women of a certain age are like sunflowers; they know how to turn their faces to the sun.

Monday, March 30, 2009

Bigger

“If I were asked to give what I consider the single most useful bit of advice for all humanity it would be this: Expect trouble as an inevitable part of life and when it comes, hold your head high, look it squarely in eye and say, 'I will be bigger than you. You cannot defeat me.'”


-Ann Landers

Nothing new to report from the weekend. No new designs - just models growing bigger.


Pampas (first in the 2009 Garden Variety Collection - presales on the right sidebar) got two more pattern repeats on her...she's ready for a test knit, if Maria the wonder knitter will have her. If not, I know lots of people who would be happy to fill in. Meanwhile, I'll just keep plugging away...


Vinyasa also grew by several inches. My fingers needed a break from beading last night, so I returned to her. I'm lovin' the Zen...

I think she will be ready for the market sometime next week. Fun knit - lots of twisted stitches.

Blood sugar seems to be well controlled at this point. Going to have to get used to control being a good thing. I had so many control issues going into therapy, that I chucked by the wayside. Time to pick them back up.

But I refuse to let them drive...

Good advice from Ann Landers.

Bigger is better...

Sometimes.

2008 GARDEN VARIETY COLLECTION RETIRED ON WEDNESDAY

GET YOURS TODAY AND TOMORROW ONLY!

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Erratas (Errati?)

SNOWDRIFT: written directions

Rows 12, 14, 16, 18, & 20: YO should be P1.
Chart is correct.

BLUE GENTIAN:

Cast on 70 stitches, not 69.

--oops--

Carry on...

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Saturday Stash Sale - S3 (S9 was too long)

SHIPPING TO US ONLY
SOLD OUT
COME BACK NEXT SATURDAY...

Email me at susanpandorf@comcast.net and tell me which one(s) you want. I will invoice you through PayPal and ship them out to your hot little hands by midweek.

Yarn will be shipped first class mail in a padded envelope if the total weight is 13 oz. or less. If yarn weighs more than that, I will ship in flat rate priority mail box for $9.85. By next week you should be happy knitting!

All yarn colors are true (on my monitor- can't account for yours.) We are a non smoking household, but I do have two cats. Yarn has been behind closed doors, so cat contact has been minimal. Yarn is unwound and untouched by human hands...Well, unless petting counts...

Each Saturday, I will post more yarn for your viewing pleasure and, hopefully, your buying frenzy.

Please give my yarn a loving home and a productive future.

Ready?

Here we go again.


FINGERING WEIGHT - SOCK


1) Gypsy Knits BFL - Red Hot Candy - $10

superwash - 380 yds.
SOLD


2) Sunshine Yarns - Mossy Rock - $10
superwash - 450 yds.
SOLD


3) Fleece Artist Sea Wool - Woodland - $10
70% merino, 30% seacell - machine wash - 350 m.
SOLD


4) Fleece Artist Basic Merino - Cornflower - $10
machine wash - yardage given as "sufficient for one pair of socks"
SOLD


5) Yarn All Over - Dither - $10
superwash - 545 yds.
SOLD


6) Schaefer Anne - $10
60% merino 25% mohair 15% nylon - 560 yds.
SOLD


7) 2 skeins Oceanwind Knits - $10
merino - machine wash - 370 yds. total
SOLD

8) Schaefer Anne - $10
60% merino 25% mohair 15% nylon - 560 yds.
SOLD

FINGERING WEIGHT - 4-PLY - OTHER



9) 6 balls Karabella Vintage Cotton - #311 blush - $15
mercerized - handwash - 840 yds. total
SOLD


10) 7 balls Rowan 4-ply Soft - #392 Deep Coral Rose $40
merino - machine wash - 1344 yds. total
SOLD

11) Fleece Artist Blue Face Leicester 2/8 - Hercules - $20
hand wash - 1000 m.
SOLD

12) Handmaiden Mini Maiden - Tulip - $15
50% silk 50% wool - hand wash - 500 m.
SOLD

13) Handmaiden Mini Maiden - Blackberry - $15
50% silk 50% wool - hand wash - 500 m.
SOLD


14) 2 skeins Handmaiden Mini Maiden - Masala - $30
50% silk 50% wool - hand wash - 1000 m. total
SOLD

15) 3 skeins Brooks Farm Acero - MW AC 8 - $25
60% Super Wash Wool / 20% Silk / 20% Viscose - 1320 yds. total
SOLD

SPORT WEIGHT


16) 6 skeins Blue sky Alpaca Silk - Ivory - $5 each
50% alpaca 50% silk - hand wash - 146 yds. each
SOLD


DK WEIGHT


17) 8 balls Rowan Calmer - #849 Delight - $45
80% cotton 20% polyester - hand wash - 1400 yds. total
SOLD


18) 8 balls Rowan Calmer - #479 Slosh - $45
80% cotton 20% polyester - hand wash - 1400 yds. total
SOLD


19) 10 skeins Elsebeth Lavold Silky Wool - Oatmeal - $40
65% wool 35% silk - hand wash - 1750 m. total
SOLD


20) Briar Rose Fourth of July - $15
merino - hand wash - 550 yds.
SOLD


21) Briar Rose Fourth of July - $15
merino - hand wash - 550 yds.
SOLD


22) Briar Rose Fourth of July - $15
merino - hand wash - 550 yds.
SOLD


23) 12 balls RYC Bamboo Soft - #110 Pompadour - $55
bamboo - hand wash - 1332 yds. total
SOLD


24) 8 balls RYC Bamboo Soft - #107 Sea foam - $35
bamboo - hand wash - 896 yds. total
SOLD


25) Fleece Artist Silk Stream - Woodland - $40
50% wool 30% silk 20% nylon - hand wash - 900 m.
SOLD


26) 2 skeins Handmaiden Ottawa - Paris - $35
92% wool 8% viscose - hand wash - 1200 m. total
SOLD

WORSTED WEIGHT


27) 13 balls Berroco Love It - #3237 Borscht (disc.) - $25
58% cotton 38% acrylic 4% polyester
SOLD

28) Briar Rose Grace - $20
60% superwash meino 30% bamboo 10% nylon - hand wash - 900 yds.
SOLD


29) 2 skeins Noro Cash Iroha - #75 - $10
40% silk 30% lambswool 20% cashmere 10% nylon - 182 m. total
SOLD


30) 5 balls GGH Samoa - Black - $15
50% cotton 50% acrylic - machine wash - 475 m. total
SOLD


31) 3 skeins Tilli Tomas Simply Heaven - Parchment - $40
silk - dry clean - 360 yds. total
SOLD


32) 10 skeins Fibre Co. Road to China - Lapis - $10 each - will split
65% alpaca 10% cashmere 10% camel 5% yak 10% soy - hand wash - 80 yds. each
super soft - depth of color extraordinary - retails for $19
SOLD


33) 12 balls Rowan Kid Classic - #840 Crystal - $40
70% lambswool 26% kid mohair 4% nylon - hand wash - 1836 yds.
SOLD


34) 3 skeins Fibre Co. Terra - Dark Indigo - $15
60% merino 20% alpaca 20% silk - hand wash - 300 yds.
beautiful nuanced shades of teal & indigo - single ply
SOLD


35) 25 balls Adrienne Vittadini Miranda - Watermelon
$2 each, 10 for $15, $35 for the lot

cotton - handwash - 87 yds. each
perfect sweater yarn for your little girl!
SOLD


36) 6 balls Diakeito Diadrey - #206 - $40
54% mohair 38% wool 8% nylon - hand wash - 552 yds. total
SOLD


37) 3 skeins Brooks Farm Riata - Santa Fe Afternoon - $15 each - will split
48% wool 36% mohair 16% silk - hand wash - 375 yds. each
SOLD


38) 4 skeins Malabrigo Worsted - Polar Morn - $20
meino - hand wash - 864 yds. total
SOLD

CHUNKY WEIGHT

39) 2 skeins Fleece Artist Scotia Silk - Woodland - $30
65% wool 35% silk - hand wash - 750 m. total
SOLD

40) Fleece Artist Wavy Wrap Kit (includes pattern) - Forest Path - $30
Mo mohair & Big Baby wool boucle - hand wash
SOLD

Friday, March 27, 2009

Inch By Inch

Inch by inch, row by row
Gonna make this garden grow
Gonna mulch it deep and low
Gonna make it fertile ground

Inch by inch, row by row
Please bless these seeds I sow
Please keep them safe below
Till the rain come tumbling down

- Peter, Paul and Mary


It is the greening season - that time when the world kicks into high gear - when every morning sees a new bud, a new beginning - when all things seem possible.

As March packs its bags and April stands on tiptoe, awaiting its entrance, I find myself impatiently waiting for spring.

I wish I could twitch my nose like Samantha Stevens (just dated myself, didn't I?) and the world would burst into bloom.

I wish I knew what life will be like with diabetes.

I wish the stock market would go up 4000 points.

I wish Pampas would be finished.

Tomorrow!

Yet I am reminded of how progress is made:

Inch by inch. Row by row.

I have always loved those fast action videos. You know the ones... The life cycle of a rose, from bud to bloom to fade in 30 seconds.

You can see the progress, right there in front of you.

In real life, the changes are often so painfully slow we cannot discern them.

We fall asleep under overcast skies, and wake to see daffodils blooming in the sun, where once the dingy snow banks stood, and all was dim and dun.

We fall asleep under mounds of dirty diapers, piles of homework, and myriad work related crises, and wake to see our children heading out the door, our once perky breasts pointing towards the floor, and our halcyon days of youth far behind.

Inch by inch. Row by row.

We struggle mightily with waiting. We are the microwave, Tivo, instant messaging generation. We want what we want, when we want it.

Nature moves to a slower pace. As the saying goes, "We are closer to God in the garden than anywhere else on earth."

God takes the long view. God sees the big picture. God looks at the entire story arc.

Seasons come and seasons go. The days of our lives pass by in the eternal cycle of death and rebirth. We learn to let go of some things, in order that other things may have room to grow.

Inch by inch. Row by row...

Gonna make it fertile ground.

*****

After a week of frogging and re-knitting, Pampas (first of the 2009 Garden Variety Collection) has reached the "Whew!" stage.

That is when I look at it, say, "I LOVE this!" and heave a ginormous sigh of relief that my gift has not forsaken me. My muse is still in residence. My vision undimmed by the passage of time.

As with all in life, the beginning is the most perilous part. All too often, the only way to get it right is to eliminate the wrong.

Repeatedly...

Over and over...

And over again.

Until that happy day, when the pieces all come together in a harmonious whole. And you realize it was growing all along.

All those days, when you couldn't see any progress. All those days of dim and dun.

Erased in the bloom of the sun.

Beads AROUND the plume, not IN it. AHA!

Ribbing at the bottom, with little inserts of beading. AHA!

She looks a little Egyptian, doesn't she?

She is going to be at least a two skein project. Straw seasilk and gold (8-0234) seed beads. Hard to see in these pics, but they add a lovely sparkle to the finished piece. Not sure how many yet. Need to knit a little further...

And she is knit in one piece, end to end. No grafting. No unhappy knitters who don't like the way the join looks.

Yes, I have heard your comments. I appreciate your concerns.

These are scarves, not stoles. Scarves are bunched up at the back of the neck. If you don't like to graft, do a three needle bind off. It won't show.

I am not belittling your concerns, simply being practical. If you choose to enlarge the pieces or wear them as stoles, you may have to take more care. If you don't like the 3 row section of stockinette that results from the graft, I suggest you end each half on a right side row and graft the lace.

It is harder, but it can be done...

Very carefully.

In many of my newer patterns I give you the option of knitting two halves or one whole. The halves have the benefit of being completely symmetrical, the pattern identical on both ends. The whole has the edge in ease of completion.

You decide how meticulous you want to be.


SATURDAY STASH SALE

All yarn is out in the mail. If you haven't received yours yet, you should any day now. I was a little late this week, as Monday and Tuesday were consumed by health issues.

Surely, you are thinking, she is out of yarn by now!


Not even close...

I am getting rid of ten years of excess.

It feels really good. I am so very lucky that my yarn can make so many people happy.

See y'all on the morrow, as I continue to divest myself

Inch by inch. Row by Row.

Ball by ball. Skein by skein.

FOUR DAYS UNTIL PATTERNS FOR CROCUS POCUS, IRIS, HYDRANGEA, AND ZINNIA ARE RETIRED. GET 'EM NOW OR FOREVER HOLD YOUR PEACE...

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Ideas

"People will accept your ideas much more readily if you tell them Benjamin Franklin said it first."
-David H. Comins

Now I don't know whether ol' Benji knit, or not.

But I do know a good idea, when I stumble across one.

Today, I ate breakfast BEFORE I sat down to my work - much better...

Today, I frogged all of Pampas that came before.

Don't put the beads IN the waving grass shapes. Put them AROUND them - much better...

Pics tomorrow...

Last year, I charged $7 for each Garden Variety pattern. Evelyn at Knitty Noddy took a dollar off if you ordered the yarn from her and paid me a portion. But she made no money on the pattern. I just don't think that is right.

So, this year, the price is increasing to $8 each. But I'm not going to raise my price to Evelyn. So she can make a buck off of the patterns she sells. It's only fair.

And the extra dollar I get on the patterns?

I'm going to pass it back to you, by offering up front subscription savings. YAY!

I know many of you have felt cheated of the last minute savings I provided in December and this month. Why should the "Johnny-come-lately"s have all the luck?

You will notice a new add to cart button over there on the right for the entire 2009 Garden Variety Series for the pre-sale price of $6 each or $24 total .

$24 now buys you four beaded lace scarf/wrap patterns, one every other month:

Pampas - April - amber with gold beading
Rose - June - blush with deep rose beading
Delphinium - August - lavender blue with deep blue beading
Chrysanthemum - October - rusty maroon with bronze beading

And the bonus pattern - Blue Spruce - free of charge - December - deep teal and evergreen (special color) with silver beading.

Right now Trillium is on hold while we wait for Handmaiden to hand dye...sigh...I know she will be better for the wait.


I have decided to offer Sunflower as a stand alone mystery shawl project, next January and February. She is such a large project, being circular and all. Much more effort and yarn required than the regular GVC offerings. Well suited to the format of "let's do a bit this week, and a bit next week, and a bit more the week after that..."

You may order the entire series and lock in your savings anytime through the end of April. Patterns will be emailed to you upon release, without any further effort on your part.

After that, I will offer the 2009 GVC patterns for individual purchase at $8 each.

I thank you for your embrace of these patterns.

I remind you that there is only one more week to order the 2008 series.


And I look forward to knitting the garden with all my friends.

Let's take a stroll, shall we?

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Trying Times

"These are the times that try men's souls."
- Thomas Paine


I am not a good multi-tasker. I tend to focus intently upon one thing at a time.


To the exclusion of some things


To the exclusion of many things

To the exclusion of everything, I'm afraid.

truth in advertising

This ability to focus has played a big role in the large number of patterns I have
been able to release over the course of the past year.

It also has resulted in a small pile


A large grocery bag


A huge avalanche...

of receipts.

more truth in advertising

And on my laptop?


An Orders folder with over 2000 order delivery messages in it. Have to get organized. Either that or start another folder.

It would seem I can only organize one thing at a time:

  • The coat closet or the Ravelry page?
  • The laundry or the knitting?
  • The taxes or the newsletter?
  • The diabetes or the design biz?
  • The menus or the stitch count?

Of all the changes diabetes will bring to my life, this is probably the most challenging to me.

Paying attention to two things at the same time - me and Sunflower Designs.

And family...

And housecleaning (what housecleaning? my dust bunnies have built permanent hutches in the corners and aren't going away anytime soon. I am considering tying bows around them and calling them Easter decorations)

And dental health (yesterday's activity. my dentist wants to see me every 3 mos. now that I am diabetic. he also tried to sell me a $150 toothbrush to help with gum inflammation. EEK!)

And exercise...


And regular mealtimes...

And testing strips...

And all the other things that go into a full (and hopefully long) diabetic life.


Did I mention how bad I am at multi-tasking?


Yesterday, after my dental appointment, I picked up my glucose meter at the drugstore. I figure that's part of acceptance. And I dutifully read several pages in my new diabetes travel guide (can't tell the players without a program)


Last night I did some internet errands, ordering waterproof mascara (my eyes alternate between gummed up and tears overflowing. waterproof would be good)
special gel bed socks to soften my heels while I sleep (pedicures and shaving my heels are no longer an option) and a new lipstick, hairspray and an inexpensive pair of earrings (because I needed to remind myself I'm still a woman.)

Today, I returned to my knitting. And before I knew it, the clock read 1:00 and I had still not eaten lunch.


Or breakfast.

This regular eating business is going to take some practice.

But I'm trying.

I set aside my knitting and tried to refocus.


I ate something, unwrapped my meter, and took a reading.

At least I tried to take a reading.

Several times...


Unsuccessfully...

If at first you don't succeed,throw the meter across the room in a fit of pique, utter a few
choice expletives and sulk try, try again.

Finally, seven wasted lancets and two testing strips later, I had figured out how to set the time so it didn't blink 12:00.

Now I was really getting somewhere...

All kidding aside, I did finally figure it out and took a decent reading.

Now, if I could just shake off my inertia enough to go to the grocery, figure out what to buy and cook dinner tonight.

Good thing I am better at lace than I am at finger lancing, glucose monitoring, and me
nu planning...

Speaking of which...

I spent the last several days (when I wasn't obsessing over the diabetes)immersed in Pampas design.

As with diabetes, the hardest part is getting started. A new design always involves some fits and starts. You know...I start. I rip. I throw a fit. I start again.


Yep. Ol' fits n' starts - that's me!

This was my first try:


Close, but not quite there yet (sort of like me)

I went down a needle size and redistributed the placement of various elements of the design.


Only got this far, before withdrawing my focus, and rethinking my goals for the day.

Now it is 3:00 and I have eaten. I have tested. I have poked myself in the finger with no scars to show for it. And it didn't hurt.


NOW, can I go back to my knitting?

Trying times, my friends, trying times...