Knits With Cats

    Blogs I Read

     

     

    Green Theme

    Thursday, 28 August 2008 7:48 P GMT-08

    Your result for What Cupcake flavour are you? quiz...

    Green-Tea Cupcake

    38% Green-Tea

    You are new and fresh. You havent been around long but already you are making loads of friends. Some people can be a bit hesitant towards you at times, but that's only because they dont know you yet!

    Take What Cupcake flavour are you? quiz at HelloQuizzy

     

    This continues the green theme that's developed completely by accident this week, and because I've got nothing else except a whine because it's too hot to think here.  It's almost 9 pm and it's still 86* outside - normally by this time it would be in the 60s - and 80* in the house (which actually feels cool; that's rather frightening!)  It was 100 on the patio at 5 pm today.  The weather guessers say tomorrow should be in the 80s and it should be seasonal Saturday.  Hallelujah!

    There are more finished objects to show.  Maybe tomorrow... 

    Random Greenery

    Wednesday, 27 August 2008 3:47 P GMT-08

    Jade Queen Sunflower (more chartreuse than jade; perhaps that will change as it opens)

    Jade Queen

    Limelight Artemesia

    artemesia

    Limelight Nicotiana (and a frog prince)

    Nicotiana

    Lime Licorice Plant

    Licorice Plant

    Green section of the Roy G. Biv garden, a work in progress. 

    Roy G. Biv

    Category: Home and Garden

    Knitted FO Alert!

    Tuesday, 26 August 2008 3:39 P GMT-08

    For the gift box:

    Hat and scarf

    Hat and scarf set knitted from stash and leftover yarn.  The breen (between brown and olive green) is a mohair blend bought in 1993 or so from I-don't-remember-where.  There were 2 skeins, and I used every last inch of it.

    The lilac and blue are Wendy Peter Pan Velvet Touch; lilac is left over from a chemo hat I knit in 2000 for a co-worker, the blue was going to be a chemo cap for another co-worker who luckily didn't need it.  This makes the softest chemo caps (I'm told); I know I want a sweater of it, but it's so light and soft I might never take it off!

    The pattern for the hat is Janet Szabo's Chemo Toque, free from Patternworks with the purchase of Berocco Chinchilla in 2000.  I've made a couple of modifications for gauge.  Scarf is a basic girl-scout scarf pattern found by browsing.

    Here's close-up (fuzzy, my apologies) of the yarn, lest you wonder why I added blue and lilac!   

    yarn

    Must Have Cardi Revisited

    Monday, 25 August 2008 3:25 P GMT-08

    Must Have Cardi - Green

    This is the beginning of the new, improved Must Have Cardigan.  I love the flecks of color, especially in natural light.  There are bits of red, purple, blue, lilac, orange and perhaps other colors.  It's a bit scratchy, but should soften when washed, and if it doesn't, I'm not planning to wear it next to my skin.

    And did I mention that I've had a skirt for a couple of years that is exactly the darker shade of green?  I couldn't have done that if I'd tried!

    Now I must chart the pattern or find charts already done.  I am so not going to knit from the written directions.  (Don't laugh at me.  It's not that long since I complained on KnitU that some of us just can't follow charts, and it's not fair that we had to convert charts to words.)   

    Arbor (Satur) Day (photo alert! new camera works!)

    Sunday, 24 August 2008 10:54 A GMT-08

    All summer - since April, in fact, I've been working on an arbor for the entrance to the patio.  When we moved here, I planted a Climbing Joseph's Coat rose and didn't realize how much it really likes to climb. 

    (Now that I think about it, I believe there may have been a rickety lattice trellis and gate thing there before.  If so, it was low enough that even I felt close to the roof, and at 5'3" that doesn't happen often!)

    Anyway, as weather permitted, I've painted the pieces (primed and 2 coats of paint), built and measured.  The weather and life have conspired to make it take this long.  First if was too cold to paint until afternoon, but the gardeners and their "mow and blow" stuff would come in the afternoon - it only took one time of getting stuff blown into fresh paint to learn that lesson.  I ran out of paint at inopportune times.  The wind blew when the temperature was right - all reasons that painting took a long time.

    A couple of weeks I was ready to put the thing together and realized that I needed some additional muscle.  Saturday evening Ken and I worked together, built the last sections, and put it up.  He even found a hole in the brick that probably held the old, trellis to the house, so we were able to secure the arbor rather permanently to the house.

    arbor1

    The rose and hibiscus look terrible at the moment.  I had to severely prune the rose; it was climbing through the little trellis and covering the hibiscus (which has never looked like much, but does have pretty blooms - apparently it was damaged by frost before we moved in, and was thought to be dead) weighing it down.  I've fertilized and watered, and will put down new mulch next weekend.  By then the rose will have new leaves, I'm sure.

    arbor2

    There's a bonus too!  Because this is an old house there have been many additions and changes over the years.  There are two cable conduits to the shop from the house which carry electrical, telephone and computer lines.  They are overhead at the entrance to the patio - the new arbor (and the rose, once it gets growing) will hide them!

    arbor3

    Category: Home and Garden

    RIP Must Have Cardigan

    Saturday, 23 August 2008 8:52 A GMT-08

    Remember this?

    Must Have Cardi

    It's the beginnings of the Must Have Cardigan.  I love the pattern, and love the color of the yarn.  Together?  Not so much.  It's been frogged, and I'm swatching with some lovely green tweed Irish wool, bought on eBay years ago.  It's a heavier weight yarn, and needs much larger needles.  That's a good thing, because I have less of it and no way to get any more.

    The replacement camera just arrived, so there should be photos tomorrow!

    TGIF

    Friday, 22 August 2008 8:44 A GMT-08

    It's been one of those weeks: long, frustrating for no apparent reason, and just meh.

    On the plus side, I did find a new doctor whose philosophies agree with mine.  The weather has been lovely all week.  Fifty-two of the 62 roses in the front yard have been heavily trimmed and fertilized, so beautiful blooms should burst forth in the next couple of weeks.  

    On the minus side, the replacement camera has not arrived, so no photos today.  (The old camera is playing with me again.)  The weather is predicted to start warming over the weekend, and to continue that trend until Thursday or Friday - getting near 100* again.

    Tomorrow is Saturday.  SuperSlow weight training at 9, then a visit to OSH for new perennials.  That sounds like a good start to the weekend! 

    10 - no, 11 Knitting Facts About Me

    posted Monday, 9 October 2006

    I'm so jumping on this bandwagon! 

    1. Knitting is my favorite way to relax, almost a dead tie with reading murder mysteries.  It's possible to knit and converse at the same time, with the right project, which enables me to enjoy talking with people more.  In fact, it allowed me to enjoy and tolerate visits with my former in-laws much more, as they are debaters and arguers and I'm not.  Lots of knitting happened then!

    2. I hate to admit it, but I don't do much charity knitting.  I'd like to do more, but I start resenting the time it takes from the knitting I want to do, and that negative energy can't be good for the finished item.  Sometimes I will take a specific block of time, say a long trip by train, and work on charity knitting during that time.  It's surprising how many child-size mittens can be finished in 8 hours.

    3.  My stash is huge, almost out of control huge.  We now measure it in miles, rather than yards, and it's still huge - we're talking 180+ miles!  Yarn mesmerizes me, and whispers sweet nothings in my ear until I take it home.  Mr. Ken is an enabler.  His favorite comment in any yarn store is "shall I back the car up to the door, open the trunk and tell ‘em to fill it up?"

    4.  I learned to knit when I was 7, in Brownies.  When I was in high school, my mother took knitting lessons and I did a little knitting.  My former sister-in-law was pregnant with her first baby about 15 years ago, and I was consumed with the need to knit baby things.  I made a baby sweater and hat, a cabled sweater for my now ex-husband and a Vogue sweater for myself (where I substituted all 7 seven yarns) in 4 months, and haven't stopped knitting since.

    5.  Our cats (mostly) know not to bother yarn.  Little Lion can sit on my lap, with yarn draped over his face and ears and he'll twitch, but won't touch or swat at the yarn.  LiveWire is a notable exception to the rule.  He loves angora, and has been known to open sealed boxes containing sealed bags of angora, which he then drapes over and around chairs and tables and down the hall.   Sweetie always loves to carry balls of yarn around, make a nest of them and sleep with them like kittens.  I don't leave yarn around where cats can get it (with 12 cats you learn to be careful), never fear, but it's nice to be able to knit without too much feline interference.

    6.  I knit a lot of socks, and almost always use Crystal Palace 6" bamboo double pointed needles.  I tried magic loop and absolutely hated it; occasionally I'll use 2 circulars, if the pattern works best that way.  I usually make several first socks - 5 or 6 - and then go back and make the second socks.  That keeps me from getting bored, and allows me to channel sock startitis in a good direction.

    7.  There are always lots of started projects in my knitting bags.  Right now, I'd guess there are at least 20 projects in various stages.  There's at least one summer top that just needs to be sewn together and edged.  There are 5 or 6 first socks, and several others with just the ribbing done.  When I'm stressed for any reason, I tend to start projects, and then when I need to refer to the pattern, or change needles or anything else that requires thought or a pattern or book, I start another one.  This has been a prolific project-starting summer and early fall!

    8.  I love knitting books.  Even if I never knit anything from them, they are wonderfully inspiring when I hit a creative dry spell, and are great eye-candy all the time.   The knitting book that had the most profound impact on my knitting is Designing Knitwear by Deborah Newton.  I do love the various stitch treasuries and EZ books, but nothing else has ever given me the feeling of freedom that Designing Knitwear always provides.

    9.  As in clothing, I prefer classic lines and designs in knitted items.  Shirley Paden, Norah Gaughn, Kathy Zimmerman, Deborah Newton, Nicky Epstein, Jean Frost, Cheryl Oberle, Sally Melville, ChicKnits - these are the designers I look at first.  There's also a place for the quirky and unusual - Not Just Plain Jane Knits, Kaffe Fassett, Ginger Luters, Valentina Devine, Judy Dercum - especially if they use color imaginatively.

    10. Sometimes I just knit swatches.  I'm a process knitter first, and a project knitter second.  Knitting has made me better at arithmetic and geometry.  I like words and charts, and it depends on the pattern which I prefer (having options is important).

    11. I have never dyed yarn (but bought some and plan to dye it), cut a steek, knit a Fair Isle pattern, knitted anything on my knitting machine.  I don't spin, and don't plan to learn (I have enough hobbies already).  I've done cables and intarsia and enjoyed both; but find cables are more my personal style.  I buy many knitting magazines, but don't subscribe to any.

    Your turn! 

    links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit