le tour

July 6th, 2007

The Tour de France starts tomorrow so I signed up for the (surprise!) knit along! You can join up until the start time tomorrow:
Polka Dots are Pretty!

I joined the polka dot jersey group for projects that are “all uphill” and I was planning on working on the cabled green socks for my father’s Christmas present, but just joining last week inspired me to work on them! I have since finished the first sock and have started the second of the pair and I am well on my way before the race even begins.

So… after I finish these I will work on other long-lingering works-in-progress; I have many. Hopefully I will be able to make some progress on the stack!

Summer of Stash 2007: Fabric - Renegade Craft Fair

July 1st, 2007

I know it was a whole two weeks ago now, so I’m not going to bother telling you that Renegade was cool; I’ll just show you my loot. It appears I’ve started hoarding fabric this year as well as yarn… I never used to do this until I started reading craft blogs! Yikes! There’s just so much inspiration out there. Anyway, I spent a reasonable (mostly affordable) amount of money at the reprodepot.com booth:

Blue Dotty

Lines

Flowers or Anemones?

Big Flowers

Cherries!

The cherries are on cotton stretch jersey - I have plans for a t-shirt quilt to take to the park and beach and I think this will make a cute accent!

Brown Upholstery Fabric

And these lovely flowers are on heavier weight upholstery fabric - perhaps for the back of a pillow or to recover the cushions on my comfy chairs…

And I just couldn’t resist (slightly less affordable) new art for a wall in my new apartment (apartment yet to be found):

New Art!

It’s one of a kind and very cool up close. I love the red and icy blue details:

Signed by the Artist

Speaking of new apartments, you’d think that a person could find an apartment for herself somewhere in Brooklyn with a reasonable commute time into the city for $1000 or less per month, but apparently not. It’s not like I want to live in Brooklyn Heights or Park Slope or anything (well, I want to, but I know I won’t be); I’d be very happy staying in Sunset Park or moving to Greenwood Heights. And small is okay (I think I could live in about 250 square feet), but it has to be a fairly clean building and there has to be decent natural light in the apartment since I work from home quite a bit. I just can’t bring myself to move even further away from Manhattan - not only does that make the commute longer when I have to go in, but it also makes a taxi more expensive on the nights that I need to take one.

Summer of Stash 2007: Sock Yarn - Boston Edition

June 30th, 2007

While I was working in Boston at the beginning of June I had very little time to play around my old stomping grounds, but I did, of course, find time to stop into two (and a half) local yarn stores:

The first: Mary Jo Cole Needlework (don’t bother with the website). I actually went here to find a needlepoint gift for my mother because they have some great brick cover designs to make doorstops, but I discovered that they now carry yarn for knitting… sort of. It’s mostly novelty yarn meant for the scarf-knitters of the world. There’s nothing wrong with that, but I wouldn’t exactly call it a “yarn store.”

The second: Newbury Yarns (again, not a terribly impressive website). Cozy, clean, friendly… I went not looking for anything and came away with (wait for it…) sock yarn! At typical retail price, some Schaefer Anne in beautiful green, blue, and a touch of purple:
Schaeffer Anne

I’ve never knit with the Schaefer Anne before, but I hear good things and it has nylon content, so I’m sure it will be okay. And at half price (I think it was a mistake, but didn’t actually look at the receipt until home in Brooklyn - I only got charged for one ball), some deep red Fortissima Socka:

Fortissima Socka

This is perfect yarn for a pair of socks for my father as he prefers solid or slightly tweedy yarns for his annual Christmas socks. I’m already working on the pair for this Christmas, but there’s always next year with him.

And the third and final yarn store: Windsor Button (yet again a nearly useless website). This store was so much fun for me! This is a good old fashioned craft store, which we don’t really have in NYC. We have yarn stores, fabric stores, ribbon stores, button stores, etc, etc, etc, ad nauseam, but no all-around craft stores with felt squares and googly eyes and yarn and zippers and cross-stitch canvas. They had all the basics plus a lot of nicer yarns… somehow I managed to escape without buying anything because I didn’t see anything that was an absolute deal or that I couldn’t find elsewhere.

(warning: end of knitting content!)

I also spent some time admiring the view out my hotel window in the evening during my dinner break:

Radisson Window Evening

And took my usual wake-up shot:

Radisson Window Morning

And because I’m a lighting designer (read: dork) and constantly taking pictures of light for “research,” I give you a shot of the afternoon sun coming through the window and hitting the wall because the color is just so intense:

Afternoon Sun Through Window

my first sweater, circa spring 2002

June 27th, 2007

My First Sweater

Contests at Skeins Her Way and Lotus Knits! have inspired me to write about how I learned to knit. My maternal grandmother and both of her daughters (my mother and my aunt - she calls herself Ant Kate [sic]) are knitters. My mother knit me and my little brother some of the cutest sweaters and vests when we were little. There are pictures at my parents’ house in Seattle, but I live in Brooklyn and the concept of scanning is foreign to my mother. The pair of sweaters I remember best were navy and had my and my brother’s initials across the chest in signal flags - they were so cool, but we couldn’t tell them apart, so my mother smartly put one stripe at the wrist on one sweater and two stripes on the other. I think I may have been about five at the time. Around that same time I wanted my mother teach me how to knit… I was in kindergarten and I remember taking my newly acquired needles and yarn with me to my friends’ houses after school and their parents thinking I had the oddest hobby for such a little kid. I think I completed about 6″ square of garter stitch in a chunky light blue wool on like US 8’s before I forgot about the whole wanting-to-knit thing.

When I was about nine I went through another knitting phase; my mother was knitting socks for my father with some sort of stranded colorwork - I think it was little fish. I wanted to work on what she was doing and not on my own project, so she let me sit on her lap and work on those socks and on a cream sweater with big magenta roses (don’t judge - we’re talking mid-1980’s here!) that she was knitting for herself. She’s only recently admitted that she had to rip back all the parts that she had let me knit to redo them…

The next time I picked needles up was in December of 2001. I was visiting my Ant Kate’s house during my Christmas vacation and I was about to study abroad in London and only knew one other person going. She found me some needles and some beautiful and vibrant red wool and reminded me how to cast on, to knit, and to purl. I wanted to make a scarf (like every beginning knitter) so I decided upon moss stitch to combat the curling edge problem and to keep it interesting. I found that knitting was just like riding a bike… I remembered things about tension my mother had taught me at five. I’m glad I picked something that would take a lot of time (I throw yarn with my right hand - moss stitch is terribly time consuming that way), because I was addicted to it - I would stay up late at night knitting and watching German MTV. I remember making mistakes and having no one there to tell me how to fix it… I didn’t realize that I could have just found any yarn store and they would help me figure it out! I had to figure out how to fix dropped stitches while keeping the stitch pattern right and how to put stitches back on the needle after ripping and how to bind off all without an experienced guide.

Knitting the First One
So Excited!
And when I finished the scarf, which was really much too wide for my tastes (I still have it somewhere, but I think it’s in Seattle), I decided I could do anything and wanted to try a sweater. I went to Liberty of London to check out my options. Options at Liberty include: Rowan. And that’s it. But I didn’t find myself wanting for any other options - Rowan yarn is incredibly beautiful and I find the patterns easy to follow. I found in A Season’s Tale a sweater whose shape appealed to me and decided I would knit in the recommended yarn but would add stripes for interest. I think I actually did a gauge swatch that first time (but I certainly didn’t wash it) before I cast on and knit up the four pieces of the sweater. I found directions for mattress stitch on the internet while on the computer at the library, seamed it up, and wore it proudly. I still wear that sweater even though the fit leaves something to be desired. Oh, and blocking? Yeah, that’s something I’ve just started doing recently - FIVE years later!

Brighton, England

(Sorry for the crappy pictures-of-pictures, but my scanner refuses to communicate with my new computer!)

best idea ever: photo scavenger hunt

June 15th, 2007

Brilliant! I love the idea of a photo scavenger hunt… this one is over at My Best Friend’s a Dork. I’m missing one photo: a knitter other than myself knitting in public. I didn’t go out of my way to look for someone (there weren’t any organized knitting events for Knitting in Public Day last Saturday in NYC), but I carried my camera everywhere for two weeks in case I saw someone. Here we go:

An ice cream truck. I live in Brooklyn, so they are everywhere all the time. This one is near Coney Island…

Ice Cream Truck

A sock, handknit or not. This is in the window of PINK in Copley Place, Boston…

A Sock

A library card. These are my two NYC library cards - you need one for the regular branch libraries and one to enter the research libraries (I use it to watch the taping of theatre shows)…

My Library Cards

A ball of green yarn. This yarn is destined to be socks for my father for Christmas, but it’s currently just torturing me…

Green Yarn for Socks!

A bicyclist. This is my father at Coney Island earlier today; I took the photo while riding my own bicycle…

Dad!

A street sign. I never spent much time in the theatre district of Boston while I lived in Andover, but I just remounted RFK at the Stuart Street Playhouse…

South Charles and Stuart

A flower. These beautiful paper flowers were found in a window on either Newbury or Boylston…

Paper Flowers

A public work of art. Strange stone chairs just south of Boston Common…

Stone Chairs

Your reflection in an unexpected place. When I went out on the balcony of the hotel in Boston to photograph my ball of green yarn I found a beautiful reflection of the Hancock Building and the Prudential Building behind me…

Me

Someone in a catalog pose. This man was highly suspicious of me and my camera…

Suspicious Man Posing

A funny billboard or sign. Upon first glance I thought this said “EYES”…

EYES

I would ABSOLUTELY do this again - it was so much fun! Maybe I’ll organize one myself someday…

knitting books

June 15th, 2007

Even if all I’m reading is knitting books, at least I’ve started reading again. I went through a big reading funk and hadn’t finished a book in about six months. While out of town I finished three books I’ve been meaning to read since I received them for Christmas:


Reading Elizabeth Zimmermann always feels very empowering. KNITTING WITHOUT TEARS is not my favorite of her books, but it does have the seamless hybrid sweater (which I want to make for myself) and the Modular Tomten Jacket (which I want to make someday).

I also read her KNITTING WORKSHOP, which has an excellent tip for Long-tail Casting-on - you don’t need the slip knot at the beginning; you just lay the yarn over the top of the right hand needle! Why didn’t I think of that? It has the recipes for the Babies’ Surprise Jacket and the Rorschach Sweater, which I’ve only ever seen here, and it is lovely.

My mother also got me KNITTING FROM THE TOP, as she felt it was a classic accompaniment to the other two. My mother has never ever knit anything without a pattern - not even socks. I think reading these books one after another has definitely convinced me to do a sweater without a pattern, whether or not it follows any of the recipes… but I have a long WIP list to do before I even think of starting something new. I should prioritize those items and attack the list rather than starting new things for this round of Project Spectrum, even though red and black are some of my absolute favorite colors.

teaching

June 14th, 2007

Sometimes I think I take knitting and all my other crafts for granted. It’s only when I see someone just starting to learn do I really appreciate the time it took my mother to teach me how to knit, needlepoint, cross-stitch, sew, and quilt (not to mention cook and bake). My mother first taught me to knit when I was about five or six years old; I think I stuck with it for about 9″ of a “scarf,” nevermind that we lived in Seattle and there was no need for scarves! I wish she had saved that little bit of blue scarf for me - or at least a picture of it!

Last summer I taught a friend how to knit and, while she enjoyed it for those first few moments, she gave up the moment someone wasn’t there to supervise. I don’t blame her - it takes a lot of time and effort to solve knitting problems on your own the first few times you encounter them. And you have to know that you really want to solve it and to get better at your craft. When she was packing up to move from NYC to Portland last month, she found the needles and yarn and the bit of knitting she had done and gave it all back to me in one piece. And before I ripped it out to rewind it onto the ball I took a photo for us to remember it by:

Rachel's Knitting
If I hadn’t been knitting for so long I would want to quit now because my current knitting challenge is pissing me off. I am designing a pair of socks for my father that is masculine enough that he’ll wear them, but not too boring for me to knit. In the past I’ve made him pairs that are stockinette and pairs that are ribbed, but golly do those get boring fast. He’s not cable-adverse like some people tend to be, so I thought I’d put together some stitch patterns myself and see how it goes:

First Attempt Dad Xmas 2007

I thought it was going swimmingly (I love the braided cable) until I measured the leg diameter… it’s so skinny it wouldn’t even fit my little tiny feet! So I ripped. And wow did it hurt to rip all that cabling. And I tried again…

Dad's Xmas Socks Take 2

I added 12 stiches to the needles and added some plain ribs in between cables and tried a looser braid and it will fit now, but that braided cable is SO UGLY and needs to be tighter as in the last iteration. I’m okay with the ribbing and the small cables and I will keep those features in the next installment. So I’m going to pull it all out again… but the Brown Sheep Wildfoote rips easily and is holding up nicely. Thank goodness I didn’t try this with a mohair blend or it would be a big sticky mess!

I have a couple other projects that are in need of “fixing” as well… and I’m hoping to work through their problems before I start new projects. I bought some yarn while I was in Boston for work last month and I just can’t wait to get started with it. Fortunately it’s all sock yarn and I only have one set of 2mm needles so I have to finish these socks and the Fiesta Mittens that I started in February first!

looky looky

April 22nd, 2007

I cannot even believe what whipup.net posted two days ago: pictures of and links to crocheted versions of the shirt-stripe quilt. They’re pink and adorable! And someone left a comment about how they looked “very Kaffe Fassett.” It just goes to show you that there really aren’t any new ideas in the world… amazing.

my first quilt

April 19th, 2007

It isn’t really done. It still has to actually be quilted, which is done by hand and takes months and months and months, but my shirt stripe quilt top is finished! I finished it while my mother was here visiting - she pressed the seams and clipped corners, but I did all the seaming myself… I’m very proud, can you tell? I’ve already started planning the next one…

Here’s a picture of all the pieces laid out on the floor before seaming…

Quilt Layout

Then I pieced it into blocks:

Block Center Left

Blocks Center Top

And the finished top!:

All done!

I am so proud, but I’ve been in tech rehearsals for some shows at Theatre Row for the last two weeks and therefore unable to share it with you until now…!

spring cleaning: donating used clothing in NYC

April 13th, 2007

My spring cleaning is well under-way and I have come up with a pile of things that I no longer need or want. The books that are still worth a little money I am selling on amazon.com and those that are no longer worth much I have listed on paperbackswap.com. (If you don’t know about paperbackswap.com, go check it out now!) Appliances and other such items I will eventually put on craigslist, but what do I do with the clothing and electronics that no longer work? Good news: the NYC Department of Sanitation 2007 Spring Cleaning Events are coming up soon!

Unfortunately, the Brooklyn event is way out on the border of Queens and not centrally located, but the Manhattan Electronics Recycling and Clothing Donation Event takes place on Sunday April 22 from 8am-2pm @ Union Square’s North Plaza, which is fairly easy to get to from the closer parts of Brooklyn.

They will be giving away free compost (I still can’t bring myself to compost in my apartment, but if you have a garden bring a scoop and containers), collecting used electronics for proper recycling/disposal, and either Goodwill or the Salvation Army will be on site to accept clothing and linen donations.

Electronics accepted: computers, monitors, printers, scanners, keyboards, mice, tvs, and cell phones.

Clothing and linens should be clean, gently used items. “Place items in plastic bags and tie securely to avoid moisture contamination. Tax-deduction receipts will be available upon request.”

I’m encouraging all my family and friends (that means you!) to find new homes for their unwanted belongings instead of just throwing them away… and year-round, not just in April because of Earth Day or whatever.