Tuesday, June 23, 2009

There's been precious little knitting shown here of late, an egregious oversight for a knitting blog. As usual, I plead too much work and too little time, with the added complication of kid graduations/celebrations - Elder Daughter from high school, and younger daughter from elementary school.

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Fun events to be sure, complete with family/friends, but time consuming none the less.

What little time I've had to knit I've used to work on my olive tablecloth, which at this point is better named "The Blob"

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Right now unstretched it's about 24 inches from needles to center, with something upwards of a thousand stitches on the needles and I'm not done yet. You can see how densely the stitches are packed onto my too small needle:

greencloth-9.jpg

That's a 2mm, by the way. At this point I don't dare let it free from the stitch keeper unless I'm actually working on it. The thought of dropping those thread-fine stitches makes me hyperventilate.

The good news is that I'm only 40 or so rows from completion. At the rate of 1.5-2 rows per week, I'll be working on this for quite a while yet.

I do have an interim knitting decision to make. This is NOT a good piece to take with me on our midsummer vacation. It's best worked on in one spot (you can see I didn't move it far from my favorite knitting chair for the photo, above). But what to bring?

Perhaps I'll bring along the Kyoto I still haven't finished for Elder Daughter. I'm mid sleeve, in boring stockinette, with just the last 8 inches of sleeve to go plus finishing. And I'm also considering bringing my Truro Counterpane. At this point it's a traditional summer knit for me, and with only nine mega-motifs done I still have miles to go before I can deploy it as a blanket. Or I may decide to do something else entirely. I've got a few sweater-sized lots of cotton stashed, any one of which would be an excellent quick-knit summer top for me. Decisions, decisions...

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009 12:10:16 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [3]  | 
Sunday, June 14, 2009

I'm being eaten alive by work deadlines as usual, limiting my time for knitting and blogging, but I did take off this afternoon to work on the Resident Male's Fathers Day present. Elder and Younger Daughter helped, of course.

Back story: Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai movie is one of this household's all time favorites. On more than one occasion we've pointed out that the Resident Male is vastly outumbered here, surrounded as he is by a sea of females. And on more than one occasion I've threatened to make him a "odd man out" banner inspired by the one raised to rally faltering spirits in our favorite move:

7banner.jpeg

Today we did it. We made a beach flag inspired by the movie. The movie banner says "Farm," but in our case "Sand" is more appropriate, because we intend on flying this on our annual Cape Cod vacation. Calligraphy for "sand" is courtesy of Ted Goodman and family, local Aikido instructor and all around good guy. (Thanks again, Ted!)

sandflag.jpg

Younger Daughter helped with the sewing, learning to use a sewing machine in the process. Elder daughter helped create and ink the circles and triangles.

Resident Male was quite tickled by the gift, which we gave early - there being no effective place to hide a four foot tall banner in this house.

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Sunday, June 14, 2009 9:00:26 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [2]  | 
Tuesday, June 02, 2009

An uneventful birthday weekend, squandered on laundry, work, housecleaning, and more work. Sigh. Still I am of the opinion that if one doesn't celebrate, then the event didn't happen and the incremental addition to one's age need not be acknowledged.

I also have to report a misfortune occurring in our wider circle. Long time readers here will remember that my kids adore Roads End Farm - a paradise on earth for horse-mad girls, run by the Woodman family for more than 35 years.

REF-kid3.jpg REF-kid1.jpg alex-ref-08.jpg


Elder Daughter spent about nine summers there, Younger Daughter has been there for three. Apparently over Memorial Day weekend there was a fire at the farm. No horses, humans or other critters were harmed, but the camp lost its dorm block and a storage barn just two weeks before the start of the early summer session. Roads End does not go down easy though. They are planning on rebuilding and as far as I know will be opening for the season, albeit with some improvisation on living arrangements. If you're a REF alumna who has landed here, please consider writing a note of support and appreciation to Tom, Alicia and the whole REF family (address at link, above). They've worked hard to keep the magic in the place, and now could use a wave of our collective wands to ensure that it stays.

In knitting news, I continue on the green tablecloth. It's big and getting bigger. Unfortunately, it's not photogenic. Yet another blurry picture of a huge olive green snood is not going to be an edifying experience. So I soldier on, visually undocumented.

One thing we are looking forward to here at String is Elder Daughter's high school graduation this weekend. Soon she'll be off to the wide, wide world of college. Another knitter released to the wild.

A bittersweet week to be sure.

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Monday, June 01, 2009 11:48:15 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Comments [0]  |