Sunday, October 25, 2009

Soctober! (contains a mystery sock spoiler pic...)

What a difference a few weeks make...

1. Earlier this month, I was in Denver for work. I saw my friend Jon, who is really Spanky's friend from HS, but I've known him a good long time now too. He's a really great guy, and he made what was otherwise an unbearable situation fun, and distracted me from my problems for a bit. Also, it snowed.

denver snow

2. You see, the Wednesday of the week I was there, my mom's husband died. She married someone 18 years older than herself, and he's been sick for a while, but all of a sudden, he went down hill really quickly and died. It was torture knowing that I couldn't leave Denver, because I was the only one from our company there, and I had to get the materials sent back before I could leave. When I got back to NYC, I spent a week catching up, just to be out the door again for my 5 day bereavement period. I know I'm lucky that my company even has such a policy, and the time was totally put to good use, because there was a lot of paperwork to help with, even though I wasn't there for the physical things like getting the cremation taken care of and so forth. We also had a very moving memorial for him, which went off very well, and of which I think he would have approved.

mom walking ahead

florida 3

Every day, I'd get up at 6am to go walking with my mom and her neighbor (which is when I took the pictures), we'd do one or two things once the businesses opened up, then go shopping, or sit out on the porch, or watch mindless tv. My mom's pretty devastated. They were happily married for over fifteen years, and she's never really been alone before. She has a lot of friends, and I'm sure in the long run she'll be fine, but it's hard in the short term. She's just going through the motions. I really didn't want to leave her, but I have to go back to work tomorrow. Meanwhile, none of the work I brought down with me got done. I did manage to knit the Soctober mystery socks up to the third clue though:

mystery socks 2009

I don't feel so bad posting the picture since the fourth clue is out now, and if you're really into the socks, then you are probably this far along yourself anyway... I downloaded the fourth clue, for the foot, before I left my mom's house, but I haven't started them yet, because I don't deserve to if I haven't done any of the work I needed to do for work.

The legs of both socks knit up really fast while I was watching cable. I don't have cable tv at home, so when I'm at my mom's I have a hard time shutting it off. Seems like some of my favorite shows are on back to back every night: NCIS, Ghost Whisperer, and Criminal Minds--the season(s) with Mandy Patinkin. I know those are all really mindless shows, but that's why I like them. There is a formula to each one, and it is safe viewing. Except that Ghost Whisperer started hitting close to home... Although, I think my mom sort of liked the message that you should keep on living even when you don't feel like it anymore, and that even though your loved one may have 'gone into the light', it doesn't mean that your life is over. Anyway... that's about all I could manage. I did finish a simple pair of ribbed handwarmers with the leftover Waterspun from my Columbia beret, but I don't have pictures of them now.

visit to joann's

3. One day, I think it was Wednesday or Thursday, we went to Joann's. I wanted to get some crochet thread, as I saw this awesome pattern in Crochet Today for christmas ornaments made from starched thread doilies. They were crocheted and then starched into balls. Anyway, then I saw this new sock yarn called Bamboo and Ewe, by Sensations, which I think is the Joann's store brand, and told my mom I would make her another pair of socks. She picked out the colorway. Don't blame me. I really tried to talk her into a different one, but she likes all the tropical colors. Yikes. I'm going to do these as just plain stockinette socks, obviously.

florida at dawn

4. Anyway, that brings me to now. I'm back for one more week, and then I have to go to Louisville, Kentucky for work again. I'm not ready for any of it. I'm really over my job right now. It's going to suck from now until the end of the year.

In the meantime, though, I did take a few minutes today to jot down my knitting goals for the rest of the year, and I'm looking forward to it:
-finish mystery socks
-Fetching for my assistant for xmas (Cascade 220 from the stash)
-Sarah's baby gift (leftover Comfort in the stash)
-John's scarf for xmas (Pastaza in the stash)
-little pumpkins socks with the awesome sock yarn I got in Denver (another post!)
-mom's socks
-finish veil
-finish clementine shawlette (would love to be able to wear this to xmas party)
-alpaca gloves for spanky (stash from 2007(?) Rhinebeck)
-hat for jon in Denver (unknown--no yarn picked for this one yet, but I'm sure I have something appropriate in the stash)
-cheryl's present (stash)
-those crocheted xmas ornaments
-hat for my mom's friend Karen (no yarn picked for this one yet either, but I do have some Koigu I was thinking about making the purl beret with, and I think that might be perfect for her)

That's it! I know it is a lot, but they're all small projects, so I think they'll move fairly quickly. Some are negotiable in timing, too. I would like to get Matthew his xmas present by xmas this year though. Normally he has to wait until February!

Saturday, October 03, 2009

so this is England

Once a year, I spend a week in the UK to meet with my manager, and get caught up in our company's version of the employee review. It's tedious, sure, but these things are never fun, and at least I get to actually travel over and meet with her in person, rather than over the video conference thingie.

I also got to see my friend Eve, who lives in a house built during the Civil War. The English Civil War, which she's dated to about 1640 (the house, not the war).

hobbit door

It is made of wattle and daub, and you can see in this picture where she and her husband had to repair the back wall (those brown panels). Yes, they learned how to do the wattle and daub and fixed it themselves.

back wall of house

They also have a lovely garden, with flowers and fruit trees, a vegetable patch, a mulch pile, and a swing for their 15 mo. old son, who is adorable, and whom I totally neglected to capture on camera. Oh well. I did get the house though!

I also spent time with my friend Kate and her husband, just hanging around London over the weekend.

on the way to the market

The weather was lovely, and we basically tooled around Hackney and then I got to see her new house, which is AMAZING. I wish I could afford something like this. It's the perfect size for a couple planning to settle in without raising a family, and if they did decide to have a baby, they would have the spare room.

K&B's new home

I did a few things on my own, too. I got to see the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square for quite a long while, as I'd gone down there to see the Portrait Gallery, but it closed before I could get there. Sadly, all I got to see was this fellow:

gorilla on bike

He rode and rode for a while, and then I got up to get a sandwich from Pret, came back, and he'd gotten off the bike and was aping around up there. He had friends in the crowd also dressed like gorillas, and they were passing out flyers for his website, which he is advertising in front of the bike. Lame. There was a person in a panda suit setting up their electric guitar when I left (they'd taken the gorilla and his bike off in a cherry-picker).

The last day I was there, I left work a few minutes early (with my boss' blessing--I think at that point we'd run out of things to talk about!) and ran to Loop in Islington. That whole area is so cute! I have to remember to go back next time I'm there. What a great shop! Most of their inventory seemed to come from the States though, or South America, and with the exchange rate spanking the US again, I wasn't about to spend cash on things I could get easily in NYC, so I bought some Colinette. I know you can get it here, but it seems much cheaper when you're paying 5 pounds per skein for it, and it is made in Wales, so I didn't feel it was as much of a cheat.

colinette giotto

This is Giotto, and I've got two skeins of it now. Not the most practical yarn ever invented, but isn't it BEAUTIFUL?! Oh, I love it so much. I just don't really know what to do with it. The owner of the shop was suggesting a drop-stitched scarf, or maybe something loopy, so perhaps that's what I'll do, but I really would like to make something pretty that I can wear a lot. I don't think I have enough for a top, unless it was something really strappy. We'll see...

I also bought a project bag:

pretty cheep bags

It is just like the smaller ones that I got at the Renegade Craft Fair in Brooklyn this past summer (only thinner cotton...), but those are more for socks and small projects. This one is pretty substantial, and I'm sure I'm going to use it a lot. It is a Pretty Cheep Project Bag by Fia. I obviously got the one on the right.

That was my only yarn shop experience. I should have found a shawl pin while I was there, but I forgot to look. On the plane to England, I spent most of the six or so hours watching the new 'Star Trek' (fantastic movie!), 'Ghosts of Girlfriends Past' (omg, soooo terrible), and most of 'The Informant' (surprisingly good! Ben Affleck does a really great job... I didn't get to see the end, though I suspect I know who did it.). I spent it knitting the rest of some Artyarns Supermerino left over from these into a simple stockinette cowl, and I must have knit the damn thing three times all the way through by the time I got to England, but it is still a little too droopy, and I think a nice pin would just be the ticket, because I'll be damned if I ever take it out to re-do it again, and I probably won't use it the way it is. Let me demonstrate:

stockinette cowl stockinette cowl w/pin

I don't actually have a pin--that's a dpn, but you see the difference, right? The second way has more structure, and you can actually use the cowl as part of your outfit, like a neck piece. So I should have looked for a nice stick pin, but like I said, I forgot. Any suggestions? I guess this would be FO #34, even though I'm not too happy with it. The one thing I used from a pattern found online was to knit five rounds and then purl one round, which helps stop the stockinette roll. It actually does work!

I also brought my two skeins of Classic Elite Waterspun that I got out in Springfield, and created the Columbia Beret, which I absolutely love. I started the beret before I left, but wasn't very far. That was my nightly knitting when I was in the hotels, after the whole cowl debacle, and it was satisfying that it worked out. I actually finished it at the Hoxton hotel, watching "A Walk to Remember" on TV. Yes, that horrible Mandy Moore/Nicholas Sparks movie where she's 'dying' and turns the bad boy good. Yes, I think I did cry a few tears for her. Yes, PMS is a bitch, and I might have also eaten three candy bars, but WHO'S COUNTING, right?! Anyway:

columbia beret from the side

These pictures were taken at 1am as soon as I bound off on the top. You can still see the ends hanging down, and I (still) haven't blocked it, although I have since woven in the ends and have actually worn it several times.

columbia beret!

I love this hat. It's the perfect color, the perfect size, and I love the ties at the top. I love that I can pull it over to one side or toward the back. I'm so glad I made it.

at the Hoxton

Please forgive the blurry pictures and the fact that I look exhausted. Sometimes you can't wait, you know?

FO# 35: Columbia Beret by Sarah Pope at Blue Garter
Yarn: Classic Elite Waterspun, which of course is discontinued. Sheesh. The beret took about 1.25 skeins of the yarn, and I think I'm going to try to knit some handwarmers out of the remaining yarn--simple 2x2 rib ones with just a thumb hole.
Needles: Size 7 circular (24"?) and dpns.
Notes: I did the pattern exactly as written. It is super-slouchy though, so bear that in mind. I've never done a slouchy hat before though, so it doesn't bother me. I'm not over the slouch yet.

On the plane ride back to NYC, I watched 'The Proposal' (soooo much funnier than I thought it would be. I actually want to watch it again!), 'Minority Report' (I'm not really sure why--I think action movies are easier to watch when you're knitting though...), and something else which I can't quite recall anymore. Oh well.

I used that time to work on the only other thing I'd brought with me--the sorely neglected Clementine Shawlette. I'm through the set up rows on the first side (it is done in two pieces and then grafted together in the center) and about 4 inches into the main body of the stole, and I'm enjoying it! The Blue Sky Alpaca & Silk yarn is sooo nice, and the lace pattern isn't as hard as I thought it would be. I am going to take it on my upcoming trip to Denver, and will hopefully be able to finish the first half at least by this time next week.

So, all in all, a successful trip! Saw some friends, did a little yarn shopping, a little knitting from the stash, and finishing up WIPs. Not too shabby. Oh, I do have one more yarn purchase to discuss, but I think that can wait, eh?