Thursday, June 30, 2011

Shopping Spree at G Street Fabrics




After sewing a bag with Mom when I was home last week, I have gotten the sewing bug. And as G Street Fabrics was having a sale and I had their coupons burning a hole in my pocket, I went on a spree.

The two lavender/purple-with-green prints are quilting cotton that I plan to use for a bag like the one I made at Mom's. They are Hoffman batiks. The large print I had planned to use for a messenger bag, but it is a little lightweight, and I could not find a lining fabric that I really liked for it, so I am reconsidering that. It is a one-yarn remnant I got on the drapery fabric table. The blue print is a 1 1/2 yard remnant I got from the same table, but it is a heavier weight. The red piece next to it is quilting cotton (also Hoffman batik) that I plan to use for the lining. This'll be a messenger bag.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Finished Object #1





I finished the Mitered Cross pillow last night.

I'd purchased the pattern from Kay Gardiner (Mason-Dixon Knitting) on Ravelry. She'd created it as a benefit for the Japan earthquake and knit a blanket out of Noro yarn that was beautiful. The cream Noro that she'd used for the background was a discontinued colorway, and I wanted to start knitting right away, so I decided to use some recycled sari yarn that I had recycled from a sweater I'd gotten at a church rummage sale and yarn recycled from my first knitting project several years ago -- a wrap made of lots of different cream yarns. I liked the yarns, but the wrap was much too long and I never used it much because of that.

I did the first block quickly because I wanted to see how the pattern and combination of yarns worked out. I liked the look be decided the fabric was too heavy and not drape-y enough to be a good blanket. So I got the idea to make a pillow, which is what I did.

I finished the second block, which had been languishing, on Friday before my trip to Ocean City. I tried to sew it up but quickly realized it really needed a good blocking. So I washed and blocked it Friday night, and left it to dry while I left for Ocean City on Saturday. Yesterday, it was completely dry and I sewed it into a 16 inch pillow form last night.

I would not do this same yarn combo again. The sari yarn ran terribly when I washed the pillow pieces for blocked (the cream background is now stained a little in places) and the various cream yarns knit up at all sorts of gauges even tho' I used the same size 10 1/2 (8.5 mm) needles throughout. Thus, blocking was an absolute necessity to get square 16 inch blocks to sew together. The sari yarn also stiffened a bit in blocking -- not bad, but definitely not blanket material.

Still, I think it is a moderately successful pillow.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

OC MD

All quiet on the beach on Tuesday morning . . . the view from our balcony.
Night jump Saturday night by the 101st Airborne.
Team RV -- all 10 of them.
Sunday morning on the boardwalk.
The airshow crowd on the beach on Saturday afternoon . . . the view from our balcony.

We just had a wonderful 4 days in Ocean City, Maryland. We splurged and stayed on the oceanfront and boardwalk at the Quality Inn Boardwalk at 16th Street. This turned out to be right at the airshow for the weekend, so we were able to watch the whole show from our balcony on Sunday afternoon, and caught the end of the show on Saturday afternoon. The weather was beautiful all weekend, with just one shower late on Sunday afternoon. This brought in cooler weather for Monday and Tuesday.

I'd never seen an airshow before. I was very impressed with the F-18 Super Hornet -- very fast and loud -- and the AV-83 Harrier -- which could hover amazingly. Other military aircraft included an A-10 Warthog, a C-17, and a P-51. The civilian flyers included Team RV -- billed as the largest team, with 10 airplanes -- Mike Goulian, and the Red Bull Helicopter, all of which did acrobatic flying. It was fun to see the maneuvers that I had seen Matt do with his RC plane done by piloted, full-size airplanes -- I even recognized the hammerhead before they announced it! There were also jumps by the 101st Airborne and the U.S. Navy Seals Leap Frogs, and the Red Bull Air Force.

Lots of sun, sand, walking (on the boardwalk and beach), and seafood. I hated to leave this morning, but it is good to be home.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

UFOs



After the concentrated knitting on the summer mystery shawlette and the scarf and hat, I decided to look in my knitting caddy and tackle all the unfinished objects (UFOs) lurking there.

I decided to tackle first the mitered squares project -- it was meant to be a blanket, but I decided it would be better just to do a pillow (2 squares) instead. There is also a second sock of a pair, a sweater I started years ago out of Vanna's Choice yarn in a pattern I got from the Lion Brand Yarn website, a shawl that I had started, and a Baktus scarf that I chose to do in laceweight yarn. These projects all were started in a burst of enthusiasm for one reason or another, and they all feature endless garter stitch (or stockinette stitch, in the case of the sweater) . . . so it is no mystery why the enthusiasm faded as I went along.

I am going to do these in the order in which I think I might be able to finish each the fastest -- so I can get some satisfaction out of Finished Objects as quickly as possible to trick myself into keeping at it. I've been working on the Mitered Square pillow this week, and I should finish the knitting tomorrow and block it. The sock will be next, then the shawl (because when I finish the garter stitch there is a lace edging that should keep my interest going). Finally, the Vanna's Choice sweater -- which is just a boxy thing ("deconstructed cardigan" I think the Lion Brand folks called it) of endless stockinette with little shaping, and which is in a yarn I'm not particularly fond of (though I like the color well enough) and is really something I just planned to use to wear around the house to keep warm in winter. I've been working on the Baktus a little at a time when I am tired, because it is as close to mindless knitting as you can get, but if it is not done by the time I finish the shawl, I will finish it before tackling the sweater. I really am trying to avoid that thing, for some reason.

Let's see how fast I can get these things DONE.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Knit, Knit, Knit







Wendy Knits started a knit-along on a summer mystery shawl on May 17 and I decided to do it, as I'd never done a knit-along -- let alone a mystery one. The clues came out with plenty of time to knit them. Because it was a mystery, I usually knit the clues as soon as I could once they were posted, so I had time in between the clues. And because I had decided to buy new yarn for the mystery shawlette, I had some new yarn begging to be knit up. I'd gone to Fibre Space in Old Town Alexandria and gotten some Neighborhood Fiber Co. yarn for both the mystery KAL and some extra, because it was such beautiful yarn. So I also had time to knit a scarf and -- because I had so much sock yarn left over -- a matching tam while waiting for the last clue to be published on June 2. So, now I have the summer mystery shawlette, a scarf, and a tam.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Frenemies




I've been doing a lot of knitting lately, and listening to books on tape. Two I've listened to recently seem, on the surface, to be dissimilar. But closer inspection shows similarities.


The first is The Best of Friends: Martha and Me, by Mariana Pasternak. The author meets her neighbor in Westport, Connecticut -- the as-yet-unknown Martha Stewart -- and they become, as she says, "the best of friends." The author gets sucked into Martha's world of fame and fortune as Martha's sidekick. She and her family serve as props in early Martha Stewart books and television shows. She and Martha each become divorced from their spouse (the author's divorce apparently occurred in part because her husband did not approve of her friendship with Martha), and the author becomes a single mother real estate agent. She mentions several high-level real estate transactions in which she participates as a real estate agent and the very good income she derives from these transactions, but she finds it hard to keep up with Martha's lifestyle on her income. Their friendship included yearly holiday travels to various exotic locations as Egypt, Machu Picchu, and a luxury Mexican spa (where she learns of Martha's stock transaction which ultimately led to Martha's trial and imprisonment). Thus she ends up in thousands of dollars in debt to Martha for trips and renovations on her home. She also testifies at the trial, and their twenty-plus year friendship does not survive. In the end, the author is cast out of Martha's world and has only her less-glamorous life as a real estate agent.


The second is The Politician: An Insider's Account of John Edward's Pursuit of the Presidency and the Scandal that Brought Him Down, by Andrew Young. Young graduates from Wake Forest Law School but decides he does not really want to be a lawyer, so he works for the NC Trial Lawyers. There, as a thirty-something staffer, Young hears John Edwards give a speech to the trial lawyers and decided to hitch his wagon to Edwards' senatorial campaign. He believes this man could be President some day, and he wants to climb that ladder with Edwards. As a staffer in the Senator's Raleigh office, he works his way into driving the Senator when he is in NC so as to get closer to him. He grabs at the chance to move to what he perceives to be a better position in the Capitol Hill office, but after 9/11 his wife wants to move back to NC, so they do. Young describes how he makes himself the "go-to guy" for the Edwards' family -- taking care of anything and everything from buying Christmas trees to setting up campaign offices for the various Presidential races in which Edwards participates. Ultimately, he helps Edwards hide his affair with Rielle Hunter from Elizabeth, his wife. He thus falls out of Elizabeth's good graces, but John keeps him on -- for he has become the go-between between John and Rielle. Young describes how he rose to his "position of power" by never saying "no" to John Edwards, and how he ultimately felt trapped in his relationship with him as a result. He says that he could not say "no" to anything Edwards asked -- including claiming paternity for Reille Hunter's child and taking his wife and children into hiding with Hunter when the affair became public. Ultimately he, too, loses his relationship with John Edwards and, thus, his job of over ten years and his reputation.


In both books, the author spills the dirt on the celebrity "friend" -- much of it a parade of pettiness and anecdotes to show how the "real person" is not like the persona they present to the public. Both authors latched onto the celebrity and enjoyed the reflected glamour and/or power it gave them -- the chance to hobnob with other rich and famous and powerful people. Both authors could not say "no" to the celebrity but ultimately felt they had become trapped in their bond with the celebrity, and ultimately broke with the celebrity over the celebrity's criminal behavior (alleged or convicted).


There's a lot of sordid detail to wade through in both books. But each is a morality tale -- whether the author intended it or not -- on the consequences of hitching yourself to a celebrity and being so blinded by your own ambition for fame, wealth, power, etc. that you end up never saying "no" and doing things you can easily regret doing. In the end, each author is left worse than he or she started.