Thursday, April 30, 2009

Life took a silly twist here at String this week. Younger daughter and her fifth grade class participated in an Egg Drop. That's the now classic assignment of designing and building some sort of a container that will protect a raw egg when container and egg are tossed from the roof of the school. The kids worked on their designs over the school break week last week. Yesterday was launch day. Acclaim was given for mission accomplishment (the passenger egg remained unbroken after a three-story fall), and originality of design.

Younger daughter's idea was to wrap her egg in a bit of bubble wrap for stability, then to embed the wrapped egg in a mass of balloons. When we went to the party store we found a bag of purple balloons on sale, a post-season discount along with other traditional Mardi Gras colors. She decided to make her balloon mass into a bunch of grapes. A very BIG bunch of grapes.


grapes.jpg grapes-2.jpg

She made the streamers from tissue paper, three sheets each cut in a spiral for maximum length without the extra weight of additional tape.

Getting the thing to school on a windy morning was a challenge. It filled the back of the van. But as I hear the effort was worth it. "The Grape Escape" had a successful launch, and fell from the third floor rooftop with majestic slowness, bouncing a couple of times on landing but remaining intact. The egg passenger was unharmed. If the school posts a video of the trial I'll share the link. Younger daughter is quite pleased both with her project's success and with its amusement value.

In knitting news, I continue on the entrelac sock and am now about halfway up the ankle. Minor disappointment in the Berroco Sock yarn I used, though. I've found six knots so far in the skein of color 1487 (browns/tans) that I'm using - one or two are a statistical aberration I can live with, but that many knots is a clear indication of quality control problems. By contrast the skein of #1425 (mixed turquoise black, red, orange, purple) was clean.

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Thursday, April 30, 2009 11:53:38 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [3]  | 
Tuesday, April 28, 2009

I clearly haven't gotten the latest sock bug out of my system. After playing with the yarn-leftovers entrelac pair last week, I thought that the same technique might be useful for a problematic skein. I recently bought a couple of 100g balls of Berroco Socks. The first was a visual jumble in the ball (color #1425 John Moores). The colors were pleasing, but the appearance of the thing gave no clue as to how it would knit up. It ended up working pretty conventionally, with an interest-maintaining long repeat:

bsox-2.jpg

I kept patterning on this pair to a minimum, and introduced the eyelets only because I find miles of stockinette to be exceedingly boring.

The other ball looked nifty in the skein, but presented more of a problem. Those nice, solid sections you see in the photo (color # 1487, Gielgud) are actually quite short. The foot of my toe up sock shows the small tiger-stripy effect of the stuff just knitted up plain in stockinette:

bsox-3.jpg

But that's even more boring if continued up the whole leg. That's where the entrelac comes in. I'm using it on the ankle part. The color patches don't align into checkerboard (a mathematical impossibility) but they are interesting in a skewbald sort of way. Note that if I had used a companion contrasting color along with this brown/tan/ecru yarn I could have made the visual weave effect clearer.

I don't know why I'm not more enthused about picking up an in-process project, but until I am I'll stick to working up more of my stashed sock yarn. One thing that whets my interest somewhat is Hanne Falkenberg's Mermaid jacket kit. Unfortunately it's way out of my price range and doesn't come in an XL (the large looks to be a 12-14 US). There's a vaguely similar pattern available from DROPS/Garnstudio that is in my size, but the lines aren't anywhere near as elegant and to me at least, it doesn't have the drape or color placement finesse of the Falkenberg. So I keep dreaming...

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009 12:21:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Tuesday, April 21, 2009

We had an entertaining weekend here at String, spending most of it cleaning up the debris of a New England winter and waking up the garden for spring. Now I'm not a very good gardener. In fact I stick to plants that in more hospitable geographic areas are rated as borderline invasive, because they are about the only plants I can't kill. I trust in my own lack of skill and the odd deep freeze winter to keep them in check.

This weekend's chores included moving a trillium and a peony to make more room for an aggressive hosta's growing hegemony; shuffling some day lilies out of the way; rescuing some tulips and daffs so courteously relocated mid-lawn by squirrels; planting three ultra hardy five petal rugosa roses in some newly freed up spots; and pulling dead leaves out of the giant grass stubble (aka elephant grass, or maiden grass).

How giant is our giant grass? It gets tall enough for its early September plumes to overtop the roof of our front porch. We cut it down before the seed sets and ripens in order to keep it from colonizing the entire neighborhood. But what to do with canes ranging from 8 to 13 feet? The first year we bagged them with the rest of the yard trimmings, for the town to haul off for composting. This fall though I had an idea.

I also attempt to grow what started out as an antique variety of big scarlet speckled runner beans. While I don't harvest enough of a crop to eat, the kids get a big kick out of our sequential years of Mendelian genetics. We plant our Magic Beans for three springs now - some are still true to their parent's form, some now look more like French flagolets/ Then we watch to see what color flowers appear (originally all red, now a mix of 25% white/75% red), and what color/form of beans result. They grow very fast, and require strings or a trellis to climb. Last year all we could find at the garden shop were puny 4 foot tall bamboo stakes. Not near long enough. So I decided to dry my giant grass stalks and store them through the winter to furnish the scaffolding for this year's bean trellis.

It's not warm enough for bean planting yet (final frost date is the second week of May here), but we did build the trellis and set it up against the sunny southern face of the garage:

orctrellis-1.jpg orctrellis-2.jpg

On the whole, given the random length, lack of flexibility and fragility of the stalks, I'm amazed we were able to come up with anything at all. Yes, those are cable ties fastening the thing together. We're nerds and proud! The structure is sort of pitiful, as if it were built by drunken orcs in World of Warcraft. I'm pretty sure that if they produced something this sad their players would be dunned a dozen experience points for failing so miserably in the attempt. But I like it. Covered in green with little flowers it will look grand. Provided it survives. Which is why we built it early. Better for it to collapse before beans attack it rather than having to disentangle them after the fact.

On the knitting front, I'm just about done with the entrelac socks. They turned out better than I expected.

moresocks-6.jpg

Still a bit motley, but the four colors of leftover self stripers ended up complementing each other, mostly because all of them had green and brown in their mix. In person what looks like bright tomato red in the on-needle sock is more muted. Also, I divided the lot of leftovers into two groups - one that was mostly speckled with few or no solid stripes, and one that had firm solid stripes and spotty bits. The finished sock clearly shows the solids in the entrelac bits worked from left to right, and the speckled yarn in the entrelac bits worked right to left. All in all quite a satisfying project for something starting with such an unpromising quantity of leftovers.

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009 12:06:16 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 

I stumbled across this on Boing-Boing Gadgets and was fascinated. It's a piece of circular knitting fashioned from thin, clear plastic capillary tubing. The flow of colored water through the thing is mesmerizing. Although it looks a bit like nalbinding, it's a twisted loop variant of frame knitting (the frame is upside down on the bottom, forming a pedestal for the sculpture).


Fluid Sculpture from Charlie Bucket on Vimeo.

Fascinating. Hats off to Mr. Bucket and the folk at Casual Profanity for the joy of this piece!

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009 12:32:41 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [1]  | 
Monday, April 13, 2009

I'm not quite sure why - maybe it's spring doldrums, but I continue to be rather uninspired by knitting. Since I wrote last, I've finished two more pairs of socks and am half-way through the third. One of those pairs has already been given away, so no pix are possible but here's the second rather boring pair:

moresox-4.jpg

About the only thing I can say about recent sock production is that I'm trying to use up leftovers and odd skeins. The turquoise in the pair above is old Kroy 4-ply (pre Kroy Sock). The multicolor is a Schachenmayer sock yarn, a ragg blend of spring pastels, mint, turquoise, yellow and pink leftover from a baby project. I had only one 50g skein of each.

The sock on needles below is a more ambitious adventure in leftover exploitation. I save every little bit of sock yarn. You never know when you'll need as little as a row or two to work a contrasting color stripe. Along the way, larger bits get used up to make baby booties in my favorite pattern -Jane's Booties by Ann Krekel. But I tend to use mostly the brighter colors and primary colors for the booties. This means that the tangled mass at the bottom of my sock yarn box is disproportionately a large number of tiny balls in browns, greens, and muddy mixes (the in-between parts of self stripers). Since there's more than enough of those leftovers to do a couple of pairs of socks, and I wanted to reclaim my storage space, I decided to work them up.

Even though I need to use lots of little bits, I don't like lots of darned ends in the foot part of my sock, so I decided to use some of the larger quantities for the feet. The ankle part however is fair game. The foot is rather humdrum, toe and heel in the same brown, and 6x2 stripes of green and brown. Rather than tons of skinny stripes I opted to do my ankles in entrelac:


moresocks-5.jpg

I've got bits of my brown and speckled green in the ankle, plus odds and ends of three self stripers and a couple of raggs and other prints. Lord knows what yarn labels these were in specific, but likely suspects include Regia Ringel, Schoeller Stahl Fantasia and Opal, all chosen because somewhere in their repeats they included green and/or brown. The second sock will begin similarly with a very plain foot part. Then it will explode into a similar bit of entrelac, although I won't be using the exact same mix of leftovers. I do have just enough of the first set (most notably the orange and brown) to unite the look of both socks so they end up being fraternal twins.

As for what pattern I'm using - I'm not. These are toe-up socks with Figure-8 toes, worked on 72 stitches around (rather large gauge for me, and quick to knit), with a short-rowed heel. I worked about three rows beyond the heel in the speckled green before blasting out into the entrelac. To keep the ankle a manageable width, I had to do some decreases. Each foundation triangle "eats" 8 stitches of my circumference (k2tog, k1, k2tog, k1, k2tog) to produce patches that are 5 stitches wide. That's 9 five-stitch foundation triangles in total around the ankle. Then I continued in normal entrelac manner until the sock was long enough. On the last row of half-triangles, I reintroduced the stitches I trimmed out before to restore the piece to 72 stitches. I'm now working my standard 20 rows of plain old k2, p2 ribbing at the top.

One more note. To keep from going nuts, I worked the entrelac patches using "backwards knitting." I used my usual yarn in left hand Continental method for what are normally the knit side rows, but instead of flipping the work over to purl back on each 5 stitch patch, still holding the yarn in my left hand I used a throwing variant to knit back from left to right. Much more efficient than flipping back and forth a zillion times.

So I guess the moral of the story is that frugality pays. If you save all those small bits you can look forward to some interesting adventures in sock knitting.

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Monday, April 13, 2009 12:35:19 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  | 
Wednesday, April 08, 2009

More nostalgia. I was digging through an old trunk the other day and I came upon a stack of my old embroideries, mostly unfinished. The majority of my finished work got given away as gifts. The completed pieces I still have I've posted here on String already, so this stash is in fact my "Chest of Embroidery Horrors™," a precursor to my "Chest of Knitting Horrors™." The first item in my stack was this odd little object, about 4 inches wide by 7 inches tall.

Be it ever so humble, there's n o place like locker.

I doodled it up one weekend while I was in 7th grade (age 12 or so), obviously to hang in my middle school locker, picots and all. There was quite a fad for locker interior decorating among the other girls at Teaneck, NJ's Benjamin Franklin JHS at the time. They did up elaborate confections of varying degrees of utility using contact paper, ruffles, shelf liner, sweet little color-coordinated pouches and shelves, magnetic mirrors, beads, decorative buttons and the like, trying to out-cheery or out-trendy each other. Many did whole themes in the school's colors, or paeans to favorite bands or actors. Others copied design tips from hot teen magazines. I suppose it's not shock to see that this same generation grew up to worship at the shrine of Martha Stewart.

I stitched my sad little sampler partly for fun, and partly to poke fun at the overly elaborate, overly girly, just plain over done lockers of my peers. I don't remember if the other girls thought much of my embroidered commentary, but I do remember a couple of teachers coming by and asking to see the thing, then convulsing with laughter. And seeing it each day jump-started my mornings with much-needed sarcasm. Subversive stitching in 1968 from a sardonic pre-teen.

As to the various animals and plants on the sampler, there's no deeper symbolism behind them, except for the cats and the budgie at the bottom. When I was a kid we had a couple of cats. The white one with the black tail was named Pixie. The Manx was Cola, from his rain-soaked tabby color and the Spanish for "tail" - an attribute he lacked. The other tabby and the bird belonged to friends. It happens that my severe allergies disappeared when I went off to college, away from home and the cats. I still miss their antics, but I'll never live with a cat again. Breathing is much more fun.

I'll post pix of some of the other pieces. At least one of them also qualifies for the subversive label.

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Wednesday, April 08, 2009 1:03:52 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  |