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« I'm in :) | Main | Geez, *another* FO! »

OMG I finished something!

Well, it had to happen sometime... I actually finished a project. Yup, a UFO became a FO.

Ever since I cleaned up, put away and organized all the knitting crap I had been kicking around downstairs for about a year, I have been on this new stringent knitting regime, whereby I remove NO MORE THAN 2 knitting projects at a time from its prison bin, and do not allow myself to start another new project until one of the existing projects is done. It is actually working pretty well!! I kinda scared myself when I cleaned up and realized that the load of crap I had sitting around in bags "around" my chair filled 5 (yes, F-I-V-E) large Rubbermaid plastic bins. [Not the bathtub sized ones; those are upstairs ... these are the half-bathtub sized ones). So I numbered my bins and wrote down what is in each bin, and I am working my way through them, one (or two) project(s) at a time. I am allowing myself one project of any difficulty level and one project of Knitting-in-Line-at-the-Post-Office difficulty level. Gotta have that walkaround project, ya know? It's like having a security blanket. But with needles.

So anyway, back to my victory dance.... mid-November, I suddenly had a strange and urgent desire to knit a fine-gauge dark brown scarf, long enough to wrap a couple times around my neck or possibly strangle an unknowing terrorist, if the need arose. This was strange because I actually really do NOT like brown, I tend to avoid it, despite it being the color of chocolate. So that was weird, but I grabbed 4 skeins of Dale of Norway's Baby Ull in a luscious dark brown and cast on 70 sts on size 4 needles and proceeded to k2, p2 forever. I loved it. I knit and knit and knit, night after night... loving every minute of it... not straying from my one project, until lo and behold, suddenly it was done! Geez, it really does work... if you keep knitting on something, it becomes "finished". Wow. So I wove in the ends and wore it out in this freaking nasty storm that manifested itself... personally, I am blaming Canada for it. I closed the store at 3 today. It was nasty out there. Here's a picture of my finished scarf, modeled on a truly lovely Unique One sweater; also there is a picture of my scarf in action, on me... after I fought my way through the blizzard to get into the store this morning. BTW it is very difficult to take a picture of yourself in a mirror without getting the camera in on the act. So oh well:
Brownscarf


Brownscarf2

Meanwhile, back at the rocking chair, I already started my next One Project, a pair of worsted weight socks in a hand-dyed lovely yarn from some farm in Maine... I will have to get back to you on the name of the place. It is lovely wool yarn, which has nylon in it. It looks handspun, but isnt; but it is hand-dyed. I got it at this year's Fiber Frolic. I have one sock done and the second one is already half done:


Worstedsock

Since I appear to be zooming through this second project, I have already been shopping in Blue Plastic Bin Yarn Mart #5 for my next project, and I chose to use some handspun laceweight yarn that I have been hanging onto for I swear, about 8 years. This was amazing yarn and we used to sell it when I could get it. A wonderful man from Rhode Island, whose name I unfortunately do not recall, had some amazing supernatural powers of spinning, and he used to spin this *2-PLY* lace weight yarn from Shetland sheep that were raised right here, in Lincolnville or Northport, I believe. It is amazing... it still makes me shiver to think that anyone could spin like that. I am finally going to use the 3 skeins of white and 1 skein of brown to make a ripple-stitch shawl. This yarn is one of those yarns (we all have them) that we hold onto and never use because it is "too nice" to use. You know you have that yarn in your stash, admit it. Maybe it is cashmere or handspun or yarn made from a pet dog you used to have... or maybe it is just the most luscious, amazing yarn you have ever seen in your life, and you are in such utter AWE of it, that you can't possibly use it because, after all, NO project could ever do it justice. Right? Right? Yeah... well I got over it. I have this impossibly amazing yarn that has been (sometimes literally) kicking around in my yarn stash for okay, maybe it's been 10 years. And dammit, it is time to knit something with it!!! Wooo hooo! I feel such a sense of freedom, of adventure, of fear that is is going to take 20 years to wind this stuff into a ball....
Pictures below.... please note that I am showing the close-up shot as well as the not close-up shot of the yarn on a background of my recently finished Baby Ull scarf. Yes... Baby Ull... and just look how fat and chunky the Baby Ull looks compared to this *2-PLY* handspun laceweight. Sigh.. I bow before this spinner's abilities... :

Handspunlaceweight

Handspunlcweightclose

If anyone knows/remembers this amazing spinner's name, please leave it in the Comments... I would love to recover that bit of info so I can give him appropriate credit!

Happy knitting, & try not to hurt yourself :)

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Favorite Quotes & Miscellanea

  • W. B. Yeats, from "Adam's Curse":
    "I said 'a line will take us hours maybe; Yet if it does seem a moment's thought, Our stitching and unstitching has been naught."

    *******

  • Mr. Finch, in a recent Dr. Who episode:
    "....forget the shooting-dog thing..."

    *******

  • Katharine Hepburn:
    "Cold sober, I find myself absolutely fascinating!"

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  • Winston Churchill:
    "I know history will be kind to me, because I intend to write it."

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  • Kaylee, in the TV show Firefly, "Jaynestown" episode:
    "Hamsters is nice."

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  • Bill Slease, paraphrasing John Beck & Mitchell Wades' book Got Game:
    "The hunger for a challenge that requires your full attention is a hero's desire."

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  • from a refrigerator magnet:
    "I used to jog, but the ice kept falling out of my glass...."

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  • from Mike Doughty ("American Car")
    "I'm done with elephants and clowns
    I want to
    Run away and join the office"

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  • from Dr. Who:
    "Are you in charge here?"
    "No, but I'm full of ideas!"

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