31 May 2008

Landscape Scarf

Oh, Koigu. How I love you.

Landscape Scarf to be?

I must thank
Lisa for enabling me to purchase these two extra mini-skeins of mill ends this month. They work perfectly with a skein from last year's mill end sale to make a small shawl.

Now that I am a reformed triangle shawl gal, I've started the
Landscape Scarf. This is the smaller version of the shawl, which is still a bit large for my evolving taste.

Lanscape Scarf - Koigu

The scarf has picot edging, which is something I'm a complete sucker for. They're like little pom-poms edging your knitted goods. And a close cousin to my friend, the bobble.

Picots!

Cute, don't you think? In fact, why am I sitting here writing to you when I can be knitting with my pretty yarn?

Landscape Scarf

Have a great weekend, everyone! Don't forget to visit the
Art Star Craft Bazaar this weekend if you're in Philly. I'm headed over there to help out a friend, and supposedly there will be thunderstorms...

28 May 2008

Jack Russell Terrier

This actually will count as my Make, Bake or Buy. Since I would love to have a dog, cool wallpaper, nice baseboards and hardwood floors in one of those things called a house. But instead, this is a thank you card to a really cool person who has a cute Jack Russell Terrier.

Jack Russell Terrier

I did get to have fun and create a crazy pattern, and use grey and yellow, which are hard not to be in love with right now. I'm not going to lie, this is one of the cutest cards I've ever made. Although a black pug (my favorite dog) would make it a little cuter!

Thank You Card

Cheers to little dogs, print and pattern, watercolor and fun people!

Pattern

Finished Project: City Shawl

My love affair with triangular shawls has officially begun. Using my Tilli Tomas yarn, I knitted the City Shawl by Stephanie Japel in mere hours. This is a super easy and versatile pattern that could work in any yarn, and looks fabulous. I predict many more in my future.

Tilli Tomas Flurries

I was almost disappointed to finish knitting with this insanely squishy, beaded yarn.

City Shawl

Who knew a triangle could turn into a quick change artist? Oh yeah. Magda. It doesn't have to be worn like "Addie on the Prairie", as demonstrated here.

City Shawl

It can be worn backwards with the tails in the back.

City Shawl

Wrapped up like a kerchief, "Magda Style". (I promise, this will be my last reference to Miss Magda. A description using her name is essential here!)

'City

Or even thrown over your body with the point across one of your shoulders.

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I am a changed woman. From now on I will scoff at stoles and wraps! (wink)

26 May 2008

Weekend Update

Thanks for everyone's input into my haircut wishy-washiness. Ultimately, my hairdresser Kate, told me that I should keep my hair a little bit long for now, and also give my mother a grandson very soon. (It must be the Asian culture...) I wasn't ready to hack it off yet anyhow, (or, um, have a child).

I like it. She put in a lot of layers, and it feels a lot lighter and choppy.

Haircut

One of my best friends, KJ visited me from Brooklyn. She was my personal chef this weekend, and cooked fish tacos with a mango salsa while I sipped on vanilla mojitos and watched. I then dragged this poor girl to a wedding ceremony (knitting friend) and to Rittenhouse Square where we met more (knitting) friends! She enjoyed herself, and we made sure to get gelato afterwards.

'My

I worked a bit on my City Shawl using the Tilli Tomas yarn. I don't have enough yardage (270 instead of 300 yards), so was knitting with smaller needles (size 13). I may rip it out and try again on larger needles (size 15 or 17) and do more lace and less of the garter rows. It's such a quick knit, and gorgeous yarn, that I don't mind working with it a bit more before it's completed.

City Shawl Tilli Tomas

Oh yeah, I also visited my "little" cousin, Bobby, who graduated from college last weekend in Fairfield, Connecticut. He lives in a house with nine guys on the Long Island Sound. Here we are standing in front of the keg on the deck / driving range where they hit balls into the water and collect them during low tide. Nice view, eh?

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We ended our long weekend with an impromptu barbeque last night (the best kind). My new motto is, "I don't need to buy a house, since we have great friends who have backyards in South Philly!"

Hope you all had a great weekend too.

20 May 2008

Make, Bake or Buy

I want to get back into the practice of drawing daily, or at least on a more regular basis. My goal is to draw to keep the ideas flowing, to try new techniques, to record ideas and have fun.

I'm creating my own project which I'm going to call, "Make, Bake or Buy". It's basically my wish list and materialistic playpen. What is that? I can't find a discounted plush velvet, chartreuse tufted sofa in mint condition that will fit through my apartment door? I'll just draw it up, and feel that it is mine. Overloading on carrot cake is going to make me diabetic? Maybe I'll draw the cake instead, and just eat the slice. The Kitchen Aid Mixer with flames that I just don't need...yup, you got it.

That way, I get to draw fun things, have lots of options, but with a bit of structure. Isn't it strange how overwhelming complete freedom of guidelines can be? Or is that just me?

I'm going to keep the goals loose, and aim for 2 drawings per week. I may not even write a blurb, but include my ideas in the drawing. (Like I could be mute, please.) Drawings will take anywhere from 5 minutes and posted using a scanner on my lunch break, to more extensive periods of time.

Here is my first one. Ideas for what to knit with my new Tilli Tomas yarn from Maryland Sheep and Wool.


1. Yarn Usage

I always disliked triangular shawls, but love my friend Magda, who wears them in the most glamorous ways possible. So after being enthralled by my friend, I'm inspired to knit my own. Lisa and I were imitating her and trying to do it. The uber-charismatic, Magda, can throw a shawl in the air like a pizza, catch it on her neck and it looks so stylish.

I'm also getting a much needed haircut this afternoon. Any suggestions? Hack it off? Keep it long? My appointment is at 5:30PM, so let me know pronto!

15 May 2008

Completed: Lace Ribbon Shawl

Here it is. The first item I have knit for my mom on purpose.

Lace Ribbon Shawl

I'm not counting the baby blanket I made for a friend that my mom wanted to keep for herself. Her argument was that the colors were not very child appropriate (this friend was kind of goth). Of course she was half kidding, but it wasn't that close of a friend, and I didn't have her address anyway. Now it's my favorite lap blanket when I'm visiting home.

I wanted to make her something that she could wear in South Florida. Although it's hot, you get cold inside, since all places has central air conditioning. The yarn is
Handmaiden Sea Silk, which is nice and cool. She can throw this on when having sushi on the beach with her girlfriends, at the movies, the opera, or the constant slew of weddings we've been attending.

Lace Ribbon Shawl

The pattern was the lovely
Lace Ribbon Scarf by the talented Veronik Avery . I really enjoyed knitting this. It was an easy lace pattern to memorize, but kept me interested. There are more specs on Ravelry for all of my knitting friends.

Enjoy the pictures, and just remember, it was laundry day...

Mom's Shawl Completed

My mom will get this in July for her birthday. Before you think I'm super efficient, I must tell you that this was supposed to be a present for last year!

14 May 2008

Pretentious Book Game

I'm currently going through a bookshelf crisis. I have books I've read, ones I reference often, books I need to finish, books I've given up on, and ones that stress me out just looking at them. I finally put the ones I wanted to get rid of in a box (I'm talking to you, Faulkner!) to de-clutter. As soon as I decided it was okay to release these books into the world for others, Mike said, "Are you sure you won't want to read those?" So of course I faltered for a few weeks.

rainbow books

However, isn't that why I support my local library? And do I really need to hang on to important works of literature that I couldn't bear to finish in college so that I can appear well read? No. Of course I've kept many of the classics, and ones that I love like a dear friend. I think after seeing this post on
Lisa's blog, I can fill out the list and it can help me to get rid of my box of books.

Here is how you play.
Library Thing has a list of the top 106 books most often marked as “unread” by their users. As in, they sit on the shelf to make you look smart or well-rounded. Bold the ones you’ve read, underline the ones you read for school, italicize the ones you started but didn’t finish.

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Anna Karenina
Crime and Punishment
Catch-22 (I love you, Yossarian)
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Wuthering Heights
The Silmarillion
Life of Pi: a novel
The Name of the Rose
Don Quixote (My brother's favorite book, on my list to read)
Moby Dick
Ulysses
Madame Bovary
The Odyssey
Pride and Prejudice
Jane Eyre
A Tale of Two Cities
The Brothers Karamazov
Guns, Germs, and Steel: the fates of human societies
War and Peace
Vanity Fair
The Time Traveler’s Wife (One of my favorite books, hands down.)
The Iliad
Emma
The Blind Assassin
The Kite Runner (I hugged this book and cried at the end)
Mrs. Dalloway
Great Expectations
American Gods
Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius (Another author you'll fall in love with. I have never laughed or cried so hard within one book or even one chapter.)
Atlas Shrugged (Oh, I had an Ayn Rand kick back in high school...)
Reading Lolita in Tehran : a memoir in books
Memoirs of a Geisha
Middlesex
Quicksilver
Wicked : the life and times of the wicked witch of the West
The Canterbury Tales
The Historian : a novel
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (I heart Stephen Daedalus)
Love in the Time of Cholera
Brave New World
The Fountainhead (Twice. Told you about that Ayn Rand kick. Oy vey.)
Foucault’s Pendulum
Middlemarch
Frankenstein
The Count of Monte Cristo
Dracula
A Clockwork Orange
Anansi Boys
The Once and Future King
The Grapes of Wrath
The Poisonwood Bible : a novel (Loved this book, but hated all of the characters)
1984
Angels & Demons (If you have this book on your shelf, you are not allowed to be pretentious. Ha ha.)
The Inferno (and Purgatory and Paradise)
The Satanic Verses
Sense and Sensibility
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Mansfield Park
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
To the Lighthouse
Tess of the D’Urbervilles
Oliver Twist
Gulliver’s Travels
Les Miserables
The Corrections
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Dune
The Prince
The Sound and the Fury (My archnemisis...Faulkner. Just kidding.)
Angela’s Ashes: a memoir
The God of Small Things
A People’s History of the United States : 1492-present
Cryptonomicon
Neverwhere
A Confederacy of Dunces
A Short History of Nearly Everything
Dubliners
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Beloved
Slaughterhouse-five
The Scarlet Letter
Eats, Shoots & Leaves
The Mists of Avalon
Oryx and Crake : a novel
Collapse : how societies choose to fail or succeed
Cloud Atlas
The Confusion
Lolita
Persuasion
Northanger Abbey
The Catcher in the Rye
On the Road
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Freakonomics : a rogue economist explores the hidden side of everything
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance : an inquiry into values
The Aeneid
Watership Down
Gravity’s Rainbow
The Hobbit
In Cold Blood : a true account of a multiple murder and its consequences
White Teeth
Treasure Island
David Copperfield
The Three Musketeers

In conclusion, I don't think that this is the most comprehensive list of books, but it was fun nonetheless. Does anyone else have a book overload problem like this? How did you solve it?

12 May 2008

Koigu, With a Side of Mush

Disclaimer: Mushy post with photos of gorgeous yarn thrown in. If you can't handle the emotions, just look at the pretty photos instead, from our recent "knit-out" in Rittenhouse Square. (wink)

Stash!

In the time since my brother has been gone, I've noticed that I have subconciously categorized my life into "before" and "after". Things that have happened and people I knew before he died, and events and friendships I've made after. Knowing there would be an awkward moment where they would ask about my family, and I'd have to test out what to say. That was in the beginning though, it's much easier now. I now know how to put the person at ease, but to not diminish the loss.

Koigu

That was not the case with my blog. It spanned both my old world, and the strange new place I was still working my way around. My blog became my safe place. I was able to sort my feelings out, to figure out how my life was different, but also a way to to look for the positive in each day. When I couldn't write about him in my personal journal, because it was still too raw, I was able to write about it on here. By doing that, I could alleviate my fear that by not writing it down, I would forget him. I was also able to just talk about it, and not worry about making people feel weird.

And then I found when I wrote about it, I received such unexpected support from acquaintences, old friends and people I had only met through the internet. I was overwhelmed with gratitude. It was a place where I could speak, and people were comfortable with that. I didn't have to worry if they didn't want to listen, because I knew that they had the choice to not return or read.

Koigu Mill-ends

I never guessed I would create real friendships with people across the country based on our similar senses of humor, aesthetics and design sense. People who have made me laugh, brought on tears with their kind words, stories and support, and who have brightened my days.

I also never expected to make such wonderful friendships with the women in my knitting circle. Let me tell you, the first time I went, I was terrified, and the only person that spoke to me nearly scared me off. Thank God I went back! I would have missed out on so much, mainly pints of pear cider, alpacas and many brunches. I can't tell you how important these ladies have been to my Wednesdays, or to my daily life in Philadelphia.

So thank you, friends and crafty community, for being so good to me.

I'm also happy to show off the 300 grams of Koigu mill-ends I treated myself to. This was a combination of my economic stimulus check, my Rosie's 20% coupon, the yearly mill-end opportunity and the result of bragging about the lowly $36 I had spent at Sheep and Wool.

In honor of my anniversary, I'll do a meme that I was tagged to do from Yarn Therapy. It asks for 5 things about myself, I know I've done this before, but I'm a sucker for surveys (wink). You can do it if you want (unless you're Susan, since I know about your feelings on memes!).

1. One of my dreams is to own a house on a bit of property, about an hour away from a big city, with a barn. The barn will have a woodshop, and a studio for Mike to paint. My studio may be in the barn, or in the house. I will refurbish furniture, do some upholstery, interior design part time, and draw and paint. Maybe I can have the grandkids my mom has been jonesing for. And a mutt, a pug, an outdoor cat, a few alpaca, a garden and a bike with a basket. Er, that's a lot for the first one!

2. I can't stand pickles. They gross me out. I'm one of five people in the world who dislike pickles. When I was at the Renegade Craft Fair, they had a Mr. Pickle booth and I had the heebie jeebies. They all think I'm crazy, but I think you're all crazy for liking them! And yes, I now like cucumbers, and even pickled cucumbers. But I'm holding out based on my ridiculous principles.

3. Everything I learned about good customer service and business relates to working as a waitress at an Italian restaurant when I was 17. In fact, my whole philosophy on life could be based on what I learned as a waitress. The most important thing was to prevent fires rather than spend time putting out fires. Not real ones though, although I did get locked in a freezer.... For example, if you get quadruple sat and will not be able to serve drinks for ten minutes, do yourself a favor and acknowledge your guests and let them know you'll be right there. Otherwise, they'll sit there wondering if you even know they're there and get pissed and leave a Spawn comic book as a tip. In my work environment today, I make sure to keep my clients updated with the status of things, especially if there is a delay. As long as they're kept in the loop, they're not going to go pickle-crazy wondering what is going on. It's amazing how a one minute email or phone call can keep people happy, and how many people don't bother to do this.

4. A psychic once told me that I would become a household name, but that nobody would recognize my face. I was excited to hear this. Would I be a ceramicist, a clothing designer, a water polo player? Excited until my dad reminded me that Charles Manson was also a household name. "Daaaaaaad!" said Marissa in a whiny seventeen year old voice.

5. In sixth grade, I won first place in the state of Florida for a 50 word essay describing the utter importance of the podiatry profession. I wrote it quite tongue-in-cheek, and in a rush to finish reading whatever Baby Sitters Club book was in my hands. The intro stated, "If we didn't have podiatrists, people would be walking on their hands every day because of all of their warts, corns and bunions."

Don't forget, you chose to read this! (wink)

xoxo, Mariss

P.S. Why yes, that's a progress shot of Mom's Lace Ribbon Shawl, on the Rittenhouse goat. I love you, lady.

The Rittenhouse Park Goat

09 May 2008

Piddleloop Love

A few gals in my knitting circle are obsessed with Piddleloop Bags. I mean people are out-of-control about these bags, and not just in Philly. We'll laugh at the Piddleloop bags lined up wherever we go. Orphaned babies finding each other in the world and all that.

Jen works on the bags (with her sister) part-time, and they have gained quite a following. My friends have tried to order the bags, but they go so fast they practically get snatched out of your cart. Her waiting list and group of fans is growing rapidly.

As I've mentioned
before, Jen is the nicest girl imaginable. So when she mentioned that she missed her favorite Philly foods, Sherry and I knew we had to create a little care package. We collected Tastykakes treats, Herr's chips, and other crafty items. Sadly, no cheesesteaks or soft pretzels would work into this scheme!

Sherry sells fabulous knitting related items in her
shop, and included a "moth guard" sachet, sock yarn and double pointed needle holders with basset hound beads.

I went the paper route, sending stationery and a pen and ink and watercolor drawing for Jen of their bags. I love seeing items lined up in a row, or a grid. This drawing was no exception. I had so much fun drawing the little patterns.

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Jen loved her package, and we felt great about sending some goodness back her way.

In the drawing is my version of Sherry's
actual Piddleloop bag below. The fabric is designed by Heather Ross, who is my favorite fabric designer.

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Below is my own piddleloop bag, which has the Alexander Henry calavera print on it. It's very sketchy, but looks much better smaller.

IMG_7317_2

I'm so glad that Jen finally got her package so I can reveal the cute drawing.

On a more serious note, prayers and thoughts and donations and much needed relief to our friends suffering in Myanmar.

05 May 2008

Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival 2008

I'll just jump back in and pretend I didn't take an impromptu break from blogging...

This Saturday, I attended my second Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival with my knitting friends. We had a two car caravan, which really saved on gas and left more to spend on yarn.

Speaking of yarn, I was not in the mood to buy a lot this year. I've mentioned that I'm a knitting anomoly, one who doesn't love to hoard stash yarn. It's not that I don't love yarn, but I get sick of things quickly. I'd rather have a project in mind, buy the yarn and start it immediately. If I have yarn or fabric sitting in my house for a year waiting to become something in particular, it haunts me. It makes me feel guilty for not starting that project, for crossing an item off of my list. It also helps my budget for now too.

On the other hand though, I love helping my friends spend their hard earned money on yarn. My catch phrase is,"Do you want me to rationalize the purchase, or tell you that you shouldn't buy it? Let me know so I can change my argument."

Original Crew

Our regular crew came this year, as well as some new friends we have made. I was worried that my hard core knitting friends would scare off my "normal" knitting friend, Olivia. But everyone had a great time and enjoyed the festival, despite the 45 minute lines for food and lack of water pressure in the restrooms.

I loved seeing the baby goats, including this little diva who kept stealing her owner's seat and making it her throne.

Prima Donna Goat

Another highlight was seeing the newly shorn and manicured alpaca. Isn't this guy cute? It was also fun to point out basketball sized sheep testicles to the newbies. Hey, this is a livestock fair!

Alpaca

At the last hour of the day, I stepped into the Tilli Tomas booth. She has gorgeous yarn with sequins and beads sewn in. They're usually way out of my price range, but she surprised us by discounting her yarn as a thank you her fiber supporters.

I left with one skein of green silk with sequins.

Till Tomas Sequined Lace Amazon

And two skeins of iris blue with glass beads.

Tilli Tomas Flurries

Ah, nothing like some bling, sequins and bold colors to make this girl happy! Thanks for a great trip, girls.