Monthly Archives: August 2012

Sewing Sunday

Since my sister Carrie is in town for a few days I decided to take a day off working and enjoy my first Sewing Sunday in ages. It was a great day.

 Caroline was hard at work on her own sewing project, but I’ll let her share that when it’s finished.

My sister and I each made a pair of short pj bottoms. I love this crazy vegetables-at-night fabric and have been trying to figure out just what to use it for for years.

The nice thing about making pj pants is that it only takes a couple of hours but it gives you a big feeling of accomplishment. I had to stop myself from immediately cutting out another pair.

Since we all had projects we wanted to focus on and no one wanted to take a break to cook, we picked up tons of Chinese food for lunch. I did invest a little time in dessert, though. This blueberry crumble is dead easy to make and well worth the three minutes it took for me to throw the ingredients together and stir.

All in all, it was a perfectly wonderful Sunday. Hoping yours was every bit as lovely.

New Pajamas

I finally finished the pajamas I had planned on making for Emily for her birthday.  Better late than never!

The fabric is Tula Pink, and the pattern is from Favorite Things.

The pants are a steampunk-ish mechanical bird, and the top has very spooky apothecary jars.  Very Emily.

I even whipped up a sleep mask to match.

She’s ready for fall already!


Tagged: Sewing

Butternut

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Apparently we have too many soaker hoses in the garden for the amount of water pressure we have so one side has been rather underwatered all summer. Nevertheless, my butternut squash is managing to produce a few lovely fruits. The hot peppers are going gangbusters and the chard continues to produce nicely. Tomatoes are improving daily now that we are spraying the nasty stinkbugs and the second crop of green beans is about to kick into overdrive.

Somebody’s 5!!!!

We’re back from Orlando!

The bigger new, however, is that Oona has turned 5.  5!!!

SO much about my life has changed in 5 years – it is so different and so much better in so many ways.  And yet it seems that Oona has gotten to be this age in the blink of an eye.

She had a spectacular 5th birthday.  And how can you not, when you are celebrating at Disney?

But first we HAD to go to Hogwarts.

The world of Harry Potter at Universal in Orlando is pretty impressive.  It’s really a must – see destination for all Potter fans.  Although I will say that my friend Jessie and her family went to the Harry Potter attraction in London this summer and saw all of the actual sets used in the movies.  That certainly beat out our experience, but we still enjoyed our fill of Butterbeer, Pumpkin Juice and roasted chicken.  This was the all around favorite of the bigger girls for the whole trip.

Disney was not quite as easy to navigate and the weather was not quite as nice.

I will say this about Disney, though: some things they do very, very right.  We had Oona wear her Cinderella dress to the Magic Kingdom on her birthday.  To that, we got a button from a shop just inside the park that had her name and announced her birthday.  EVERY “cast member” (employee) all day long greeted her with “Happy Birthday Princess!”.  It made her millenium.

There was also plenty of meet and greets throughout the day.

Followed by the famous fireworks spectacular at the castle that night.

There is no way we will ever beat that as a birthday experience.

As for me, I found myself having the most fun at the Animal Kingdom.

Since it was meant to look like parts of both Asia and Africa there was much more plant – life (and shade!).  There were animals everywhere of course, and we were all very excited to see their petting zoo, which promised “Exotic animals of many species”.

Well.

What they had were sheep, goats, pigs and a llama.

That was a total bust.  That was the opposite of exotic.

Fortunately, the safari ride we took more than made up for it.

We didn’t have to touch any of the animals to thoroughly enjoy them.

Now we are back to reality.  Back to planning for the school year which will start in just about a week and a half. Back to digging a culvert so we can make a bridge over the stream.  Back to getting fencing set in.

Because y’all, my birthday is coming up.  And you know getting my animals home is the one and only thing left for me to be completely content.

:-)

 

 


Tagged: Farm, Homeschooling, Pets, Trips

Review: Nicky Epstein’s Knitting in Circles

Post image for Review: Nicky Epstein’s Knitting in Circles

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First, the facts:

Title: Knitting in Circles: 100 Circular Patterns for Sweaters, Bags, Hats, Afghans, and More

Author: Nicky Epstein

Published by: Potter Craft, 2012

Pages: 224

Type: Stitch patterns, as well as full-fledged patterns for things to make

Chapters:

Introduction
Notes on Texture and Gauge
Designing with Circles
Project Gallery
Round 1: Basic Circle Shaping
Round 2: Texture & Techniques
Round 3: Lace & Points
Round 4: Colorwork
Round 5: Eclectic

KS: Knitting in Circles

The In-Depth Look:

It’s almost hard to know what to say about another collection of stitches and techniques from Nicky Epstein. I have seven of them on my bookcase, I think. (Eight? I’ve lost count.) It’s easy to see why, too, because they’re wonderful–bringing our attention to a specific theme (squares, edges, flowers, circles, etc) and then doing as many possible things within that framework as possible.

She says in the introduction here that, “Over the years, I’ve used a variety of circle shapes in my designs and thought it was finally time to share their many unique and beautiful uses with knitters of all skill levels. In this book, I’ll teach you different ways to shape, create, and embellish knitted circles, using traditional methods as well as some I’ve come up with on my own.”

She says she’s created 100 circles as well as 20 full, original designs for this collection–all made of circles–big ones, lots of little ones sewn together, or several joined in clever ways.

It’s easy to forget … knitting so obviously lends itself to rectangles and squares … but circles are versatile. You might think “hat” and “pillow” and then stop, with a glancing thought at a circle skirt or wrap/shawl/poncho of some kind. But really, you can do all sorts of things with circles. Sweaters. Afghans. Bags. Almost anything.

The book starts with basic shapes–ways to knit a circle. Start in the center and increase in a spoke pattern? A spiral? How about knit across in garter stitch rows? Or shaped around a center point with short rows? Then you can add texture … stitch patterns like cables or lace. (It’s hard to flip through some of these without thinking of the perfect tam-o’shanter cap.) Of course, color is always nice, so next we can try stranded color, or intarsia blocks–anything to add a splash. And then, as a full-fledged swing at having fun, there’s the “eclectic” section filled with … well, everything.

Finally, we get the patterns for the 20 original designs–sweaters, wraps, afghans, bags. A nice variety, all using circles. Some I think are more successful than others. (Some look rather like they’re using circles because they can rather than because they should.) But they’re all fun, all creative, and many of them are lovely.

Really, the book is a pleasure to flip through, and with so many different circles to choose from, there are tons of inspiration here.

But, then, it’s Nicky Epstein. At this point, I expect nothing less.

You can get your copy at Amazon.com.

Want to see bigger pictures? Click here.

This review copy was kindly donated by Potter Craft. Thank you!

My Gush: It’s Nicky Epstein. Of course it’s wonderful.

Other posts for this author:

Chap-A-Versary …

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This is Chappy on Aug 25, 2001… we had just picked him up from the breeder in western PA and were starting our 6 hour drive  home to NJ.

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This is Chappy today Aug 25, 2012.  Grew up nice didn’t he :)


7:30 P.M.

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Quilted

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Practice and Progress

Guess what you guys?! I can do colorwork!

Who would have thought, that it would be just as easy picking up some needles and doing it. Don’t get me wrong, I am still working out the finer points of keep my yarn from tangling and not pulling my floats too tightly. And the gauge on this swatch is ALL WRONG. I can barely fit that over my toes. But it has a pattern of color, and it is so far in the vague shape of a tube, so I call it a successful practice swatch!


This is a better picture of the color pattern. Which makes me think either my yarn (protoceratops) isn’t the best for color work projects, or my colors aren’t contrasty enough. I am leaning toward both. Of course, I have absolutely no idea what makes a sock yarn good for colorwork.

I browsed through my latest knitpicks catalog and picked out three colors of Palette to make this sock out of. While, yes, Knitpicks is cheap and easy, I mostly decided on this yarn because it was made for colorwork, and I want to see what that is. I will be purchasing it the moment I get paid next week…and scouting my local(est) yarn stores for sock yarn for the next few projects.

While I am waiting for money, I have been making some progress on my OWLS sweater! (Class starts the 13th! Sign up now!)

But I can’t show you now because my the picture uploader is seriously killing my lovely “it’s the weekend!” buzz and not uploading my photos properly or in a timely manner. Just be satisfied to know that I have the body and one sleeve done, and by the time the weekend is over, I hope to be joining it all for the yoke. Hooray for knitting with bulky yarn!

Happy weekend. I shall spend mine knitting as fast as I can!

Dogs Days of Summer

We had some hot days, relatively speaking, last week:  hot enough to keep clouds & fog from forming in our marine layer.  Bright blue skies, bright sunlight.  Great for going to the beach, of course, but….rotten for knitwear photography!

We (meaning Dave & I) need to do the photoshoot for the Malabrigo MFPP booklet.  I’d wanted to do it last weekend, but that just didn’t happen.

Now the cooler temps are back, so is our cloudy marine layer.  Photoshoot planned for Sunday!

The eBook will include a cardi, fingerless mitts, a hat, and a cowl.  I expect to publish it in the first week of September.

*****

A lesson learned this week:   Don’t spill the dog’s fish oil onto anything.  Especially not the small rug on which his food & water dishes sit.  And don’t toss said rug into the washing machine, even on hot & with extra detergent.  (Just throw it away. Which is what we did eventually.)  And especially don’t let your husband (who’s just trying to be helpful) move it from the washer to the dryer…without smelling it & realizing the whole thing smells fishy.  Literally.

Apparently sometimes people accidentally put fish oil caps in their pockets (with the rest of their vitamins) and forget them.  Vinegar (multiple wipes) and fresh lemon juice (multiple wipes) seem to have fixed our dryer odor issue.

Rigel’s on fish oil now.  He should’ve been, just for his skin allergies, but now he’s on it for his newly diagnosed glomerulopathy — he’s losing protein through his kidneys.  He’s also on antibiotics and  enalapril.  He’s acting, of course, completely normal — this issue showed up on routine preanesthetic labwork.  We’re not sure of the cause — that’s often the case, there are so many things that can cause this.  But again, he’s acting his normal happy bouncy self.

*****

Knitting-wise, I added a pattern (the afore mentioned hat) to the Malabrigo project.  I’ve finished a hat for the next big book.  I’m working on a hat for the Hitch collection (all the other projects from everyone got done, but this was a last minute fill-in).  Lots of hats for someone who doesn’t ever really wear them, lol!

Tech editing-wise, Hitch is taking nearly all my time.  As noted before, I’ll post on the tech editing page when I’m able to take on new tech editing jobs.