Life as a Spectator Sport

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Sunday, January 13, 2008

Another pair of socks, yippee!

These blasted socks have taken just about exactly one year to finish. Working on them was postponed for everything under the sun, but I was determined to finish them now.

I slipped on some ice almost two weeks ago, and pulled a hamstring muscle in my left leg. Worse than that, it happened as we were leaving the house for a 300 mile trip, in a car with a standard transmission and a clutch pedal. I wasn't certain I'd be able to use the clutch at all, but we got up to northern Virginia somehow. Once we were there, my daughter Kay came down to the hotel and stayed with us, driving me around to where I needed to go, and Kate drove on the day we spent together. I had these socks with me--the finished one and the half-finished one, and on impulse, I put on the finished one and wore it all one day. The comforting sensation of having a hand-knit sock on the injured leg makes no logical sense, but there it is. That's how it felt. So I was particularly anxious to finish the other one.

I learned a new technique too--how to Kitchener without a yarn needle. My little bag of goodies--scissors, stitch holders, tapestry needles, etc.--has taken a hike, and rather than putting off finishing the sock while I looked for it, I decided to Google for instructions to Kitchener without the needle. Turned out to be exactly the same technique, of course. You just use a regular needle the same way you'd use a yarn needle, but pull the yarn completely through after each stitch. I actually think it made a more even seam, so I'll almost certainly do it that way from now on.

Observant eyes will notice that the socks aren't completely identical. The one with the brown toe is the second one, and it's a bit longer than the first. The first one fits fine, but I had originally intended it to be for someone else with a slightly smaller foot than mine. So I made the second one, which was otherwise almost identical, just a tad longer.

My new sock project is this Jaywalker, in Trekking Pro Natural (wool and bamboo). Oh my, what a lovely soft yarn! And it shows off the Jaywalker pattern as nicely as I thought it would. The yarn is one I would probably not have bought for myself, because of its cost, but I do love knitting with it. Jaywalkers have had some bad press because of their alleged inelasticity, but the pattern is so simple that resizing it would be extremely easy, and I think these are going to fit me just fine anyway.
posted by Liz @ 1:47 PM     |


Sunday, January 06, 2008

St. Distaff, the patron saint of -- huh??

Yesterday my knitting buddy and I brought our spinning wheels to the coffee shop and spun instead of knitting. It brought us a lot of attention, everything from "What are you doing?" to "Wow, I never saw anyone making yarn before!" Only one woman asked, "Why?" when we said we were spinning fiber into yarn, and the conversation moved on before I could find out whether she thought it made more sense to buy yarn than to spin it, or she just couldn't figure out why anyone would want to do it at all.

I replied to every comment with, "This is the closest Saturday to St. Distaff's Day. You know, the patron saint of spinning?" Not a single person challenged me.

It's a JOKE. There is no St. Distaff. A distaff is a spinning tool, not a person. The practice of giving this name to the seventh day after Twelfth Night (or the seventh day of the new year) apparently came from the fact that it was the end of holidaying in many European traditions--the day when everyone returned to their work, including the women to their spinning. It was also called Rock Dag, or Rock Day, which is interpreted by many online sources as referring to the distaff. I think 'rock' is more likely to refer to the use of a rock as a whorl, something not uncommon in early cultures. (And making a whorl of 'found objects' is not unheard of now, either--I read not long ago of a pair of American women, who, faced with a long wait for their ferry, brought out their knitting needles, their just-purchased sack of potatoes, and a new bag of fiber, and whiled away the time with made-on-the-spot spindles.)

It was fun, anyway. I spun up the rest of my Candy Cane top, and it's now hanging in the bathroom drying after I set the twist. Next step, plying, and then on to socks!

Today, I went up the mountain to Greenberry House, a little shop that sells fleece, fiber, and hand-spun yarn and bought 2-1/2 pounds of Shetland fleece from a Tazewell County farm. I'm not sure when I'll have time to wash and spin it, but I hope it won't be long. I haven't spun Shetland before, so this will be a new experience.

And I've been knitting. I frogged the hot water bottle cover after deciding it really was too small, and used the yarn to make Clarence these mittens instead.
One mitten is made with a standard thumb, and the other is just a pouch, to cover the hand he doesn't use. He says they are very warm (and they should be--they're wool!).


And then I started the hot water bottle cover over again with some lovely soft Paton's Soy Wool Stripes in the Naturally Plum colorway. This isn't a great picture of it--I'll post another one when it's finished. But I love these colors!
posted by Liz @ 7:44 PM     |


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