Smatterings

  • snow days

    It’s time to start packing up the red ribbon!!  Deliveries are winding down, billing is in the mail and IT"S SNOWING!!!  and BLOWING!!   Big exhale….

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    (one of these prints is not like the other ones… one of these prints is just not the same…)

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    It’s time to wade through the muck the house has become, but first.. I could use a little spinning time.  I just checked for podcast updates.  There’s 75min. and 29 seconds worth of fiberly listening, newly downloaded.  That ought to be just about right.   Hey Santa, do you read blogs??  I could use one of those contraptions, you know, those connectors, that let the ipod play through my stereo.  Just about right.

    7 responses to “snow days”

    1. Wouldn’t the picture of the foot prints be a perfect gretting card! Nice photos. Stay warm!!

    2. I LOVE the footprints in the snow pic – are all these from RI?

    3. Beautiful! Love the bittersweet pic especially.

    4. TAMARA

      Yay, the herd is back! I love those guys.

    5. TAMARA

      Yay, the herd is back! I love those guys.

    6. Gosh, girl. You sure can take a picture. Syndicate or something, willya?

    7. What Margene said. Excellent picture. I love the herd, too! Llama sheep sheep? Needs a duck.

  • junk mail and new (junk) projects

    It was 5am and I woke up thinking about the pit that the house was fast becoming.  The diningroom table, which is pretty central to the whole house and the first point of focus when you enter the front door, has become trash pit for everything that needs to be *put down* when we come home.  Stuff is piling up.  Lots of what’s there are the stacks of mail that need sorting, when we get a minute.  Most is junk.  One of the guys that empties my mailbox for me when I’m away told me that he has never seen so much junk mail.  He’s right.  I’ve never been able to figure out why we get so much.  Yesterday, being sort of cold and icy and that I had SO much office stuff to catch up on after being out *on* the job so much recently,  I did not take the time to go for a real walk.  Instead, I walked to the mailbox twice and drove to the post office once to collect the mail, stretch my legs and get a breath of fresh air.  Here’s what I discovered. Not all the junk is really mine  (as if I didn’t already know this, ha!)

    1. We get mail for C’s ex-wife.  He’s been divorced for more than 25 years.  She never lived her, nor anywhere near here.  But, her alumni mail comes to us, none the same.  I’d have it forwarded to her, but I know she doesn’t want it either.  She’s busy too.
    2. Mail for a dear friend of mine comes here.  He died almost 15 years ago.  He also never lived here.    Mostly it’s requests for donations, he gave to lots of charities.  Now, I get them.
    3. We both get mail that has a combination of names made from parts of both of our names but not really belonging to either of us.  When I see these strangulations of our names I know to throw them away, fast! 

    Seems a terrible waste, all that paper, energy, just junk that needs to get recycled.

    That ends my Wednesday rant.

    Knitting:
    Last night I started knitting on the neckband.  The pattern has you knit a 4 stitch wide 4" long strip, then attach it.  I decided to knit it and attach it as I knit, picking up one edge stitch and knitting it with the last stitich on the needle.  Had Sam not shown quite so much interest, I’d have it to show, finished.  He wanted to sit with me, and as I’ve said, this yarn pulls easily.

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    So I picked up another project.  The Backyard Leaves scarf by Annie Modesitt from Scarf Style…  funny thing about this pattern.  When I cast on for it a couple weeks ago (before I stuffed it into the bottom of the bag and misplaced the pattern), I thought it was really confusing.  Last night, while watching a movie, it all made sense.  That’s with a glass of wine.  I should probably run to "knock on a bit of wood" at this.  Maybe it *was* the wine.  I’ll let you know.  This is not a project I’d take with me to a knitting group.  It’s not a pattern I could follow and take part in a conversation.  It is fun.  I’m not through the first repeat, it’s early.

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    6 responses to “junk mail and new (junk) projects”

    1. Oh, I want to make that scarf! Your yarn choice is lovely. And, ditto about the junk mail — we get mail here for the folks who owned this house two owners ago. Such a waste of energy and resources! Can it be that someone actually responds to all this junk and that’s why they keep it up or is it corporate inertia?

    2. One interesting thing to do is to sign up for your next magazine subscription/catalog (or whatever) with a just slightly mis-spelled version of you name – its fun to see which junk mail is attached to which vendor sold your name to the marketing companies. Well, maybe not fun, but enlightening.
      Lovely scarf too!

    3. A lot of things are better with wine! Annie’s pattern is really great, isn’t it?
      Did you hear about the court case involving some mailmen who refused to deliver junk mail to their customers? Their employers fired them and they’re trying to get reinstated because all they did was obey the wishes of homeowners who requested that they not receive junk mail…

    4. The junk mail IS accelerating. I have a pile that I’m supposed to go thru when I have a moment. The pile is getting very very big. I did that address glitch once, and then promptly forgot the original place I sent it to. Plus, each subsequent buyer probably sells it to someone else, so the tracking loses meaning.
      I like how Backyard Leaves is starting. It’s (still) on my list. I need to focus more and start these things.

    5. Tish

      For the mail coming to your deceased friend, you can just write “deceased” on the envelope and “return to sender”, and for the ex (or mangled names) write “not at this address” and “return..” Most companies don’t want to pay all of the return postage and will remove those names from the mailing list, especially if they get returned mail more than once from the same address. If you get duplicates of catalogs, you can usually call the company and let them know about the duplicates (my last name gets mangled often and results in several of the same catalog) and they’ll cancel all but the correct one. I’ve been admiring the Backyard Leaves Scarf (I have the perfect green wool for it), but the directions looked too confusing. Maybe I’ll give it a try after all.

    6. A number of years ago I put myself on that list to cut opt out of junkmail. It worked, but also stopped catalogs from companies I want to get things from. If you want the info I can send you the URLs.
      I loved the Backyard Leaves pattern (yes, it was the wine -grin). There’s something about how it looks like the chart-from-hell and then turns into the most logical pattern that is immensely satisfying. Yours looks great!

  • a perfect little something

    Flora was the perfect little something.  I wanted an easy knit with a twist to get my mind off the holiday work.  Something I could pick up and do sort of mindlessly. Something I hadn’t done before.  Enter Flora…

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    Those cute little twisted fringy things are fun to make and a new technique for me.

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    My thanks to Kate.  Great pattern and perfect diversion.
     

    For Flora:
    1 strand Brown Sheep Cotton / wool
    1 strand brushed mohair / nylon binder
    1 strand handspun wool single dyed orange for those fringy things
    knit on #9 straights

    Yesterday I spent ALL day in a high rise office building.  I was moving around, floor to floor, office to office, decorating.  Yep, more poinsettia trees, and more artificial Christmas trees.  They take FOREVER to build.  Anyway, that’s not where I was really going with this.  I can not imagine what it must be like to be in one of the buildings, in one of those cubicles, day after day, no matter.. not even in one of the really nice corner offices.  I guess the camaraderie would be nice. I asked one of the women I see there if the falcon had been outside on the 19th story decking much lately.  She told me she wouldn’t know, she doesn’t look outside, she doesn’t turn around.  Her back was no more than 5 feet from the window.  I’d be stark raving mad if I didn’t ever look outside.  I realized how lucky I am.  I have always basically worked for myself.  Those of you that do this know that there are lots of points on the downside, but you move around as you need, want, and most importantly, PLAN.  You still have to kiss a lot of backsides, and smile when you don’t feel like smiling and all of that, but hey.. that’s any job, that’s just life, if you need to make a living.  I know how lucky I am to have figured it out early on.   And, regarding yesterday, twelve hours on my feet, bending and lifting and fluffing up those old dusty tree branches has me exhausted and sore today.  My back muscles are still burning.  It’s not all cake, right?

     

    9 responses to “a perfect little something”

    1. Beth

      Fast and very cute. I think just one tree is a project, I’ll bet you’re glad this holiday is only once a year.

    2. That is just adorable.
      Yes, self-employment has its ups and downs. I do sometimes miss the camaraderie of the workplace…but on the other hand, I don’t miss the interoffice politics. I’d rather have it this way…I go in and out of places, a different place almost every day, but go back to the same ones often enough that they know me. They are on best behavior and kind to me, and I get to leave and not go back until the next time.

    3. Your back muscles may be burning, but you have the option of resting tomorrow, or sleeping in a little later than planned to help your back, unlike us poor schmucks who have to check our leave accrual before we can decide if we CAN take a sick day.

    4. Every job has its advantages and disadvantages. It’s all about making a life that has balance. What is missing at “the office” can be made up for by what we do in the other hours.

    5. TAMARA

      I work from my home office 90% of the time, but when I do go in to The Office, I have a window office, and any time I am on the phone, I stand at the window and look out. It takes away the distraction of the computer and I like to watch what’s out there.

    6. TAMARA

      I got interrupted while I was typing my comment, and posted it before saying how cute your Flora turned out.

    7. Kitty

      I have worked in cubicle offices for many years and love it – love the ideas that get batted back and forth in the open floor plan; love the laughs we’ve had that I would have missed if I were holed up in a solitary office; love the great friends I’ve made, and have converted several to passionate knitters.

    8. I love how your Flora turned out — your yarn selection and button are perfect!

    9. Cute flora 🙂
      I work in a cube farm. My back faces the window 🙁 I have to turn around to see outside, though I have often threatened to install a mirror. I’d go nuts if I couldn’t see outside. I notice if it is raining or if something interesting is happening outside before the people who have the window seats. I also have to go for a walk each lunchtime just to get outside, even if I am walking around the CBD. The river is nearby and I walk along it a lot.

Our lives are dyed the colors of our imagination.” ~ Marcus Aurelius

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