30.9.08

dahling, the dahlias

When we first moved up to the Boston area two years ago and were presented with the opportunity to garden, I was beyond excited. Although I was raised in an apartment in NY, I love to tend to plants. In fact, my father once had a coffee tree in their apartment that faces west so they get lots of light and is always ridiculously hot. (Going back there after having become accustomed to our chilly apartment here, I almost find the heat of my parents' place insufferable.) My dad had all sorts of plants in the windowsills, from a teeny azalea bush to amaryllis to African violets to different varieties of spider plants, whatever he caught his eye at the local florist. These plants would thrive there on the windowsills in their living room. He still has a whole bunch of them there including a pine sapling that my mother somehow ended up with and had better find a proper home for before it goes through their ceiling.

Since moving out however many years ago now, I have tried to keep plants in my different apartments but have never quite had the same level of success my dad has had doing so. The closest I came was in our stinky beloved old apartment in LIC where I grew a whole bunch of aeniums and other succulents. They did really well in our super-hot apartment (I swear it was 90 degrees year-round in that place). While we were living there, I tried my hand at actual gardening by joining the community garden, which was fun. I planted a few things, but I don't think I really cared for them properly. I was a slacker about going there every weekend, and sometimes I used to just go and hang out there. I'd have coffee with my friend who ran it, and we'd do a little bit of work and a whole lot of talking. It probably didn't help that we're both big hand-talkers so we did more gesturing than gardening as we chatted.

Last year, up here in fancy-pants Cambridge, I planted several dahlias, but they didn't do very well. One of them didn't grow much, and the other two were knocked over and destroyed in a storm because I didn't stake them correctly. Due to what I thought was a failure on my part, I wasn't very enthusiastic about planting more dahlias this year. I even lost last year's tubers, which I took as some sort of sign that I shouldn't bother. (They're somewhere in a brown paper bag in Matt's parents' basement. Yep.) However, Matt went and got a bunch of tubers at Bonnie's anyway, and touched by the fact that he did this, I planted them, blindly, only knowing what one of the whole bunch would look like. It was late in the season so Matt said the pickings were slim, and I had assumed that they were probably all the same variety. Well, we lucked out big time because we got a lovely array of brilliant dahlias. And because of all the rain, they've done exceptionally well this year. I've also made sure to stake them securely and to re-stake them after storms or heavy rain. So yay for dahlias! I'm hoping next year is as bountiful in our little garden.

big fat purple dahlia about to bloom

25.9.08

oh! I almost forgot!

THANK YOU guys for your awesome advice and tips re: picot edges!

fits like a glove, or ahem, a mitten

maybe not so bad?

Can I live with this picot edge? Or will I just end up ripping it out and knitting the ribbing, thus salvaging an otherwise enjoyable knit and pattern that I am more than a little in love with? Because really, look at that palm:

I know I said this before....

And the thumb:

ooh yeah, thumbkin!

One down, one to go! And the fit is just perfect!

one mitten down

23.9.08

picot-boo!

Oh, picot edge. I've never tried to knit you before. I don't know why. I guess I was a little daunted. You seemed more complicated than you actually are. In fact, I was kinda amazed at how easy it was to knit you - just a YO, k2tog all around. So simple and pretty. I was sold on your beauty. Or was it all just an illusion? You see, in my mind, you would look something like this or this. Not this:

uh yeah, picot edge, you are not working out here

Hmmmmmm, where did I go wrong? Suggestions anyone? Should I have used a smaller needle? That's it, isn't it? Help a knitta out here.

I really like this pattern, period

As far as these mittens go, I think maybe what I need to do is rip out the picot and knit that part as the pattern calls for, so that it looks like these beauties here (or as close to perfect as those as possible). Here I thought I would make the cuff all fancy-pants when really I should have stuck to the plain ol' ribbed bit that was in the pattern. I have to say, the fit is perfect. I thought the fit would be super-loose because the mitten looked so big on the needles, but it fits my 7.5 inches in circumference hands perfectly. Not too loose, not too snug - juuuuuuuuuuuuust right! I have to say, I am in love with the pattern on the palm:

I really like the palm

16.9.08

i'm just mad about mittens!

EZ Mitered gloves in Silk Garden

pattern: mitered mittens from Knitter's Almanac
designer: Elizabeth Zimmermann
yarn: Noro in Silk Garden, colorway
needles: Addi Turbos US size#6
modifications: I used Grace of KathrynIvy's length specs and thumb modifications

How long have I been meaning to make these mittens? It feels like forever. I've been stalking other's people's mitered mittens on Flickr and just dreaming and drooling. Well, I am so glad I finally went and got myself a copy of Elizabeth Zimmermann's Knitter's Almanac (seriously, how could I not have had this book in my knitting library? crazy!) and knit these puppies up. I LOVE them. The pattern is super-simple, the yarn does all the magic, and they fit fabulously. Using the mods that Grace was wonderful enough to share with us, they were a breeze to knit. I am now ready for winter! Ummmmmm, well, on second thought, not quite, but I am extremely pleased with the mittens.

4.9.08

froggy went a'courtin'

Subway Stripey Scarf before I frog it

Guys, I think I am done with this scarf. This is how much it has grown since I last blogged about it. See? It's barely gotten any longer. And that's my fault. I have neglected it. So many other fun projects going on! I think the truth is I just don't want to invest another second in it. No hate. No vitriol. Just one big "Meh!" Besides realizing the fact that I am more of a cowl person that a scarf person, I have also come to the conclusion that a) I don't have the attention span or project-dedication to do a long scarf anymore, and b) I am sooooooooo not into what the colors are doing here and would never actually wear this. Let me clarify: I love the colors, just not that weird almost ghost of an argyle pattern that's going on there. The reason that the Noro works so brilliantly with this specific pattern/scarf recipe is because it is a striping yarn, not a variegated yarn. Hence, it stripes beautifully. It doesn't pool or splotch or spread like icky oil slicks. I think I may try this scarf again, only using the Noro (Silk Garden, not Kureyon, since I find the Kureyon too scratchy) or a similar striping yarn. In the meanwhile, I'm frogging this atrocity and either throwing this yarn out the window or attempting socks with it yet again. Grrrrr!