Saturday Muddle

This is pure unadulterated lust. 1300 yards of peridot green with hints of bronze. Alpaca/merino/silk. Lace. Lust. My brain is galloping through all the relevant patterns. My heart is beating fast. You non-knitters, you have no idea how a knitter’s pulse can race just by looking at some yarn. It is a heady feeling.

Thankfully the yarn is already mine as I actually dyed it myself yesterday afternoon. Woo.

Isn’t it funny how I can always make time for lace knitting even though my knitting schedule is already full? Is that similar to how sock knitters think? Just one more skein of laceweight sock yarn? Just one more shawl pair of monkeys? Maybe I can relate to the sock knitters after all.

I really did not mean to make this yet another post about knitting, but somehow I succumbed. I do have links to share, but first: more knitting!

I finished the first of my The Vicar’s Mitts and I’m overjoyed. Most glove patterns run too big for my ludicrously tiny hands. They are much too wide and then paradoxically too short for the upper part of my hand (“this bit”) which therefore must be longer than the average hand. Witness the joy of designing a pattern that fits you like a .. erm .. uhm .. er..  glove!

If I were to be critical, I’d probably want to extend the corrugated ribbing cuff for added warmth, but I’m thinking a longer cuff would ruin the look. And I love how it looks and fits. I should do this self-designing lark more often. It’s very gratifying.

(I do apologise for the photo. it is the oddest thing: on Ravelry the photo is crisp and beautiful; uploaded to Flickr, the same photo turns overly sharp/defined; here it turns blurry. What gives? And no, the glove hasn’t been blocked which is why it is slightly lumpy.)

So, links.

  • Firstly, a knitting link. I love Patsy. I think a red Patsy & I are meant to be. I have a cunning plan.
  • Persnickety Snark has posted its Top 100 YA Books. Funny how so much YA literature is superior to so-called “grown-up literature” (Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials is one of my all-time favourite reads. Ian McEwan’s much-praised Atonement isn’t. ).
  • One of the few sewing blogs I read had a fantastic entry: We Live in a Good Body. I have my own reasons for having assorted body issues, and I found it strangely .. affirming to read Gertie’s entry: “I think so much of our culture is built around the idea of somehow getting another body, as strange as that may sound.(..) I’ve certainly spent plenty of time buying into the idea that I could somehow have a “better body” if I just did something differently. There’s no upgrading to a better body in this lifetime. I already have a body, and it’s a good body.”
  • This Air New Zealand in-flight video made my day. I don’t even think you’d need to be a Kiwiphile to get a kick out of it (although if you are, yes the soundtrack is The Exponents)
  • Karl Lagerfeld amuses me endlessly. I don’t know why. Or maybe I do.
  • AfterElton.com looks at obsessive fandoms. I’m long out of ‘fandom’, but I still have scars to show from my brief journey into X-Files fandom all those years ago. Although I’ve met some great people through my fannish years, I’ve also seen quite a bit of scary behaviour. Really scary behaviour.

And on a final note, I have definitely become Middle Class with a capital Em and Cee. I went out shopping for booze (long story) and I came home with organic ginger beer from a local brewery. Well then.

3 Responses to 'Saturday Muddle'

  1. Paula says:

    The yarn turned out gorgeous , as has the mitt.

    Loved the blog link We live in a good body. Sometimes I feel at war with my body and perhaps I need to just learn to work with it more.

  2. Darth Ken says:

    First: Lovely gloves!

    Second: re. YA books … I have just recently had a rather long and involved (and at times approaching heated) discussion about this classification, and how more and more books get lumped into that “genre”. It seems like the deciding factor these days is whether or not the main character is under the age of 18. If you can answer yes to that question, the book is classified as YA.
    Now, this annoys me to no end … but is that just me being old and stodgy and too academic?

    But yeah, I agree. There are gems to be found in the “YA” heap, and some (well, quite a lot) are superior to the Ian McEvans of the literary world. (Though, that The Hunger Games is so popular right now seems to results in IMDB syndrome (you know, the “Ohhh, this is the latest blockbuster movie that has been at least halfway decent, therefore it is one of the 250 best movies of all time”-thing). it’s good, but not that good in my oppinion).

    Damn, I AM grouchy today :D

  3. Roobeedoo says:

    Love the yarn colour!
    And thanks for the link to YA booklist – much-needed inspiration for The Girl.