Wednesday, December 31, 2008

FO: Orange Tweed Boatneck


(click for bigger)

Got this one in just under the wire! It's been done for a week or so, but I needed to to some finishing and some serious blocking before I could blog about it. It's a very simple sweater - top-down raglan with garter stitch cuffs and a ribbed hem, and the rest in stockinette - but I really like the way it turned out. I'm realizing more and more that I like to wear fairly simply looking sweaters (though more interesting construction is always a plus), but I like to knit crazy-intricate stuff that I don't ever seem to actually wear. Cruel twist of fate, I guess.
Yarn - 6 skeins of Classic Elite Skye Tweed (100% wool, 110 yards) in MacAlister Orange. This yarn is beyond awesome! I got it on closeout from Webs a really long time ago, maybe a year or so back, to make a sweater vest and just sat on it. An then I decided I should make an actual sweater out of it and had just enough for elbow-length sleeves.

Needles - 24" size 5 Inox grey circulars I think. Hmmm....I should resize and sort my needles.

Pattern - Made it up as I went along, but as I said, it's got a really basic construction and no fancy stitchwork anywhere. The garter stitch cuffs on the neck and sleeves were knit flat, and the rest of it was worked in the round. The mother-of-pearl buttons were salvaged from a shirt that got caught in a nasty flood when I moved ot Michigan for grad school. I used these buttons for my very first sweater ever, too.


PS - if you have a more creative name for this sweater, let me know, because I clearly don't.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Christmas Hermit: Day 6

Today has been....odd.
  • Last night, I kept myself up until 4:30am writing posts on the Jarthenpedia (and I am now completely caught up with that, so woot) and then couldn't sleep. So I started Part III of Book I, which I have been dying to do since Thanksgiving.
  • I worked on Jarthen until about 8:30, when the benedryl I took kicked in and knocked me out until 3:30ish. I am not a person who takes naps and I have developed a rather high tolerance to benedryl over the years, so this was surprising to me.
  • I have spent the last 7 hours in a writing cocoon. Turns out I have three different storylines to write over 4 chapters, so I picked storyline and wrote it chapter by chapter (calling Jon a lot while doing so with such important questions as "can it be the brothel's Madame?" and "do you think satyrs should have an accent?").
  • I have not turned on the TV once today, played warcraft, or knit anything, and spent most of the day with few lights on. All of that is very odd, too.
  • Now, I'm going to shower and start the next storyline. Go go sleep deprivation!

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Christmas Hermit: Day 5

The Good:
  • Heard that people received (and enjoyed) their gifts. Woot!
  • finished blocking my sweaterand finished knitting a sock for Dani. Expect pictures after I come out of my fortress of solitude.
  • organized my research stuff, which sorely needed it.
  • found myself transfixed by the living train wreck that is a The Real Housewives of Atlanta marathon.
The Bad:
  • I am almost out of soup: the squash soup is gone and I've already eaten 2 out of the 3 jars of tomato soup mom gave me for Christmas
  • I didn't brave the outdoors and feed my advisor's cat, though I probably should have.
  • I bought The Women off payperview last night. It was definitely too lame to stay up late watching or spend money on, and I'm not entirely sure why I did either.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Christmas Hermit: Day 4

Not that much to report on:
  • Watched Zodiac and Priscilla Queen of the Desert last night. Both were excellent - especially 70s-out Mark Ruffalo running around in bow ties.
  • finished the last of the now-famous squash soup
  • woke up around noon today and have been watching House and make a budget for me and Jon's finances until now. Realized going through our records that I eat a lot of tacos and Jon tends to buy a lot of stuff under $10. Exciting way to spend boxing day.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Christmas Hermit: Day 3 (the big day, as it were)

I woke up late again, around 2 pm. Probably not a habit I should get into, but hell, it's Christmas! why not?
  • blocked a sweater I haven't yet blogged about. Expect pictures soon.
  • now halfway through 77, seriously considering leveling more tonight.
  • been watching the 3rd season of Dexter all day on demand. Jimmy Smits is sleezier looking than usual with a tiny mustache. And Vince Masuka is the shit.
  • have not been paying much attention to the cats, but they also seem less whiny and attention starved than when other people are here. Will ponder this paradox later.
  • ate delicious soup but no noodle bowls. Only one bowl remaining of the butternut squash soup.
Now for presents!
  • thank you Dani for Mamma Mia and The Happening, both excellent additions to my now very organized DVD collection
  • thank you Sanders/Mesler/Cantu clan for the following:
    • the three jars of amazing tomato bisque from La Madeline, my very favorite soup ever

    • this awesome monkey hat for Jon
    • and the best gift ever....ROBO-DUCK!

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Christmas Hermit: Day 2

I woke up very late today - about 2:30pm, which means I got about twelve hours of sleep. Sleep is so awesome.
  • In the last 24 hours, I have watched The English Patient (which I love, and I had totally forgotten Naveen Andrews played Kip. I was all, what the hell is Sayid doing in this movie?), The Road to El Dorado (which I also love. Re-watching it, I also realized that the I totally ripped off the dynamic between Tulio and Miguel and used it as the starting point for Nel and Lem. And if you don't know who they are, go read yourself some Jarthen.), and The Lions, The Witch and The Wardrobe (the one with Tilds Swinton. Honestly, I don't know why I'm watching this, I really hate everything about it except Tilda Swinton, and Narnia-related things tend to just piss me off. I mean, have you read The Last Battle? And what's up with the Calormens totally being Muslim and constantly called 'evil' and 'dirty'? Ok, I'll just stop there.)
  • I leveled my priest to 77 today and got the cold-weather flying skill. Think I might need a day off of levelng, as it's starting to feel more obligatory than enjoyable.
  • I took a shower and messed around with my hair. I wondered what the fauxhawk would look like without the natural texture in my hair, so I flat ironed it. Turns out I look like a Dragonball-Z character.
  • Worked on some Jarthenpedia posts about the Border Wars, which I may finish tonight.
  • Ate some squash soup and noodle bowls. The soup running low, which saddens me.
  • Completely and totally reorganized my DVDs. And they needed it badly, because Jon has this habit of just shoving discs in random cases. So mostly, I just put the DVDs in their right cases and then put them back in a different system (which fallows below).

(click for bigger)

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Christmas Hermit: Day 1

It's that time again! Really, it was a half-day today because Jon left this afternoon, but whatever. Because this whole hermit-thing seems mysterious and concerning to come folks, I've decided to demystify it by noting what I do while everyone's gone. It'll be a boring few posts, so I'd suggest only reading it if you feel strangely compelled or are actually interested (though the latter case may be more odd than me actually spending the holidays alone). Today:
  • Jon drove me to my advisor's house and I fed his cat. I also removed a dead mouse from his basement. I should go again before people come back here, but there was (no exaggeration) a foot of snow on his landing, and conditions were such that I left a ridiculous amount of food for the cat , Clara, in case I couldn't bring myself to go back out there again.
  • I ate some delicious butternut soup, generously made for me by Jon last night from a recipe of Van's.
  • I completely reorganized my yarn stash, which was quite satisfying.
  • I moved my desktop computer to the coffee table, the better to watch TV and play warcraft from. I kind of like it here.
  • I watched the first season of Entourage on demand. I like it more than I expected.
Stay tuned for more boring stuff tomorrow.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

FO: Rhiannon Knee Socks for Mandy



(click for bigger)

These have been done for awhile too, although not since August, like Sam's. More like late-September/early October. These socks will be showing up for Mandy at Christmas, which I feel a little bad about since everyone else has had their socks for awhile now. But it is a more appropriate time to get knee socks....so I guess it all works out. And now for the really satisfying part of finishing them:
  1. Charade socks for Brian
  2. River Rapid socks for Jennie
  3. Vinnland socks for Van
  4. Millicent socks for Sam
  5. Rhiannon socks for Mandy
  6. Spiral boots socks for Leila
  7. Socks for Mom
  8. Socks for Stepdad
  9. Something sockish for Dani (possibly booties?)
  10. Indestructible socks for Jon
On to the knitting specs!
Yarn - maybe 3 1/2 skeins of possibly Lang Jawoll Cotton (49% new wool, 35% cotton, and 16% nylon)? I'm really not sure about the yarn. It's a great thing black and green tweed with a strang of gold running through it, and I know I picked something with a decent amount of cotton in it so that Mandy's legs would bake in the socks. I'm pretty sure that it's Lang Jawoll because it came with reinforcement thread (which I totally didn't use), and I think that brand does that. Note to self - take better notes.

Needles - addi turbo 1's, same as Sam's

Pattern - Rhiannon by Cookie A. Again, I didn't actually read the pattern, just references the charts (noticing a pattern with this?). Here are the mods...well the one's I'm aware of and remember making:
  • worked it toe up with a short row heel. Woo! Toe up 4-eva!
  • according to Mandy's measurements, I bet the calf shaping got tweaked a bit. I ended up increasing every other row about 2 inches past the ankle
  • I didn't knit foldover cuffs, just ribbed ones
  • I threaded elastic thread around the top edge of the cuffs to prevent them from falling down, like Leila and Sam's reportedly have been doing (Note to Leila and Sam: check out the inside of Mandy's socks to see how you should fix yours, if you so desire).

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

FO: Millicent Knee Socks for Sam




So.....this is really old news. I finished these and gave these to Sam (along with the socks I made for my Mom, stepdad, and sister) when I was visiting Texas way way back in August. Sorry about the hold up. Wait! You know what this means:
  1. Charade socks for Brian
  2. River Rapid socks for Jennie
  3. Vinnland socks for Van
  4. Millicent socks for Sam
  5. Rhiannon socks for Mandy
  6. Spiral boots socks for Leila
  7. Socks for Mom
  8. Socks for Stepdad
  9. Something sockish for Dani (possibly booties?)
  10. Indestructible socks for Jon
Woot.
Yarn - Knitpicks Risata (42% Cotton, 39% Superwash Merino Wool, 13% Polyamide, 6% Elite Elastic) in Navy. I thought knitting with this yarn would be weird and awkward - that it would be to springy to get in the groove with - but it turned out to be kind of nice to knit with. And good sock yarn, though, in hindsight maybe not the best choice for these socks (the elastic makes it slightly nubbly, which makes stitch definition on the laces cuffs less than awesome). It wasn't quite stretchy enough, either, probably due to the high cotton content, and the cuffs sag like all hell1.

Needles - Hmmm....it's been awhile now, but I think I made this using size 1 (which is really more of a 1.5 compared to my other needles) addi turbo circulars.

Pattern - Millicent from Cookie A. I really didn't read the pattern at all (even though I bought it), just knit it toe-up using the pictures. I just looked really closely to figure out the toe, then it was golden. I increased 2 at the center of the back of the leg every 5 rows to make the calf shaping starting an inch or so into the leg. I did read the charts for the lace cuff.


1Sam, I'm including some elastic thread in the pickage of christmas stuff for you and Leila to fix the cuff problems with. Just a heads up.

Friday, December 12, 2008

My new haircut: El Cockatiel

Yep, I cut it all off again. I've been cutting my own hair for years (because when your hair is thick and curly and you can't afford to/are too lazy to find anyplace better than Supercuts, you learn to cut your own or die trying), and it's basically one of those things I do when I'm bored or frustrated.

I had been thinking about a sort of fauxhawky-crestish thing like this (but, you know curly) on and off since I first saw season 3 of the L Word:

this, by the way is the only likable thing the character Jenny has ever done on that show. Also? It took me forever to find a picture of it on the interwebs

I just decided to go with it one day a few weeks ago after I had been laid up with a migraine and was officially done teaching. I was afraid that if I had cut my hair dramatically different twice in one semester it would scream FLAKE to my students. And it would have if I had stopped halfway through:

it's like Simply Red, but brunette...and with Jon's foot

Right? Anyway, this is the finished product:

by the way, that's my office in the background. Exciting, huh?

I have to say, I really love it. It's very much the result of knowing the peculiarities of my hair like the back of my hand, though. I cut the back and sides just short enough that they wouldn't curl, and kept the crown about and inch longer than that so the natural texture of my hair would do it's thing. I sleep on my side in such a way that cause my hair to stick up like that already, so I really just have to slick down the sides and back and stick some styling wax in the hawk part to keep it as is and I'm done.

By the way, this is the origin for my personal nickname for the 'do.

Elvis's pompadour

+

the crest from a cockatiel

=

my new hairdo

Saturday, December 06, 2008

Other interesting tidbits that transpired during FGFO

1) I got a new iPod because Jon's ass made a slow, steady progressive attack on it that resulted in a more and more busted screen that recently became unusable. I am seriously considering not letting him touch the new one (which has DO NOT SMASH ME! engraved on it) as it seems more delicate than the last.

2) I wore the most ridiculous outfit ever to escort Dani to the car to get diet cherry cokes from it to feed her horrible addiction. See?



Yeah, bet you're glad that's burned into your retinas. Best part? I totally almost got hit by a car. Could've died....in that outfit. what a way to go that would've been.

3) My friend Cathleen and I carved small melons well after Halloween. Belated Melon O'Lanterns, Huzzah!



We had pumpkins but didn't get around to carving them. Now squirrels are harvesting the seeds from them and becoming strangely domesticated outside our front door.

4) I saw Joan Baez in concert (with Dani again - she's a fixture of these fun things, huh?)!! It was so awesome - she totally made digs at Bob Dylan and played a lot of songs I was really hoping for. And Dani and I were possibly the youngest people in the audience by a margin of about 25 years.

Next I shall discuss my new hairdo in depth. So stay tuned for that (if you're interested, I mean).

Wednesday, December 03, 2008

Jon is so weird.

Exhibit A: Magical static-y hair.



Exhibit B: Comatose warcraftin'.



Exhibit C: He swoons when exercising his core.



Exhibit D: He hangs out bare-assed on the toilet...for no reason.


Exhibit E: All of this was posted with his full knowledge and (enthusiastic) consent. True story.

Never a dull moment, right?

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

A brief glimpse into the future...

Now that all the FGFO madness is done, I've got some catching up to do. Notably:
  • A new haircut. Yes, another one.
  • Awesome knee socks.
  • More awesome knee socks!
  • 3/4 of a sweater I haven't ever posted about.
Exciting times.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

FGFO part 4

Here we wrap up this year's fierce competition - but stay tuned, because I'm planning on posting something at the conclusion of this crazy odyssey (like all good reality TV shows have)!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

FGFO part 3

Witness the athleticism and grace with which the competitors shovel watermelon into their faces. Truly a sight to behold.



Stay tuned for the inspiring conclusion, which will be posted soon!

Thursday, September 25, 2008

FGFO halftime show: My birthday!

I turned 24 last week! That means I'm in my mid-twenties, and I have been warned by several people independently that it's all downhill from here and to prepare myself, as best as one can, for the dreaded quarter-life crisis which is surely lurking around every corner. So far so good, though.

I took my birthday totally off from school. Moved office hours, refused to come in for meetings, the whole shebang. I slept in (which was great) and then popped in Excalibur1 and chopped my hair off. See?


I think it was time. The long hair was a hassle, what with it swallowing pocket change and clogging shower drains.

All in all, very successful, but more because people are awesome than that I gave myself a haircut. Aside from the lovely posts Jon wrote for me here and Dani wrote here, along with some mushful emails from Jennie and Tamar, Jen and Van came to visit! The best part? They made the foor of the gods - cashew cookies. Seriously, I beg them to make them every time I visit them.

Last but not least, my friend Cathleen surprised me with this:


There's a running joke in our research lab that I have a sketchy van that I use to lure unwitting naive data into which I then have my way with. This thing is going proudly on my desk forevermore.
__________________________________________________________
1I just got this back from Tamar last month. For some reason over a year ago, a CD of her dad's musical stylings would up in the DVD case and vice versa. Basically, she highjacked it from me.

Monday, September 22, 2008

The saga continues

Yep, I'm serving you up another piping hot round of Fat Girl Face Off '08! Let me tell you, this one's a doozy, too. Chock full of twists and turns. Enjoy!



Don't be fooled though, anything can still happen! Stay tuned for the next installment to follow one fat girl on her epic journey to victory!

Monday, September 08, 2008

Not knitting, something much much better

Well, it's tangentially related I guess. It features lovely people that I've knit for. Anyway, I bring to you the FIRST INSTALLMENT OF FAT GIRL FACE OFF '08!! WOO!!

To those of you new to this annual celebration of the competitive spirit and love of eating, every year in Texas we hold a number of trials to determine who the fattest fat girl of the year is. It's phenomenal and we take it very seriously. I've mentioned it in passing before, but I'll catch you up real quick.

1st annual - Sam and Mandy compete, Sam reigns triumphant becoming the first winner of the face off.

2nd annual - Jon is allowed to compete as long as he is in drag and soundly trounces Sam and Mandy in a dark horse victory. As his coach1, I was elated.

3rd annual - Jon grows overly fat and complacent, fails to listen to his coach, and is bested by Sam. I adopt Mandy as my protege.

4th annual - There were questions about Jon's eligibility to compete due to his apparent lack of coach (which were resolved when Leila's boyfriend Gio took on the challenge2) and weight loss, but when Sam and Mandy heard about the stewardess who kept telling Jon she couldn't give him anymore food he was allowed back in.

So here's Heat 1. I'll get the rest to you as soon as I'm able.



_________________________________________________________________
1I should say that I am indeed qualified for such a post, as I have actually won multiple eating contests. I am retired now.

2Gio didn't actually have to be pushed into coaching Jon at all. Hopefully Jon will drop by and tell y'all all about their bromance.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Updates abound!

Oh, knitting blog (and the odd reader who may or may not be perusing this), I have so many exciting things to tell you about! I'll keep it short and sweet though and get straight to the point, though.

1. Knitting News
I started the last of the need-to-be-knitted-ASAP socks of the sock queue, and I'm making pretty quick progress on them. They're Rhiannon knee socks that are destined for my sister's best friend's sister, Mandy, who is awesome, and very much deserving of such cool cabled knee socks.


I'm finding the cable charts way easier to memorize than the lace chart for the Millicent knee socks I just finished, even though the snaking side cables are worked on a different number of rows per repeat than the main cable which can be tricky to keep track of. More proof that cabling comes a lot more naturally to me than lace knitting, I guess.

2. Face News


Check it out! My super-fancy new glasses finally arrived! Aren't they awesome?? I've wanted a pair of white framed for awhile now, although I'm not really sure why. They fit well, I love them, and feel like it was totally worth it to splurge on literally the only thing I am guaranteed to wear every day for the foreseeable future.

The coolest thing about them, though? Definitely the back/top. See?


3. Best Souveneir Ever News
After hanging with Jon's family last week, we went to New York to visit Tamar and whisk her away to the house her family owns in the Hamptons (yes, THOSE Hamptons. How badass is that?). Our many adventures frolicking along the seashore will most likely be detailed by my esteemed guest blogger, Jon , so stay tuned for that. The reason I'm bringing this up is that at the beach house, we stumbled across the following book:


Quite a title, right? Intrigued, we starting reading it and found out that it was a Cold War era novel written in the most heavy handed style possible in the mid '60s. Let's just say that it really should have had a subtitle along the lines of "Or, Why ICBMs Totally Suck and Endanger the Free World." This just about sums up the tone of the book:


Seriously, though? Grab a copy of this if you ever get an oppurtunity. It has characters named Skipper and Pixie! And sometimes the characters use the term 'balls' as an exclamation of skepticism and/or disbelief, which Jon and I totally have adopted wholeheartedly. Here's an example of how best to use it, in case you're interested:
Me: You know you really need to watch your portion sizes.

Jon: My portion sizes are fine! I don't eat that much....

Me: Balls, man! In the last three hours, you've eat four sandwhiches! Unless you're in the Olympics, you can't possibly be that hungry.

Jon: Touche.


4. Cat News
Last but not least, I have a video for you! During his last trip to the vet, Fatty was deemed truly deserving of his nickname and we were warned that he was in danger of becoming diabetic if he gained much more weight. So we decided to take action! We've spent a good portion of the summer acclimating Fatty to a harness, and then holding him out on our landing, in order to prepare him to start being walked on a leash. Recently, we've made great progress on that front.



Tuesday, August 12, 2008

So close, and yet so far away

The millicent socks should be done, and technically, I guess, they are. Sadly, in their current state, they don't actually match. After finishing the lace cuff on the last one, I triumphantly started the lace cuff of its mate and merrily knitted away at it during the long drive from Michigan to Maryland.

Then, I ran out of yarn. No biggie, I thought to myself, I'll just knit as far as I can and unravel the first sock to match.

Yeah...I totally left it back in Michigan. Lame.

Saturday, August 09, 2008

JUST IN: New glasses fulfill promise of knitting content

Yep, thanks to my newly competent corrective lenses, I have knitting news to share! I finished off the first of the Millicent knee socks I've been making for Sam. Take a gander:


I'm going away this week, visiting Jon's family and our dear dear friend Tamar (currently the Reader of the Current Time Period in Jarthen land), so many hours in the car should make finishing the other one no problem at all.

Actually, I think I'll be able to start the last of the pressing items on the Sock Queue of Doom on this trip, since there's actually not that much to do with Sam's sock. I knit the first up to the lace section and stopped because we were driving and I didn't bring the pattern (yay foresight!). so I started the second one and knit it all the way through it. All I really have to do, then, is work the foldover lace cuff for the first sock and weave in all the ends.

Thursday, August 07, 2008

Proper eyewear = spike in awesome knitting content?

Only time will tell, but I'll go out on a limb and say, probably! So here's what happened: a few months ago, Jon broke my glasses (this has happened to several pairs already, but these were really awesomely sturdy glasses - they fell off a giant statue unscathed once! - so I had high hopes) which meant I had to start wearing my backup pair. What I didn't realize was that my backup pair sucked some major ass.

First, the glasses themselves didn't fit right at all. I have kind of a tiny head and the glasses fit weirdly about the ears and would fall off if I looked down. This lead to slight feelings of vertigo and much panicky clutching at handrails while walking down stairs like an old lady. But that's just a slightly annoying thing. The real problem was that the glasses, which had the same prescription as the ones that fell prey to Jon's clumsiness, were definitely not strong enough. I couldn't read powerpoints from the back of classrooms or recognize people on the street (which may or may not have lead to some awkwardness here and there). Lately, Jon and I have started playing this game whenever we're driving around:
Jon: "I can read that sign now, tell me when you can, ok?"

......10 second pause.......

Me: "Ok, I can kind of read it now."

Jon: "Oh man. That's sad."
Obviously, it's been clear for awhile that I need new glasses. Stands to reason, since I haven't actually gotten an eye exam since before I studied abroad which was...oh...about 5 years ago. I bet you're probably shaking your head right about now, tsk tsk-ing at me for not getting it done sooner. Well, for awhile it really wasn't that big a problem, more of a minor annoyance, and besides I'm not exactly rolling in cash what with being a grad student and all.

Then I won the NSF (YEAH!! WHAT, WHAT!!), which will effectively double what I'll be making next semester. Perfect, I thought, I will just get through the summer and get new glasses with my first paycheck! But then the eye strain from wearing crappy out-of-date glasses that fall off all the time started giving me migraines, so I caved. See?1

These do not fall off. Oh, happy day!

HELP! The giant grandma/hipster prescription sunglasses are eating my face!

In any case, having appropriate corrective lenses should allow me to fitter, happier, more productive2 knitter - or at least one with fewer headaches. I'm already making wicked fast progress on Sam's knee socks.
_________________________________________________________________
1The cute little rectangular black ones? Yeah those will eventually be bumped down to backup pair status. I totally splurged on a fantastic (and substantially more expensive) pair with better quality lenses, but they are backordered and won't arrive for awhile. I figured I'd earned it, what with being a badass researcher who won an NSF and all. Besides, it's close enough to my birthday to claim them as my birthday present to myself. Ah....rationalizations abound!

2The other really exciting thing that happened recently? I got to go see Radiohead!! I'm a massive Radiohead fan and I've never gotten the chance to see them (Jon has, though, and has been known to go on and on about how awesome they are live). We had to drive 3 hours for it, and I couldn't make out a damn thing happening on stage since I was still wearing the old crappy glasses, but it was amazing nonetheless. They totally played all the songs I wanted them too! It's as if the band and I had a weird half-blind mind-meld or something. Seriously, though, I was kind of a giddy little schoolgirl about the entire thing.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

The Flight from Hell (and other tales of misadventure in modern travel)

History has not been kind to fascism with one major exception: their singular capacity to make mass transit function in a regular, timely fashion. A weekend or so ago the captain and I were actually feeling a certain amount of nostalgia for the iron-fisted rule of a punctual despot despite our avowed Trotskist proclivities as a result of a veritable comedy of travel related errors.

The adventure started innocently enough, but I guess that can be said about most disasterous travel experiences.
At least they got peanuts...

We made our way to the Detroit-Wayne International Airport without incident or delay via a well-traveled thoroughfare that was ominously free of traffic -- it was a friday evening after all, and the road should have been packed full of weary laborers returning to the pleasant respite that is Detroit's great suburban hinterland. This should have been our first indication that some powerful forces out of the ordinary way of things were acting upon our collective fate, but we were blissfully unaware and continued to the discount parking lot without heeding the ill-tidings of these unseasonably clear highways.

We arrived at the parking lot and were picked up by a surly, salt-of-the-earth sort of fellow who made several none-too-witty remarks about the Captain's (i.e. the respectable owner of this blog) ever-present pillow. Nevertheless, he was game enough to load our bags into the rear of his van, and we clamored in as well, making our fateful way towards the Northwest World Terminal, from which we were scheduled to depart.

Everything seemed to be going well: we were right on schedule to make it to the terminal with plenty of time to go through security, catch our flight, and perhaps even secure some sort of tasty snack. However, as we sat on the sticky, vinyl seats of the van, breathing in the faint aroma of fried fish my phone began to ring, sounding what would ultimately be the first toll of our journey's death knell.

It was my mother, and her voice came bearing bad news: our flight that day had been canceled. As we had just arrived at the airport, we elected to seek an audience with one of the friendly representatives of Northwest Airlines. After some valiant searching on the part of this brave gatekeeper of the skies, it was determined that our best option would be to reschedule our flight for one that left the subsequent day, and had a layover in scenic Memphis.

So, while the Captain kept a steady eye on our belongings, I rendezvoused with our surly chauffeur, who took me with great expedition back to our car in the bargain lot. After paying for a full day's parking, I picked the Captain up at the terminal, and we drove home having expended a few hours and several dollars, but with our faith in the righteousness of our mission unshaken.

Day 2

After a much needed rest (the two of us have both been operating considerably below the doctor recommended threshold of restedness lately), we again succeeded in driving to the airport in a timely fashion, finding a parking spot in the discount lot, and being ferried to the terminal by a (different) curmudgeon.

This time around we actually checked in, made it through security and boarded a flight. We had the additional pleasure of being checked in by a delightful middle-aged woman by the name of Peaches.

Our flight to Memphis was as one expects flights to Memphis to be -- nasty, brutish and populated by an inordinate number of whiny children -- but one expects such things, so we weren't sorely tried. The flight went smoothly, and featured the traditional selection of in-flight beverage choices.

If there were any evil omens in the skies of Tennessee that day, we were blissfully unaware of them, as we disembarked from our plane in the humid warmth of Memphis. Now it is generally the case that an airport of any size and in possession of modern appointments will have a wide range of shopping and dining options available to the airborne traveler. For unknown reasons Memphis does not adhere to this beneficial tendency, and one is limited in his edible options to several bbq restaurants and Lenny's Subshop. Now, in general bbq food is all well and good, but in an airport, where one lacks ready access to clean bathrooms and/or grass to clean oneself with following its consumption, this delicacy is just impractical. This means that one really has to content oneself with the rather suspect-seeming fare available at Lenny's. Despite its apparent lack of charm, Lenny's does end up delivering highly edible sandwiches, chips and cookies.

Following our repast, we boarded our jet headed to Baltimore-Washington International airport right on time. Everything seemed to be going great today! We taxied onto the runway, and we didn't even have to wait forever! Before I knew it, I was dozing off thousands of feet above the surface of the earth while we whisked away toward BWI.

It was about an hour into the journey when things first started to go wrong. The pilot came on the loudspeaker and announced that -- due to bad weather -- we would be in a holding pattern for the next hour at least just over West Virginia. Well, we said to ourselves, an extra hour isn't too bad, we'll still get there at least! Though, in the back of our minds, I think that we knew even then that it things were not fated to end well.

We carried on bravely all the same, and I managed to fall back into an uneasy slumber -- my mind troubled perhaps by a strange inkling of the doom that stalked us at every turn. I was rudely awakened a short interval later by another announcement from our captain. We would, he said, be landing in Pittsburgh, our prospects unknown, because of the forbidding weather that persisted in shrouding the eastern seaboard from all approaching planes.

We were of course quite concerned about the future of our trip when we landed, closer to our point of origination than destination. This being the case, I approached the flight attendant at the front of the plane as soon as was convenient to assess our options. As I walked down the narrow aisle of the plane, before I even opened my mouth in salutation, she greeted me with a brusque "Yes, sir, we're all hungry, but I'm afraid that we can't feed you now."

Like the Donner Party, she would have known it if I were hungry

This opening left me completely unmanned, and I didn't really end up getting much information out of the remainder of the interchange. I returned to my seat next to the Captain, who upon hearing the result of my first attempt, exhorted me to make a second. This second essay yielded much the same result, which greatly increased our mutual frustration. We endured the uncertainty and tediousness of waiting on a runway in a completely random airport until we were finally told that we could leave the plane ostensibly to secure food as "all the restaurants in Pittsburgh's airport close early on Saturday of all days."

Unbeknownst to the flight attendant that realeased us from our hitherto airborne gaol, the Captain and I had hatched a daring plan of escape from any further flight-induced frustration. In clandestine discussion we had resolved that if we were permitted to leave that plane's cabin, it would take more than the prospect of eventually reaching BWI to get us back in one again. Instead, we planned to secure a rental car and drive back home, across state lines, as we felt that we had expended enough time in airports already.

After carefully skirting security and all other potential obstructions, we arrived at the area of the Pittsburgh airport where one rents automobiles from various vendors. There was another scary moment when the first three rental places we approached told us that they were on a reservation basis only at that point, but we still managed to succeed in getting a car at the fourth place that we looked. The gentleman who handled our rental was a consummate salesman, managing to convince not only to purchase the rental, but insurance to boot! We felt so extravagant.

The drive itself is perhaps best omitted from this post, as it has already gotten prohibitively long. However I would be remiss if I didn't mention the fact that whilst trying to find the Pennsylvania Turnpike we happened upon a "Croatian Community Center," that advertised a weekly fish fry among other things. Needless to say, the relative benefits of roadtrippin' have become increasingly salient to us of late. Hopefully our suffering will be a warning to other unsuspecting travelers about the dangers of leaving the house, and dismissing the merits of brutal dictators too hastily.

Monday, June 23, 2008

Some progress

You know what that is? The first half of one of Sam's much-anticipated knee socks, that's what. Yeah, the Millicent socks are underway and going smoothly. I just finished the first skein and figure it was as good a time as any to post an update about them.

And please enjoy this picture of sleepy Jon for the road. A video montage to his awesomeness (and fantastically bad dancing) is in the works, so stay tuned.

Monday, June 09, 2008

FO: River Rapids Socks


(click for bigger)

Yeah, so, sorry for the delayed absence (again). These have been done for awhile, but I couldn't fine the cable to my digital camera for the longest time....and I've been completely taken over by warcraft. In fact, if you're interested, you can read about it here. But this is a knitting blog, so I'll stick to that.

Yay! Another one scratched off the Dreaded Sock Queue!
  1. Charade socks for Brian
  2. River Rapid socks for Jennie
  3. Vinnland socks for Van
  4. Millicent socks for Sam
  5. Rhiannon socks for Mandy
  6. Spiral boots socks for Leila
  7. Socks for Mom
  8. Socks for Stepdad
  9. Something sockish for Dani (possibly booties?)
  10. Indestructible socks for Jon
Look at that! Finally making some progress. I've actually already started Sam's Millicent socks, but it'll be awhile before they're done. BUT THEY WILL GET DONE, goddammit.
Yarn - Hipknits, but I don't remember the colorway and I can't for the life of me find the tag (when did I start losing everything? I swear, I'm inches away from becoming that doddering old woman with the plastic bag wrapped over her blue 'do mumbling to herself in the supermarket. This close.).

Needles - 32" (I think) size 1 addi turbos. Although, they are bigger than my size 1 bamboo dpns, which I think means they're really size 1.5. But whatever.

Pattern - River Rapids by Sock Bug. This is a really simple, really pretty pattern that was kind of ridiculously fast to knit. As always, there were mods:
  • worked it toe up, substituting a short-row heel
  • I didn't work 1, 2, 8, or 9 of the chart. I dropped them because it made the chart easier to memorize and I am a lazy, lazy girl.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

FO: Spiral Boot Socks


(click for bigger)

Look, they're done! My sister will be so happy...you know, because feet get really cold in May in Texas. Ah well, better late than never, right? In any case, I do get the satisfaction of scratching one more pair off the infamous sock queue:
  1. Charade socks for Brian
  2. River Rapid socks for Jennie
  3. Vinnland socks for Van
  4. Millicent socks for Sam
  5. Rhiannon socks for Mandy
  6. Spiral boots socks for Leila
  7. Socks for Mom
  8. Socks for Stepdad
  9. Something sockish for Dani (possibly booties?)
  10. Indestructible socks for Jon
Ah. Finally making progress! Speaking of which, I'll likely be done with another pair really soon, so stay tuned - it could be yours!

Yarn - 2 skeins Knitpicks Gloss (70% merino, 30% silk) in burgundy. This is really nice shiny yarn, especially for the price. I found it to be kind of splitty, though, and not as soft as I was expecting.

Needles - I merrily magic looped away on 32" size 2 addi turbos.

Pattern - Spiral Boot Socks from Interweave Knits, Summer 2007. Really, the only mods I made were working it toe-up instead of top-down and substituting a short-row heel.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

A good beginning to the summer

Sorry about the month-long absence! It's been crazy around here - first finals, then prelims (which I just turned in yesterday! Woo!), then a week or so of zombified recovery with much sleeping. This summer looks like it'll be great though, basically no set schedule and plenty of time to catch up on the analysis/writing up for publication (!!) of all the data I've been collecting. I even found a ways to run stats via a remote desktop from home! And of course, sweatpants + SPSS = nerd heaven. This also means I've got way more time to knit, and that I'm actually making progress on some stuff, so expect more regular posting in the near future.

But before we get to all of that, I should tell you about Tamar's visit! She and her boyfriend, James (who is also awesome), came to visit a couple of weeks ago, right after finals were over and right before I had to kick it into high gear to finish prelims. So, perfect timing. We spent a lot of time playing warcraft and eating various pizza-related products, but probably the most entertaining part of their visit for those of you who weren't there was when we went to the playground in the park next to my apartment building.




See, when Tamar and I used to live next door to each other junior year at Oberlin, we lived in a building called Firelands which was campus-owned off-campus housing for upper-level students. It was actually a converted old folks' home with random bars you could grab hold of in the bathroom to prevent you from falling and being unable to get back up, but that's neither here nor there. Anyway, one nice thing about Firelands was that all the apartments in it had a teeny stove, meaning you could cook in the privacy of your own home instead of in a group kitchen. Being the inexperienced college students we were, few of us (apparently) knew how to operate said stoves appropriately, meaning that fire alarms were constantly going off. During said fire alarms, Tamar and I would often scamper over to the swing set across the street and play on it until the firefighters let us back inside. So, in a weird way, this was kind of nostalgic for me.

Although, I should note that in all that time, I never noticed the fear that Tamar had of swinging which she ever so cogently describes here:


Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Sorry for the lack of posts...

...but it's hard to blog from the PICKET LINE!

Basically, I've spent all of my free time preparing and mobilizing for the grad student's strike here at UMich (because we need a GODDAMN CONTRACT! Right? YEAH!). Today was the first day, and I am achy and covered in blisters.

Regular blogging will resume when the dust has settled and I get a living wage.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

FO: Proletariat Socks


(click for bigger)

My stepdad's socks are done! I know I'm already a few months late, but I'm starting to really bang through the sock queue! It's a good feeling. Check out the progress:
  1. Charade socks for Brian
  2. River Rapid socks for Jennie
  3. Vinnland socks for Van
  4. Millicent socks for Sam
  5. Rhiannon socks for Mandy
  6. Spiral boots socks for Leila
  7. Socks for Mom
  8. Socks for Stepdad
  9. Something sockish for Dani (possibly booties?)
  10. Indestructible socks for Jon
Despite the top picture, I think these turned out pretty good. They're totally inoffensive to one's masculine, both in color (a nice manly gray) and texture (just ribs and seed stitch), and machine washable to ensure optimal low maintenance care.
Yarn - 2 skeins of Knitpicks Swish DK (123 yards, 100% superwash merino) in mist. This is awesome yarn for thickish socks - it's squishy and soft, but still stretchy and not too heavy.

Needles - magic looped 'em on my trusty 40" size 3 addi turbo circulars

Pattern - I totally made this up as I went along at the socialist thingy. Here's how it went:
  • CO 28 sts using figure 8 technique, and increase 1 st at beginning and end of each needle every other row until there's 60 sts total
  • For the top of the foot: p1, k2, p2, work 20 in seed st, p2, k2, p1. Knit across sole.
  • Around round 40, start gusset increases by increasing 1 at the beg. and end of the sole section every other round. Continue the top of foot pattern. Repeat until you have worked 10 increase rounds.
  • For the heel: p1, k2, p2, work 20 in seed st, p2, k2, p2tog. Turn work and sl1, then: p2, k2, work 20 in seed st, k2, p2, k2tog. Repeat until all the increased sts have been used up, which should be 20 rows (PS - notice something missing? Like short rows? Yeah, I totally blanked on that. I think they turned ok anyway).
  • Keep knitting the leg in the rib/seed st pattern as established until you run out of yarn. BO loosely.