So here I am, decompressing in Seattle on my friend Miles' couch, looking at a blank TV screen (because I wouldn't know what to do with one even if it was on), and feeling the Malabrigo Rasta on my leg.
Why?
Because despite the fact that I've made a scarf a month for an entire YEAR, I neglected to bring one with me on this trip. That's why. So I found the local yarn shop. While there, I also purchased a pair of size 2 circulars because I am going to make a toe-up pair of socks out of a Crazy Zauerball, and I was able to dig into the middle of the ball and pull out both ends. So far, knitting-wise, this trip has been a success.
Here is the article I wrote today for examiner.com...it's about knitting for charity and what drop-off points are located in Chicago:
http://www.examiner.com/article/charity-knitting-abounds-november
After zonking out on the plane while sitting in between a guy with zero humor and another guy who was literally 6'7" tall, I was up all day yesterday and then slept for ten hours last night. This morning, I walked downtown and stopped at a breakfast place. This is what I love about Seattle. The woman asked if I wanted coffee, and I said of course. She asked if I wanted cream, and I asked if she had soy milk. Then SHE said, "Of course!" Vegans are the majority here.
I also walked down to Pike Place Market, did some wandering around downtown, and sat at a coffee shop for a bit to cast on the Rasta. Basically, I have spent the last...depends on who you ask, but...between few weeks and few months on a downward spiral. I'm miserable. And I'm tired of being miserable.
The good news is that I'm not hopeless, having suicidal thoughts, not getting out of bed, or anything else that would indicate I need medication. I'm just in a really crappy place.
But every once in a while, something really cool happens and it reminds me that my lot in life isn't exactly horrendous. Yes, I've had my struggles, but big deal...I'm here, I have a job and a family, some spare cash, and an upwardly-mobile attitude. A woman bought one of my patterns today...she met me at a yarn shop and enjoyed our chat enough to buy one of my patterns. That's trust, in my opinion. Some of you may not see the connection, but I do.
Anyway, tomorrow I am interviewing a woman named Kelly Fleek...she is an artist who uses yarn as her medium. How fun! And she is a vegan so she is picking a place for lunch that I'm guaranteed to enjoy. Of course, if I had known my audience, I would not have said the following:
"Just so you know, I'm a vegetarian, but I'm not one of the crazy vegans that will throw red paint on your fur coat or anything."
Her response? "Well, that's okay because not only am I a vegan, but I'm ethical too, so we'll find a good place to eat."
Damn...I hope she gets to know me well enough tomorrow to realize that I meant no disrespect. If not, then I guess our hour will be the only one I spend with her...ha ha ha.
Other than that, I was thinking of going to Vancouver for the day. I have access to a car, and ever since I saw the movie "Cousins" with Ted Danson and Isabella Rosselini, I have wanted to see that city. Best line from that move...everyone should live by this philosophy:
"You've got only one life to live. You can make it chicken shit, or chicken salad!"
Don't forget, I'm also donating a portion of my pattern sales this month to Movember, an organization which raises money for testicular and prostate cancer research. You can buy my patterns either on Ravelry (thefiberfriend) or Etsy (The Fiber Friend). Please share with others...it's for a good cause and my patterns are super-cheap and not too challenging. Yay!
Monday, November 12, 2012
Monday, November 5, 2012
Get Me to NUMBER ONE!
Hello, everyone...I have been bogged down by my ACTUAL job this month, but I have hopes I'll get used to it. Now...onto the knitting. Here is my most recent article for examiner.com, about a knitted-art exhibit at Northeastern Illinois University:
http://www.examiner.com/article/woman-s-work-a-knitted-art-gallery-opens-at-neiu-today?cid=db_articles
I'm working overnights now, and while I'm horrendously miserable, there are a couple of factors at work there. In the meantime of getting me un-miserable, I have a plan. Or two. Or even a few. First one is knitting-related. After Vogue Knitting Live, I...wait. I didn't tell everyone about VKLive.
Let me get to that. First, I'm currently number 23 of the 1,569 Chicago Examiners. For knitting! Can you believe that? I can probably name the people ahead of me...celebrity, sports, weather, current events...blah blah blah...and then knitting. How awesome is that?
But I hate being number 23 (even though it's not only Michael Jordan's number, but also the classiest of the classy...Ryne Sandberg). I want to be NUMBER ONE. I need your help. Please help me out...subscribe to my examiner.com articles by clicking on the link below and hitting "Subscribe":
http://www.examiner.com/knitting-in-chicago/amy-kaspar
You just have to click on the article once it reaches your inbox, get the info you want out of it, and POOF. I'm that much closer to NUMBER ONE. Phase Two: please share this with all of your friends, family, local yarn shops, blah blah blah (that's the phrase of the day), and get them to subscribe as well. I will never retire on my examiner.com income, but how awesome would it be if I was beating out the weather guy on an expert-driven website? For KNITTING?
Please help me out. Subscribe, share, and badger your friends. Get the word out. Get me viral. Whatever you have to do so I beat out the Pop Culture guy. Thank you.
So check this out. I wrote my three articles about the event, but now is my time to totally geek out and tell people what I saw there. First thing is this...I was walking to the line at Starbucks when Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, otherwise known as the Yarn Harlot, walked by me. I dropped my jaw a bit and subliminally pointed at her. Then I laughed at myself...most people have that reaction when they see Julia Roberts. I have that reaction when I see a knitting goddess. But whatever...I'm fine with it.
The experience was fantastic...my photos are WAY behind but a bunch of the designers and lecturers were absolutely lovely. My press pass was like the Golden Ticket...people were being shut out of doors, and I just flashed my badge and it was like, "Oh, ma'am. My apologies. This way..." So I got to see some behind-the-scenes stuff I wouldn't have seen otherwise. One example is that I got to worm my way into the very front of Nicky Epstein's fashion show...too cool for words. That woman, as far as I can tell, just never ever sleeps. She may doze off for a few minutes, but all it does is temporarily slow down her circular or double-pointed knitting needles.
I also met Vickie Howell, who was exactly what you would expect from a southern-belle-slash-crafty-moefoe. She was adorable. And classy. And she was willing to pose with Teeny Jesus, which makes her that much more awesome. She suggested I contact her publisher to get a copy of her book, so I can review it. Really? Yay! I will do that...
Just as soon as I accept the fact that this column is going national before my very eyes. What fun! Again...I most likely won't make a living at this, but damn if the number of increasing clicks doesn't increase my yarn budget, and subsequently the design whirlpool in my head.
I told Deborah Newton, who designed my favorite sweater in Vogue Knitting's 30th Anniversary Issue, that the only thing keeping me from making it was the fact that it requires three gauge swatches. She laughed and suggested that if I got the stockinette stitch one down pat, I should be fine. Done. Then, of course, I bought yarn for it at the event. Duh.
So between that, and running into a bunch of my knitting friends (I'm talking to YOU Sue, Karen, Maureen, Lynn, Beth, and all of the LYS owners who were there), it was a fantastic weekend.
Sorry I've rambled so much...coffee is the only thing that currently gets me out of bed, and I've drunk a LOT of it. Back to the needles!
http://www.examiner.com/article/woman-s-work-a-knitted-art-gallery-opens-at-neiu-today?cid=db_articles
I'm working overnights now, and while I'm horrendously miserable, there are a couple of factors at work there. In the meantime of getting me un-miserable, I have a plan. Or two. Or even a few. First one is knitting-related. After Vogue Knitting Live, I...wait. I didn't tell everyone about VKLive.
Let me get to that. First, I'm currently number 23 of the 1,569 Chicago Examiners. For knitting! Can you believe that? I can probably name the people ahead of me...celebrity, sports, weather, current events...blah blah blah...and then knitting. How awesome is that?
But I hate being number 23 (even though it's not only Michael Jordan's number, but also the classiest of the classy...Ryne Sandberg). I want to be NUMBER ONE. I need your help. Please help me out...subscribe to my examiner.com articles by clicking on the link below and hitting "Subscribe":
http://www.examiner.com/knitting-in-chicago/amy-kaspar
You just have to click on the article once it reaches your inbox, get the info you want out of it, and POOF. I'm that much closer to NUMBER ONE. Phase Two: please share this with all of your friends, family, local yarn shops, blah blah blah (that's the phrase of the day), and get them to subscribe as well. I will never retire on my examiner.com income, but how awesome would it be if I was beating out the weather guy on an expert-driven website? For KNITTING?
Please help me out. Subscribe, share, and badger your friends. Get the word out. Get me viral. Whatever you have to do so I beat out the Pop Culture guy. Thank you.
So check this out. I wrote my three articles about the event, but now is my time to totally geek out and tell people what I saw there. First thing is this...I was walking to the line at Starbucks when Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, otherwise known as the Yarn Harlot, walked by me. I dropped my jaw a bit and subliminally pointed at her. Then I laughed at myself...most people have that reaction when they see Julia Roberts. I have that reaction when I see a knitting goddess. But whatever...I'm fine with it.
The experience was fantastic...my photos are WAY behind but a bunch of the designers and lecturers were absolutely lovely. My press pass was like the Golden Ticket...people were being shut out of doors, and I just flashed my badge and it was like, "Oh, ma'am. My apologies. This way..." So I got to see some behind-the-scenes stuff I wouldn't have seen otherwise. One example is that I got to worm my way into the very front of Nicky Epstein's fashion show...too cool for words. That woman, as far as I can tell, just never ever sleeps. She may doze off for a few minutes, but all it does is temporarily slow down her circular or double-pointed knitting needles.
I also met Vickie Howell, who was exactly what you would expect from a southern-belle-slash-crafty-moefoe. She was adorable. And classy. And she was willing to pose with Teeny Jesus, which makes her that much more awesome. She suggested I contact her publisher to get a copy of her book, so I can review it. Really? Yay! I will do that...
Just as soon as I accept the fact that this column is going national before my very eyes. What fun! Again...I most likely won't make a living at this, but damn if the number of increasing clicks doesn't increase my yarn budget, and subsequently the design whirlpool in my head.
I told Deborah Newton, who designed my favorite sweater in Vogue Knitting's 30th Anniversary Issue, that the only thing keeping me from making it was the fact that it requires three gauge swatches. She laughed and suggested that if I got the stockinette stitch one down pat, I should be fine. Done. Then, of course, I bought yarn for it at the event. Duh.
So between that, and running into a bunch of my knitting friends (I'm talking to YOU Sue, Karen, Maureen, Lynn, Beth, and all of the LYS owners who were there), it was a fantastic weekend.
Sorry I've rambled so much...coffee is the only thing that currently gets me out of bed, and I've drunk a LOT of it. Back to the needles!
Sunday, October 21, 2012
The October Blahs
Good morning, everyone...I sit in my living room, watching Bluto destroy his rope toy (this is constant, actually), listen for Penny (and get concerned when I don't hear her), and wonder what the heck I should do today. See, I have a list. It involves getting a new lease to one of my tenants, calling a mortgage guy, following up on a few key documents, and maybe cleaning or something. Or not.
But I'm feeling blah. Tomorrow night, I flip to the overnight shift and I'm not very happy about it. I was joking with my friend Elizabeth yesterday that the good news is that my days are now ALWAYS free, but I'm just not sure I'm cut out for working overnights. I thought I was; I spent a week doing it at the beginning of the month. But now I'm questioning.
The good news, and this is relative, is that I finally have a knitting project to leave in the car. After the washcloth was done, I have been staring at an empty passenger seat while waiting for the Bensenville train to pass at 8:34pm every evening I left work. Now that I'm on overnights, I'm likely to catch that f***ing thing TWICE. But all is well...I'm going to make baby blankets out of acrylic yarn and give them away! Here's how you do it:
Cast on 8 stitches to a set of four double-points.
Rnd 1: K1, yo, K1
Rnd 2: Purl
Rnd 3: (K1, yo, K to last st on needle, yo, K1) 4x
Rnd 4: Purl
Repeat Rounds 3 and four until you need to graduate to a circular needle. Place a marker at the beginning of the round, and then three other markers in a different color than the first one to mark the end of where the needles had been. Then repeat the following two rows until your blankie is the size you want:
Rnd 1: (K1, yo, K to last st before marker, yo, K1) 4x
Rnd 2: Purl
I haven't bound off yet, obviously, but I'm thinking a normal knitted bind-off would be find. It's a garter-stitch blankie, for crap's sake.
On the other hand, the edge could be the most interesting part of the blankie! Crochet picot? Ruffle? Scrap yarn with a Victorian lace motif? Whatever!
I also have all of these Teeny Jesus photos to upload...I'm going through a phase where I only do what I need to do to get through the day, and then I THINK about all of the stuff that needs to get done. Not very productive but I do think it's making me smarter, no?
So I'm feeling positive some days, and damn-near hopeless the next (don't call an intervention hotline...I don't mean it that way). Today I'm feeling hopeful. And...this coming weekend is Vogue Knitting LIVE. I wrote an article about it and got a message back from their PR person saying "Great article! Your press pass will be at Registration..." I'm so starstruck it's not even funny. Dorky, I know, but this is like a Who's Who in the Knitting World, and I'm incredibly fortunate to be a part of it. Even got my new business cards!
Have a good day...please shoot me an email with what you're working on in the changing weather...as an inquiring mind, I want to know. Or is it enquiring? I'll have to look that up.
But I'm feeling blah. Tomorrow night, I flip to the overnight shift and I'm not very happy about it. I was joking with my friend Elizabeth yesterday that the good news is that my days are now ALWAYS free, but I'm just not sure I'm cut out for working overnights. I thought I was; I spent a week doing it at the beginning of the month. But now I'm questioning.
The good news, and this is relative, is that I finally have a knitting project to leave in the car. After the washcloth was done, I have been staring at an empty passenger seat while waiting for the Bensenville train to pass at 8:34pm every evening I left work. Now that I'm on overnights, I'm likely to catch that f***ing thing TWICE. But all is well...I'm going to make baby blankets out of acrylic yarn and give them away! Here's how you do it:
Cast on 8 stitches to a set of four double-points.
Rnd 1: K1, yo, K1
Rnd 2: Purl
Rnd 3: (K1, yo, K to last st on needle, yo, K1) 4x
Rnd 4: Purl
Repeat Rounds 3 and four until you need to graduate to a circular needle. Place a marker at the beginning of the round, and then three other markers in a different color than the first one to mark the end of where the needles had been. Then repeat the following two rows until your blankie is the size you want:
Rnd 1: (K1, yo, K to last st before marker, yo, K1) 4x
Rnd 2: Purl
I haven't bound off yet, obviously, but I'm thinking a normal knitted bind-off would be find. It's a garter-stitch blankie, for crap's sake.
On the other hand, the edge could be the most interesting part of the blankie! Crochet picot? Ruffle? Scrap yarn with a Victorian lace motif? Whatever!
I also have all of these Teeny Jesus photos to upload...I'm going through a phase where I only do what I need to do to get through the day, and then I THINK about all of the stuff that needs to get done. Not very productive but I do think it's making me smarter, no?
So I'm feeling positive some days, and damn-near hopeless the next (don't call an intervention hotline...I don't mean it that way). Today I'm feeling hopeful. And...this coming weekend is Vogue Knitting LIVE. I wrote an article about it and got a message back from their PR person saying "Great article! Your press pass will be at Registration..." I'm so starstruck it's not even funny. Dorky, I know, but this is like a Who's Who in the Knitting World, and I'm incredibly fortunate to be a part of it. Even got my new business cards!
Have a good day...please shoot me an email with what you're working on in the changing weather...as an inquiring mind, I want to know. Or is it enquiring? I'll have to look that up.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Yay and Double Yay!
Good morning, yarners and blog followers! I'm sitting on the chair, Penny is sitting on the other chair, Bluto is passed out on the couch, and the husband is upstairs. So I'm basically alone. Big deal in my house, considering the dogs like to act as cardigans.
So anyone who followed my "anatomy of a sock" series on examiner.com saw photos of my socks, made in a yarn called Lorna's Laces Solemate. It's lovely. Colors are also lovely. I can't think of a bad thing to say about the company's yarn...it's worth every penny of what you are paying and then some. So every year, the Ravenswood ArtWalk happens the last weekend in September, and the only year I was able to go was 2008 with my friend Ellen and her mom. Even this year, I was scheduled to work this weekend until I arrived at work yesterday.
Turns out, we are embarking on a big project this week, so I offered to work overnight from Sunday to Thursday. This means that suddenly I have today (Saturday) off, and suddenly...I GET TO GO TO LORNA'S LACES BECAUSE THEY ARE LOCATED SMACK IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ARTWALK. Yes, that was me screaming from the rooftops.
In case you're curious, here is the article I wrote about it for examiner.com. I of course get paid by the click, so make sure you share this with your friends, family members nearest neighbors on the bus via Samsung Galaxy SIII click, whatever:
http://www.examiner.com/article/lorna-s-laces-opens-its-doors-during-the-ravenswood-artwalk?cid=db_articles
Now, I respect the fact that people will think I'm geeking out in a way I don't normally geek out. But two things to consider:
1. I have no Chicago Blackhawks preseason to speak of
2. You all have your ComicCons, Live Action Role Play, World of Warcraft, Coffee of the Month Clubs...
So yeah. I'm there.
Also, I am getting press credentials for Vogue Knitting Live, something that STILL has me geeked out. I was asked if there was anyone I would like to interview, and I didn't feel right by responding with, "Umm..how about everyone on the docket? I can do that, right?" I chose one of my favorite designers. It will be a surprise, but if this person is free, I already have my rapid-fire interview ready.
This has been another good month on the writing front...it started out with the Red Scarf project, which to-date has 52 "likes" on facebook (click here if you didn't get a chance to read this...it's a fantastic organization). This has also been a good month on other fronts, as I had an epiphany in the middle of a training class. The first voice I heard was CJ's, which figures, since I was only a few blocks from his house (in fact, Teeny Jesus made an appearance in his front yard). Then I heard a woman's voice, telling me basically, "I told you so." It was in a very nice way, and I couldn't figure out the voice, especially since only ONE person had dissented on the particular I-told-you-so decision. Come to find out that the voice I heard was the person who originally dissented, and she had passed away that morning.
By the way, I don't care if you agree, disagree, believe, or think I'm nuts when I say things like this. But if it's true to me, just respect that.
So anyway, I heard the signs loud and clear. I need new direction. I see the new direction. It's just a matter of getting there. Next month's pattern is ready to be shipped (via email of course) to my subscribers on the first of the month, I get to drool at Lorna's Laces this afternoon, and basically all is well with the world. Or something.
So anyone who followed my "anatomy of a sock" series on examiner.com saw photos of my socks, made in a yarn called Lorna's Laces Solemate. It's lovely. Colors are also lovely. I can't think of a bad thing to say about the company's yarn...it's worth every penny of what you are paying and then some. So every year, the Ravenswood ArtWalk happens the last weekend in September, and the only year I was able to go was 2008 with my friend Ellen and her mom. Even this year, I was scheduled to work this weekend until I arrived at work yesterday.
Turns out, we are embarking on a big project this week, so I offered to work overnight from Sunday to Thursday. This means that suddenly I have today (Saturday) off, and suddenly...I GET TO GO TO LORNA'S LACES BECAUSE THEY ARE LOCATED SMACK IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ARTWALK. Yes, that was me screaming from the rooftops.
In case you're curious, here is the article I wrote about it for examiner.com. I of course get paid by the click, so make sure you share this with your friends, family members nearest neighbors on the bus via Samsung Galaxy SIII click, whatever:
http://www.examiner.com/article/lorna-s-laces-opens-its-doors-during-the-ravenswood-artwalk?cid=db_articles
Now, I respect the fact that people will think I'm geeking out in a way I don't normally geek out. But two things to consider:
1. I have no Chicago Blackhawks preseason to speak of
2. You all have your ComicCons, Live Action Role Play, World of Warcraft, Coffee of the Month Clubs...
So yeah. I'm there.
Also, I am getting press credentials for Vogue Knitting Live, something that STILL has me geeked out. I was asked if there was anyone I would like to interview, and I didn't feel right by responding with, "Umm..how about everyone on the docket? I can do that, right?" I chose one of my favorite designers. It will be a surprise, but if this person is free, I already have my rapid-fire interview ready.
This has been another good month on the writing front...it started out with the Red Scarf project, which to-date has 52 "likes" on facebook (click here if you didn't get a chance to read this...it's a fantastic organization). This has also been a good month on other fronts, as I had an epiphany in the middle of a training class. The first voice I heard was CJ's, which figures, since I was only a few blocks from his house (in fact, Teeny Jesus made an appearance in his front yard). Then I heard a woman's voice, telling me basically, "I told you so." It was in a very nice way, and I couldn't figure out the voice, especially since only ONE person had dissented on the particular I-told-you-so decision. Come to find out that the voice I heard was the person who originally dissented, and she had passed away that morning.
By the way, I don't care if you agree, disagree, believe, or think I'm nuts when I say things like this. But if it's true to me, just respect that.
So anyway, I heard the signs loud and clear. I need new direction. I see the new direction. It's just a matter of getting there. Next month's pattern is ready to be shipped (via email of course) to my subscribers on the first of the month, I get to drool at Lorna's Laces this afternoon, and basically all is well with the world. Or something.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Rat Extraction
It's past eleven at night. Everyone is asleep except me, and possibly Axl (who is not in my field of view at the moment). I was at work until almost three in the morning so I really have no business being awake right now, but whatever.
After living like a zombie for the first half of the day, I finished the second Sunday Swing sock...for those of you not privy (and why wouldn't you be, since this is a knitting blog), these are the socks I making for the examiner.com tutorial. I also wrote an article about Second Sock Syndrome, that horrible affliction that overtakes you when you are about to knit your second sock, and you get a case of the fuckits. So here is the article...
http://www.examiner.com/article/chicago-area-knitters-advise-on-second-sock-syndrome-remedies?cid=db_articles
And here is a photo of Teeny Jesus blessing my new pair of socks:
Otherwise, my day was spent flipping through the new Vogue Knitting 30th Anniversary issue, and perusing the Knitty.com 10th Anniversary issue. In other words, the whole day consisted of yarn and journalism, and for some reason, my brain isn't full enough to let me get to sleep.
At the very least, I wanted to celebrate my sock victory, but the dogs started freaking out. I went to the back door to let them out. I waited a minute. I looked outside to make sure they weren't digging. I see Bluto cradling and cuddling something fuzzy. Of course. F***ing Bluto.
So I go outside. Call the dogs back in. And this is what I find, curled into the fetal position on my back porch.
Now, I'm pretty sure Bluto didn't mangle the guy...I think he was like that for some other reason. On the other hand, I'm praying he is just stunned and spooked and gooey from afterbirth so he can wake up and scurry out of the yard on his own power before I have to let the dogs out to pee one last time.
I think it's time to go back to Vogue Knitting. Nobody needs THAT as their last image of the night. Or I could start on those slippers. Or finish the kimono sweater. Or the scarf. Or...
After living like a zombie for the first half of the day, I finished the second Sunday Swing sock...for those of you not privy (and why wouldn't you be, since this is a knitting blog), these are the socks I making for the examiner.com tutorial. I also wrote an article about Second Sock Syndrome, that horrible affliction that overtakes you when you are about to knit your second sock, and you get a case of the fuckits. So here is the article...
http://www.examiner.com/article/chicago-area-knitters-advise-on-second-sock-syndrome-remedies?cid=db_articles
And here is a photo of Teeny Jesus blessing my new pair of socks:
Otherwise, my day was spent flipping through the new Vogue Knitting 30th Anniversary issue, and perusing the Knitty.com 10th Anniversary issue. In other words, the whole day consisted of yarn and journalism, and for some reason, my brain isn't full enough to let me get to sleep.
At the very least, I wanted to celebrate my sock victory, but the dogs started freaking out. I went to the back door to let them out. I waited a minute. I looked outside to make sure they weren't digging. I see Bluto cradling and cuddling something fuzzy. Of course. F***ing Bluto.
So I go outside. Call the dogs back in. And this is what I find, curled into the fetal position on my back porch.
Now, I'm pretty sure Bluto didn't mangle the guy...I think he was like that for some other reason. On the other hand, I'm praying he is just stunned and spooked and gooey from afterbirth so he can wake up and scurry out of the yard on his own power before I have to let the dogs out to pee one last time.
I think it's time to go back to Vogue Knitting. Nobody needs THAT as their last image of the night. Or I could start on those slippers. Or finish the kimono sweater. Or the scarf. Or...
Friday, September 14, 2012
GORGEOUS Knitting Weather
Good morning, everyone. So here I am, coffee in hand, dogs in lap (as much as 125 pounds of dog fits into ONE lap), laptop on armrest, getting ready to continue my day. I started thinking about Life In General, and there have been about zero noteworthy observations to share. Zero. Seriously.
So apparently, I should be knitting.
Here is a roundup of events going on in the Chicago area this weekend...yarn-related, of course:
http://www.examiner.com/article/this-weekend-a-fun-filled-fall-full-of-yarn?cid=db_articles
I have asked for the help of knitters to tell me how they combat Second Sock Syndrome...any other suggestions would be appreciated. It's for Tuesday's article, so there is still time, baby. My last five weeks of Knit Tips Tuesday have been dedicated to making a sock; I now am about halfway done with the second sock and I'm literally talking myself into finishing because I don't want to have a random sock just hanging out there.
Last month, I finished having over 3,000 unique hits on my examiner.com articles, and this month I'm on pace for more of the same. Yay! This is causing more traffic to my Etsy site (I've sold six patterns this month), and I'm now to the point where I'm hoping I can get a good second-income thingie going. It would be nice to retire a year or two early, just because I write about colored string and all things heavenly that go with it, no?
This next few weeks, I'm trying to figure out what I need to change. Getting organized is at the top of the list, but I'm still just not feeling it. I built a desk, bought a drawer tower, and have effectively at least looked at my tax paperwork. So that's a start. The thing is I really need to finish what I've started, before the mess overtakes the house to the point where I'm going to be on an intervention television show. Sadly, I don't even watch TV so it's not like I'd see it when it airs.
Anyway...so, one of the stores I mentioned in the article above is Sifu Design Studio. Lisa opened her fabulous store over two years ago and has so many kitchy and awesome things going on there, I don't have the space to write about it. She has a weekly caption contest where the winner wins the pattern in the caption photo and a $5 gift certificate to her store. This is the picture from last week:
So apparently, I should be knitting.
Here is a roundup of events going on in the Chicago area this weekend...yarn-related, of course:
http://www.examiner.com/article/this-weekend-a-fun-filled-fall-full-of-yarn?cid=db_articles
I have asked for the help of knitters to tell me how they combat Second Sock Syndrome...any other suggestions would be appreciated. It's for Tuesday's article, so there is still time, baby. My last five weeks of Knit Tips Tuesday have been dedicated to making a sock; I now am about halfway done with the second sock and I'm literally talking myself into finishing because I don't want to have a random sock just hanging out there.
Last month, I finished having over 3,000 unique hits on my examiner.com articles, and this month I'm on pace for more of the same. Yay! This is causing more traffic to my Etsy site (I've sold six patterns this month), and I'm now to the point where I'm hoping I can get a good second-income thingie going. It would be nice to retire a year or two early, just because I write about colored string and all things heavenly that go with it, no?
This next few weeks, I'm trying to figure out what I need to change. Getting organized is at the top of the list, but I'm still just not feeling it. I built a desk, bought a drawer tower, and have effectively at least looked at my tax paperwork. So that's a start. The thing is I really need to finish what I've started, before the mess overtakes the house to the point where I'm going to be on an intervention television show. Sadly, I don't even watch TV so it's not like I'd see it when it airs.
Anyway...so, one of the stores I mentioned in the article above is Sifu Design Studio. Lisa opened her fabulous store over two years ago and has so many kitchy and awesome things going on there, I don't have the space to write about it. She has a weekly caption contest where the winner wins the pattern in the caption photo and a $5 gift certificate to her store. This is the picture from last week:
- Well, my caption won the contest last week: "I was SO hoping you'd say 'Yes!'" I'm a horrible crocheter, but I do collect vintage patterns and like I said, I can't think of a single bad thing to say about Lisa's store (or herself for that matter). The energy there is just fabulous. So yeah.Okay...it's time I showered and actually...you know...did something today. I am hoping to plow through the sock, as the October scarf pattern of the month is already finished and I'm not ready to start on November's yet. I also have to meet the roofing guy, deposit some checks, wear clothes that don't give off the vibe that I actually DO spend all of my spare time at the employer's address...Have a good day, everybody!
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Saturday Saturday Saturday!
Good afternoon! That title was done in the voice of the NHRA guy who tries to make Sundays sound like the most awesome day of the week. I was at work until midnight finishing a spreadsheet, following up on little notes, blah blah blah, and this was the week of tears and snot bubbles so I was ready for my three days off after the first day. The last customer I encountered reeked of alcohol and stopped to tell me I had to fire someone for giving him the finger.
Now granted...had one of my associates given this guy the finger, with witnesses, maliciously, because of something unprovoked, then sure. But by all accounts of those around these two people (and there were a lot of witnesses), the only truth is that the guy reeked of alcohol.
Chicago has a new yarn store which opened today. It's called Knit Nirvana and was opened by my friend Sue Jaffe, who used to work at two yarn shops in the near western suburbs. I'm very happy for her that she can see her dream realized and share it with others...there is no other feeling like that. I also took a bunch of pictures so I can write about the store.
Today, though, I wrote about the fact that September 1 is the first day the Red Scarf Project accepts donations. Who's with me?
http://www.examiner.com/article/september-1-kicks-off-red-scarf-project-donations?cid=db_articles
So then, just in case August wasn't affirming enough, I got the loveliest email from a reader from another part of the country:
Hi, Amy …
I don’t know if you’re still doing this (below) or not, but whether you send me a free pattern or not I wanted to e-mail anyway and tell you how much I enjoy reading not only your examiner.com articles but also your Fiber Friend blog posts. For a full six months I commuted by air from Charlotte, NC, to Phoenix, AZ, very early each Monday morning, then put in 60 hours, and flew back late every Friday night; somehow I feel kinship beyond knitting with you! 8^) By the way, I’m also (name withheld) on Ravelry. Thanks again for the enjoyment you bring with your writing and designing …
Georgia
How nice was that? I of course sent her a free pattern...if anyone forwards me the email of the subscription confirmation from examiner.com, I send them a free pattern. The warm and fuzzy feeling I got from reading her message is just a bonus!
I am currently taking a break from putting the finishing touches on the photos from September's pattern...I have until 11:59pm...ha ha ha. My subscribers, hopefully, have given up on scheduled emails because of me, so this month's pattern (and the last three after that) will be sent out the old-fashioned way. I actually can't wait until the 20th to share this pattern with everyone...it's one of those that gets noticed because the yarn does all of the work for you. Pretty darn easy pattern to turn out so pretty! I may send a teaser later in the month, but not today.
Then, there are still two more posts on examiner.com for Knit Tips Tuesday regarding sock-knitting. I have to show the heel-turn and gusset this Tuesday, and the foot and toe the following week. The sample sock is super-pretty...makes me actually want to make the second one...
Have a great holiday weekend! By the way...don't text and drive. I was at a stop sign earlier today, waiting for a freight train so I was actually in PARK because there was a wall of about fifty cars before me that were also parked. A woman scared the bajeesus out of me by...wait for it...banging on my window when I wasn't looking and yelled, "Hey! Don't text and drive!" Duly noted, lady. I believe in safety as well. However, banging on my window could have caused me to freak out and take my foot off of the brake...good thing I wasn't in gear.
Now granted...had one of my associates given this guy the finger, with witnesses, maliciously, because of something unprovoked, then sure. But by all accounts of those around these two people (and there were a lot of witnesses), the only truth is that the guy reeked of alcohol.
Chicago has a new yarn store which opened today. It's called Knit Nirvana and was opened by my friend Sue Jaffe, who used to work at two yarn shops in the near western suburbs. I'm very happy for her that she can see her dream realized and share it with others...there is no other feeling like that. I also took a bunch of pictures so I can write about the store.
Today, though, I wrote about the fact that September 1 is the first day the Red Scarf Project accepts donations. Who's with me?
http://www.examiner.com/article/september-1-kicks-off-red-scarf-project-donations?cid=db_articles
So then, just in case August wasn't affirming enough, I got the loveliest email from a reader from another part of the country:
Hi, Amy …
I don’t know if you’re still doing this (below) or not, but whether you send me a free pattern or not I wanted to e-mail anyway and tell you how much I enjoy reading not only your examiner.com articles but also your Fiber Friend blog posts. For a full six months I commuted by air from Charlotte, NC, to Phoenix, AZ, very early each Monday morning, then put in 60 hours, and flew back late every Friday night; somehow I feel kinship beyond knitting with you! 8^) By the way, I’m also (name withheld) on Ravelry. Thanks again for the enjoyment you bring with your writing and designing …
Georgia
How nice was that? I of course sent her a free pattern...if anyone forwards me the email of the subscription confirmation from examiner.com, I send them a free pattern. The warm and fuzzy feeling I got from reading her message is just a bonus!
I am currently taking a break from putting the finishing touches on the photos from September's pattern...I have until 11:59pm...ha ha ha. My subscribers, hopefully, have given up on scheduled emails because of me, so this month's pattern (and the last three after that) will be sent out the old-fashioned way. I actually can't wait until the 20th to share this pattern with everyone...it's one of those that gets noticed because the yarn does all of the work for you. Pretty darn easy pattern to turn out so pretty! I may send a teaser later in the month, but not today.
Then, there are still two more posts on examiner.com for Knit Tips Tuesday regarding sock-knitting. I have to show the heel-turn and gusset this Tuesday, and the foot and toe the following week. The sample sock is super-pretty...makes me actually want to make the second one...
Have a great holiday weekend! By the way...don't text and drive. I was at a stop sign earlier today, waiting for a freight train so I was actually in PARK because there was a wall of about fifty cars before me that were also parked. A woman scared the bajeesus out of me by...wait for it...banging on my window when I wasn't looking and yelled, "Hey! Don't text and drive!" Duly noted, lady. I believe in safety as well. However, banging on my window could have caused me to freak out and take my foot off of the brake...good thing I wasn't in gear.
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