Knitting Musings

April 17, 2008

Someone Who Gets You...Priceless

Birthday_top_pot_08

I had a very nice knitterly birthday.

On the way home from the extra (and very needed) Pilates lesson I scheduled, I stopped at one of my favorite places to KIP. I can't eat donuts often due to my milk allergy, but I really like the wall of windows at Top Pot with a street view that includes trees and the monorail. And they're a local place with their kitchen in the back of this spot so the goodies are very fresh.

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Note the change in the trees since my last photo from here. Spring is coming on rapidly here in Seattle.

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That same evening the Seattle Knitters' Guild meeting featured my friend Karen Alfke, whose talk I'd arranged. Karen was her usual funny and informative self, even if she said she was nervous. She does move too fast to get a decent photo when she's in action.

Afterward I went out for a bite and a glass of wine with a small group that included Karen and Sussana Hansson (she of Bohus fame - one day I'll tackle one). Sussana and I have passed each other at meetings and events before but this way the first time we'd really met. It was a fun group and a nice time.

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Usually my husband and I just get each other cards and go out to dinner for our birthdays. The Guild meeting interrupted that pattern and other engagements this week made it seem pointless to schedule dinner for another evening.

When I got home I found this waiting for me - a knitter's birthday card (photo and pattern here) and a gift card to the LYS that's in walking distance (he walks most days). Between the encouragement of my passions and the coping with messes skills, I can't see ever getting rid of this guy. Especially not after almost 26 years.

April 07, 2008

Early Signs of Crafty Tendencies

I didn't think of myself as a crafty/arty type for most of my life. I identified myself more by my A-student-and-president-of-Science-Club side.

Crafty_doll_covered

Now as I look back I realize when I add up the pebble-mosaic-by-number kit, pastels requested one Christmas and good watercolors as a surprise another, extra art projects and more art classes than usual for a college-prep track, years spent as an avid gardener, repeated bouts of embroidery flirtation and sewing frustration, a flair for 'merchandise presentation' in a past career and home decoration currently, a fascination with color theory and a penchant for HB pencils and ring-bound sketch pads, my obsession with knitting over the last nine years shouldn't really be a surprise to anyone, much less to me.

Recently I've spent a lot of time sorting through the many things my 80-year-old mother has kept from my and my four siblings' childhoods as we move her out of her current house. Yesterday she unearthed this. I made this doll and her two wee companions as a gift for no particular reason to one of my sisters.

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I remember just having a desire to make something and rummaging for bits and pieces of cloth in the household rag bag. I cut up the remains of an ancient baby blanket and old t-shirts. I also used up some too-small bits of old lace and ribbon from the Trimmings Box - corollary of the Button Jar in our house. I loved old cotton lace.

I think I was in about fourth grade, maybe fifth and felt very pleased both then and now with how it turned out. Since the dolls didn't actually work to play with much, my very young sister tired of them quickly and gave them back. I'm not sure the larger doll's been out of her shoe box bed since I put her there over forty years ago.

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The memory made a nice connection between my child and adult selves, but I gave her up once more - after I took a few photos. This process with my mother has been more about letting go and simplifying with the reconnection as a by-product.

No, that does not mean I'm down-sizing my yarn stash.

December 18, 2007

It's Raining, It's Pouring

Today we've had some long and heavy downpours. When I went to the grocery store earlier, the puddle filling the curb cut in front of the doors grew from a short hop to larger than I could jump over while I shopped. The drive both ways required lots of attention and some evasion, including two swerves to miss little frogs crossing the road. A major drain just above us clogged and the water made a white-capped cascade down our street to the next working drain.

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Nothing seems to be in imminent danger and the noise of rainfall has now slowed. Fortunately, I got my Dutch Irises planted yesterday - about the only productive thing I got done.

I've wanted just white ones, with the yellow flare on the falls, for a while, but only found all blue or mixed colors. They had a pile of these still at the smaller hardware store. These grow easily in the heavy, dry soil in this area and seem deer-proof in neighbors' yards. I may go back for more.

I really hope everyone's Okay with mostly things other than knitting filling this post. During the return flight on Sunday I managed five rows on my sleeve. Since then I've knit just two more.

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Part of the lack of knitting action relates to my feeling ill for the first couple of days after our trip. Food and I can have a love/hate relationship. And we basically ate no food prepared by us for four days. Wait, I did have one breakfast that pretty much matched what I usually eat. But something(s) disagreed with my system in several ways.

Much of what we ate had more salt in it than we usually use. We do have occasional sushi dinners or other high-salt meals, but our normal intake is fairly low. We both grew up with fathers on low-salt diets so no salt got added in our childhood cooking. Neither of us got in the habit of salting our food. Though my blood pressure runs just fine, a meal involving soy sauce can raise my weight a couple of pounds for a couple of days and make me noticeably puffy.

And I have a respiratory allergy to milk - it gives me asthma-like symptoms if I eat much of it or often. I know I had a couple of treats that were a real spurge for me at the function on Friday night. If I'm good otherwise, I can do that occasionally with minimal effect.

But it can be very hard to eat out with a food allergy. Ingredients don't get mentioned on the menu or the dish gets changed a bit without an update. Servers don't always know the actual ingredients. The good ones find out.

On top of that, I'm pretty sure there are other things I react to that I haven't identified yet. I've been feeling unwell off and on recently, and not in a flu-ish or getting-a-cold kind of way.

So I came home tired, with an unsettled stomach and difficulty keeping focused on anything that required much attention.

I also came home with several gourmet cooking magazines bought at the airport. They now sit in the stack next to my chair with the vegan cookbooks I bought in the last couple of weeks. I go through phases of wanting to read about little other than food or cooking. Often those phases correspond to times I'm felling unaccountably unwell. Perhaps my brain makes the connection between what I eat and how I feel and tries to find a fix.

Part of the impetus for the grocery shopping outing in the horrid weather tonight came from a search for a holiday cookie recipe that would make something suitable both to my dairy-less need and to my MIL's combination of diabetes and celiac disease (no gluten). Fortunately, I found a recipe for Holiday Fruit and Nut Balls that uses ground almonds rather than flour, plus dried fruit and orange juice. I have some decent almonds bought in a stop at Whole Foods on the way back from the airport. Here I found unsweetened dried apricots, figs, and plums for the fruit. I'll try producing powdered sugarsubstitute by whirring erythritol in the blender.

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Unfortunately, I hadn't researched recipes before our little trip. Three other recipes I found all call for tapioca flour, which my local store doesn't have. They do have both brown and white rice flour, and both potato and cornstarch from Bob's Red Mill, as well as a premixed gluten-free baking blend - a big increase from recent years. But I really wanted to make the Lemon Olive Oil Cookies. Of course, I'm now a thousand miles from the source for the lemon oil, too, but you can bet I'll look for as soon as I get back to Seattle.

I did find a couple of good looking, smallish butternut squashes. I'll roast those in olive oil tomorrow along with a half dozen little yellow potatoes I have. Or maybe I'll try the Hashed Brussels Sprouts with Lemon and Poppy Seeds and save the squash for Thursday.

I'll make the fruit balls in time to have late-afternoon tea and cookies while I watch the deer graze in fading sunlight on the bird and squirrel seed I toss out back as a source of Kitty TV. That'll make decent compensation for the lack of things I'm used to having easily available.

December 07, 2007

This and That

While I sew the buttons on my finally-dry cardigan I'll follow up on a couple of things from yesterday's post. (Yes, I do find that my habit of multitasking while I knit slows down my progress a bit. Why do you ask?) Photos tomorrow.

It seems, if you can't find Erika now you should try looking for her in the land of perfume blogs. Sorry about that/you're welcome, Erika.

The sample source I linked yesterday, The Perfumed Court, specializes in niche and hard to find scents. Those are the kind I tend to go for and I can handle, enjoy even, the wait/search for one I like. Very much like I enjoy the hunt for an illusive yarn.

Another source with samples of more easily bought perfumes is discounter Perfume Bay. I haven't bought from them but have read only positive things. I have bought perfumes from Imagination Perfumery. They don't carry samples, but have a 10% off and free shipping over $50 deal on right now and that's off already discounted prices.

So, back to knitting related issues - though having a nice scent on your wrist while you manipulate needles is a good thing.

Robin and I had a little conversation about methods to keep yourself moving forward on projects. She says she tricks herself by stopping at a good starting place rather than at a good stopping place. She tries to always cast on for the next piece before she puts the knitting down or to start a seam as soon as she casts off the last piece. Does it surprise anyone that her job involves process efficiency?

She suggested I try stopping mid-row when I put a piece down. Unfortunately, I've done that one before and didn't pick the sweater back up for a year. Apparently I have a headstrong and hard to trick subconscious.

We do both lay out tools and supplies for a task ahead of time. I may not be able to soak and pin out a piece of lace in the time I have, but if I can I lay out the foam blocks I use to block on as well as my pins, wires, and tape measures. Then in the time I do have to block I can just block rather than taking up some of it with prep.

I assume Robin also has no little kids to get into things and places she can lay out tools without having them in the way.

Any other ideas? How do you keep yourself from procrastinating? How do you get yourself over a difficult spot in the knitting?

November 27, 2007

Random Filler Thoughts

I haven't yet done any knitting today, so no photos of progress, but I expect to get some done this evening. Tonight's movie/TV fare won't have subtitles, though I enjoyed La Vie en Rose last night and now want to knit berets. My hand feels fine. However, I want to try to get to sleep earlier tonight, as on Thursday and Friday I need to be up by seven. My current schedule of sleeping from 3 or 4 AM until eleven or twelve won't work so well, then. So I have to move my usual posting time up.

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I've always been a night owl, but my schedule has become even more random and later over the last few years. Some of this comes from my having better concentration on things such as knitting, reading and blogging late at night and just enjoying them more then. Some is hormonal, or lack thereof.

Speaking of hormones, I may have reached that mythical place on the other side of perimenopause where the excess weight starts to pack up and leave as mysteriously as it arrived. Despite celebrating Thanksgiving twice in the last week and a half and not getting in a workout for longer, I'm within a pound of my lowest weight in the last twelve years.

Correction, I did do a light workout on Sunday, and a longer one today. I started working out regularly, including practicing Pilates, about eight years ago. Life activities just no longer provided enough exercise as they did when I was a hospital nurse and an avid gardener. Knitting builds biceps but can not count as aerobic, no matter how fast you do it.

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I'm fitter than ten years ago - also more flexible and have better posture. I have noticed over the same time frame that now when I spend an entire day on the computer or sitting and knitting, I feel  much more stiffness than before. IMO, only part of this relates to my age - 53, for those who want to know. If I don't stretch out my legs after sitting a lot, they'll wake me up at night.

The benefits of a good range of motion and the pleasure of stretching out tight muscles outweigh the annoyance of the need to keep up with it. So I try to incorporate both leg and back stretches as well as my hand stretches into my knitting routine. I do feel less creaky than some knitters I know. Repetitive motion and bad posture catch up with you.

I worked out tonight to a video set near Sedona. I lived in Sedona for a few years back in the late 50s when I was in kindergarten and younger and it was a small town in the middle of nowhere.  In February, the week before The Madrona Winter Retreat, Spousal Unit and I take a trip to Tucson for the  pre-official-show Gem and Mineral show and a couple days in Sedona.

As I was doing my video I thought I should get recommendations on yarn stores in the area. I'd like to get something different from what I can find in Seattle, though I have great access to wonderful stuff. I should get on Ravelry and poke around the Arizona groups; ask for some tips.

The fact that I'll be at Madrona a week later shouldn't have any effect on yarn store visits in Arizona. After all, I don't plan on going to Stitches West the week after Madrona. Except those classes on knitting back backwards and conquering collars still have openings.

Random_avatar_swatch

I need to spend more time learning the resources on Ravelry. Last night I finally entered an avatar. This is a close up of my Mountain Colors 4/8s wool in Silverbow knit up. The real thing looks a bit bluer - blues just don't cooperate with my point and shoot photography - but the muted grayed tones are right on.

I just get caught up in blogs and don't get to Ravelry. This afternoon I followed a link on Weebug's blog through Rebecca's to a search for Cupcake Royale in Seattle. From there I ended up going through a series of links that led to an order for a vegan cupcake and a vegan baking book. I'm allergic to milk and my sister has an intolerance. Her 50th birthday party is at my place on Sunday, so I hope to find a birthday cake possibility in one of them.

So, there we are; a bunch of random thoughts that seem to prove everything in my life does relate back to knitting.

September 30, 2007

Knit Surfing

No wonder I so often get behind on reading blogs. I keep finding new ones to add to my Bloglines list. Lately I've explored many of the links from one blog to the next and on to the next. I've ended up in some interesting places.

I try to stay with just knitting-themed blogs, but even that seems to get away from me sometimes. This week I spent some time reading back through a blog called Posie Gets Cozy who's author knits very little. Actually, today when she planned to start a cabled sweater and said it would be a first sweater, the post made for the first knitting content I've seen there.

Alicia does craft, in fact has just finished the final draft of a crafting book, but she does more sewing-based stuff. I don't sew much or well. She cooks a lot, too, when not up against deadlines. Many of her meals or food ideas wouldn't work for me due to my milk allergy and habit of not eating red meat.

So why am I there? Well, there's a feeling at crafting/cooking/gardening/making things and your life blogs that feels familiar and comfotable to me. And I like her writing style, though she gets more 'mushy' about things than I do - things like Clover the corgi puppy. The site needs a Cute Overload warning label right now.

And then I had to go back to find out what happened to Audrey, the recently previous corgi. And I got mushy. So, now I'm stuck on yet another blog and my sweater is not done. Blog reading slows my knitting way down.

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At the other end of the blog spectrum, TECHknitting has resumed posting. Yes, I found an entire blog of knitting geek heaven - nothing but knitting techniques. A blog of well-written and illustrated posts on techniques.

The most recent post (September 28, 2007 - the posts don't have a permalink) covered a new method for left-leaning decreases that better matches a partnered right-leaning decrease. The one before (September 24, 2007) explained why the left-leaning decrease turns out so wonky as usually done.

I tried this new decrease on my sweater yesterday. How could I resist something called 'Sip Yank Twist Knit.' That sounds so much like making a left-leaning decrease feels when I do one.

What she's done is to take up the slack that gets inot the top stitch and transfer it to the stitch that will end up hidden on the back of the decrease. Then she twists that stitch to keep it there.

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The top photo shows my first execution of this technique. My previous over-sized SSK stitch shows in the second, I hope.

Cool, huh?

Oh, and if you really want to challenge your mind, That Laurie's guest posts during the Yarn Harlot's push to a book deadline will do it. Laurie discusses various facets of top-down yoked sweaters, including some to use a limited amount of hand-spun yarn in the yoke. Unfortunately, That Laurie doesn't have her own blog.

Or fortunately - I do not need another blog to read.

 

September 29, 2007

Cooking v. Knitting

Besides the lentils I cooked a pot of white beans. My recipe for these is just in my head. It comes from several recipes I read over the years, mostly the one I remember from Cooking From an Italian Garden.

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I use cannellini beans. Any white bean will do, but cannellini have a more 'meaty' flavor than other white beans so they will make a difference.

I do the same 'rapid soak' method with the white beans. I put them in a large batter bowl, cover with hot water, and boil in the microwave for about five minutes. Then I let them sit while I get everything else ready.

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Everything else includes a large onion and several cloves of garlic, mostly smushed in my mini-food processor, three or four big pinches of sage, less rosemary, a couple grinds of black pepper, and this many juniper berries cooked together in olive oil in the microwave and then boiled with some white wine. How much of each relates to my mood as much as my cooking experience.

After I stir in the beans I add enough liquid to almost cover. The white beans also need more liquid added during cooking. I use  a bit more wine but mostly water. They cook for a few hours on high in a slow cooker, then on low over night.

So, other than baking where the chance of experimental failure is high and my modifications are minimal, I don't cook from recipes, though I often base my cooking on ideas from recipes. Sometimes I write down my versions.

Actually, the first recipe I remember writing was for a cake. It turned out well enough that my family ate it. My father really liked it, or said he did. I liked it. I must have been about ten or eleven.

In high school  I taught myself to knit from a book, but I didn't use patterns. Not many were available there and then and those I remember seeing seemed way beyond me. I did buy a stitch pattern book and devise scarves. That was about it.

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When I took up knitting back up seven or eight years ago, I went straight to sweaters, but altered the first pattern I knit. It went okay. The second thing I started was a simple-ish large shawl I designed. I love books that discuss design-it-yourself sweaters like Elizabeth Zimmerman or Barbara Walker. Lately, I've started knitting scarves and small shawls that I create myself again, using all of my stitch pattern books. I have lots of sweater ideas in my head and a few drawn in a notebook.

I don't really think of myself as an advanced knitter; more intermediate. There are lots of things I haven't done. For example, my current project will include my first button bands. I've only done small colorwork projects.

Not everything turns out like I want it. That doesn't bother me. I'd like to wear mostly hand knit sweaters, but some of the ones I've made get worn very little and just at home. Still, I learned something from every one of them. I'm definitely a process knitter.

I really should knit more things from patterns. They'd teach me a lot, too.

I've just never been one to follow the recipe. It's a good thing that I like my own cooking.

September 17, 2007

The Harlot Effect

At 5:37 PM Pacific time yesterday The Yarn Harlot, Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, posted her blog entry in which she linked to my blog.

TypePad tracks blog statistics on Greenwich Mean Time. Since 5PM Pacific time corresponds to midnight in GMT, my stats had just reset for a new day. I got the first hit from her blog at 5:38. Odds are good I had fewer than a half a dozen hits in the previous 38 minutes of the stats day.

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At 4:39 PM today, 23 hours later, my Stats page looked like this.

Note the day's total (1337) versus the last seven days (1610) and the Lifetime totals (5367). I've only blogged for five months as of yesterday and I have worked on some ways to increase my blog traffic, though I've only done one KAL. The last couple of weeks I've averaged around 40 to 45 page hits per day.

TypePad timed an issue with my e-mail notification for comments to coincide with this week. If you leave a comment I'll try to find an e-mail address to send you a thank you. I really do appreciate those who stay and chat.

Next month for my six month anniversary I'll do a give-away of the second copy of Casts Off I got Stephanie to sign. Come back a few days before that to check on details.

Of course, you all are very welcome to hang around here between now and then if you like. I hope some of you do.

August 28, 2007

Writing Assignment

The sweater looks about the same with a few inches more body since I last took photos. While we wait for things to get more interesting, here's an exercise I wrote for my writing group last week. I do have a few photos of recent yarn purchases to liven things up.

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As the first light showed on the horizon I felt energized yet calm. For hours, with only short breaks, I'd sat in this chair and knit.

My emotions resembled those of a 'runner's high' produced by the release of endorphins after long exertion. This high, though, lacked the giddy skittishness of the exercise-induced state. Brought on by repetitive motions, the mood was more Zen than manic.

   

Yarn_jaeger_beiges_82807

The next day my hands would feel stiff, a bit sore, but then they moved easily through  the stockinette repetition. The yarn fed smoothly over my fingers. No mistakes slowed my progress.

Tomorrow, also, I would walk onto the ferry and ride across the Sound to knitting circle at the island yarn store. There, after some manic knitting to reach the crucial point, I would separate the sleeves from the body and turn this formless lump of the beginning of a top-down sweater into something recognizably a garment.

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Eventually I need to fix the one mistake I found in the marathon of stitches. I'll ladder two columns of stitches down a few inches, move an incorrectly placed yarn-over one column to the right, and chain the stitches back up to the working row.

These moves will require attention and calm. They will not leave me feeling Zen. Instead, I'll feel accomplishment after the challenge -- or not.

When I wear the completed sweater I can reply to questions that, yes, I did make it myself. The pattern, actually, is my own based on a template. Oh, yes, I do like to design my own work and have more ideas than time to knit them -- sketchbooks full of sweater drawings.

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If the questioner knits, we may discuss the picot hems I chose and the use of yarn-overs to make a lacy pattern of increases along the raglan sleeve line. We could pass on tips or compare favorite techniques.

And I will remember the feeling of sitting in this chair where I now write, watching the sun rise as I knit, and knit, and knit.

    

No, I haven't fixed the misplaced yarn-over yet -- tomorrow.

August 20, 2007

Stash Attack

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My luck held today. Early this morning, while the rain drummed on the windows, my garden-help guy called and rescheduled for tomorrow when the prediction contains much less wet. Usually his schedule doesn't allow us last-minute reschedules.

First, I went back to bed and caught up on my sleep and on cat-snuggling.

Stash_attack_too_82007

Then I spent part of the day reorganizing a couple of cupboards in the room where I store my knitting tools, files, and yarn.

In the last week I received a couple of largish orders of now-discontinued Jaeger yarn. I needed cupboard space to store it. We still have some unused cupboards elsewhere in our place, even after a year in residence here, so I could shift a shelf full of stuff out of another cupboard in this room and commit all of this one to knitting.

Note a few empty and unfilled storage boxes in my after photos and space for another box. I have a bit more Jaeger yarn I want to order while I can still get it, so some of that will get filled in the near future.

Stash_attack_done_82007

Also note that I have a long window seat with a row of yarn-filled drawers in addition to what you see here.

Yet more yarn fills half a dozen deeper boxes in a space over the closet of a cathedral-ceilinged guest room in our Bainbridge Island place. I need to buy a slightly taller ladder to help manage that stash, but I organized it into labeled boxes just a couple years ago -- not that long in knitting stash history.

Stash_attack_more_progress_82007

Not everything is done. The lower two file boxes contain piles of papers and stacks of folders waiting organization. My regular-life paperwork overflows a file drawer likewise awaiting sorting into folders. Another two or three or more hours of work remain.

I also did a bit of regular closet and shoe organization. I have a couple of other areas of collecting compulsion besides yarn.

Anyway, tonight I feel virtuous despite accomplishing no actual knitting today.

August 17, 2007

A Very Nice Week

I had a pretty nice week, knitting and knitting community wise.

I passed 100 posts and the four-month mark in my blogging.

I blocked one finished Pinnate Shawl and finished and blocked another.

I finally started my Mountain Colors cardigan.

I got a couple of boxes of yarn in the mail, mostly containing discounted (and discontinued)Jaeger Extra Fine Merino.

I had a post selected for Yarnival. Since january one hosted this month's edition, I've had two or three hundred people click on my post since Wednesday.

Wednesday evening I went to the Ice Cream Social at the Seattle Knitters Guild August meeting. I just joined the Guild and started going to meetings a few months ago. This one was all about socializing so I talked to several people I've kind of met at meetings or on the bus trip to the Lavender Festival last month. I also finally met Ryan of Mossy Cottage and got to visit with some of her recent projects in person.

I won the Weekly Link Contest at the Summer of Socks 2007 KAL with a link to hand and wrist stretches. More people stopped by the blog from that post. Thanks, Margene for being my source for the link in the first place.

Today Ryan, who's a sweetie herself, posted about Wednesday's Guild meeting and said some extremely nice things about me, as well as linking to my blog which brought yet more people over. One of those was Kim, from Knits with a Silent K, who apparently had made futile efforts (due to lack of information from Blogger) to find my blog after I commented on hers.

Then Jo Anne from Ottawa, apparently blogless but a repeat commenter on my blog, said in a reply to my thank-you e-mail that I'm on her daily blog list "right up there with the Harlot, Rabbich, and Franklin." Which both made me speechless and made a superlative end to a mighty fine week.

August 14, 2007

Interweave Knits Fall '07

Opinions and comments on the new issue of Interweave Knits pop up regularly in the land of knitting blogs over the last few days. The issue marks the first one officially run by Eunny Jang, though changes began to show up a couple of issues ago with the behind the scenes transition to a new editor.

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Tonight I sat down to compare the current issue with some older ones. I couldn't put my hands on my copy of the Summer issue, so I looked at Spring '07 and Winter '06.

Last Winter's issue had the look I was used to seeing in Interweave. Changes first showed up with the Spring issue.

The cover changes, though subtle, make an impact with a glance such as the magazine would get lined up among dozens of others on a newsstand. KNITS is now in larger type running across the width of the top edge. The cover printing references more articles in a bigger variety of print sizes.

   

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Inside the magazine several big shifts happened between Winter and Spring. The patterns separated from the initial photographs in Spring. I like the photo-spread style with first presentations uninterrupted by pages of pattern text. It allows me to quickly get an idea of what's in the issue in a very enjoyable way. Plus, I really appreciate that Interweave corrected that major flaw I find so annoying in Vogue Knitting. Both the first photographs of the projects and the pattern pages indicate clearly the page on which you'll find the other part. No frustratedly flipping back and forth looking for the gauge of yarn used or the photo that showed the cuff detail. And the pattern section still has an interesting layout with a separation between patterns.

Still, I found myself confusing the editorial section of the Spring issue with the advertising. The photos and page layouts had a similar feel. Things just didn't pop when I looked at them.

Coverwin062_x120Fall '07 definitely pops. The photos are brighter and crisper, starting on the cover. Plus, each project has more photos, both in the initial spread and later with the pattern. Most projects have four to six different pictures giving a very good idea of what the garment actually looks like. There is no sense that a less than successful neckline is camouflaged or wondering how the sweater would hang if the model actually stood up straight. And the layout of the photos and print is clean and interesting -- very distinct from the ads.

One more change that I like very much first showed up in the Spring issue. The Beyond the Basics feature moved to the front of the magazine. Instead of drawings it has photographs. And a relevant pattern follows the article. Since I rarely actually knit patterns from magazines or books as is and mostly use them to learn more about knitting and knitting techniques, this change makes me very happy.

Some things, like fewer small entries in the News & Views sections or Clara Parkes' piece on organic yarns actually titled Yarn Review, may indicate changes or merely the content available for this issue.

Overall, the changes made more impact with this issue. The photography and its layout really felt new and fresh and made you notice that things were different. The issue was visually stimulating and just plain fun to look at.

August 11, 2007

Blocked Manos

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Apparently my forgetfulness now extends beyond the need to post to the blog as I progress from peri-senility to full senescence. I can report that after 20 hours of soaking, Manos del Uruguay yarn will leave some of the darker dyes in the water. Otherwise, it seems none the worse for its loooong soak.

I have two habits while blocking I can't account for.

   

Blocked_81207

First, I don't sew in my ends at the cast-on and bind-off before I block. This one I think comes from some belief that I can fix a problem that arises during blocking, such as a too tight bind-off, more easily if the ends still hang loose. This may be true but I've never tested the theory.

Secondly, I block in two stages. First I pull the edges out fairly securely, but without forcing anything. Then, after things are mostly dry, I pull all the edges out a bit further and spray the piece down until it's pretty damp.

   

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My pieces always relax a bit when unpinned. This piece is about two inches narrower and an inch shorter.

I've never tested whether my two-phase blocking actually results in increased size. I really should, shouldn't I?

May 2008

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