More Lace!

First up is a lace shawl I knitted. It’s a one-skein wonder, in that the pattern only calls for a single skein of yarn. The pattern is a little inaccurate, though. Not in the design itself, but in the amount of yarn I personally needed– I could easily have increased the size by another row of the feathery part at the bottom.

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Edging detail:

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Because I love beads, I used them in this shawl– they look silver, but are actually peach. The contrast with the teal makes them brighten to look silvery.

And I participated in the tatitandsee tat-along. The finished product is a hippo:

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Mine is… well, it’s beginner art, yes?
I’ve also been working on a wrist cuff bracelet for a swap. Things were going along pretty well, I thought, and I was about 90% finished, with the swap deadline closing in FAST.

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Well, sure enough:

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Yep, right there in the middle of the bracelet, my knots came untied and one of my rings came unraveled. I’m going to start over with a more robust design (I was freeforming this one), and hopefully it will come together quickly so I can send it to my swap partner.

In the midst of these projects, I decided to tackle the Queen Kahuna Crazy Toes and Heels toe-up sock method on 2 circular needles. My first pair using this method:

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This is using hand-dyed KnitPicks bare sock yarn. I dyed it back in August, and only now got around to knitting with it. I liked the yarn, and am glad I have two more balls of it in different colors. This pair of socks, which only goes partway up my calves, used exactly one half of the yarn I had for it. You know what that means, right? Yep– another pair of socks is in my future. One thing I don’t like about the socks is the heel– it is a bit “pointy.” I understand from the book I’m using that this pointiness can be adjusted for, which is why I cast on yesterday for another pair of socks in the exact same yarn, using the same needles and gauge:

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More next time, on our trip to the Kennedy Space Center this weekend, meeting an astronaut, and learning how to drive a 16 ton vehicle.

January 2008: Book Reviews

#1:

Eleven on Top (A Stephanie Plum Novel), by Janet Evanovich

Another Stephanie Plum mystery novel. This time, Stephanie quits her job, but the job won’t quit her.

#2:

Boomsday, by Christopher Buckley

A sardonic look at the Social Security system. Buckley is a political satirist, so the story comes off as over-the-top sometimes. There’s a lot of humor in this one, though, and the audiobook is read by Janeane Garofalo, which gave it a great bite.

#3:

Wide Sargasso Sea: A Novel (Norton Paperback Fiction), by Jean Rhys

I seriously, seriously, seriously don’t get it. One of my friends loaned this book to me, telling me it would completely change how I read Jane Eyre. Um. No. Maybe if the story had been coherent enough, it would have changed how I read Jane Eyre, but since it was that awful, flowy, not-quite-said, overly dramatic style that drives me nuts.

#4:

Big Girl Knits : 25 Big, Bold Projects Shaped for Real Women with Real Curves, by Jillian Moreno, Amy R Singer

A book of knitting for plus-sized beautiful women. As the intro says, these patterns won’t make you look skinny, but they will make you look good. Lots of great advice. I’d say that this book and Figure it Out by Geri Brin, Tish Jett are my two “must reads” recommendations for the sized-16+ crowd.

#5:

Twelve Sharp (Stephanie Plum Novels), by Janet Evanovich

Another wonderful Stephanie Plum adventure. In this one, danger lurks close to Ranger’s home, and Vinnie’s crew gets a new team member.

#6:

An Elegant Madness: High Society in Regency England, by Venetia Murray

A history book about the Regency era. This was very readable and enjoyable. The author is a natural storyteller who didn’t skimp on details or primary sources, but who also told the story of the Regency very well.

#7:

A Lady of His Own (Bastion Club), by Stephanie Laurens
More love for the Bastion club, of course, and for Stephanie Laurens.