5 Things You Should Never Spin Yarn From
- Flax
- Virgin Acrylic
- Corn Husks
- Dryer lint
- Steel Wool
I finished the last lingering project from this summer on the Friday. I had started a number of sweaters in June so that I could have the right projects on the needles for camp. See, for camp they want you to be working on something small that you can try out all of the nifty things that they’re showing you. I, however, think making smaller sweaters is kinda dumb, because I am ornery like that.
So rather than have a baby sweater for camp, I decided to have, 3 me-sized sweaters in progress.
Usually, the pace of a sweater sort of balances things out, and if you work on them successively rather than concurrently, it’s hard to get bored. So making them all at the same time, was clearly a mistake that I won’t be repeating. It took me to thanksgiving to get all three sweaters from may and June finished up.
The good news, the green cardigan (my first venture with EZ’s seamless saddle shoulder shaping) seems to be an instant hit. I’m not sure it’s the best looking sweater I’ve made, or that it fits my father particularly well, but he seems to like it a bunch, and that’s what counts. It still needs to be blocked. And I have a couple of socks worth of yarn to cope with.
Also--and this is where the title of the post comes in--but I finished another pair of socks that rock socks (medium weight) that I’ve been dragging my feet on for a while. I think I started these in may as well alas. I’m working on a little black cap, as I am with out hats at the moment, and feeling like making a few hats, and I have little odds and ends of yarn that I need to knit up before I can more comfortably get more yarn.
Also, good news, my last real remaining spinning wheel has, I think found a buyer. Which means we’ll see how this goes, but, I think I might be able to buy the new wheel soon. I have a hank of yarn that is drying in the upstairs shower now (great place for setting twist!), and it’s quite nice. Quite nice. I’m not sure what I’m going to do with it yet, so we’ll see.
Also--third post-script paragraph, a new record perhaps?--I’m slowly getting the wheels started on selling a couple of my patterns and what not. I need to do some tweaking to the TealArt design, not to mention some more writing, before this is a reality, but it’s coming.
Anyway, that’s all for now. Hope your long weekend has been long enough!
Onward and Upward!
So there’s this saying that floats around, and there might be science fiction lore that surrounds this, but it says, basically that every writer has about a million words of crap in them that they just have to get out. After you write the first million, the thought is that you’ve written a certain number of words, you’ve learned how to write, found your voice, learned what you’re interested in and gotten over your youth, which makes you prone to writing all manner of foolishness.
Now it’s of course a rough estimate--your milage may vary--but I think being ok with the fact that I’m still learning, that it’s ok to not be perfect, because after, I’m still under my million words. If I’m still writing crap at 1,500,000 words I might get a little ticked, but where I am right now, it’s ok.
I have an informal tally of my fiction writing at about 150k. I wrote a novel in high school that was 100k, I have this novella (32k), I have about 10k in station keeping, and about 20k in the the project that preceded station keeping, not to mention, a couple of assorted little projects that never panned out. It seems like a good number.
I, on a whim, installed plugins that basically do a worcount on your wordpress (blog) postings and archives. In the past five years of TealArt, we have amassed a total of 269k words, 214k of which are mine. In four months of tychoish, I’ve written 69k words.
I think it’s time to readjust the crapo-meter a bit.
I posted pictures yesterday of a sweater that I had just finished.
It’s a jaunty little number, and I’m glad that I’ll have it in the pile, even if I do have to do a little bit of extreme blocking first. This is probably my best design to-date. Of course there are others that are good, certainly others that are more impressive feats of knitting engineering, but there aren’t a lot of other ones that look good as consistently, and regularly. It’s a good sweater, testified by the fact that I’ve knit 3 versions of it by now, and am probably going to knit another version soon.
There are a couple of things that make this sweater so delightful to knit and wear. First it’s knit entirely in the round, so there’s not a lot of thought involved, and while I certainly like complex projects, sometimes it’s nice to have something plain going on. Because it’s knit in the round there are a number of knitterly wisdom that’s incorporated into the design: gussets at the underarm, combined front and back neck shaping, a slit neck which regulates temperature for those in more hospitable climates, short rows that keep the back from riding up, and so forth. Secondly, as a design feature, the fact that the top of the shoulders and sleeves are a different color gives this sweater some of the appearance of having saddled sleeves, which ameliorates the problem of drop shoulders, and the problem of boring solid colored, without going crazy.
I call it the sport sweater, mostly because I think that the split neck is kinda sport-like, and it emphasizes the fact that this is a casual, comfortable sweater, not a formal blouse or jacket-type sweater. I dunno, it seemed like the thing to call it. This sweater would be my submission into a book of “house sweaters,” that I’ve thought of putting together for a while. I think it’d be cool to ask a bunch of designers to submit designs for the sweater that they find themselves reaching for when ever it gets a little drafty. I think we all have “that sweater,” and I think it’d be an interesting collection of “real” people sweaters (as opposed to most of the sweaters that make it in, say Vogue Knitting.)
So I wanted to post pictures of the other two sweaters in this series for reference, and because I finally have pictures of these sweaters.
Here’s the first iteration:
and
Here’s the remake version that I did two years ago, in attempt to get something that was a little bit more fitted, out of better yarn.
and
Enjoy. Working an unusual Saturday at the Yarn Store. Hoping I’m not too worn by the end of the day.
Onward and Upward!
It’s black friday and while I’m not hopping or anything like that. I have gotten some things done that I thought I’d share with you. So I think a good old fashion list was in order:
Here’s the picture of my red sport sweater that I (also) blocked right after dinner yesterday:
It’s big. Really big. I’m going to felt it, I’ve decided, because it’s too big length wise in every direction, and pretty good width wise. Some concern about the sleeves (of course), but it’s sort of silly looking, and I think a little bit of fulling will add some much needed stability.
I wanted to get before pictures of it in any case. The first sweater that I made in this style (I got pictures of it, don’t worry) is also fueled for much the same reason, so I’m not concerned.
Anyway, There you have it. Have a good day not shopping hopefully. I’m going to go do something utterly lazy.
Onward and Upward!
So, Christina, wrote a comment (thanks christina!) regarding my little tirade on NaNoWriMo, that basically said, the project might allow (if I’m reading this right) for non or new writers to get a more clear understanding about what “being a writer” is, and maybe make it more accessible. But you can read the comment in more depth here.
I replied (as I do try to do to many comments), and when I was done I found that I had basically written another blog post on the subject, and I think it moves the conversation around, so I’m going to post it. I’m interested in what you all think, though I suspect that the NaNo-ers are deep in trenched in their novels, and the remainder probably don’t care all that much. Anyway, here’s my little response:
I really don’t have anything against NaNo, and think it’s a goods project. For many years now, I’ve been the leader of a small science fiction writers list on yahoogroups, and there’s a way in which these folks who very much want to be writers, are sometimes afraid of plowing through a novel, so having a project like NaNo makes a lot of sense, and can sort of light the right kind of fire under peoples asses. So it’s a great project for people who already write a lot, who haven’t made the jump to novel writing, but maybe have always wanted to.
In this respect, I think the NaSweKniMo (national sweater knitting month, which is the brain child of Shannon. Okey (I think), is a great project in the best sprit of NaNoWriMo. then again, I think sweater knitting leaves you less prone for burnout than novel writing, but maybe that’s just me.
And maybe this is the price of success for NaNoWriMo, but in the past couple of years, there are people who do NaNo because it’s some cool social bonding ritual. There are write-ins, there are support groups, and it’s all focused on the word count. Which really so not what writing is about, at least to me. Writing is so often a solitary practice that means neglected social ties, nights of insomnia when you can’t get a story out of your mind, haggard pushes to deadlines, and a lot of time sitting around having arguments with yourself while scribing unintelligible notes on things that weren’t meant to be written on.
I think that while this invokes a nativist-type epistemology that I’m not entirely comfortable with, it’s true: writers write, not because they want to, but because they can’t not write. I took several years off of fiction writing (the past four, or so,) but in that time managed to amass 200,000 words of writing for my blog, plus tons of stuff for classes, and I’m a better writer for it, so I think that still counts.
Anyway, there you have it…
Onward and Upward!
I write science fiction, and truth be told, and I think the space opera form has life in it yet. While my last story was set on Mars and didn’t have a lot of interplanetary travel, this project does. Mostly because I want to cover a long period of time in the stories that I’m writing now, so that we can see characters relate to histories. So I have characters on space ships.
One thing that I have yet to do, is create some sort of FTL (faster-than-light) construct in the stories, and while I’m not hyper vigilant about making sure that planets are actually going to be where they are in relation to each other when I say they are, I’ve built transit times into my plots and stuff like that, so that there’s at least some sense of a “price” for technologies that seem too good to be true. And I think in some ways this connects to some sort of notion of constrained creativity and particularly in fiction this is what makes stories interesting
So, in pursuit of making this work I occasionally find myself looking up orbital mechanics and interplanetary transit systems, to figure out how to get ships and planets to be in roughly the same place at the same time. There’s only a little bit of this, in the current book thankfully: most of the story takes place on ships bound out of the solar system and on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. But at the moment I’m following a ship that’s making it’s way to Titan, with a brief detour to Mars. So I once again find myself trying to figure out Martian orbital dynamics and distances. Sigh.
This website about Martian Orbits is quite helpful.
Also, for those of you playing along at home, I think--think here--that an object that was .25 of a martian year behind mars in orbit would be about 17 light minutes away from Mars. This is between Mars and the L4 (or 5 if mars is ahead) Lagrarian points, which are, despite being farther away only 12 minutes away. (.25 of a year, is 45 degrees ahead/behind mars, the L4/5 points are 60 degrees ahead/behind. I’m figuring that the Mars Orbit, at 1.5 AU, to Earths 1 AU has a radius of 12 light minutes, or 134123326 miles.)
This ignores the fact that the orbits are all elliptical, and the effect of gravity on light/radio waves, which exists, surely, but not I think to a degree great enough to affect the truthfulness of a character that says “The message is about 20 minutes old.”
I wonder if you can get a job doing something with rudimentary orbital mechanics with an undergraduate degree in psychology and no college level math. Sigh. Guess I better stick to writing.
Hope your turkey preparations are going well.