SockoRama

Posted by amy at February 23rd, 2006

I’m thinking about my sock pal, and she sounds a bit more fussy than me.

I don’t think I am identifying her in any way when I frame her request like this:

girly = bad bold pink = good
teal = bad blue = good
pastel = bad green = good

So given that - what do I choose?

Would you throw out a pair of handmade socks that had some bold pink but a couple of pastels too?
sock_hydranga.jpg

What about a pair of hand painted socks that were primarily green but had a hint of teal?
sock_clover.jpg

Would you go with something totally not girly and mix up some Koigu in autum colors or with a Twinkletoes in shades of deep red?

What would you do?

In other, knitting related news, I actually finished my Interlacements shrug and am in love. The shrug may become my Jaywaker (ala Cara). I will debut it on Sunday at the Boston Olympic Closing Ceremonies event.

Speaking of Olympics, I’m on goal for the move your bottom challenge, but gave up on muffy the ear warmer as totally impractical. Instead, I reverted back to the February Finish it or Forget About it challenge from last year and am cleaning out my WIP basket - ripping or finishing and am looking for gold as I finish the cast of of a mini-pie alpaca brown shawl.

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Olympic Village

Posted by amy at January 29th, 2006

flame.jpg The Olympic Flame arrived in Milan today. I wonder what those fashion divas would think of my entry for the ‘06 winter games. Fellow olympiads and spectators alike, may I introduce you to my knitting event? The Thrumb - no, not the ubiquitous thrumb mittens, but Muffy:

muffy.jpg

I know what you are thinking - you could knit those up during the commerical break of the opening games, but here is the twist. I am going to spin the yarn myself. And, I’m going to use them to wear to my own personal/fitness olympic event - either a rigorous/hilly snowshoe (3 miles) or hike (7 mile) depending on the weather, in any case, I am nominating myself Captain of the 2006 Knitting Olympics Move Your Bottom Challenge and I invite you to join me.

myb.gif

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Possible Projects for the Winter Olympics

Posted by amy at January 25th, 2006

teambostonskate.jpg

I’m still searching for my event. A trip to Knitty provided some inspiration.

Ripley for my son.
Bella or Ella or Muffy for me.

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What to make, what to make?

Posted by amy at January 24th, 2006

teambostonbra_1.jpg

I’m in. I thought about being a cheerleader for this event, but couldn’t resist being part of the hometown team. But what to knit? What will be my challenge? Do I stash dive and get creative or splurge for something new? Do I knit for myself or for others? Do I want the knitting to overcome a project that has become a chore or do I want to create something completely new? What is my event?

Possible events:

Sheep to shawl - if a they can do it at a Sheep and Wool festival in one day, surely I can do it in two weeks, no?

Lace Shawl - Something with more than a k2,yo pattern. Flower basket shawl perhaps?

Practical Sweater - Raid the stash, pull out the salmon/pink cestari wool and whip up a shapely raglan that I can squeeze a few more wearings out of before spring. Throw in a a cable or two to up the ante.

Sockapalozza - Break out of my hand painted sock rut and use a pattern to decorate the sock.

Maybe I’ll wait and see what events the home team is signing up for and follow the herd.

Thanks to Claudia for an amazing time on Sunday, I talked to so many interesting and kind women from near and far - enjoyed some wonderful food and made some good progress on the CO2 shrug.

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Legal Cheating?

Posted by amy at January 23rd, 2006

“Today, if one of the main tools workers use in a digital age is the Internet, why not include it in test-taking? After all, asserts M.I.T. economist Frank Levy, it’s more important to locate and piece together information about the World Bank than to know when it was founded.” Read more here

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Study: Most College Students Lack Skills

Posted by amy at January 19th, 2006

Wow, what timing!

Study: Most College Students Lack Skills
Jan 19 2:43 PM US/Eastern
Email this story

By BEN FELLER
AP Education Writer

WASHINGTON

Nearing a diploma, most college students cannot handle many complex but common tasks, from understanding credit card offers to comparing the cost per ounce of food.

Those are the sobering findings of a study of literacy on college campuses, the first to target the skills of students as they approach the start of their careers.

More than 50 percent of students at four-year schools and more than 75 percent at two-year colleges lacked the skills to perform complex literacy tasks. [ http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/01/19/D8F7UO204.html ]…

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B is for ball

Posted by amy at January 18th, 2006

*** edited to note*** this is one from the vault, written in January 2006

image lost
A follow up to A is for Arggg.

The original ball of yarn cost me $55 (for 750 yards, I think). I’ve spent 10 hours untangling it and even though I don’t have an income stream right now, if I was billing for my time at my old rate, this ball of yarn would be costing me about $700 with about another 3-4 hours worth of untangling to go. I haven’t knit in days and won’t until I’m finished with this damn thing. Frustrated, me? No, never.

Yesterday, in an impulse moment, I took Cate to the local mall for a little indoor playground time and to do a quick check of the sales racks. It has been a year since I broke up with food, and in that time, DH and I completely changed the course of our lives. We both gave up fairly lucrative careers in finance to get our souls back - he wanted to be a stay at home dad, I wanted to go back to academics, starting with adding another graduate degree to my resume. This is our year of frugality and thrift. As the pounds started to come off, there were plenty of clothes in my closet to transition into - you know those pants you pushed to the back of the closet when they got just a smidge to small, thinking you’d pull them out when you weren’t bloated? Clothes that were too big were immediately banished to a box and when that filled up, off to the salvation army or friends in need. I’ve filled in with a piece or two from Target, but haven’t done any of that shopping that most girls claim will be the first thing they do when they lose the weight. I haven’t been tempted, mostly because I’m reluctant to spend money on transitional clothes unless they are really cheap. The result is a wardrobe built around rather butch looking basics. But something weird happened yesterday, I went in to Lane Bryant looking for a pair of chinos, (I have three pairs of pants that fit me right now, two pairs of jeans and one pair of black pants) and ended up with this:

lb_skirt.jpg

A very, very girly looking skirt. Cate picked out a frilly, lacy cami and we topped it of with a black cardigan and some jewerly.

There are two points to this, the first is that I noticed Lane Bryant was still featuring shrugs, and very few were on sale, which tells me the moment has not passed yet. So I’m going to try and take those balls up there and turn them into one of the staff shrugs from Interweave Knits.

The second point is food/weight related. While I’ve lost a lot of weight, the progress is fairly slow and I’m ok with that most of the time. I figure slow and steady is the only way to make the changes stick and conquer my demons. I’ve been at my plateau for a while now and am ready to move on and am thinking alot about the next changes I need to make. I already walk 3.5 miles a day, close to 5 days a week, throwing in some snowshoeing when the weather allows it, with a random yoga class when I can squeeze it in. Lately, though, that isn’t enough. I know my 3 biggest weakness in exercise are the weightlifting, my cardio is no longer as intense as I need it to be, and random yoga isn’t enough to get the mind/body benefits I need. Now that I can recognize this, I’m going to try and fix it and see if I can move to the next level. For the next few weeks, I’m going to try to do weightlifting at least 3x a week, 20 minutes on the eliptical 3x a week and 10 minutes of yoga every day, in addition to my regular walk - which I can not imagine living without.

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A is for ARGGG

Posted by amy at January 14th, 2006

INYCO2.gif
yarn after flying off my swift and landing on floor

Recently, I splurged on some Interlacement New York ribbon yarn, Carbon Dioxide Colorway. You might remember I whipped up a smaller skein of this with some Pheonix’s Bamboo to make a shawl for my book signing last spring.

My family and I are going to Naples, Florida the second week of February and I thought I would knit up yet another shapely tank, but after giving way the last luxurious knit due to weight loss, and knowing I may be a completely different size this summer than I will be for Florida, I’m hesitant to committ to resizing a pattern for a splurge yarn, only to give it away in June. So, I was thinking about a shawl or a shrug, but wondered:

[cue Carrie Bradsaw voice over]
Is the season of the shrug behind us? Are we destined to be out of style by the time we finally cast off or can we ever cast on ahead of the curve?

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Congratulations

Posted by amy at January 5th, 2006

to Kat in Oklahoma who won the corset contest. Thanks to all who entered and please, watch this space as I have more items that could use a good home.

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Corset Contest Ends Today

Posted by amy at January 4th, 2006

Looks like my bowl will be filled with names, I’ll post the winner tomorrow. Haven’t signed up? Not too late, email me

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