4.24.2007

BIRTHDAY FUN

I had a FANTASTIC Birthday! It was great and thanks to everyone who contributed! I spent a majority of the day with my family at my grandmother's house and when I went to Target to shop with my mom.

After that I was treated to dinner. Justin took me out to dinner for my birthday. Megan met up with us an hour and a half later and what resulted after coffee was this. Acting like morons in the parking lot at Boston's. Apparently Justin decided to carry me off. Megan got a hold of my camera and we had a blast.

After that I decided to sit (ok I NEEDED to sit) and I also decided to be a brat.

OK OK! Onto things of yarn related matter. I finished the Sushi change purse. It's all felted and sewn together and it looks awesome. I like it. I haven't decided how to carry it yet because it's bigger than I thought. (my measurements are almost always off)


Like I said I would, I made the damn gloves. STUPID GLOVES! Even though I finished them they still look and fit like crap. You can't tell in this picture but the pinky finger is totally off. It looks so bad in person. It's such a shame the pattern didn't work out. Merino/Silk blend yarn is so glorious. I LOVE that yarn and I want to knit with it again but I'll make something I'm more familiar with. Like socks. Speaking of socks. I think that I want to make these
socks. I want to make the taller ones. Wear them with knee length skirts. I can make them in either Gloss yarn (merino/silk blend in pretty colors) or I can make them in bare merino/silk blend and leave them natural or I could dye them in something awesome! Oh the possibilities.


Silk: the best ever! I finished one panel of the silk bag. The yarn is lovely. It's different to knit with since it's the sari yarn but it creates a beautiful fabric. I can't make another panel till I get back to The Whole Nine Yarns.

Let's look at that silk a little closer. It's so beautiful. I love it so much.


In other news. I've finished my Senior Seminar paper. I'm going to collapse now.

4.12.2007

The Bitch is Back!

I choose this title for a reason. When I was on my way home I was listening to Elton John and the song "The Bitch is Back" came on. Then when I got home my parents were watching Will & Grace and it was the gay mafia episode and at the end when it's revealed that Sir Elton John is the head of the gay mafia (so fitting) he says "This Bitch will be back!" and I knew what I had to do. I HAD to start back on the gloves and MAKE them work. And that's what I'm doing. THIS BITCH IS BACK! I'm taking cues from the Domiknitrix and I'm going to whip my knitting into shape. I WILL make these gloves. Terrible pattern be damned!

4.11.2007

enough

I am close to tears. I started making the fingerless gloves as soon as the yarn came in the mail. I made the thumb without problems and even made the index finger without problems. The pattern is flawed. Greatly flawed. It fails to state WHICH marker I am to knit to. I took a guess and my guess was way off. The pinkie finger is off which means that allllll the other fingers will be off. I cannot rip back the glove and I don't have enough yarn to make the gloves. I want to cry. Patterns should never be printed till they have been gone over by strangers who can point out the mistakes and the confusing points. I will not knit for the rest of the night. I have a mutilated glove made of silk and merino. I will knit again tomorrow as soon as I am no longer disgusted with this pattern.

4.08.2007

new yarn = fun times

Friday: My mom and I got up early and went by B&N to pick up my check get some coffee (50% off people!) and then got on the road to go to the bank to deposit my check but surprise surprise the bank was closed for Good Friday. I didn't think they did that anymore. But oh well I have to wait till tomorrow to get $$. We drove up to Woodstock to go to The Whole Nine Yarns. A GREAT yarn store that I wish I had found earlier. We spent a few hours walking through the store looking through patterns and books getting ideas and looking at the yarns and finished garments that were displayed throughout the store. Then we went to the coffee shop next door and got a peach smoothie to share and then hit the road again to go to Why Knot Knit. Where again we went through all the patterns and books and everything. I admired the Rowan books (I LOVE Rowan yarns). The trip was overall a blast.

This however is not yarn I got from either of the yarn shops. I got this from knitpicks.com and finally got around to knitting it. SOCKS! Nice warm wool socks. Now this I did get at a yarn shop. The Whole Nine Yarns to be exact. It's a spindle and a whole lot of fiber. I plan on learning how to spin. I've already tried a little and it's hard. Very hard. But I will continue to try and learn.


At Why Knot Knit I got a really cool kit to make a felted change purse. It was part of an early birthday kit. I got started on it as soon as I got home

See? However at this point it was Saturday after work and I was close to being done. After I got done knitting it all I had to do was felt it. Felting is still to me so much fun. I love it.


Oh, I forgot, I bought a skein of handspun silk yarn. It's so beautiful. So colorful. I am really looking forward to making a beautiful purse out of it.


When I was finishing the changepurse I noticed that the little piece that was suppose to look like a piece of sushi looked more like a mini hat. So we put it on Baby's head and laughed. Poor baby. She's such a good sport. See? It does look like a hat. Of course that was before it's felted and felting makes all the difference.

As you can tell from this picture. That's everything for the changepurse in question. It's drying and I just need to sew the zipper and the circle to it and I'm done
I had a great weekend, my Daddy had his birthday party, and I got to do cool stuff. I also got to eat amazing food from my grandmother's house. However all weekends must end and we must return to the week ahead. Yuck.

4.05.2007

still working along

I'm not totally useless and out of it. There has always been a sock on the needles and there is currently one on the needles now. It's sock #2 . It took me forever to get around to making the second one on account that I got a really bad case of second sock syndrome. It was bad. It took me a month to get around to it.


I also started on another sock. Only this one is made of merino wool. I meant to dye the yarn before knitting it but I never could find a big pot for dying. I'm still looking for one. I figure I'll just dye it as soon as I get them knit and then I can just do it in a small glass jar using Kool-Aid. I had to cast it on twice because the first time I read the directions wrong. I read CO 60 stitches and distribute 20 stitches on each needle so that's what I did. Only I forgot that I was doing the sock on 4 needles not 3 like the pattern said. I noticed that the cuff seemed really, really big. So I took it apart and cast on again this time doing 15 stitches on 4 needles so I had 60 total and not 80 like before... such a beginners mistake. But it's on it's way now.


Tomorrow my mother and I will be going to yarn stores in the ATL and Woodstock as we spend the day together. YAY! I love yarn and I love that I get to go to a yarn store that has good yarn for once. 100% wool and not the wool blends I find so much in chain craft stores. I shall talk of that tomorrow.

4.02.2007

Ode to the craft

I don't know when it happened officially but I am a crafter. Perhaps it is the product of being raised by a mother who believes that creative expression is key in a child's development. That being said I believe a summary of my craft history is in order.

Some of my earliest memories is of being able to color, to draw (I didn't draw near as much as my brother though) and to play with paper, and glitter, and feathers, and things I could glue to paper or anything really (sorry mom, but you gave me the tools). My mom was always teaching me how to do something cool and creative which was a result of her upbringing. When I was 5 I remember I learned how to cross stitch. Of course it was on one of those 'cheaters' cross stitch kits, the ones that are printed on cloth, but I didn't care, I was creating something. My cross stitch got better and better and by the time I was twelve I was knitting counted cross stitch on the same level as my mother. During this time as well my grandmother tried to teach me crochet. I got it kinda but it didn't captivate me quite the way I wanted to. As a typical bratty teenager I wanted to be better and faster than my mother. To accomplish this I planed and stitched a beautiful and complicated picture (literally) to send to the State Fair in Perry for youth competition. That year I won first place and best of show in youth textiles. I was very proud of myself and planned another project for the next year. I won first place that year again. After what to me seemed to be two very quick and easy victories I got bored with cross stitch. I didn't feel challenged anymore. I wanted to be challenged by something. Something new. I tried crochet but I never felt that I could move past the basics. I wanted to try sewing but I never got around to it.

I didn't do much crafting till I got into my freshman year of college. During my freshman year of college I was depressed. I was thinking I had made a mistake of going to school, I didn't really know anyone at school (I'm actually a really shy person when I'm around strangers). I no longer was taking piano lessons so other than school work I didn't have anything to do! For Easter my mom wanted to buy me something as a gift (to go with my basket full of candy) and I decided on a learn to knit book, needles (size #8, I still have them), and a skein of acrylic yarn (we all start out on something cheap so if it looks like crap, we didn't pay much). I tried it out and got casting on down as well as knit and purl, but I put it aside because I understood it but didn't at the same time. It was not until I was at Michael's and saw a book called Stitch N' Bitch that I was truly drawn into a world of needles, purling, yarn, and a craft that challenged me to the point that I was ready to cry. I bought the book simply because the patterns looked like fun. It didn't take me long to realize that the book would inspire me to make knitting not just a hobby, but part of my lifestyle. I hit the ground running, moving on from scarves to sweaters, socks, hats, gloves, handbags and everything else. I started buying books filled with patterns, I began stalking LionBrand.com, and the Yarn Harlot's blog (or eblo for Whitney). I found a world that was creative, challenging, and fun all at the same time. The needles felt right in my hands. Maybe it's from playing the piano so much that made the transition so easy (you use both your hands in knitting and playing the piano).

I haven't stopped knitting since I started. I've transitioned from cheap acrylic yarn (which still to this day serves a purpose) to nicer wool, silk, bamboo, mohair, and of course linen. I discovered the joy that is knitting with bamboo. I've knit with straight, circular, and double point needles. I've had people stop to ask me in the halls at school exactly what I'm doing and when I answer "making a sock" they always respond "I didn't know people actually made their own socks". I've read patterns that make my fingers ache and my head spin. I've read patterns that have made me laugh at the thought of someone actually making them. I started carrying a measuring tape in my purse for visualizations. I began scouring yarn stores for sales and new yarns. I've laughed at the trend of fuzzy yarn and the number of women who have asked me to teach them so they can learn to make those fuzzy scarves. I discovered knitpicks.com. The GREATEST source for affordable yarn, GOOD affordable yarn. I've looked through every knitting book at work (Barnes & Noble). I've read all of the Yarn Harlot's writings. I've declared myself a yarn whore and carried the title proudly. All of this brings me to my next thought.

I encounter a great number (a really scary number) of women who have no hobby. Not just a craft hobby ( even though it still amazes me and makes NO sense to me that some women do not craft in any shape or form, it is out there, you poor things) but no hobby at all. I am going to focus on the craft hobby since it's what I know best. The idea of someone NOT creating kinda freaks me out and it has me wondering why in vast numbers women don't craft. It cannot be because they are busy. I know mom's who are running a home, homeschooling, doing all kinds of stuff at a church or a homeschool group or something and they still do something crafty (yes I understand that knitting and crochet are indeed the MOST portable of such crafts). I myself am terribly busy yet I will knit on something a little here and there. Is it because women have been somehow convinced that crafting is too much of a domestic art? Are women who work full time not creating or working with their hands because they believe that it's too domestic for them? I've been called a little old lady, a grandma, and have been told on several occasions that "one day elise is going to be a wonderful stay at home mom". To this I say try my cooking. You will quickly, VERY quickly change your mind. I can make a pair of socks in no time but the kitchen is off limits to me (I tend to set things on fire). Crafts, expecially sewing, knitting, and crochet seem to have taken on this stereotype of being old lady things, things only homemakers have time for and can do. To this I dissagree. Textile and Fiber arts are for EVERYONE. Knitting soothes my soul (except when I screw up the decrease for the f*&@ing vest and have to rip the whole f*&@ing thing out to start over after knitting 6 inches on size 6 needles). And carries a connection to the past, the women before us who knit because they had to. They were knitting to keep their families warm to survive cold harsh winters in the days before central heating and air (yay technology!).

Knitting to me expresses my love, and my creativity, in each and every stitch. In the wool socks I make and give away, I made them with the hope that the wearer will have warm toes. I make scarves so that people will have warm necks and also look cute. There is no greater reward to my craft than when someone asks me "where did you get that" and I get to reply "I made it!". What I have made is one of a kind, it has part of me in it, it expresses a little part of my personality, with each and every stitch that passes on my needles, so a part of me is knit into my fabric. Part of my love, my fustration (wedding afghan, I still hate you), my day dreams (32 inches of garter stitch I HAVE to think of something other than my knitting), and myself. I knit for my peace of mind. I knit because I love to create. I knit because I want to be challenged ( I WILL knit a lace shawl). But mostly I knit because I love it. I love the click of the needles, the feel of the yarn between my fingers, the looks I get, the questions asked, and the gratitude of those who receive gifts. I am a knitter/crafter for life.

I owe it all to the women before me, most directly my mom, and both my grandmothers. Momma for teaching me cross stitch and being nice about me being better than you at such a young age and encouraging me to be crafty and creative and for keeping every craft supply known to man in our schoolroom. Mom (grandmother) for sewing, painting, and also encouraging me to be a crafty girl. Memaw for being the crochet wiz that I know I'll never ever beat.

And thanks to everyone who encourages creativity in the world. Creativity makes life a whole lot more interesting.