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Thursday, October 4, 2007
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
ALL BETS ARE OFF!
Three weeks after my last post, my husband accepted a position at Wind Cave National Park and life became a fury of chaos. I began by "depersonalizing" our house and pseudo packing everything to store in the garage. It paid off...the folks on HGTV are right...we sold our house exactly 1 week from the list date! Having such an empty house brought me to a more in-depth level of organization...the brass tacks. I've spent the rest of my time going through old files, shredding trees-worth of paper, pitching old spices, baking ingredients and half-used bottles and jars of condiments and marinades that weren't that great but I couldn't bring myself to waste. When you're moving, you get a "Get out of Guilt Free" card to play when ridding your house of such things that one might normally consider wasting. It's truly a liberating experience, moving. AND! As my friend, Jacquie, said, "you get to re-invent yourself". She elaborated by reminding me that nobody there knows me and if, by chance, there are any flaws in my personality that I have been wanting to work on or completely change...NOW IS MY CHANCE!! My favorite part about it is: ALL BETS ARE OFF! Did I promise you that I would serve on this committee or watch your house for three weeks and feed your plants and your cat or did I have a momentary lapse of conciousness when I agreed to be the road committee treasurer? Sorry. ALL BETS ARE OFF. And when I get to my new location...you can bet that I'll think twice before offering to bake 150 cupcakes for the school bake sale or sew the costumes for the community theatre's fall production. NOT A CHANCE. I love moving.
Anyway - I have had some time to knit and felt. This is my latest creation: I made it with Nashua Wooly Stripes single ply yarn in the Citrus colorway. It's oh, so soft...hardly like you're knitting anything, it's so very light! I threw this puppy in the washing machine and at the end of the second short cycle, it's was DONE! I couldn't belive it! And it felted beautifully - very strong, dense fabric. I was very pleased with it and so, it seems, is my buyer who commissioned it. I decided this yarn would serve well felted on my feet. So, I ordered 8 skeins of it off Webs site (it's on clearance for $4.99/sk) and can't wait to knit up Bev Galeskas' pattern for some felt clogs.
So, I'm moving AND I'll have a new pair of clogs...can't really see any downside in that! BTW - can I interest anyone in 12 different, partially used, containers of meat rubs?....

So, I'm moving AND I'll have a new pair of clogs...can't really see any downside in that! BTW - can I interest anyone in 12 different, partially used, containers of meat rubs?....
Tuesday, August 7, 2007
Extreme Wool Makeover...

I paid $5 for this lump of wool on etsy. I won't mention the sellers name because she took her sweet time getting it to me (21 days before she actually SHIPPED it - to be exact!- and I had paid immediately with Paypal upon purchase)...let it go, let it go, let it go. Irritating.
ANYWAY! My purpose of this post is to show how impressed I am with myself...nothing like tooting one's own horn.
I really didn't know what to expect when the box finally arrived. I had no idea what I would do with it, but $5 for 12 oz. of wool just could not be passed up.
So it arrived. Harshly dyed coarse wool packed into a tiny little box...and need I mention again...from an annoyingly careless etsy seller. Many things can be done with primary colors. So I hauled out the anchor-weight drum carder that I have on extended loan from my frightfully busy fiber friend, Nancy, and began to blend. Yellow with blue, yellow with red, red with blue and the three colors on their own. I ended up with a MASSIVE pile of carded wool in 6 varying colors. I began to spin and was surprisingly pleased to see the earthy, organic colors that developed on my spool. I then tried my hand at navajo plying to avoid having to wind off the spool into a centerpull ball and plying the single against itself...that always results in a headache for me. The yarn sat in my stash for a couple of months. I couldn't decide to sell it as-is or do something with it.
So, I swapsat last night for a friend. We have this great arrangement where she sits my kids one night so Hubby and I can get out and act like adults and I watch her kids one night so she and her Hubs can do the same. It's a great arrangement that gives me peace of mind that my kids are safe with another mommy I know and it doesn't cost a dime! I do apologize to those HS girls out there who need a little babysitting spending $...but desperate financial times call for logical measures.
Anyway, back to my excruciatingly long story (my kids are circling at this point...nice day outside, much bike riding to do and here I am on the 'puter...I'll be DONE IN A MINUTE!!!).
So, when I sat last night, I took said skein of yarn and some fat needles with me 'cause I'm on this bowl thing, ya know. I whipped up what resembled a Rastah hat for dreadlocks and dropped it in the washer early this morning.

Anyway, I think it was quite the accomplishment...considering what I started out with.
OK, kids...you have my complete attention...just let me grab my knitting and we'll head outside...
Saturday, August 4, 2007
Cyberfriends...

Bare Sheep Yarn and has created so many amazing colorways with her yarn. We have done a few "swaps" and these three felted bowls are the result of some of her "Country Roving". It's a 5-strand pencil roving that knits up so fast you won't believe it and it felts beautifully! Anyway, she is kind and generous and genuine and I not only look forward to seeing what new colorways she has on her drying rack, I also look forward to hearing from her now and then. I've learned so much from her about dyeing and I would like to think she learned a thing or two from me. The internet has opened up a whole new world of potential fiber friends for me and if any of them are like Jenny, well...LUCKY ME!!
Friday, August 3, 2007
Etsy rocks!

I just love etsy. List something one day, money in your pocket the next. I finished this little gem today. Sea Anenome sold yesterday. It's on it's way to St. Andrews, Fife, England. That's pretty cool. To think that someone on the other side of the ocean wants to buy what I make...that's cool.
So we'll see where this one goes. Who will give it a new home?
Monday, July 30, 2007
Hang the code!

If I can put my FABULOUS wrap sandwich down long enough to type, I will introduce myself and get on with posting my very first blog entry...
BTW, the wrap is a whole wheat lavash with alfalfa sprouts and a black bean and corn salsa I make regularly. The salsa is one can of black beans (rinsed and drained) one can of corn niblets, 1/2 med. red onion diced, 1/4 cups chopped fresh cilantro leaves, 1/4 cup storebrand mango vinegarette dressing, salt and pepper to taste. My local grocery sells their brand of refridgerated dressings in the produce section and that's where I get the mango vinegarette. TRUST ME! If you make this even once, you will find yourself making it again and again and again and serving it with grilled chicken, pork, beef or shrimp; eating it with chips, over a salad or right out of the bowl! It's yummy and pretty good for you too.
OK - now to why I'm really starting a blog...FIBER.
I loooooooooooooooooove fiber. Wool especially. There is just nothing like the feel and versatility of it. I dye it, spin it, weave it, knit it and felt it...and occasionally pick a strand of it out of my food. That's the price a fiber freak must pay.
I just finished a felted bowl that I am very proud of. I, like many fiber people, happened across the pattern in ONE SKEIN that I finally got my hands on at my local library. The pattern is now engrained on my tiny, fiber brain and I use it as more of a guideline...for those of you wondering about the title of my entry, it's a line from the original Pirates of the Carribean movie where Elizabeth is trying to express to the other pirates that the "pirate code" is more like a guideline. That's how I feel about most knitting patterns. They're more like guidelines and I adjust them as I see fit. Hang the code!
Socks are another good example...once you understand the formula, you can knit socks out of any weight of yarn.
Back to my bowl...Sea Anenome...it really looks like one. I knit this sucker up last night and felted it this morning in my washing machine....which, oh by the way, has seen more felting projects lately than laundry...don't bring this topic up with hubby...I know it's a sore subject.
So, this is my first blog and I'm not too familiar with how posting works and I don't even know if anyone is going to ever READ this, so I won't go into dirty details about how many stitches and what brand of yarn, etc. , etc., etc. I don't read that stuff on most other blogs unless it turns out to be something I, too, would like to make. BUT, if you're interested in a pattern, email me and I will do the best I can to write it out for you.
Check out my etsy shop too, while you're at it! The bowl's for sale...I'm proud of it, but I'm not gonna keep it!
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