Fun Things

My favorite place online to shop for pens and ink is Goulet Pens. An ad for a fun ink brand called Colorverse popped up earlier this week, and I couldn’t resist.

It comes in various color pairs, with out of this world names. The Schrodinger is a nice medium olive green, well saturated. I inked up my Visconti fountain pen, it flows nicely, but isn’t too wet. The other two colors I got were Crystal Planet, which is just one color, and Einstein Ring, another single color pair. A few of the colors, including Cat, have shimmer particles, so be aware of that. I usually don’t use those in my more expensive pens.

Happiness…

Is having just a few minutes for a cup of tea and knitting before I head off to work. I finished the sleeves for Rogue yesterday and picked up the stitches around the neck for the hood, which is full of delicious cables.

Here’s another shot of the cables. It’s tough to get a decent photo this time of morning.

Vogue Knitting

Several weeks ago I received a copy of the Vogue Knitting book from the publisher, with a request to review the new edition*.

I also have the original version of this, published in 1989. Honestly, I haven’t used it much, but it was nice to have for comparison.

Much of the content of the new edition is similar. Overall, the text is much easier to read. All text, including chapter headings, is on a white background, with a bigger and cleaner font. The old edition had “tip boxes” with dark colored headings, so it was hard to read the text. Here is one comparison. The first photo is the from the old edition.

A lot of the text is similar, though cleaned up, and key points in the text throughout are in bold so are easier to find. Similarly, many photos and illustrations are the same, but are larger, and a lot of the swatch photos are either redone or lightened so stitch patterns are easier to see.

There is expanded information on new fibers and tools. There are 11 new cast ons shown. The sections on increases and decreases uses terminology that is much clearer, and matches current pattern writing.

There are brand new sections devoted to cable knitting, lace knitting, advanced techniques (brioche, double knitting), directional knitting (entrelac, center-out knitting), and new sections on designing shawls, hats, and hand and foot coverings. The cable and lace sections alone are worth the price of the book. It includes instruction on knitting from charts, as well as shaping in lace patterns.

The section on understanding knitting directions is expanded. There is more on gauge, and detailed sizing charts that are new. This section has one of the simplest explanations of darning that I’ve ever seen.

The section on circular and double point knitting includes expanded information on newer techniques: magic loop, the jogless join, Moebius knitting, and knitting with two circulars.

In the chapter on designing, the goofy wooden body models are gone.

Instead you get this:

The accompanying text has numbered descriptions of each of those measurements.

Other new features that I found include a more extensive discussion of short row shaping, including double stitch German short rows (Melanie Berg uses this in many of her shawl patterns). There are also updated shoulder and sleeve construction options.

There are a couple things from the old book that were left out. The introductory chapter on the history of knitting is gone. I doubt that anyone will miss it. The stitch dictionary is gone, but much of that info is now in the appropriate chapters on cables and lace. And the handful of very dated sweater patterns at the end of the book are gone. I’m quite certain that I’ll never get the itch to knit an oversized bulky sweater with reindeer on the front.

I probably wouldn’t have had this on my radar screen to go out and buy. There is so much useful information on the internet that I don’t haul out my knitting books much. This book is a great addition to any knitting library, and I anticipate that it won’t spend nearly as much time on the bookshelf as the old edition. I would highly recommend this one.

*In full disclosure, I received the review copy for free, but I’m not getting any other compensation for this.

Stash

Or,

My Yarn Box Runneth Over

I either need to knit faster or buy another plastic container. And no, I’m not going to admit publicly just how many of those boxes I have. Let’s just say that I have it all recorded in a spreadsheet with photos, since if the house burned down, USAA would never believe I have that much invested without proof.

Baking day

We’re having a friend over for Easter dinner tomorrow, so today is baking day. The main course is an herbed and roasted boneless leg of lamb, with a potato gratin and asparagus. This morning I made some bread to go with dinner. I’m making an orange chiffon cake next. Here’s the bread.

I’m pretty sure that won’t make it until tomorrow before it gets “tested”.

In other news, I bought a set of 3 resistance bands for strength training. They didn’t last a day before one went missing. Yesterday I wedged the other two under a set of dumbbells to secure them. This morning John found one of those two on the stairs, and the third seems to have permanently disappeared.

I’m pretty sure this is the culprit.

All I can say is that she better be showing some muscles.

Holy Moly

I can’t tell you how many dozens of pairs of socks I’ve knit over the years. I still get gusset holes sometimes, which really annoys me. Here’s a closeup.

It’s always on that same side. It just pisses me off, even though I can fix it later with duplicate stitch.

But isn’t that some pretty sock yarn? I just keep knitting and knitting to get to the next color stripe.

And one last photo.

Fourteen Years!

It’s a good thing that my phone calendar has a reminder feature, or I’d have missed my own “blogiversary”. It’s actually tomorrow, but I’m pretty sure if I wait until then, I’ll forget to post something.

I’ve been a very neglectful blogger in the past year. I’m hoping to change that. I’ve got all sorts of new stuff going on in my life to talk about, so hopefully I can get back into the habit of writing here.

First up is my current projects.

That is Rogue. I have just a bit of one sleeve to finish, then the hood, which is full of pretty cables, so that should go quickly. I have a little fixing to do on the front right neck. When I pulled it out of the bag to take a photo, the stitch holder carrying the right front cabled stitches had come out, letting all of those stitches go. Fortunately Peace Fleece sticks together pretty well, and I have the other side to compare, so I should be able to get it together without too much of a mess.

This is Trillian, knit in Schaefer Anne. It’s a lot less garish and much more girly than that photo would lead you to believe. This is pretty simple “TV” knitting. You’d think that I would have it finished by now.

Next up is my Winter Solstice shawl. This is even less photogenic than a blob of lace usually is, I stopped right in the middle of the row to get a photo. I have about a billion rows left to knit.

Last but not least, my latest sock. I simply adore this yarn. It is from Trailing Clouds, the color is Mind the Gap, inspired by the 12 colors of the London Tube map. The shop has been sold out for awhile, but fortunately I have a couple other colors of this in the stash.

That’s it for today. Next time I have a knitting book review for you!

Ladybug Socks! Mexico!

We are back in our favorite place in Mexico again for a week. So far the weather has been perfect, and we’ve had a terrific relaxing time. I finished my latest socks this morning.

I’m not doing the whole “Finished Project” thing. It’s Opal yarn, the Ladybug color, from deep stash. Knit on size 2 mm needles, usual plain vanilla sock with ribbed cuff. I keep forgetting that Opal has very generous yardage, I could have knit the cuffs quite a bit longer.

Here are a few photos from our trip so far. We came this year with neighbors from home.

You can probably see why we keep coming back here!

Yes, I Am A Dork

I realized earlier this month that it will be 36 years this year that I graduated from medical school. Where the hell did the time go?

I decided to make a big splurge and update all of my hard copy medical texts. I tend to use a lot of online resources “on-the-fly” when I’m actually seeing patients, but do have a need often to return to actual texts. I can always read those online through my work medical library, but it’s not always the latest version, and I have trouble reading scientific stuff on an iPad on a routine basis. With technical texts, I find that I need to flip around to find stuff, and refer to the index a fair amount, and find that more annoying on a device.

So here they are.

The only one missing is the pharmacology text, which is coming later this week.

The dork part is that I’ve been pretty damned excited to have these show up. I’m also really excited that I have a monetary allowance at work for education and books, etc. I’m glad I’m not a freshman medical student for all sorts of reasons, not the least of which is the expense of textbooks.

I’m also hoping that there is a reference in there somewhere to the treatment of hernias and back strain, because I suspect my poor mailman has both after lugging all those to my front door.

Happy New Year’s Eve!

Don’t forget to gather your ingredients for your New Year’s Black Eyed peas!

Once again, as a public service, here’s my sort-of recipe for BEP’s. I say sort of, since I don’t actually follow it exactly, this is just a guideline.

1 biggish onion, chopped

4-5 cloves of garlic, chopped

Celery, about 3/4 cup chopped

1-2 large carrots, chopped

1 Bell pepper, any color will do, chopped

Olive oil

Blackeyed peas, 1 pound bag, picked over and rinsed

1-14 ounce can of diced tomatoes, drained (use the juice if you like it more tomato-ey)

Chicken stock, canned

1 bottle of beer

Splash of worcestershire sauce

Ham hock or ham shank (shank is meatier)

Thyme & oregano, a couple of teaspoons each

Bay leaf

Dijon mustard, a teaspoon or two

Salt and pepper

Cayenne, to taste. I start with about 1/4 teaspoon, and generally add more.

Saute the onion, celery, carrot, and pepper in oil in a big pot. Add the garlic when the other veggies are soft, cook for a minute. Add the rinsed peas, the can of tomatoes, the beer, and enough water or chicken stock to cover by about an inch. I usually use the tomato liquid, too. Throw in the seasonings, except for the salt. Add the ham hock and bring to a simmer. Cover and cook until the peas are done, about 45-60 minutes or so. Add salt to taste towards the end of the cooking time. Keep an eye on it, and add more liquid if needed as the peas cook.

Pick the meat off the ham bone, if there is any, and add it to the peas. Serve with cooked rice. If you are really lucky, someone will make you homemade cornbread to go with it.

Sleeve Island, Part Eleventy-Billion

I actually have gotten some knitting done this past few weeks, though damned little. It’s been the usual holiday season chaos around here, with too much to get done and not enough time to just sit and knit.

I’m in that endless part of sleeve knitting, where it just keeps getting wider and wider, with ever longer rows. This Peace Fleece yarn is so lovely that I am enjoying it though. And that is a good thing, since I have enough Peace Fleece in different colors to make nine more sweaters. I keep looking at their colors that I don’t have (admittedly not very many!), but I really need to stick with the plan and not buy more until I use some of what I have.

On that note, it’s been nearly 3 months since my last yarn purchase. I’m going to try to get to a year again. We’ll see how that goes. When it comes to those pretty pretty colors, I don’t have a lot of will power!

I hope your holiday season is full of joy and peace!

Ancestors

I’ve gotten sucked down the ancestry.com rabbit hole again this week. It started when I saw a patient in my office with the same last name. We talked about possible relatives for a bit, and when I got home, he had sent me an extensive genealogy of his family. It turns out that his grandfather and my grandfather were brothers.

I had been on ancestry.com for a while, but gave it up a few years ago. Well, this spurred me on to get to work.

So far I’ve traced the Meske side of my family (Meske is my birth surname) back several generations, to my great great great grandfather in one branch, and 5 times great grandfather in another, he was born in 1712 in Germany.

We haven’t known much about my mom’s side of the family past her parents and grandparents. I was able to find the ship manifesto from when they came to this country in 1905. They were the last of the family to come over, It was my grandfather Johann, grandmother Josefin, daughter Antonina, and another daughter Gladys, who is on the ship log as Wladyslawa, I think. It’s hard to read. She was 14, and a big line was drawn through her name, with a notation that says “trachoma”. She was not admitted, and was sent back to Europe. Can you imagine that? We had heard this story before, but had not seen paper documentation of it previously. No one in the family knows what happened to her.

Here is a photo of the document.

Click on that to make it bigger. Their names are right where that dark horizontal line sits. One of the challenges of finding relatives is that a lot of names got changed when they came to this country. And there may have been multiple alternate spellings in old birth records and baptisms, etc.

I just need more hours in my day. I’m still knitting, but everything looks about the same, so no new photos.

Sock Project

I have been knitting socks almost since I learned to knit almost 20 years ago. Since then, I always have a sock in progress, as soon as I finish a pair,  I cast on another one.

My finished sock stash is starting to show its age a bit. I still have a dozen plus good pairs, but some of those are getting a bit thin in places. My hand knit socks far outlast commercial socks, but they don’t last forever.

I’m hereby declaring 2018 to be the year of sock knitting. God knows I have sock yarn to spare. I have yarn in those boxes upstairs to knit well over 200 pairs of socks.

Here’s what I am working on now.*

I’m thinking I could finish those with a couple of good football games on deck.

What about you all? What are your knitting plans for 2018?

*Just because someone almost always asks, the small red spool is Wooly Nylon. I use it as reinforcing thread for heels and toes.