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A New Knit-Along

For the uninitiated, a "knit-along" consists of a group of knitters making the same project & helping each other, commiserating, and a few speedsters gloating about how fast they finish each project. As much as I don't particularly care for the MS3 stole--henceforth known as the Beaded Knitting Abyss--it was fun to be part of a knitting group. My friends locally have other hobbies--usually scrapbooking--but as much as I support their right to have hobbies, I don't really want to hang around them with my knitting while they have dozens of sharp cutting implements laying around. So, rather than convert, I have joined another KAL. Elizabeth Zimmermann, a revolutionary knitter who would probably not have hesitated to smack someone with a size 11 knitting needle for trying to sell patterns for garter-stitch scarves & plain socks, wrote a book in 1974 called Knitter's Almanac . In it, she provides instructions for a new project every month, but in such a folk...

How I Spent My Weekend

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Fishing the shrug--involving MILES of ribbing: Finished my homework for quilting class tomorrow night. THANK HEAVENS THERE IS ONLY ONE MORE CLASS!!! Nothing wrong with quilting, but this little baby quilt already represents close to 26 hours of my life. And there is still more to do! *Sigh* And in time to be this week's Secret Santa gift: Mr. Flurry. Who would be part of an entire colony if I had spent the same 20+ hours working on him. Obviously, no one should be expecting quilts for Christmas....ever.

The holiday spirit

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Last night we went to the Festival of Trees and saw this: It's the "Knit Before Christmas" Tree! It was decorated by a school class, and each mini hat represents four hats knitted & donated to a homeless shelter. I thought it was a great class project, and made for a pretty spiffy tree!

A Rarely-Seen Sight....

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It's been a long time since one of these has been sighted around here: That's right--FINISHED OBJECTS! Of course, the hat still needs to be felted, but as it is easier to store this way, the felting process can wait until closer to Christmas. And, in a further burst of creativity, the puppet kits for our youngest nieces & nephews are done: Complete with hair, mustache, and bow tie options: Thankfully, we only needed 12 for each child to receive 3 puppets--otherwise Aunt Toni might need a little alcohol...felt puppets get a little monotonous after a few hours......

GIVE ME ANOTHER CHANCE!

Last night my husband and I were discussing our Christmas list and upcoming birthdays, and as part of our "not buying anything new" program, I was trying to think of gift options for a young niece that I could make in a reasonable amount of time, and asked him what he thought of a hat & mittens combo. Bless his heart, he asked if I had enough yarn! Being an idiot, I confessed that I not only had enough yarn, but that I could knit for the next 5 years without running out of yarn. WHAT WAS I THINKING????????????????????????????? I should have said I would have to check, or that I'm sure I could find enough of something! But to admit to my spouse that I have, perhaps, a little too much yarn...what have I done???????? What's next--admitting I have more shoes than I really need? Saying that one really can have too many Cary Grant movies?? Someone stop me, please!

2 Hours = 1 seam

Yesterday I had a lovely 2-hours stretch of free time, so with that "I'm about to finish a project" thrill (which doesn't exactly rival the thrill of starting a new project, but it's light years ahead of the "I'm slogging through a project with no conceivable end in sight" doldrums), I locked myself in the sewing room with the almost-completed fleece jacket which would be quite handy right about now. 2 hours later, I was one seam ahead of where I started out. Step one: sew the sleeve hem in place, using a knit-friendly, ripping-out-hostile jagged seam, only to notice seconds later than I misread the directions and must rip out BOTH sleeve hems. Step two: rip holes in fleece with seam ripper. Spend 20 minutes fixing holes with fabric glue & tweezers. Step three: pin the sleeves correctly, sew hem. Sew cool decorative stitch using embroidery thread as described in the newest sewing book acquisition. Step four: rip out decorative stitch that l...

Always a bad sign...

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Last night I finished the body of the Elann.com shawl-back shrug, and have only the ribbing to knit, and out of the 8 balls of yarn the pattern asked for, I have about 1 and 3/4 balls left. This disturbs me, as that generally has meant I have missed something important in the pattern, such as, say, a sleeve. But, I have tried the shrug on, and it fits, and the 3/4 sleeves are on purpose, so maybe the ribbing is much more yarn-consuming than I am picturing.... Yesterday's WIP inventory count (which missed a few things, I admit) motivated me to finish something, so the fleece blanket for my new nephew is finished, complete with name & satin binding. OK, it wasn't a difficult project, but at least it is something that is no longer "in progress." And might be a good reason to start something new....