Monthly Archives: November 2014

Thank You …

Thanksgiving is a week away but I’m thinking today of the person to whom I am thankful for bringing Martha’s Vineyard into my life, and the lives of my family.

My mom, Maude Louise Littlefield Freeman.

Born March 11, 1907 in Waterville, Maine but raised on MV and through her we’ve all come to love the Vineyard.

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Mom and me 1946.

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   Little did she know when she set me down on this beach in Oak Bluffs  for the first time in 1943 what an important and life defining moment it was.  CLICK HERE for more about my mom.

Same beach 2010

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Passing the Vineyard to new generations is a tradition for lots of families and mine is no different.

  Here at State Beach in Oak Bluffs in the early evening one May is my daughter Deb and her dog Chappy.

My daughter Patty and son-in-law Mike at Aquinnah.

  The next generation appears.  My grandchildren Tiffany and Tyler at Edgartown lighthouse in 1996 during their first trip to the Vineyard.   It was the month of May, not swimming weather but good for collecting shells and rocks and seeing the ocean for the first time.

My entire family has been to MV with me at one time or another but never all of us at the same time. That’s okay though as the Vineyard is a different experience depending on who I’m there with.

My creation

I hope she knows how grateful we all are to her for the gift of the Vineyard she gave to us…. thank you Mom

This post was prompted by a ‘small world’ cyberspace meeting this week with someone with ties not only to the Vineyard but to my mom. Thank you B for urging me to dig out old photographs and stories to share.


A Serious Moment

Yesterday I read an article that was posted on my newsfeed in Facebook and it made me very, very angry.

It was THIS story in Rolling Stone Magazine. It didn’t make me angry because it shocked me; it made me angry because I was completely unsurprised.

You see, it’s about rape at UVa.  The sad fact is that young women are sexually assaulted at universities all over the country (and indeed, the world), and though UVa is just one among many, the administration has quite a long history of dismissing those claims and sweeping that information under the rug.  As an undergrad I was lucky; I was already married and a mother and so I never lived on grounds, and I never attended the large, sweaty frat parties that seem to pop up every weekend with a fierce regularity.  I did see them, though.  Being a transit driver for the university meant I worked a lot of late night runs, and many of those nights were spent gingerly navigating along Rugby Rd (fraternity row, in essence) where throngs of scantily dressed young girls stumbled around in the dark with frat boys, drunkenly hopping from party to party.   I heard the widely – believed story that Charlottesville police had no jurisdiction in those areas.  I heard that rape was not treated as a crime by the University.

After I graduated and became an employee working in the fundraising arm of the College I found more evidence of the pervasive sense of white male entitlement I had gotten a taste of as a student.  Board members were overwhelmingly wealthy, male and white, and completely uninterested in anyone who did not fit into that narrow category (unless of course they were trying to fill some sort of quota of diversity to keep up appearances).  I even met older alumni who were upset that so many “veiled women” were enrolled.  It gave me quite a distaste for my alma mater and fellow alumni. This wa s not a group I wished to belong to.  I still, in fact, have a hard time reconciling my time at Jefferson’s University. There were many wonderful friends I made and still keep up with, and I took classes with some incredible faculty. But there was and still is, for me, this shadow of “prestige” hanging over everything.  An unspoken but well-known and accepted idea that this prestige is all-important. That UVa is better than the rest of you.

And so when I read a story in the local paper describing how the University had essentially turned its back on a rape victim, I felt as though it was more of the same.  There later there was THIS story as well.  At this point most people think, Okay, the University is listening. The problems have been pointed out, surely they will change this.

And it seemed to those of us now on the outside that perhaps it was moving to a more progressive  stance.  Certainly there was much more dialogue being opened up.

Or was there? I know an instructor who was chided by the (at the time) President for discussing feminism in her writing class…because the son of very wealthy alum was in that class and found it offensive. (And I hope she’ll forgive me for relating that without asking).

Sadly, now that the Rolling Stone article has hit, it is even more clear that exactly nothing has changed. Sure there’s someone in charge of talking to victims who has been tasked with guiding them.  It seems that she is failing them, though. By not taking them to the authorities, she is tacitly agreeing that perpetrators may go unpunished, free to assault the next girl.  Many victims understand that going forward with charges means they will in effect be put on trial. They will be questioned in painful detail, forced to relive that painful moment over and over. Without a strong advocate most will shrink from that.

This is where my friend Lisa stepped up. You see, while I was sitting in front of my computer with a fire raging in me over how this, over how helpless I felt, she was on the other side of town feeling that same fire – and using it to make something happen.

Lisa (also a UVA alum)  created a fundraising campaign to establish a Legal Defense Fund for victims of sexual assault at UVa.  This would be separate from the University and provide free resources – a victim’s advocate, really – to get help.  It’s been less than 24 hours and she has raised nearly $10,000 toward the goal of $50,000.

The page can be found HERE.

If you are a fellow alum, a member of the UVa community or of the Charlottesville area, or you simply want to help,  I urge you to visit and donate.  Every small amount helps.  We can’t end rape, but we can make sure UVa victims have a place to go and get the appropriate help.

 


Artemisia Cowl

2014-10-12 09.30.45Recognize the location? It’s Veteran’s Park in Redondo Beach again.  I love these pilings, and I think the soft gray of the Artemisia Cowl, my new release, looks great against the worn wood.

The Artemisia Cowl includes one of the my favorite Aran Lace cables (#28 from Annie Maloney’s book, Aran Lace), flanking the larger panel that I’ve used either directly in Sedona or as a variation in Jackalope.

I chose these panels not only for aesthetics but because they allow the knitter to gain practice in two of the main Aran Lace techniques: paired yarnovers and decreases to outline the path of the cable, and yarnovers and decreases within the cable itself.

Finished Measurements
Circumference: 25½in / 65cm
Height: 8¼in / 21cm

Yarn
Stitch Sprouts Yellowstone, 80% wool / 10% silk (285 yds / 260m per 3.55 oz / 100g), 1 skein, shown in Old Faithful. Sample as shown used 217 yds / 198m.

Needles
US5 / 3.75mm needles or size to obtain gauge

Gauge
approx 25 sts and 34 rounds = 4in / 10 cm in cable patterns

Notions
4 stitch markers, (1) unique for beginning of round
cable needle
yarn needle

Skills
knitting in the round, cabling, reading charts

Thank you to my tech editor, KT Vaughan.

NYC – Radio City Music Hall …

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- by Joan -


Better Endings

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I liked this question suggested by Lindsay. (Thanks, Lindsay!)

If you could change the ending of any book you’ve read, which would it be and how would you change it?


Don’t forget to leave a link to your actual response (so people don’t have to go searching for it) in the comments—or if you prefer, leave your answers in the comments themselves!


NYC Grand Central Terminal …

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- by Joan -


Quick Peek: Road Trip by Tin Can Knits

RoadTrip-Cover-sm_small2Road Trip by Tin Can Knits, 2014.

Emily Wessel and Alexa Ludeman of Tin Can Knits have created another collection full of gorgeous cable, lace, or colorwork accessories and garments, highlighted by lovely styling and photography.

Road Trip includes 14 patterns, with sizes ranging from 0-6 months to 4xl. Some of the items are unisex.  Each includes a sweet hand drawn schematic, with sweaters having an adjacent chart detailing the various measurements.  Most of the cable or lace patterns include charts and written directions for the stitch pattern (some, like Granola, are charted only); check out the info for each individual pattern on Ravelry for more details.

Yarns range from indie dyers like Indigo Dragonfly to larger companies like Cascade.

My favorites include Stovetop, a cabled unisex hat; Rivulet, a fringed and textured shawl; and Granola, lace and cable socks.

I received my copy from Tin Can Knits.  All photos © Tin Can Knits.

A quilt for the baby

I am blessed with a man who is willing to try anything and is good at just about everything he tries. As far as Mike is concerned, so long as there are Youtube videos, her can probably figure it out.

So it was no surprise that when he started sewing clothes for my step-daughter Gabbi last year, he was a much better sewist than I am right out of the box. (His attention to detail is and patience are a lot greater than mine as well.) This week, he decided he wants to make a quilt for our baby’s nursery and this is the one he selected:

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I’m super excited, because I love this quilt and it fits in perfectly with out son-to-be’s room, but there is no way I could possibly have the patience to cut out all those fiddly coast lines! Lucky for me, I don’t have to.

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Mike did task me with picking out the fabric I wanted for the continents. It was much more difficult to put seven prints together than I thought it would be, though. I originally tried using fabrics that sort of represented each continent (i.e. stars/stripes on North America, bold pinks and reds for Asia) but it the fabrics were fighting with each other and it looked too noisy.

 I’ve pulled together five options from our own fabric stash and the local fabric shop. I like them all in different ways but I would love to hear what you think.

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First up is dots of different sizes and colors.

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Next, the blues.

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This one is all bold prints. mostly from the latest Denyse Schmidt collection.

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This is an even bolder collection that I put together from what we have on hand, but it needs to be filled out more.

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Finally, the plaids. I love the gentle colors in this grouping but I think it is too pale to go with the rest of his nursery.

Keep in mind that the water background will be either white or a pale, pale blue.

Help me out, readers! Which collection do you like best with the pattern? Or should I scrap these and start over?

 

NYC St Patrick’s Cathedral …

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- by Joan -


Indie Designer GAL Interview: Jenise Reid

GAL14_logo-400Hi all! As part of the Indie Designer GAL we get to interview other designers, often new to us. For this installment, I got to interview Jenise Reid, FeminebyDesign on Ravelry.

Steph: Hi Jenise!  Thank you for participating in the GAL.  What are your favorite items to knit for gifts?
Jenine: Mittens! Where I live, they are useful both for walking or driving in the winter (ever tried to hold a below-freezing steering wheel? It is not fun!). They are pretty fast to make, you don’t need to worry about a perfect flattering fit (like you would a sweater) and they use up very little yarn. Also, I know offhand about how large my friends hands are, so I don’t have to ask for measurements.

Copy_of_IMG_0125_small_best_fitWhich of your patterns are great for gifts? Which are most popular? Which do you think are great but overlooked?
Screw top is a really enjoyable toque to knit, and it comes together quickly. I have a some collections of headbands (Headband Love 1, 2, & 3) that are perfect for warm areas, or the Bootcuffed collection for cold areas. I didn’t expect it, but my family and friends ask to “borrow” the cuffs more than any other item in my buckets of knitted stuff.

Surprisingly, I have seen a number of ladies make Persian Dreams as a special gift, but I don’t think there is enough time before the holidays to start one and give it this year! I would suggest casting on in January and then giving it next winter.

Persian_dreams-4_smallOh, I love that blanket.  I’m definitely getting that pattern…though I’ve no idea when I’ll do it!  Any new designs for the GAL? if not, anything in the works you can tell us about?
Nothing for the GAL, though I should have a handful of patterns released over the next month. Besides that I am working on a collection of fine-weight sweaters and I am really excited about it. They will be released one every two months all of next year, starting in January.

Sounds awesome!  Thank you, Jenise.