Wednesday, November 27, 2013


Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
 Tax the Rich
 
Website Wednesday
 
If you read me last Friday for Knitting Friday, you know I was a complete failure. First, DH (very busy) didn't upload the pictures. No problem, I would talk about a shawl I was making, except for some mysterious reason the Ravelry site was suddenly devoid of the usual link to the pattern. So I waited and thought and the more I waited the further I got from even wanting to post. So I didn't.
 
Only two picks today; I'm tired, probably depressed, the hospice nurse could be here within the hour.......
 
 
Unusual site but very interesting and it's a two-fer: a Wednesday pick which is of Movie Monday interest. You click on a decade and get scores of screen shots of movie titles from that time. But if you love movies, click on (buy) and get sent to an Amazon site with a lot of good review stuff. So, if you love movies, this is a site for return visits.
 
I'm thinking Politico is a right-wing mag and I'm going to burn in hell for posting it (it's touts Politico is brought to you by the Bank of America for crying out loud) but these are great pictures.
 
 
That's it. Short and, I hope, sweet. Profound thought for the day: I noticed that only thin, attractive, tight-fitingly-dressed women are news/business talking shows co-hosts, while the men on these shows, whether co-hosts or guests, come in all sizes and happily show off what our society considers physical ugliness, like weight or "plain looks." So I listen to the "wisdom" from these men and think of the women: whom did they sleep with to get here. What an insult that the physical spectrum for women is so narrow on TV. How demeaning to all women!
 
See you next week. Hopefully after I get a good nap. 

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich
 
Website Wednesday
 
It's Wednesday again and the hospice nurse comes. DM is watching Time of Death on Showtime. The hospice nurse, when she heard, asked: Why? But apparently she's finding some comfort from it. She's getting some solace, some answers, and has said she was surprised to hear a patient on the show say that there was so much pain in dying. DM, as a heart failure patient, didn't think there would be pain but is experiencing it.
 
Is there any such book as a Diary from the Dying? People leave uplifting thoughts, histories of their lives, but what about chronicles from them to others documenting living during this final time? Probably that's asking too much.
 
Oh, and if this Affordable Care website is really more complicated than the Minotaur's labyrinth to navigate, as people are saying, then it's just another example of Obama's "I really don't care" style of governance. Because good, uncomplicated websites are not rocket science and, hey guys, the internet has been around for a long enough time that you could have found a highly competent web page designer in a heartbeat. No way should this administration have created such confusion with its website.
 
And now, with Affordable Care sign-up a mess, with my own life as watching sands spill from the hourglass, I present jokes, because you gotta laugh:
 
 
I don't know why these jokes are labeled lame; some are quite good like, a rope walked into a bar........ in a puny way or A housewife takes a lover....which works in your "I didn't expect that" way.

I'm sure that I used the following site before but a quick search didn't bring up this page from May:

 
(I used the word "man" to search and I did learn that I use the word "human" way too often.)

This page gives you books men should read because, as the author says, men don't read that much. Is this true? Two things about this list: 1: I've read a lot of these books and 2: I do like the link to Amazon for each selection because, reading carefully, you can get some great reviews on Amazon. Take a look.

Pictures!:

 
Ok, here's how this goes: National Geographic's 2013 Photo Contest deadline is November 30th but they allowed this blogger for The Atlantic to see the entries and he has chosen 39 of them to display on his blog. So while you will be looking at NG entries, the real winner may not be among the pictures you see here. But I'm never disappointed looking at entries in this contest. Hope you won't be either.
 
And now for some serious stuff:
 
 
We all know even good computers give up the ghost one day, hopefully after we have backed up all the data on the hard drive. Here are tips for recovering this data if, by the slimmest chance you forgot to back-up. Though I'm a novice in this field, even I get a confident feeling reading this walk-through. Take a look. But, more important: back up your data.
 
I can't believe I'm posting this next site:
 
 
I'm giving Utah a plug! Utah, home of some very scarey right-wing thinking. But also home of some of the most amazing natural wonders, probably in the world. And, you get to pan the scenes! Watch out for dizziness but take a look. This stuff is amazing. 
 
That's it. It's getting late. See you next week.

 
 

Friday, November 15, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich
 
Knitting Friday
 
Wednesday was the first time the hospice nurse said DM had taken a definite decline. Not going to tell her; though obviously I'm not keeping my mouth totally shut as I'm saying this on my blog. But what's the use of telling her? It's a yin and yang dilemma as to whether it would bring her comfort. Yes, because she understands and welcomes this ending for her life but No, because I see a glimmer of hope for that miracle she even knows isn't coming.
#1 Frogged, not the lace scarf
 
I discovered yesterday that a wool blazer with a lace wool vest and a fingering weight wool lace scarf is not warm enough for sitting in a car in 50 degree weather while waiting for Kumon boy. He really wasn't long in there but I was sure cold. So I decided to frog that lace scarf (which I had originally made as a swatch scarf in my search for one good lace pattern for a special gift scarf) and make it shorter and wider and reversible. Talk about thrift! Talk about nuts!
 
And talking about frogging. I got absolutely no where with the small afghan in #1 because I realized that as an afghan it was too flimsy. So I went back to an old stand-by, Shimmer Mesh, by Lion Brand:
 
#2 Shimmer Mesh
 
and am making another one of these, #2:
 
I don't use DK yarn nor do I double my yarn but in fingering or even lace held single, it makes for a light, delicate shawl or scarf. (Note: You must work into chain stitches throughout this project so unless you are able to work well-defined chains in novelty yarn, I would stick with traditional yarns.)
#3 Wheel chair blanket

I finished DM's wheel chair blanket and it's very, very warm. These are great on-going projects and great busters of yarn stashes. Here's the pattern for the original mitered square (and the first one in this project) again:

 
I just went back to Knitting Friday on 11/1/13 where I give directions for making a mitered square blanket and I think they should be cleaned up and presented in a more traditional pattern format....one of these days........

#4 Foundation Chain Row
I just happened upon these two swatches (#4) and they show why I like to make my foundation chain and sometimes first row with a larger hook. In #4 at the bottom of the picture, you have the foundation chain rows for two swatches. The one on the left is "even" from top to bottom because I started with a larger hook then switched to the one called for in the pattern. The one on the right puckers in at the bottom (tough to see, but it does.) because I used the same sized hook throughout
 
Cripes! This hasn't been Knitting Friday. It's been Crochet Friday. Sorry, knitters. I just seem not to have the time for serious knitting right now (two KALs are hanging fire) and this may be the first year in 4 when I didn't start the Advent Calendar Scarf on time. Oh, well.
 
Let me just keep chugging along in crochet then and end with something I just learned; the faux double crochet. It's what you use when the directions say: Chain 3, to be considered the first double crochet throughout.
 
Instead of making a limp chain 3, you work a faux double crochet, shown here, which is much sturdier:
 

She gives a good explanation though I had to make some notes to really "get it." Here they are:
1. At the beginning of the row, pull up a loop to mimic the size of a double crochet (DC). Your hook is inside this loop and your working yarn is behind and to the left.
2. Put your index finger on the top of the loop to stabilize the size.
3. Take the hook under this loop to the back (working yarn still out of the way and to the left)
4. Now, it looks like you have two loops on the hook.
5. YO by taking your yarn from L to R under your hook and then over your hook and back to the left.
6. Bring this YO through the loop so you have 2 loops on the hook again.
7. YO and bring your yarn through these final 2 loops as you would do in a regular DC.
8. After you make your next regular DC, compare it to the faux DC and you will see they both have horizontal bars on the top.
 
OK, it's getting late. Got to run. See you next week. Hopefully with pictures of my reversible, knit, lace scarf and my new Chiaogoo needle set. Happy Knitting - and Crocheting.


 
 










 
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich
 
Website Wednesday
 
Things may have taken a turn for the worse last evening (as opposed to being just an isolated incident) and DM said during the worst of the pain (she's still amazed by the pain with heart problems) that while she has always wanted to die, all she wanted last night was for the pain to end and to feel better. Once again, she understands what's going on, embraces what's going on, on an intellectual level, but striped down I guess all mammals live on a visceral level and maybe that level never gets convinced that it's time to let go.
 
Hospice nurse comes today so we may know more.
 
In the last 24 hours, I broke the microwave (2 years old) and tore down my closet clothes rack system (not intentionally.) So once again, I'm living amid a mess; though a new microwave has been installed. (GE would not sell us the cheap plastic/metal part which broke - the door opener - but will give us $25 towards a new GE. Yeah right, I'm just aching to run out and buy another crappy GE product - 2 years and the microwave door latch breaks!)
 
Let's start with pictures I found interesting this week.

 
This is another "Wow" picture for me. Then be sure to go to the Home page:
 
and just click around.
 
I didn't start with the Home page of Where Cool Things Happen, which is here:
 
 
I started here:
 

which has pithy, funny, perfectly timed photos. Good for chuckles and "Wows".

Once again, just don't stop at this page, look around.

OK, enough with the pictures, let's get cleaning!

 
Yes, your mom was right, you have to clean up after messes or else your only future will be on these re-decorating shows where your messy house/room/apartment rivals the town's busiest junk yard and, on national TV, the world gets to see some re-do-it professionals gingerly pick through all your crap and, by the end of the show, leave you with house/room/apartment ready for a photo-shot from House Beautiful. (Yeah right! I want these people surprise revisited in 6 months!)
The Fun Cheap or Free Queen has a lot of good tips for fast cleaning on this page. She provides you with a printable weekly cleaning chores chart (Monday looks like a bear) and really has a good idea: tackle just 1 or 2 major cleaning chores a day.

TFCOFQ's site is being re-done (last entry 11/4/13) but click the links for past ideas in, among other things, fashion and food. Yes, she has recipes!
 
And finally, this:


which supposedly will get you out of data-tracking. (You know, like when I visit a site on knitting and then every damn site I visit after has a knitting ad.) I have no idea if the suggestions presented here will work but they look OK to me and if you have more computer/web knowledge than I, take a look. It may be very helpful.

That's it for today. See you next week. And yes, there will be Knitting Friday this week.


    


 
 
 
  

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich
 
Website Wednesday and no Knitting Friday this week 
 
A quick explanation re no Knitting Friday this week: Starting tomorrow, I'm getting 24 hours of aide help for DM and there are major, major chores I must do. So, once I post today, I'm just clearing my mind, getting all the needed supplies together (cleaning stuff, boxes, strong muscles), readying my body for some major grunt work and shutting down my brain for a bit.

Living in NJ, I guess I should mention yesterday's Gov election. Our current one, Chris Christie, was reelected. His campaign promise of finishing the job he started must mean, (since his 4-year ago promise to lower property taxes is no longer even on the radar), that he will continue to bully his perceived "enemies" and use NJ as his jumping board to a Republican presidential nomination.
 
His re-election is no surprise since shamefully our state Democrats only gave lukewarm support to their candidate, Barbara Buono ("The Obama administration declined to deploy its best political weapons against Christie, while Buono struggled to earn the support of her party's most devoted supporters. The Democratic Governors Association spent less than $5,000 on the contest while pouring more than $6 million into the Virginia election." HP, 11/6/13) who came across as a bright, articulate, progressive woman. Wait a minute. This is Jersey. A bright, articulate, progressive woman as governor? No way!

OK, so I'm still obsessed with my diet and at:

 
I really like the way they present recipes. Great pictures and great walk-throughs. Oh So Pretty looks like a fun site. Be sure to click around. 
 
I still seem to gravitate to graffiti as you can see with this pick:


Graffart presents graffiti from around the world. Be sure to click on the right column of Archives for some great examples. As an American, we're told "Get the mop and wash away that graffiti." Apparently, not all the world has this narrow view.

Here's an example of the very short graphic novel:


Start with this fishing story and then click here:


Most of the written stories are hokey with uplifting messages but a lot of the picture tales are worthwhile. Two things I realized from a fast skim: 1. In spite of the montage of a deer eating a biscuit from a humans' mouths, this is a very bad idea.  2. Baby polar bears are adorable.

And finally:


This page from So Bad So Good shows you vintage anti-Communist propaganda posters which we probably should never forget since today, long after the Soviet Union re-became Russia, commenters on political blogs will accuse one another of being a Commie as if appellation still makes sense. Beyond the wacky propaganda, I'm amused that way back then (the movie shown is from 1949) they were using sexy women to make their point.

Athttp://sobadsogood.com/ , they say you will get the best and worst of the web. I haven't discovered the bad yet but I have to admit that the pictured friendship between the joey and the baby wombat even melted my cold, cold heart.

That's it for this week. Now it's time to start the workout to get ready for the grunt work I will be doing in the next two days....... Nah! I think I'll just eat bon-bons all day.

See you next Wednesday.










 

Friday, November 1, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich
 
Knitting Friday
 
To return briefly to those sleepless early morning hours on Monday when I skimmed three years of my blogs: Well, I never found the pattern I was looking for but I did find a comment from Magnolia Blossom thanking me for my review of the KP Sunstruck interchangeable needles. I'm really very sorry I never saw your comment MB but let me follow up (hope you are still reading me) by saying that I still like (love?) these needles. They are the smoothest of all my KP interchangeables at the joins and the least likely to unscrew (in fact they never have.) My only regret is that I didn't buy two sets before KP moved the factory to China. I'll still looking for good reports on the needles being made there (as opposed to their first factory in India) but almost all of the reviews are negative. I know that they lowered the prices of all the interchangeable sets by about 20% because of the money this move has saved them but I want to be sure the quality is just as good. Still looking for that answer.
 
What started me on my midnight quest was the pattern for a mitered crochet square which starts from the outside, in. That is, many miters start with chain 3 and then you increase. I wanted a pattern I had seen and blogged about which started with chain 22 and you decreased every row. It's only with that second type of square that you can make a shawl/blanket where you work from that first square and never have any ends to weave in except your starting and ending strand of yarn.  Like this in #1
 
#1 No sewing lapghan
This is a crocheted lapghan for DM. It's made from remnants of green hued wool and the first square I made is by that strand of yarn you see about midway up the left side of the picture. Once I made that first square I just kept picking up stitches and making more squares. I made 8 more squares across for the width. In #1, you see that I've worked back and forth across these 9 squares and now I'm ready to complete row 4 in the length.
 
Here's the link to the original square:
 
#2 One mitered square
 
I've made these squares before but I think Cindy has the best pattern for it.
 
Since I took a lot of pictures, let me explain how to make a blanket from your first square.
 
#3 Chaining 11
First, here's a picture of just one square in #2. I followed Cindy's directions and started with a chain 22 and then worked the pattern just as she wrote it. (One tweak I made: at the center decrease, I cut a long strand and placed it in that center stitch (SC DEC) after I made it. I moved that yarn into every center decrease as I moved from row to row so that when I got to that stitch I knew I had to have the same number of single crochets before and after it.) From #2. you can see that my chain 22 started at the long strand to the right and the square decreased to where my hook is on the right. One square was completed and I was ready to begin my blanket.
 
Just where I finished the first square (upper left in #2), I chained 11 stitches (1/2 of the original Ch 22 - always use 1/2 of your original chain # for this) and you can see in #3 that I've formed an L. I'm going to work my next square into that L. (Just make sure with subsequent squares the the Ls are all going the same way or you'll get one wacky shape.) I went back to Cindy's directions for Row 1 and worked 9 single crochets down that chain 11 as she sats. Then I worked the decrease (SC DEC) at the V part of the L. 
 
OK, here's where my design kicks in: Once you work down the CO chain with your single crochets and make your SC DEC at the V, work 9 single crochets along the top of the first square. Your goal is to get the correct number of single crochets across this edge. You can fudge the placement of these stitches, even decrease a stitch to make them fit evenly.* Once you reach the end of this first row (you're at the top right corner of #3) just follow the directions from the original pattern until this square is completed. #4 shows the L of the second square being filled in.
#4 Filling in the L
 
That's it. Except for a few exceptions, the L you will be filling in will have a side edge from the square you just worked and a bottom edge from the top of the previous row's square. You just work Cindy's pattern in this space. Here are the two exceptions: 1) On your first row of squares (#3), for each new square you must ch 11 (or 1/2 your original chain) for one side of each square. 2) Once you complete that first row, you will only have to chain 11 for the first square of every row. All the other squares in every subsequent row (except the first square) will be worked in Ls formed by previous squares.

#5 Working along, so easy
You can see in #5 that I'm making the first square in a row. The white yarn marks the center decrease and you can see that I'm making the right "wall" of my next square (pictured at the left in #5) as I work. (BTW: the bottom "wall" of my next square is the horizontal stitches on the left.)

This is such an easy and fast way to make a blanket and, using wool and an I hook it's going to be very warm. I've never made this blanket in anything else but remnants but I think it would look great in so many types of yarn.
 
Also this week I've been looking into wool eating patterns to gobble up my remnants. For these projects I gravitate to crochet because it is so much faster. Here's one I found: 
 

and here's a horrible picture of my progress with it:

#6 Wool eating project
I really have to throw out the scrap yarn I use for swatches but I'm moving along smoothly here and there is only one more row which then becomes the repeat row for the entire pattern. Apparently, this pattern is from Australia so you're looking at British crochet terms.

And finally, some knitting:

#7 Pi in the Sky
This is the Pi in the Sky shawl I linked to last week:


You can see a row between the top finished lace pattern and the one on the needles. That row (really two) is the one where you increase your stitches for the shawl. So you're really knitting pattern sections where you make no increases and dividing sections between these patterns where the shawl gets its needed increases (you double your stitch count on these rows.) It's a creative design element and fun to knit because there is no increasing inside the pattern.

OK, enough for today. See you next week. Maybe I'll review a LYS I haven't even visited yet. (It's amazing how much you can learn searching the web.) Happy knitting.

*It's usually only when you make this first row of 9 single crochets across a previous square's edge where you might have to be creative. Once this row is done, you'll have the smooth top of single crochet stitches to work into.