to figure out how to knit a smooth button band when it shouldn't have required any thought to begin with. You're supposed to simply pick up the slipped stitches and, the end! But no! Now I've got to experiment with RATIOS and different needle sizes and whatnot so I've tossed it aside for the moment. I am angry at it. I am angry.

I'm seeking a little therapy by knitting socks again.

The return of Pomatomus

Pomatomus (or the Best Sock Pattern Ever) in Sundara Yarn "Aqua Over Lilac"

I'll finish the cardigan once I'm feeling a little more rational.

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My three things

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Why, I'm glad you asked. The three things I would bring with me to a deserted island would be 1) mojitos, 2) VanBuren, and 3) a Jane Austen book.

I love Jane Austen

Don't you wish she had written more??

The problem is deciding which.

It would probably be Emma, being the most humorous (I think) with the added bonus of being the lengthiest.

Even so my time on the deserted island should not last longer than a couple of days. It would take me only that long to finish the book, the mojitos would be long gone for sure, and Veebs would be too since I wasn't given a fourth option (Cat Chow, or roast beef...Or Pride and Prejudice. The cat needs something to read too).

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The worst is over

Monday, March 24, 2008

Cannot wait to finish

I've just finished the yoke and will be starting the neckband and button bands tonight. Oh the bliss of knitting from a single ball of yarn!

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Friday is for Felines

Friday, March 21, 2008

I can has cheezburger?

I can has cheezburger?

OK roast beef den

OK. Roast beef den.

nyom nyom nyom..

nyom nyom nyom nyom

I can has more?

I can has more kthx

Please?

:'-(

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Thursday is for Favorite Places

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Lafayette Cemetery
Old Burial Hill
Cemetery | Les Arcs, France

I like visiting cemeteries.

From top: Lafayette Cemetery, New Orleans | Old Burial Hill, Marblehead, Mass | Cemetery in Les Arcs, France

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Wednesday is for Where I Live

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

I live in Boston. For almost the last 10 years I lived in various suburbs of, none of them more than 5 miles away, but this past summer we moved downtown and what a lifestyle change it's been! All for the better.

Farewell, car

We donated our car sometime in November, just in time to avoid the pains of the season's first major snowstorm. It is not fun having a car in the city with only on-street parking available which is impossible to find as it is. Since I work from home mostly and Duck takes the subway to work, keeping it no longer made sense. Now we just use zipcar (a very cool urban service) when we need a vehicle.

Farewell, car

The side effect to not having a car anymore, besides the reduction in bills from not having to pay for insurance or gas, is that we are totally jacked! Two or three times a week we walk to the grocery store with our backpacks, and are not afraid to fill them with a large cantaloupe, a gallon of milk, a bag of apples, a roast chicken and a couple of bottles of wine, give or take several other items, and haul all that stuff home. We're walking everywhere, patronizing local shops and with a mall and two major bookstores nearby, I've find that we're shopping online less and less. Which means no need for shipping.

We support our local stores, we get our exercise, we reduce our monthly bills, we reduce our carbon footprint.

It's a nice win-win-win-win.

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Chugging along...and a new game which I hope to follow through on

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Rambling Rose - back

Miniscule progress on Rambling Rose. I lopped off all the yarn balls and am dealing with several yards of yarn at a time instead. Better. But still messy.

Rambling Rose - front

I tried on a sleeve and boy. it is tight. I really hope this turns out because if it doesn't I just might have to hurl myself off the roof. I just might.

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OK. So. In an effort to get myself back on this blogging horse I have devised a scheme in which every day (heh) I will post about a topic which will differ day-to-day but remain consistent week-to-week. ie I will post under the same topic every Tuesday. Topics are to be determined by myself and rules may change at anytime.

So for today, Tuesday, I bring you...My Favorite Things. Besides Knitting.

Smells like a cathedral

These are candles from Diptyque, a perfumerie based in Paris that also sells soaps and house sprays at - I will not lie - kind of exorbitant prices. Except I think it's worth it, and who doesn't deserve to splurge on themselves every now and then?

I love this place. Unlike walking into say, YankeeCandleCo. and having your little body pillaged with a freight train of a million headache-inducing scents, walking into Diptyque is a subtle, tranquil, zen experience. And if you're lucky the lady working there will actually be FRENCH who speaks perfect English with that wonderful French lilt, and if you're really lucky, she also distributes wine on the side, so when she's describing to you a scent, it doesn't simply smell "good" or even "fruity," but has a base note of "bananas" or reminds one of "ghosts in the closet." Hee hee!

My favorite one included Feu de Bois (Firewood). It was like Santa Fe on chilly nights, but I came away with wanting Paris a little bit more. Myrrh. It smells like a 600 year-old French cathedral, dusty, damp and cavernous. So while it's burning, you have to talk in hushed tones.

Aix

Cathedral in Aix-en-Provence, France. Taken August 2007

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Tangled Up in Blue (Moon Fiber Arts)

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

I've stalled big time on my knitting because I've reached the yoke for the Rambling Rose cardigan and now it's much less knitting and much more wrangling. And crying.

Ugh

The right front panel is joined with the right sleeve is joined to the back is joined to the left sleeve is joined to the left front panel. That's what, about one trillion some-odd stitches squished on a needle with 9 strands of yarn - kept wound in small balls - jangling and twisting like windchimes in a hurricane and it SUCKS. I suppose I could/should make the balls of yarn smaller but I feel it wouldn't make the process any more manageable. The whole yoking was a bad idea. Fine so you don't have to seam later, but seaming is a small, TINY price to pay for not having to knit back and forth - no yoking in the round, this is a cardigan! - and deal with the all that yarn getting all insane all over your lap. Nightmare.

Here is a shot of Veeb's humungous backside to make everyone feel better.

Blue Ribbon winner

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