sp10 or what knitters want

bumble bee

1. What is/are your favorite yarn/s to knit with? What fibers do you absolutely *not* like?

Well I’ve just gotten back into knitting after a two year hiatus, and I have fallen in love with sock yarn, superwash notably and anything
sportweight superwash. I love Wollmeise yarn and etsy hand-dyed yarn.

2. What do you use to store your needles/hooks in?

A ratty plastic bag with all my yarn stash and a cleaned out olive tin
on my desk for double pointeds.

3. How long have you been knitting and how did you learn? Would you
consider your skill level to be beginner, intermediate or advanced?

I have been knitting since I was about 8 I believe, I learned from my
mom with a really crazy purple and yellow garter stitch monstrosity.
Shortly after that I fell in love with knitting pattern books and made
an intarsia bumble bee (pictured above, I must have been about 10 when I made it) and then I forgot for a long while. Much later I got on a scarf kick with really huge needles and
luscious mohair from La Droguerie in Paris, I made a ton and gave them away. Now I guess I’m a beginner that likes to tackle tough projects.

4. Do you have an Amazon or other online wish list?

I have an Amazon list that is up to date.

5. What’s your favorite scent?

Max Mara perfume.

6. Do you have a sweet tooth? Favorite candy?

Yes, but I can’t eat milk products even in trace amounts nor gelatin so
I tend to make my own desserts.

7. What other crafts or Do-It-Yourself things do
you like to do? Do you
spin?

I am building my own bed frame from scratch, so woodworking. I sew with
my refurbished vintage Singer
featherweight 222K, and I make hardware
circuits and hardware embedded in clothing. I don’t spin.

8. What kind of music do you like? Can your computer/stereo play MP3s?
(if your buddy wants to make you a CD)

My music tastes are fairly varied, I love wazee.org‘s stuff, indie rock
and indie pop and punk. Yes I can play CD’s, mp3s, ogg, anything you throw my
way.

9. What’s your favorite color(s)? Any colors you just can’t stand?

I am in my blue period right now and I love black. Teal blue, green, purple, grey and black are always safe bets. I’m not a big fan of
light pink or pastels or yellow by itself or red by itself. That being said, I like something that
packs a punch or has some great contrast.

10. What is your family situation? Do you have any pets?

I live with my significant other and we don’t have any pets.

11. Do you wear scarves, hats, mittens or ponchos?

I wear all of those except ponchos.

12. What is/are your favorite item/s to knit?

For the moment, socks and scarves. I would love to get a sweater under
my belt this year.

13. What are you knitting right now?

Baudelaire socks in superwash fingering black, and a secret item in orange not for myself.

14. Do you like to receive handmade gifts?

Oh yes.

15. Do you prefer straight or circular needles? Bamboo, aluminum, plastic?

I just started using aluminum double pointeds a few months ago along
with addi turbo circulars, before that I just used the straights that I
got passed down from my mom + grandmother.

16. Do you own a yarn winder and/or swift?

Nope but I’m planning on getting both.

17. How old is your oldest UFO?

A few weeks old.

18. What is your favorite holiday?

Halloween.

19. Is there anything that you collect?

Vintage electronics, cheap hackable toys with audio, gadgets.

20. Any books, yarns, needles or patterns out there you are dying to get
your hands on? What knitting magazine subscriptions do you have?

I don’t have any knitting books besides one: the hardback of Vogue Knitting
and I do not have any subscriptions. I am hankering after some of the designer
books coming out this year: Runway Knits, Twinkle’s Big City Knits, etc.
I love following the ready to wear fashion shows and the couture ones too.

21. Are there any new techniques you’d like to learn?

Oh yes, stranded color knitting for an overly ambitious sock project is
next and I’ve started learning lace work pattern reading.

22. Are you a sock knitter? What are your foot measurements?

Yes I am a newly-addicted-to-sock-knitting fiend. My left foot is a US
women’s 8.5, my right foot is almost a 9.

23. When is your birthday?

Just ask.

Black as Night, with Mutton Sleeves

6267 fall 2007 ready to wear

[Designer: 6267, Fall 2007 ready to wear, Photo: Marcio Madeira, Model: Yana Karpova]

Fall 2007 fashion shows hit the spectators with a big splash of color — well a big dose of black to be precise. Most of my closet is black, I do after all have a degree in classical music performance. Many nights of my week used to be on stage in all black and even after all those years, I still have a knack for sifting through a rack and pulling off only black. Despite my closet’s penchant for dressing me like a goth girl, I wasn’t prepared for the plethora of black for Fall 2007. The mutton-chop-sleeved monstrosity pictured above is a don’t, as is the cabled hugeness pictured below:

Burberry Prorsum fall 2007 ready to wear

[Designer: Burberry Prorsum, Fall 2007 ready to wear, Photo: Marcio Madeira, Model: Freja Beha Erichsen]

So much for my dream of finding some inspiration for a hand knit sweater for next fall from the fashion shows. Neither Pringle’s cabled yoke nor Cavalli’s crossed wrap with poofed out half sleeves do it for me either.

Pringle of Scotland fall 2007 ready to wear
Just Cavalli fall 2007 ready to wear

[L to R, Designer: Pringle of Scotland, Fall 2007 ready to wear, Photo: Marcio Madeira, Model: Sasha Pivovarova; Designer: Just Cavalli, Fall 2007 ready to wear, Photo: Marcio Madeira, Model:
Catherine McNeal]

There is one piece from the fashion shows that I keep coming back to again and again: Zac Posen’s black ruffled jacket. If only someone had done one up in knitwear, oh wait, Cavalli did show something similar but in a sort of frumpy, shapeless, lace weight mohair.

Zac Posen fall 2007
Just Cavalli fall 2007 ready to wear

[L to R, Designer: Zac Posen, Fall 2007 ready to wear, Photo: Marcio Madeira, Model: Inguna Butane; Designer: Just Cavalli, Fall 2007 ready to wear, Photo: Marcio Madeira, Model: Emina Cunmulaj]

I guess the bottom line is, I should go inspire myself because frankly there isn’t all that much to work with as far as Fall 2007 trends and knitwear trends in particular. I’m sure I can dream up something black, minus the mutton.

february socks: TechGuy socks in regia 5097

zigzags of red

i finished the second TechGuy sock today. w00t! my s.o. has quite long feet, so it was no easy feat (har har). if i make him socks again, they will be with a thicker weight yarn to obtain a less stitch-intensive gauge. if you are yearning to knit your first pair of socks, and you’ve never knit in the round, i would recommend grabbing a book or two from your local library before attempting this. i managed to figure it out, but i did undo the first heel three times. now i’m inspired: the next pair will be for myself. i’m thinking i will try toe-up construction to obtain the longest sock possible out of the yarn on hand and may include some fancier stitches to keep myself from getting bored.

We Be Wrappin'

We be wrappin’
Don’t ya like it when the girls
shape somefin’?
Knitta don’t pull nothin’ (That’s right)
We ain’t froggin’
We just perlin’ an’ knittin’
like it ain’t nothing wrong
Get ya sock on (we be turnin’)
Ah, we be wrappin’ (we be knittin’)
Yeah ya (we be wrappin’ we be knittin’)

[rare extra chorus to Ice Cube’s We Be Clubbin’]

foot model is the recipient

I turned my first sock heel! I did rip it out three times before making it relatively free of holes in the heel. These are knit top down in what I figured out is a fingering weight german sock yarn by Regia (much smaller than what is detailed for the Tech Guy Socks pattern I semi-followed). I ended up following the wrapping technique detailed in Vogue Knitting on page 186 and not the PGR yarnover method. I don’t own that book by PGR, nor have I ever knit socks, and I must say that without the incredible tutorial on misocrafty, I wouldn’t have had the faintest idea how to turn the heel. I recommend arming yourself with both the Vogue book and the misocrafty tutorial before commencing. If I do attempt the PGR method, I will use this other tutorial with photos for turning a heel. As I mentioned, the weight of the yarn is very very fine and I would recommend using sport weight sock yarn for the Tech Guy Socks pattern, not fingering as I did. I cast on 60 stitches on metric size 3.0 mm (U.S. size 2) double pointed aluminum needles, but the sock barely fits my S.O., 64 stitches would have been better with this extremely fine yarn.

In celebration of my successful wrappin’ and heel turnin’, I joined a KAL (for those of you geeks reading my blog, KAL == KnitALong) where each member knits one pair of socks a month for six months and blogs about it. The KAL, SAM3 (SAM == Sock A Month), is located here. I even grabbed some superwash hand-dyed sock yarn from fearless fibers for the next three pairs. Oh, and I bet you didn’t know Ice Cube was into fiber arts.

purse refurb

skull logo

this weekend i refurbished the inside of a purse that i bought at a flea market back in the early fall of 2006. the gross lining and pocket material had to go; it was smelly sticky and positively disgusting. the purse however, is an awesome shape and i needed one in black. it also fits my subcompact laptop: a consideration i never overlook. i finished all the lining and pockets (fake leather is tough to stitch into). the next project is making the purse as teched out and interactive as possible. mods that will happen to this black handbag include: wifi sniffer embedded in the strap, mp3 next track button for my nokia embedded in another strap, headphone port in the front pocket so you can store headphones there too, and more. you can check out the photos of the purse mods as i complete them at the blackpurse keyword on smugmug.

at the same time this weekend i decided to make myself a knit insert: a bag that can go in a bag but that can semi-stand on its own. it’s simple and black but the inside is slippery to not damage yarn fibers. check out the knit insert here.

sock-making thou art tricky.

not that ugly

i suffered a couple of major setbacks in my mission to make some pairs of socks (cursedly inspired by the seemingly simple TechGuy socks). the knitting stores conspiratorially closed early today so i sprinted and managed to grab both the yarn and the double pointed needles required to make socks.

my first mistake was losing one of the five double pointed needles from my smallest set five minutes after opening the package causing me to curse and rummage around the house only to find the missing needle a half hour later nestled in my g4 keyboard right in front of my face. the second mistake was thinking that i should force myself to switch over to continental knitting with this piece instead of my usual gimpy style. thirdly i picked out aluminum double pointeds which apparently are not recommended for lam3rz like me. the aching in my hands is a testament to the pain of knitting in a new way with tiny gage thread on slippery needles, not to mention sharp double pointed knitting in the round.

at least i have the satisfaction of knowing that i may move beyond my huge collection of scarves to something a little less beginner. i’m embarrassed each time someone brags about a scarf i made them, because frankly before today i didn’t have the faintest idea how to read a knitting pattern. you hear that scarves? you have been demoted.

take me there: dellis cay

dellis cay

i’m going to start a new feature here called take me there. first up is dellis cay: an island in the turks and caicos. the island is renown for its seashells and relative obscurity. i found zero shots in flickr, and no info in wikipedia. knowing my childhood obsession with islands and seashells and sailing, i’m fairly sure a visit would be a safe bet. add in modern architecture and i think i can stay for quite a long while.

i saw the island thanks to Harry at MoCo Loco who highlighted the architectural marvels being built there by the likes of Zaha Hadid et al. if you go to the dellis cay site please be forewarned that the annoying flash presentation about the astounding architecture will take over your entire monitor. google maps wasn’t responsive with a search for the island so i am linking to their coordinates instead. i figured out which island was dellis cay thanks to a map here.

che faro senza formaggio?

pizza capriccioso: feeling capricious

a pizza without cheese is still a pizza. a pizza consumed in rome is more pizza-ey than pizza itself. this past weekend’s visit to rome was intriguing. my s.o. and i went without expectations except to eat some delectable meals. unfortunately, the food wasn’t all that great. the stellar pizza pictured above was at a small pizzeria down the hill from the vatican museum entrance where we had lunch on our last day. by this time we had pretty much given up on the dream of great italian food; i was even ready to eat at an indian restaurant that afternoon. please don’t think i didn’t love the trip, but just be prepared to hunt a bit more than we did to find a great restaurant in rome.

january is rome’s off season but the town was still teeming with tourists. the locals zip raucously through the narrow streets and alleys on scooters and mini coopers (old and new) and mini buses. faded paint peels off the buildings and carved latin inscriptions remind one that rome thrived BC and not just AD. christian symbols in the form of crosses and framed saintly figures adorn the outsides of buildings. i don’t think i’ve ever seen as many nuns per capita as i did in rome.

taller than imagined

il colosseo (pictured above) was dark and dank while waiting in line under the lowest level of arches, but once we got inside the sky cleared up. it was smaller in size but taller in height than i had imagined. we went largely without any guidebooks or history in hand, mostly so i could shoot as many photos as possible, but also i think it’s nice to wonder what things are and learn about them later. the small piles of seemingly discarded capitals from columns found in various places throughout the city look more like architectural salvage lots than archeology sites.

i understood a lot more italian than i ever expected, probably due to the excessive study of operatic scores i undertook while working on my conservatory degree. thanks gluck, you helped me order pizza without cheese.

frenchified = flowery?

oz-like

so it has been bugging me lately that when certain francophones pass articles my way to read, i can’t parse the language.

basically, if you know me, i speak fluent french. this isn’t me boasting, i learned french before english, just ask my parents. why is written french so distanced from the spoken dialect?

perhaps a small clue can come from some of my ex-coworkers at ircam in paris a few years ago. when i asked how to spell french slang no one knew because on n’ecrit pas l’argot [one doesn’t write slang]. my current language partner (she is helping me with my german) speaks with a fantastic accent in french, but can’t understand a darn thing i say en francais parle’. i like to think of myself as a sort of word snob in english, so why am i not that way with french?

i could go the route of saying that obscure cultural references and my lack of post 1970’s french pop culture is the culprit. i could say i’m lazy and that my french is rusty or never was that intellectually inspired. i could mention that i firmly believe that my brain houses french and english in two separate lexicons. or i could simply gripe about french run on sentences with their grandiloquent use of vocabulary and old fashioned poetic undercurrents that would undermine even the most rambling of american journalists while still evading the dispassionate swipe of an editor’s cursor resisting instead to exist in the realm of gorgeous but unreadable prose meant to evoke fields of supercilious coquelicots in a red not-quite-vermilion bowing their heads in a ripple of silent percussion from an errant zephyr.

…or it could be i absorb massive quantities of written-by-americans news each day.