Your life as it has been, is over.

(This is a text heavy post. I'll try to throw in some fibery pics just to break up the monotony.)


Well, I've been away for a bit, haven't I?

First, it's summer. I have 3 kids, one of them special needs. It's busy.
Then, there was the Harry Potter mania. Which means I did nothing but read for 2 days. When I do nothing but read for 2 days my house completely falls apart in a way that takes me 8 days to recover from. Do not try to figure that out, it doesn't make sense. But it's true anyway.

Then I fell down the rabbit hole that is Ravelry. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, go, check it out. I'll wait. (BTW, it's still in beta, so you can't get on, but you can get on the waiting list and you might get in sometime, eventually. Do it cause the list will only get longer and you'll regret it later.)
Basically, it's a database for knitters. It has inside it all the yarn and patterns and projects you can imagine. Well no, really it doesn't, but it can, because if it's not there, you can put it there, and then other people can find it. And eventually every yarn ever spun and every pattern ever designed will be assimilated within the Ravelry universe and then the knitters can take over the world!

Seriously, though, it's pretty cool. You get a little virtual notebook where you can organize your projects. That's where you start. You think you don't have that many projects, but then you start entering them in. And then there's a place where you can drag and drop your pictures from Flickr into your project page. And now you have a nifty little thing that shows all the things you are knitting, and you realize how very many of those things there are. Yikes.



THEN, there's a place for you to enter all of your yarn, (called the Stash). Seriously. Ok well I'm never going to enter *all* of my yarn. But I did put in quite a bit. And then I had to take pictures of it all. And there's a lot.

So, I've been using my Ravelry time to organize everything else. I took out the yarn to photograph and sort and put it back. I sold some of the unloved stuff to someone else who will love it more. I donated some acrylic to a lady who is making bears for sick kids. I cleaned out the WIPs and figured out Just. How. Many. there are. But at least I know they're there, you know what you're up against, and where they are now. You can become one with your projects.


And THEN.... Here's the real time vortex. You get a queue. Every pattern you want to make. Or think you might want to make. Or you want to remember where it is. Or yarn you want to buy. Put it in your queue. Add in all the stuff you might want to know, what kind of yarn it needs, where the yarn for it IS (behind the curtains, under the bed...) Plus, you can go through and look at what other people are making. You can find out what the monkey socks look like in 903 different projects. You can find out that Hedera is way cooler than it looks in the really dorky pictures on Knitty. You can figure out just how much sock yarn you have and which ones would look good knit in Hedera, and even though you just found out that you have 19 WIP's, you can start Hedera anyway.


I really love them.

I have also been using this time to organize all my patterns. I have a very many patterns. I picked out several to give away because I just don't need THAT many baby sock patterns. They aren't that different. I still have very many patterns. But now I know where everything is. So that's cool.
I have 27 projects. 175 stashed yarns. 138 projects in my queue. Just in case, you know, you were wondering.
OOOOH and I forgot, I'm a *DESIGNER*. I feel all official now. I have my own special designer page. With 1 lonely pattern on it. Now I'm feeling like I really need to finish writing the other 5 or 6 patterns I have plans for. Cause, you know, it's Ravelry, and I can't resist.

Resistance is futile. **



Meanwhile....

Life has apparently continued on. My blog has sat, blogless. I have finished some pants that I haven't even mentioned starting, but, they were in my Ravelry :) I finished 1 Hedera sock and decided I had to finish the pants before I could make another one. I'm determined to cut down the number of WIPs to a more manageable number. Then I have 138 projects to make. And I'm quite sure there are things that still aren't in there.

I'll be back to regular entries here this week. Probably with fresh pictures. School starts next Wednesday (WHOOO!). I have lots of work to do between now and then.

For now, here are some Q&A from the comments.
Did Spike's sweater survive the remainder of the winter?
It did! I was thinking I should probably make another one so I can alternate them when it gets wet. He really likes it when it's snowy. I wish I could figure out how to make felted booties for his poor little feet. It's hard to think about snow when it's 100 degree heat index though!
Re: the Harry Potter knitting:
What are your thoughts after the whole experience?
I assume you meant the midnight book experience? It was fun and I'd totally do it again. C was so excited she couldn't stand it. They interviewed her on the news twice. When she actually got the book she was screaming and squealing like mad.
Also, the book was awesome. I loved it. Everything I knew would happen did, everything I thought should happen, did, but there was still a lot of stuff I couldn't have thought of, and that was cool, too. I'm kinda sad that it's over. And I need to knit a beaded bag. In a bad way. Make that 139 projects in my queue.
By the way - what exactly is a Pygmy Puff?
It's a miniature Puffskein. That clears it up, doesn't it? Basically, it's a little tribble. One of the characters has a purple one as a pet (Arnold).
Hope the Snitch washcloth turned up!
It didn't. Bummer. It only took an hour or so to make, though, so it's not a huge loss. Not like the original Spike sweater or anything.... *sniff*

** 10 points if you can spot all the geeky Borg references in this post.

Ravelry....

is such a HUGE vortex of time-wasting mojo.... I'm trying to convince myself that this will save me all kinds of time later on, being more organized... yeah, right, finding dozens of new things I want to knit, that will save me *LOADS* of time....

But, it's sure fun to play on!

We're all ready here...

I haven't had time to post since we got back from our trip. I finished the stag bag before we left except for some finishing, which I did when we got back.

I really really love it. Seriously love it.
Here's the back

And the insides, just in case you want to see that too...
Remember when I showed you a picture of this a while back as a hint? It was an extreme closeup and I was hoping you couldn't tell it's scale.
Well here it is all finished. It's a bookmark. It's made from embroidery floss on 0000 needles. I did it with double knitting because I didn't want to fiddle with double pointed needles on something this small. Instead, half of the stitches are slipped one way, turn it over and stitch the slipped stitches, and slip the stitched ones, the other way. Same thing but only 2 needles.
Just for the record, it's 12 stitches per inch.

Last night I whipped up this Pygmy Puff for C. She has named it Penelope. (I was thinking it would be Arnold, but she wanted it to be a girl... *shrug*).
I also made a snitch washcloth on our trip, finished it while we were there, and now I can't find it. I think we're completely unpacked too, so I'm really baffled as to where it went. Maybe a house elf has decided to pick it up...
We're just waiting for the book to come out now. Just under 12 hours...

True to form...

I cannot follow the directions on a pattern without changing them.

My children and my house conspired to keep me from starting the stag bag until today (Wednesday), even though the yarn was dry on Sunday. Well except for when my DH put it outside and it got dewy again. I'm chomping at the bit here. I thought I had a shot at finishing it before the movie, but gave up on that idea yesterday. It should definitely be done for me to carry my new book out of the store at 12:01 though.

I start out thinking I'm going to make it just like the pattern. Really.

Well, except the color, but that doesn't really count.

And well, those chevrons. Those are a little bit like construction arrows. It could be cooler with something else there.

Then I sit down to start making it, and it's stranding *flat*? You want me to PURL with 2 strands? Um, why?

Yeah, so I changed it. It's now all made in 1 piece. added the swirly design, charted it out both directions so it can go around the stag, and figured out how many stitches that was. Figured out a fill stitch pattern for the back so I can carry both colors around the back. Did a provisional cast on, so when I'm done I can graft the bottom together, and then started working it all in the round.

But other than that it's exactly like the pattern.

Sheepy Time catch up

I'm using one post to catch up on all the soaker knitting I've been doing when I was too busy knitting and taking care of 3 kids to post about knitting.
I figured I better start working on some pants instead of shorts. These are fibonacci sequence striped longies, made with Reynold's Turnberry Tweed wool. And those of you who felt them in person, they did get a lot softer when I blocked them *whew!*








I've been working on the soaker pattern and this is one that I made in that process. Internal drawstring and I was working out a good ruffle. I like how it came out on this one. Lamb's Pride yarn.



Dinosaur soaker. This is Purewool and some random bits of leftover wool. That Pterodactyl was a PITA.

I finished these shorts a while ago but just finished weaving in the ends and adding the flowers and drawstring. It's purewool (again). Also, I had to take pictures of them a million times because those colors don't want to come out right. This is pretty darn close.





Needle Felting

So while I was at the fiber festival I decided I was going to try needle felting. I got some books from the library, but I've been kind of avoiding it. I was intimidated.

I shouldn't have been

Needle felting is both awesomely cool and fun but also pretty easy.


Just make sure you don't do it when you're pissed off....
These are a custom order. She picked out the blue/green yarn (100purewool, btw) and asked for hibiscus flowers in a dark pink.

I had SO much fun doing these and it's not too difficult at all.

Of the books I got from the library, I would recommend Needle Felting: Simple Techniques, Beautiful Projects, by Linda Lenich and Jennifer Kooy Zoeterman the most, followed closely by Indygo Junction's Needle Felting: 22 Stylish Projects for Home and Fashion, by Amy Barickman. Both have good explanation of the technique, and both have some projects that are cool and some that are just weird.