Friday, January 17, 2014

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich
 
Knitting Friday
#1 Mr. Bear in circular shawl
 I've been hawking Paton's crochet circular shawl for a long time now:

 
#2 As a throw
so I think it's time to show some good pictures of it. #1 is the shawl in wool and a god-awful gold color. This is tapestry wool from an LYS which was going out of business. I bought two big skeins of it (yes, it was cheap) and was able to make a shawl to reach past my elbows. In #1, that looks like a lot of yarn left to use but this shawl is a folded over circle so it eats up yarn fast.
 
In picture 2, you see the second use of this shawl as a throw.
 
#3 The Pillsbury Dough Boy
I originally started this pattern in white acrylic to re-work a big afghan into a very warm, big shawl. You can see this is #3 and notice the difference in lengths from #1 to #3. The shawl is so very warm. Unfortunately, you look like the Pillsbury Dough Boy in it which for a house shawl is OK .

#4 PDB as a throw
As you can see from #4, the PDB shawl makes a really large throw. This does become very repetitive crochet but it's a great TV, talking to others, project.

A few tips if you're interested in making this:
1. This pattern uses UK terminology.
2. Once you get to your width, just DC, ch1, in every space. No more increases of Loop TR, ch1, Loop TR, ch1 in every nth space. (The Loop TR in American terms is a *YO and put hook through designated st, YO again and pull hook through stitch. [3 loops on hook], YO and draw through 2 loops on hook* 2xs in the same stitch,  With 3 loops left on hook, YO and draw through all loops on hook - 1 loop left on hook.)
3. Once you start working the no-increase stage, you may find yourself still increasing. If it's 2 DC in one space instead of just one, treat that increase as one stitch and work around it. However, if you really zone out and make a Loop TR increase described above, you should tink that since that's too bulky to fudge.
3. If you change the pattern, (as I described above) and end long after you stopped the increases, you won't have the right configuration for the elaborate border given. I don't think you even need a border or you can use any crochet border you want.
#5 What is this pattern?
 
 Now on to some knitting stuff. In #5, you see the swatch for a half circle shawl, all in K. Here you work an increase row (where you double your stitch count between your 2 K edge stitches) after a number of knit rows, which are multiples of 2. So, after your CO, you K 2 rows, work an increase row**, K 4 rows, another increase row, K 8 rows, an increase row, K 16 rows, another increase row. You see the pattern.  I'm thinking that like the crocheted circular shawl above, once you get to your width you could work a mock increase row to keep the lace look by working a row of: *K2tog, YO* at intervals.
 
**Sorry I can't find the pattern right now but I think the increases were *K1, YO*, though you could work your increases any way you like. But watch your gauge if you do.
 
As you know, I got back to crocheting because I love to buy lace-weight yarn and lace is so tricky (for me) when I knit it. But I think I may tackle pattern #5 with lace because it is so simple.
 
And finally a plug for Lion Brand because I really think they have improved their free patterns enormously. (Plus, they made all their patterns free which was a very nice gift.) So with my warm feelings for LB, I went back to this crochet half-circle Sea Shell shawl:

 
#6 Sea Shell Shawl
which is ubiquitous but which I had been ignoring. In #5, you see a swatch for it. It's so easy and I'm thinking with a much larger hook and finer yarn, it'll be a winner.

That's it for today. I have loads more ideas for knitting and crocheting but my little fingers are tired.

See you next week. Happy Knitting.
 
 
 


 
 





 

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich

Website Wednesday 

Let's just do a straight WW today. 
http://www.boreddaddy.com/how-our-world-would-look-if-you-were-a-bird/ 

These pictures have been making their way through the web but as you start scrolling through them, they grab you. How did they attach tiny cameras to their feet? 

Bored Daddy offers itself as your Daily news and entertainment magazine. 

Be sure to go to their home page: http://www.boreddaddy.com/  and look around. Interesting stuff here.

You knew I had to have a decorating/remodeling site: Here, they make an old mill very livable.

One again, go to the home page: http://www.homeadore.com/ for more makeover ideas.

Now let me digress for a sec and tell you (hope you're interested) that the one furniture item I would love to buy is a loft bed with stairs.

Here are some pictures for you:
https://www.google.com/search?q=loft+beds+with+stairs+for+adults&client=firefox-a&hs=gq8&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=eaHWUp32H8G0sASQ_oDQCQ&ved=0CEUQsAQ&biw=1600&bih=749 

I would not have an additional bed on the bottom but I would use that area for a comfy chair with a TV of a comfy chair and computer with a small desk. It would be my hide-a-way.

http://images.nationalgeographic.com/wpf/media-live/photos/000/746/cache/cougars-teton-winter_74612_990x742.jpg 

The above is just a throw-away pic. I just like it.

Let's end with movie trivia:
http://inktank.fi/82-mind-blowing-movies-facts-you-probably-didnt-know/ 

Don't know if it's all accurate but it's interesting: like #10 on how Samuel Jackson used expletives as therapy.

Here's their home page: http://inktank.fi/blog/ 

and I plan to cruise it once I finish typing.

That's it for WW. Hospice nurse will be here soon. See you next week.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich

Knitting Friday - Oh, no it's not!
 
Let's talk about the NJ Gov, Chris Christie, a bully of a man. And I mean as a consummate bully. My theory (and don't I have theories?) is that he got elected and then re-elected in a very Democratic and Independent state because thousands of frustrated voters thought: Hey! This guy will talk back to all those bozos who are making my life miserable. And lower my taxes. Well, he hasn't done either because bullies only "bully" for their own agenda, not yours. Also, many Democratic politicians have been eerily unwilling to take him on.
 
Until now, perhaps. For it seems that the Democratic mayor of Fort Lee (the town from which the George Washington Bridge - apparently the most traveled in the world! - starts its span from NJ into NYC) did not endorse Christie for reelection last November (Mr. Mayor is not one of our spineless Dems) and the Gov was not pleased.

So in retaliation, this September the bridge had lane closures for a "traffic study" causing a myriad of stand-still traffic for days. From September to just yesterday, the Gov denied any punitive action in this: His office was not involved. It was a traffic study. I know nothing.

Even after e-mails from his top aides (and these gals/guys had to think their backs were well-covered to write so blatantly) were discovered where one top aide e-mails 3 weeks before the "traffic study": Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee., and another writes back: Got it., the Gov was in denial mode.

But only fools think that e-mails are private. And, now that the scandal is out and there's nowhere to hide, the Gov is in his best Claude Rains mode from Casablanca: Gambling is going on in here. I am shocked!, as he throws his aides on the sword by firing them and hopes his I'm so sorry mea culpa will be believed.
 
Boing Boing's picture on 1/8 says it all:

 
Maybe this will all blow over and Christie will continue on his dream trajectory to the GOP presidential nomination in 2016 because people are so somafied (Brave New World drug: "By this time the soma had begun to work. Eyes shone, cheeks were flushed, the inner light of universal benevolence broke out on every face in happy, friendly smiles. Even Bernard felt himself a little melted.") that they won't get/won't care that top aides do the bidding of the governor. They are chosen by the governor to watch his back. They are not recruited for their rogue talents in bringing down an administration. You're looking at a vindictive administration, starting from the top; which got caught. Bullies are never your friends.

And back to other things. My cell phone is still in rice. Yesterday, it received a text message and said it was 88% charged. When DH returns today, we may turn it on. My life is Zen-like without my cell. I no longer have to worry: Where's my phone? It's in the rice! Bliss!

For next week in knitting: The frigid weather on Monday convinced me that I have to make a warm shawl, like the Irish women used to wear (still wear?) so I can run out for the mail without layers of clothes. I'll have patterns for you. Maybe pictures, but I'm such a liar about pictures. 

See you next week. Happy Knitting.
 
 

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich

Website Wednesday

Wanta hear my woes? Should I start small with the fact that I can now access my blog on my early-morning, drink-my-coffee computer but the e-mail has stopped working on that computer so unless I'm just palavering, I can't get to my web picks, which I e-mail to myself, until I arrive at my work-day computer.

Boo-hoo, you say Complain! Complain! OK, I get it. How about this one: Not even realizing it, I brought my iPhone upstairs on top of the laundry and only after the machine started the agitating stage did I think: Where did I put that phone?

Yes, I put it in the machine with the water and the soap and the sheets Good news: it was protected from the machine sides by a mother load of laundry. Bad news: it's been sitting in rice for over 48 hours and when the charger is put in (phone is not turned on) all I get is the apple icon appearing sporadically.

So now, I've heated the rice, put it and the phone in a paper bag, put the bag in a big metal bowl, covered by another metal bowl (metal will prevent the phone from trying to connect if someone calls it). Now, we wait.

On the bright side, I'm not the stupidest woman on the planet; a Google search shows that I have a lot of 'friends.' As the hospice nurse quipped: You're not under any stress. 

My web picks are two weeks old but I hope they're still good:


I don't know why these pictures are the top 75 of last year and there are a lot of such lists out there, but, as you know, I'm a sucker for pictures. Take a look.

 http://www.picklee.com/
 
I like Picklee. It's probably a "girlie" (No! I don't mean girlie pictures; I mean womanly interests, like decorating, recipes.) Boy, does that sound sexist! Anyway, I like the effort put into this blog. It's a good one to bookmark.

http://www.fullpunch.com/random/26-brilliant-cooking-facts-revealed.html/

And in keeping with my interest in food (I must exercise!), the above site has helpful cooking tips. Click around this site. It looks sweetly funny. And witty.

And finally, one from The Huffington Post, UK:

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/12/17/91-pictures-that-amazed-us-during-2013-_n_4459155.html

Take a look and find out what amazes liberals.

That's it. The hospice nurse will be here very soon. See you next week.



 

 

Friday, January 3, 2014

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
Tax the Rich 

Knitting Friday 

Since I've already failed with my NY's resolution of walking a mile a day, I'm gearing down to my second choice: figuring out why my blog page on my early morning, drink my coffee and write my blog at 4 am computer lacks a "sign in" link. On every other computer in the house, I have that link.... So, that's why I didn't get to a blog-writng computer on Website Wednesday until 1 pm and I thought: WTF, the day is too far gone. Screw it!
 
It's getting busier around here and I'm finding that I'm really adapt at sitting down and then getting up immediately to answer DM's requests. No tiredness nor bone creaking at all until I lie down right after "work" and fall asleep before the hand clicks the remote.

First for Knitting Friday, I have a "why swatches are so important, even though I seldom do them" visual moment:

#1 A mistake
What you see in #1 is the Ravelry shawl, Ribambellise, which intrigued me because it has an unusual cable where you work the cable needle front and cable needle back in the same cable. It's a triangular shawl but Chart D has a straight repeat section so I decided to swatch the repeat, which you see at the left. What a mess! What a mistake! The cable runs straight up through the middle but you can't tell it here. The bottom of picture is the beginning flat knit rows but they look like I'm trying for a chevron look.

But that's why you swatch. I'm sure this will make up into a lovely triangle and the pattern with its 17 rows, doesn't bore you.

On a happy/sad note, with the sad part first: I'm not making the Advent Calendar scarf/shawl this year. The pattern is all YO and SSK or K2tog and I really don't see myself using the finished item. I have enough "pretty" shawls and scarves and since I really only wear both for warmth, not show, I decided to use the yarn in this: 
 
#2 A pattern only in French!
I'm as giddy as a kid with this one because the pattern is in French and I have to read the charts. Which, to you, may be a "so what?" but a year ago, I could not read a crocheted chart to save my life.

It's only one row and I'm using fingering and an F hook. At the end, you continue around with larger clusters. It's a good traveling project and it may finally use the last of my Advent Calendar yarn (4 years later.)

Also as a good travel project is this:

which is a neck warmer which I modified into the shawl/scarf in picture #3:
#3 Dona Ines
 This is another 1-row pattern but I like the stitch definition and the Knit Picks lace is dreamy.

#4 Is this shading ugly?
OK, let's take a break from crochet for a minute and show the tunic I'm still knitting:

Wow! Is the shading in #4 as ugly as it appears? Here's a second view:
#5 Still ugly?

In #5. you can see the stitch definition which is 9 rows of K in the round and one round of Twisted Stitch (K 2nd st in black loop, then 1st stitch in front loop.) Right now, I'm past the waist and I've been increasing 1 stitch each side of the arm, 2 rows after each twisted stitch row (4 increases per row.) I'm too far into this beauty right now so I'm just going to forge ahead to the bind off. Please don't be as ugly as you photograph!

And finally as I prepare my wardrobe for the nuclear winter (Yes, I saw and learned from The Road), I've been crocheting this circular shawl, 4 times so far:


I can't recommend this pattern enough. It's worth learning to crochet for. In DK yarn it's a warm shawl and circular blanket, when needed. Just remember that it is in UK terms so triple crochet is US double crochet, etc. (Sorry, the picture of Mr. Bear modelling this beauty didn't come out well.) Next week, I'll show a close up of how you stop increasing in this pattern and start crocheting straight to your length.

That' it for blizzard Friday. Well, it's only a blizzard for sissies where I live but schools and businesses are closed and the Gov has declared a state of emergency. 

See you next week. Happy Knitting.

 

Friday, December 27, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
  Tax the Rich
 
Knitting Friday
 
Sorry for no Website Wednesday. It was Christmas Day. Forgot all about that. It's a national holiday.... So I took the day off.
 
Really original excuse for no pictures (after I promised) today: DH had a 13 hour transfer of files between 2 computers. I was warned, doubled warned, tripled warned (his computer has the pictures for KF) not to touch his computer during that time. And I didn't. 
 
Plus, DM has taken a turn downward and I'm just plain tired.
 
So, a short post re: what I'm knitting or crocheting.
 
Still working my my generic top (pictured a few weeks ago) and I really have enough yarn for a dress but I'll stop at tunic length.
 
On my 4th circular shawl:
 
 
It's crochet but it's the easiest, best fitting shawl pattern I have ever done, and the warmest. I've never made the border yet. I just work the pattern with its increasing sections until it's wide enough then I work on without the increases to the length. Can be boring but it's so much in keeping with the architectural "form follows function" principle.
 
I started knitting the Downton Abbey shawl:
 
 
but it was in fingering and it was just a bad marriage of yarn and pattern. So back to the frog pond it went and I'm looking at a free baby blanket pattern from Ravelry for the yarn:
 
 
It's a simple 2 double crochets and 1 single crochet in one stitch every 4th stitch. I'm thinking of using a very large hook.

And finally, the Thank You cowl:

 
Its crocheted ruching makes a very interesting pattern which I would work as a large scarf. This one really has to have the right yarn.
OK, no pictures today, but a few links I hope you will like.

See you next week. Hopefully with pictures. Happy knitting.
 
 
 
 

Friday, December 20, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
 Tax the Rich
   
Knitting Friday
 
OK, I'm now at my "job" and at a computer which will allow me to write a new post. (I'm really going to have to pull out the guts of my desktop computer and figure out why I can only read my blog but not create a new one.)
 
Last Monday, the hospice social worker wore an ecru Aran style tunic/dress, probably in cotton/linen. Yesterday, I had some time to work up swatches to recreate that dress. (She loved it so much, she bought it in all the other colors they had. I never did that.....Ha!) Anyway, after a few tries, I got the cables down. You want ones with no/little depth since you're sitting on this. So I eliminated any honeycomb/popcorn effect and settled on a row of repeating twisted stitches on 2 stitches - 2 reverse stockinette stitches - back cable on 4 stitches - 2 reverse stockinette - back cable on 6 stitches. Pretty soon I got the rhythm of the 3 patterns (2 with 8 rows; 1 with 10 rows) but I also got the feeling that if I wanted this to have a flat look, I would need to use finer yarn and smaller needles. And then the "life is too short" mantra kicked in and I decided to deep six this project and search for a store bought one.........To Be Continued........
 
No pictures this week because hospice life is getting more complicated. More on this another day since this is the holiday season and let's be upbeat.
 
So without pictures, I thought I would link to the projects I'm working on.
 
First, my baby alpaca scarf is done. I used only 1 skein (440 yards) of Knit Picks baby alpaca and I crocheted the Beatrix Potter shawl with it:
 
 
This is a Ravelry pattern and free. Here are some of the modifications I made: Foundation chain should be w/a hook at least 2 sizes larger than your pattern hook (I used M and then J) and use wood or plastic hooks since metal is too slippery with lace. The pattern is 3x sts + 4 but I'm using  3x + 5 so that I put my first V stitch in the 5th chain from the hook and not the 4th as the pattern says. Then I begin every row with a chain 4 (not a chain 3) and end every row with a triple crochet in the turning chain.  This is not done in the pattern but I like how the rows look (more finished) this way. Note: Pure alpaca lace is clingy.
 
The finished project wears like a cloud (as if I know what a cloud feels like.)
 
Funny story: A friend who saw the scarf said: I'm afraid to wear lace because I'll catch it on everything. With complete hubris, I thought: Well, I've been wearing lace for years and that hasn't happened to me. Fast forward to last night and I'm in DM's room and the phone rings. I race for it, passing her walker (it's a sturdy one), catching my scarf on the handle, and, as I pulled past it, I take the walker with me and it falls to the ground. Finally, I untangle the scarf, upright the walker and happily discover, my scarf is fine. Sturdy little buggers, those baby alpacas.

On the crochet side, I'm on my 3rd circular shawl:


I think this link is a repeat but it's worth the repeat since this shawl is hands-down the best one I have ever made when it comes to staying on your shoulders. Without any short rows, or stuff like that, just following the pattern produces a naturally curved shawl which stays put. And, being double layered, it's warm.

I'm also moving right along with my generic top which I'm going to knit-till-I-drop and make it into a tunic for tights. I'm well past the armhole and now, on the second row past the twisted stitch row, (Pattern: 9 rows of K and 1 row of twisted stitch, *K in the back of the 2nd stitch on the LN, K in the front of the first stitch*. ) I'm increasing two stitches on each side of the front and back. I'm using the 2nd row from the twisted stitch row because it distorts that row if you make the increases on the row right after it. The increases are M1R (make 1 right) and M1L (make 1 left) where you increase by picking up the horizontal bar between 2 stitches and knitting this bar. The bar pick up and the knit is done slightly different for each type of increase so one leans to the right and one leans to the left.

I'm also finishing up my Barbizon lace scarf:


Not really worrying about the placement of the lace patterns with this scarf. The question now is should I break out another skein of yarn and make a big scarf or end at 1 skein for a moderate-length one.

I'm also looking at Lucille:


Which shows a lot of chutzpah since Lucille is written for babies. But if you cast on 80 for the largest size (I think 6 to 9 months) and then work increases to 157 (I'd round up to 160), you get the numbers I start with in my typical generic tops. After that, I would work 3 rows of K (I'm knitting in the round) and one row of *YO, K2tog* to the armhole (about 6".) Then I would bind off for the armhole after a *YO, K2tog* row and once I cast on the stitches for the underarm I would start the charted lace pattern.

Now this is the weird part. There are written directions for the yoke but the lace body is charted.(Nothing weird here.) Reading the comments from Ravelers, this lace chart caused confusion. It did for me also, and this is the weird part because when you click "copy image" for the chart and plunk it in WordPerfect, the chart now has two extra stitches at the beginning of every row! Which is weird and annoying because these two extra stitches each row, destroy the symmetry of the lace! But instead of angsting over why this happened, I'm going to take the suggestion of a Raveler and just work the 8-stitch repeat section of the lace pattern.

And finally:


which is a cowl pattern knit in the round so you get a stockinette look. Here's my idea: Work the pattern flat from the written directions where all the rows are knit. This will give you a reversible scarf/shawl. The big decision is whether to knit for width (so the long ends of the scarf/shawl will have the scallop) or for length (where the scallops with be on the short ends of the scarf/shawl.)
 
That's enough palavering for this week. Next Friday, I will have pictures since I plan to start taking them today.

Happy holidays to all and Happy Knitting.
 
  

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
 Tax the Rich
 
Website Wednesday
 
Sorry about not posting a Knitting Friday last week; things got hectic. Sorry about being so late with Website Wednesday today but that's more "a dog really did eat my homework" excuse because still, my early morning, eating breakfast and knitting desk top computer will not allow me to log into my blog. Bummer! So I have to wait until I'm up and dressed, on my "job" and finally at a laptop which will allow sign-ins on this blog. 
 
Right to some picks:
 
 
Yes, I did laugh so hard I cried with this entry. Test makers is so rigid when it comes to accepted responses, but some of these answers are pure genius. Check out the rest of the site also.
 
 
So it's holiday time and I probably thought I should bring you first to cleaning tips. But Tipnut has a lot of categories with interesting ideas and tips. Roam around and have fun.
 
 
Don't know much about Trendland. but it says it's presenting "your daily dose." Very nice, upscale articles and pictures. Taking long to load on my laptop. I think if you have any interest in design, fashion, art, culture, this is a nice place for return visits. 
 
 
Games! And not easy games. OK, I get the distinction of "pick the word 'blue'" and "pick the color 'blue'." But to have your brain register the fact that the color 'blue' is on the word 'purple' in under 2 seconds is not easy. Test those brain cells. There are a lot of games here for you. Good luck.
 
Got to go. Hospice nurse just called. See you next week. 
 

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
 Tax the Rich
 
Website Wednesday 
 
WTF is going on with the web? DH's professional website will no longer be supported starting next year. My blog comes up "closed" on my desktop computer. That is, I can read it but there is no top bar for signing in, creating a new post, etc. But, on the other computers in the house, their is still a functioning top bar. If only I were a tea bagger, I could blame Obama-care!
 
Which brings me to the realization that since all this hospice stuff, my view of the machinations of politics, of the ruling human species, has become so filled with ennui it's practically dormant. So let's get right to some picks:
 
 
A lot of brain exercise on this site, and typing. Take the Countries of the World quiz, I looked at it and thought: Hey, no country is highlighted. What one do they want me to type in? Then I realized: It's a map of the world, dummy. They want you to type in every country. Looks very suitable for lunch time relaxation at work.
 
This next one is very esoteric, may not be of interest to many, but for the myth/metaphor alone it's worth a visit (and even more than one):
 
 
This University of Rochester site explores the Camelot legend. Arthurian legends blend the pagan with the Christian; take the Anglo-Saxon myths and give them the face of Christian myths. Click all around this site, you'll be taken on a fantastic adventure.
 
And finally:
 

Picture galleries, not suitable for office openings though. I'm going to let you explore this site. It looks interesting, different and promising.

That's it for today. Last night, the hospice MD visited for 2 hour, today the hospice nurse will be here in less than 2 hours. Got to go. See you next week.
 

Friday, December 6, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
 Tax the Rich
 
Knitting Friday
 
I've been knitting this (#1) on US 10 
#1 Top on KP Caspians
Knit Picks Caspian needles without a hitch. No unscrewing, no snagging, and very pointy tips. The only disappointment is that I thought the variegated green tips would be lighter. They sure looked lighter on the KP website. But looking again, I think they flooded the photo shoot with light; like a black cat in the cop's headlights.
 
The top is in 25% wool Plymouth Encore in a discontinued color. (Where do I pick up all this crazy yarn?) It's variegated in a wild way: a block of beige, a block of dark tweed, a block of light tweed. I've never seen such a blend but it feels very soft. The pattern is my typical generic top with these variations: With a G hook, I chained 80 and worked 80 extended single crochets across. I picked up 80 stitches from the chain with a US 8 circular, joined for round knitting, and then I knitted in the front and back of every stitch (I usually don't increase to 160 when I work a lace pattern but this baby is in stockinette and is going over my hips.) Switched to the Caspian US 10 and I worked 1 row of *YO, K2tog*. After that, it's going to be 9 rows of straight knit and 1 row of *knit in the back of the 2nd stitch on the LN, knit in the front of the 1st stitch on the LN* for a row of twisted stitches. I have enough yarn, I hope, for a sleeveless tunic top which will be long enough to wear with tights.
 
#2 Dona Ines variation
In keeping with my new mantra: you can't buy new, good lace wool without working on your old, good lace wool, I'm working on a Dona Ines neckwarmer (#2), but with mods:
 
 
1. It's a scarf not a neck warmer (no joining.)
2. It only uses Row 3 of the pattern. (The original pattern has a row of single crochet and a row of half double crochet. I decided it was much easier just working the hdc row. As you can see, even with this one row and an H hook the scarf is pretty dense. It was even denser with both rows. Yes, I know blocking will open up lace, but I'm toying with no blocking. This variation is a great take-along project since it's always the same row.

And here's another pattern variation which is called Lovely Cowlette but the swatch in #3 is for a scarf.
#3 Lovely Cowlette variation
 The link to the original pattern is below but I'm going to work this up in good yarn before I discuss my mods. But, as with all my mods, it's dead easy.

 
And finally, here's a knitting website you may like:
 

It's an online knitting magazine which says of itself: We are an independent on-line magazine focusing on knitting and the sister arts. We are always looking for new ideas, and for the most part, we are letting strong submissions drive issue content. However, we will periodically send out a "mood board" or a thematic statement.
 
Take a look.

That's it for this week. I'm eyeing a rib stitch sleeveless, seamless vest pattern. I made one with an Elan pattern once (might be the same one) but it was in bulky (as this one is) and I looked like a fat polar bear. More next week if I have the time to modify the pattern for DK weight.

Happy knitting.



 

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Capitalism - Feudalism without the King
 Tax the Rich
 Website Wednesday

Just like once and a while I visit Amazon, once and a while I have to move furniture. Humans are wacky. But then I saw this site this morning:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/12/03/lion-tiger-bear-negligence_n_4374091.html

and I almost cried. Yes, I, steel-souled I, almost cried. Not because the money spent for these three abused wild animals should have been spent on human unfortunates but because the whole story is a metaphor, people. Due to reasons they're not telling, three natural enemies, natural predators, are living together in harmony. Good job, bear, tiger and lion. And humans, please don't forget their meal time - ever.

And now for segueing:

http://koikoikoi.com/2013/05/where-children-sleep-by-james-mollison/

I know I've shown a similar site before (maybe the same site?) but as we're in a holiday season in the USA (and other places), it's a good time to see where kids sleep/live throughout the world. Some are sleeping in pleasant environments, most not, and the main issue in those pictures is the lack of hygiene which probably inhabits all of their world.

Another picture:

http://sergeyivanov.35photo.ru/photos/20131030/607035.jpg 

Now here's your brown bear in the wild. Cute but don't touch and don't offer to play with him/her and that piece of snow.

I'm on a roll with animal pics today. From the same site:

http://musskaya.35photo.ru/photo_626862/ 

Why do these puppies all look just this side of feral?

I don't know how accurate these maps are but they sure are interesting:

http://twistedsifter.com/2013/08/maps-that-will-help-you-make-sense-of-the-world/

Be sure to click the double gold arrows on the left and right for a lot of different/off-beat photo-journalism.

Finally, fashion and style:

http://www.vouchercodes.co.uk/most-wanted/fashion-100-the-definitive-list-of-the-most-influential-bloggers-4008.html 

It's a UK based site so many sites are from there but the rest of the world is represented. Blogs look current and there's a lot to see/read here. However, Firefox will not link to these blogs so "opening in a new window" was the only option. You may have better luck. 

That's it for today. And yes, I'm really going to go and move furniture. No idea why I have this furniture moving bug today. Go ask the lemming why that cliff is so tempting.

See you next week.