For some, this is the summer of the sock. For others, it's the summer of shawls. For me, it's the summer of indulgence.
Yes indeedy, I'm going to indulge myself in any way that pleases me. There will be no knitting to a deadline, no veggies planted because they're good fo me, no weekends full of to-dos. Instead, there will be weekends left open to explore new places and new things, plants grown because they make me happy and knitting - whether sweaters or swatches - because it makes me smile.
I've begun laying in supplies, much like frontier women did for the winter.
So far, I've amassed many (20?) new knitting magazines for my reading pleasure. I'm also digging out some old issues that inspire me.
There's a pile of beads, 24- and 26-gauge wire and metal knitting needles. Several years ago I knit bracelets from beads and wire - quick, fun and different. I've been asked to take part in a "craft and hobby as art" demonstration this Fall, and knitted wire might be just the thing! Tonight, Ken showed me a pile of multi-colored twisted pair telephone wire, and immediately I had a project in mind for it.
Yarn has been purchased. Not a lot, mind you, but yarn for specific sweaters that I've wanted to make for several years, and that will be worn a lot. Some yarn is being re-purposed; bought with a specific project in mind, and now I've changed my mind. Other yarn is becoming available as sweaters are picked apart and unraveled.
There is a summer quilt in my future. It's bright, silly, funny and quirky, and the owner of the quilting store is reserving judgment until she sees the finished product. It's going to be great fun to make.
Fabric for clothing has been purchased. There was a time when I made all my clothes - tailored suits for myself and the then-current spousal unit too. Now I rarely even sew on a button and I miss the impeccable fit that self-made clothes have. We'll see if I can remember how to tailor. Britex Fabrics had 50% off on remnants sale last week (their remnants are divine: 1 to 3 yards and more of the most wonderful Italian wools and blends, for example, already 50% off of ridiculously high per-yard prices) and I got enough Italian stretch wool fabric for 2 suits and a skirt for less than $100!
There's a pile of flour sack dishcloths next to a pile of embroidery transfers. Crewel yarn and canvas, needlepoint yarn and different canvas.
The vegetable garden is well under way. I've planted 16 tomatoes, some herbs and lots of beans. There are still cucumbers, squash, corn, more beans, eggplants, greens, carrots and radishes to plant. Fortunately for planting - but not for getting veggies - it's still cool here. Aside from the week of hot weather in May, it's been at least 10* below normal for the past couple of weeks, and will continue that way to mid-next week.
Fun gardening is happening too. The formal rose garden is becoming an English cottage garden. The new patio plantings are tropical. Areas of the yard that have been ignored for years are being turned into secret garden hideaways. I'm having such fun!
In other news, I've started making new recipes that sound good. Mr. Ken isn't always thrilled with them, but he's eating them anyway. We've found a couple that are keepers. Ken is eating some things he's not crazy about, and not minding too much.
The front room is full, completely full of (mostly) donated bookshelves, desks and the like for the museum where I volunteer. We should have a new gift shop sometime this summer, and I'll have a front room again.
Photos, inspirations and an updated blog and new links to follow soon, but now it's back to work. (Yes, it's 10 pm. I'm working on an install that will probably take at least 3 more hours, but that's OK. I love what I do, and it allows me to do all these other wonderful things!)