Two and a half months later…
The last few months really got away from me. I signed up for 3 separate classes at the Graham School for both fall and winter quarters. These are 3 hour classes per week for each class, with an accompanying amount of reading. While I enjoyed all of them, it hasn’t left me much time for other things besides the real life stuff that doesn’t go away, even if I’d rather be sitting in a chair reading. I had signed up for another three classes for spring quarter, which starts next week, but came to my senses yesterday and dropped one of the classes. It was a class on Ulysses, by James Joyce, which I’d really love to take, but it will likely be offered again at some point. John has three grandsons in university, and has pointed out that I was probably doing more class work than any of them.
I have been knitting, but slowly. I pulled some yarn out of stash a few weeks ago to knit a plain warm shawl.
I bought that in 2022 after we got back from our Scandinavian cruise. It’s a lovely, woolly yarn made in Sweden. I’m doing another Boneyard shawl, which is dead-easy, and doesn’t require much of my available brain power to work on.
I really like how the gradient striping is turning out. I have the last skein to go, so this will be a really huge shawl to wrap up in.
That stack of books behind the knitting is for spring quarter. We won’t read all of each book, but it’s still a lot of reading. I’m taking a three-quarter class on the history of US immigration, as well as the Graham Basic Program (great books class), which is a four-year program. Spring quarter will complete my second year, and it has been a real eye-opener for me. The books we read are mostly things I missed in college, since I was on a premed track, and didn’t get a chance to study many of the classics. For fall quarter, I also took a class where we read Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables, and for winter it was Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov. (Spell check wanted to change that to The Brothers Kalamazoo, which certainly could be an interesting book, but not the same.)
I did actually finish a pair of socks over the weekend.
Aren’t those pretty? The yarn is from a UK dyer, Felt Fusion. This particular yarn base is John Arbon’s Exmoor Sock yarn, which I love. It’s the same old plain white bread sock, top down with a flap heel and gusset.
That’s all for now. I’ll try to not stay away so long this time!
Love the green gradient in that yarn. I’m making a ginormous shawl right now too in sport weight. Verdon by Melanie Berg. I like the socks you finished. I’ve not knit on my socks for awhile, I’ve become obsessed with English Paper piecing and sewed a quilt together for a friend.
That shawl is so yummy and will be a nice, warm one in which to wrap while sitting on the patio and doing some of that class readin! Nice socks, too. I haven’t made a pair of socks in a few years. After doing one a month for a few years in a row, I needed a break. Plus, I have all these socks and I never wear them…
OMG! Brothers Kalamazoo! Love that! That shawl is a super no-brainer; your yarn choice is lovely. Yes, your socks are beautiful!
Dostoevsky is one of my favorites!
Agree, love the tonal green and the yarn sock is beautiful. What a fun pair.
I love a good mindless knit, and those greens are so nice. As for The Brothers Kalamazoo, well, I’m interested!
Exam question: Discuss the differences in the themes of The Brothers Karamazov and The Brothers Kalamazoo.
I would pay money to read the responses!
I love the colors in your shawl, and how things just worked out, stripe-wise.
The shawl (love the color) and socks are divine!
The Brothers Kalamazoo gave me a chuckle! Spellcheck is ignorant, literary-wise.