Showing posts with label charity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charity. Show all posts

25 August 2025

Typically American Measurement

There are jokes and memes going around about how Americans will use anything as a unit of measurement to avoid the metric system.  My friend Trish and I joked about it and decided to display her Great Big Squishy Scarfie Thing against their Grand Caravan:

Current length, on Colour #21 of 25, is about 2/3 of a Grand Caravan.  I've knitted on it twice (somehow, not this trip!), once when I was there for "AIDA" and once at Maryland Sheep & Wool.

I did some knitting of my own, a scarf of Bernat Blanket that I left in Dallas to donate to Warm Up, America! at DFW Fiber Fest next month, and three hats; four if you count the one I knit on a friend's machine so I could try it:

The green one with brick stitch at top left will go to the local
guild's Hundred Hats Challenge collection; the other three are
destined for a different charitable project.

This time I was there to see her son in "HAMLET", portraying several characters, primarily Rosencrantz:


This wasn't the only play I saw this weekend, though.  On Friday I went to the Allen Contemporary Theater to see two friends in what turned out to be a spectacular production:
I've recommended it to people, and they report the shows are
selling out before they can get tickets.  Kudos to ACT!

And then this went into a black hole, instead of getting published.  I thought I'd hit the "Publish" button!

Since then, I finished another two hats for the collection, and half a scarf for WUA:

Ooops, the top one is a repeat from the previous photo.
Both hats are AlwaysBeKind yarn.  Scarf is a Caron Chunky Cake.

I've planned some projects (probably too many to get done before DFW Fiber Fest), and finished my Berie Shawl of the "Sunset Skies" yarn:

When I saw how much is left, I decided not to frog back and add another garter row in the center, and there isn't enough remaining for a border, so the shawl is as it is (and fits me well) and the last bit of yarn will go into a hat or something.  Yes, I have the ends to run in, but that's just a few minutes of work.  I love how it feels, very soft and cuddly.

07 April 2025

Baseball and Opera and Books.

I love libraries.  I may have gotten my library card before my driving license during the latest move, and if not, it was close.  I've used many services over the years, taken out (and returned!) many books, and with the online options I attend events and watch videos and I'm borrowing an e-book (because my library doesn't have hardcopy) of a book to read before my next overseas trip.  So I'm always up for celebrating National Library Week, and hope that you support your local libraries also.

Last week was busy.  In addition to work (and the madness of our fiscal year ending on March 31st, which meant that the next days were catch-up on the carryover work plus anything that wasn't urgent and got postponed until after April 1st) it was NC Opera weekend, and my parents were hosting the guest speaker.  So in addition to two operas (I skipped the dress rehearsal because of my library's Science Fiction Book Club meeting) and the Sunday afterparty, I went to a ballgame on Thursday evening, and did other activities with parents and guest on Saturday, when not participating in the Knit For Food A Thon.


Sadly, the Durham Bulls lost to the Sugarland Space Cowboys,
but we had fun, weather was perfect, and they didn't get shut
out thanks to their designated hitter in the bottom of the 9th inning.

I started a hat during the ball game (which meant I had to restart it several times, even though it's a basic and easy pattern, because I kept getting off-count on the first row - stitch markers to the rescue!) and I finished a scarf that had been too big to take to the game.

I picked up some library swag at the game:

I asked if I needed to show my library card (of course it was with me) to get a sticker, and the library staff said no, and let me take one of everything that was still there.  I didn't need info about their Library Fest activities - I'm already signed up for ones I can do, and wish I could do more!

15 December 2024

Busy (and COLD) week.

I went to Chicago for a conference, and the temperature was around 18°F one day and not quite to freezing the next, so combined with the inevitable windchill it felt like -15°F.  Unlike last year, when it was warm enough to go out without a coat, this year I decided to stay in the hotel for the duration and not look at the lights or go to the Art Institute on Thursday evening.

It was a good conference but work was crazy-busy, so staying in my room and working was the best answer in the evening.  I enjoyed seeing people in person and my parents where thrilled to receive a bit of Garrett Mix as a gift when I returned.

I took a "pocket hat" to work on, and also some yarn for a gift but struggled with the pattern, so I am going to pull it out and try something else.  When I got home I returned to the "Christmas-Channukah Advent Shawl" as I'm ten days behind and need to focus and catch up if possible.  Because it's a bit bulky and has a stitch pattern, I started another "pocket hat" to take to the opera today.
"The Passion of Mary Cardwell Dawson"

I call these "pocket hats" because they are small enough to carry in a pocket (or purse) when being made, and of course fit well into a pocket once finished.
Top left: shawl, almost ready for Day 6 to begin.
Bottom:  Almost-at-decreases hat.
Top right:  Newly-started hat, ribbing completed.

I finished a book and started another, but haven't made much progress.  Yesterday was my usual day at my parents', this time helping my father clean out and organize his closet.  Luckily we're mostly done in the garage as it was cold here (but quite a bit warmer than Chicago!) and we didn't want to work out there.  Then I ran errands, including picking up a load of towels at a local shop (sale, discount coupon, store credit) because a church backed out of getting items for a group of senior citizens for the holidays, and a local community group stepped in.  Within 48 hours people had pulled together a huge carload of gifts of the kinds wanted: hats and gloves and scarves, blankets and towels.

10 December 2024

Three Red Scarves

 I finished the last of the red scarves very late last night:

This used up an entire ball of A Pound Of Love in "Cherry", plus a small ball of brighter red that I bought when it was clear that I couldn't get a full third scarf.  In the end, I had less than 3" of the Cherry as scraps!  I do have a bit more of the brighter red (it's "COLOR/COULEUR # 15705", no name) but not enough for a single additional row.  I'll use some to tie on the washing instructions and put the rest into the box of scrap yarns.

These are closeups of the stitch patterns:

Bavarian Stitch - crochet

"Hot Frosty" or broken rib (K3P1+K1) - knit

Simple 1dc1sc repeat, worked from center - crochet

I have made not enough progress on the Advent/Channukah item, because I was focused on getting these three scarves done.  But I made some progress:


I planned to use three stitch patterns but did not like the transition from #2 to #3.  So I frogged the third stripe and now I am using just two, seed stitch and single moss stitch.  I also realized that some of the minis are longer than other minis, and decided that rather than have wildly uneven stripes, I will end each one somewhere around the 2½" width.  So I will have bits of leftover yarn, which may get added later, or put into another project.

Tonight is the holiday party for one of the local fiber groups I have joined.  They are collecting the red scarves, hence my deadline of today.  We are having a potluck and I made Grinch Cookies:
Simply dye a basic cooky dough green, roll into balls, flatten
slightly, and add a red candy heart before baking.  These were
made with a gluten-free cookie recipe, but you can use any.

For the white elephant gift exchange, I made a few stitch markers and packaged them with a hank of yarn from a mystery yarn purchase.  I love the dyer but notice this has a lot of mohair, which can be an issue for me.  I have kept all the other mystery skeins!

Later:  Party was small but fun enough.  We played a game of pull a question from a bag and answer it, which generated some interesting discussions.  The person who received my gift was very happy to have it, and I scored a Bonne Maman 2024 Advent Calendar, which I am very happy to receive!  I'm not opening it yet, in part because I scored sugarplums from Andy's Orchard and am very happily eating those.

{Also:  This is my 350th post.  A piker compared to many who have posted daily for years, or decades, or even those who posted weekly from The Beginning.  But more than I expected I'd have.}

17 November 2024

Final Dozen.

I was going to post midweek but ended up sick on Wednesday, with a sinus headache that morphed into a migraine.  I took two naps that day, and lots of OTC medication, and kitchen medicine in the form of chicken soup, wasabi chips, and hot sauce.  
Not my bottle.

I got my head in order enough to participate in "Lady Windemere's Fan" that evening (luckily, I had a small part as a gossip at the ball, channeling my inner Anna Russell on the line 'Who is she?') and before then to drop off five hats and five scarves to the Twisted Knitter collection:

The five scarves are all my basic C2C, made from a now-discontinued red/white/blue Premier Candy Shop yarn.  I intended them for Knit Your Bit but since they are not currently collecting, this is a good substitute.

I knit or crocheted three of the hats while on my trip earlier this month.  The top left hat is based upon the Airegin Hat pattern but adjusted because the yarns I had are thinner than the pattern requires.  The yellow hat below it is the Granny Beanie, and the other yellow hat is based upon it but working the rows in the one two below, so it closes up the holes.  Because I used the majority of the multicoloured yarn on the first one, I spaced those rows out further on the second, because I have lots of the gold.

The brown hat is based on Barley Hat, out of a ball of Taos I received in a local fiber group's holiday swap.  The white-and-grey was worked from leftover acrylic yarns, Premier Sweet Roll Silver Swirl.

I didn't have this set finished in time to deliver it on Wednesday evening, because of the play, but I finished during my "offstage" time and delivered it Thursday morning, just in time for the deadline:

So that's the last dozen for this collection.  Up next are the Blue Elves and Red Scarf Project.

On Friday I finally felt better.  Yesterday I had my usual Saturday at my parents' house, helping my father to sort books (we finished a carload in time for Mom to deliver it to Friends of the Library, instead of having to wait for Tuesday), then after this week's soufflé Dad decided to clean out his bureaus and closet a bit.
This week's soufflé was especially tall.

Today I got to do chores of my own.  This evening I am watching a film about Braver Angels.  In this fraught post-election atmosphere, they are probably very much needed.

01 November 2024

Taking care of business.

Leaving in a few hours, and my laptop was approved to travel outside our geo-blocking, so I can keep up with work.  Yes, it's a vacation, and I won't stress to participate in meetings while gone, but tracking through email and not returning to an overfull inbox and missed deadlines can be restful.

Of course I made sure to vote before I leave.

The other night I took a quick break from work and delivered nine hats plus one hat-and-scarf set, plus a scarf a friend had knitted, to the Twisted Knitter collection point at our community center:

Some of these are in acrylics, others are sock yarn leftovers, and others are hand-dyed yarn from Always Be Kind Yarn, Forbidden Fiber Co., and UP North Yarns.  While it may seem absurd to use an expensive yarn for this purpose, the dyers are paid and appreciated; I get the fun of using the yarn; and somebody gets a nice warm hat!  I tag them with washing instructions, of course.

Off to the airport in an hour, for my next adventure.  I've packed yarn for more hats and a scarf.

21 October 2024

There and There Again.

After getting home from the meetings in Nashville, I was home for the weekend then had to pack and leave on the Monday for department meetings at our headquarters in Irving.  While in other times I might have stayed the intervening days, I chose to go home when the meetings ended on Wednesday evening and come back on Saturday.

The original reason for this second trip (and I'd hoped the work one would overlap, so I wouldn't have to travel twice, but it was not to be) is the Dallas Winds concert on Tuesday evening.  When I came to the July 4th concert the friend who accompanied me expressed interest, and who am I to pass up the opportunity?  Then I realized if I came on Saturday I could see a play, then the family announced a memorial service for an actor I knew and admired, held on Sunday.  So it's a busy few days here, and I supposed it's good that I had the break at home.

During those days another friend died; she had pancreatic cancer and lost the battle.  Her husband is devastated, even with the time to prepare; they'd agreed, no official memorial service.  The same day that I heard about Jo, my (honorary) aunt/godmother advised that my (honorary) godfather/uncle had died.  He was one of my mother's longest-term friends, and became a friend to my father when my parents married.  My brother and I grew up with their children, and they looked after us a few times when our parents went out of town.

So, it's been an emotional few days, especially because I was at the meetings and so had to remain professional, give a presentation, etc.

On the up side, when I went to the show last night, a friend gave me a huge bag of scarves and mitts and hats she had made to donate to people in western North Carolina, who are recovering from Hurricane Helene.  It's getting cold out there and these will be welcome.  The friend with whom I am staying, who is also donating via a friend's daughter who is at school in WNC, gave me a scarf to include.

{Yes, my title is a takeoff on this book.}

29 September 2024

DFW Fiber Fest 2024 - Charitable Giving

Every year, DFW Fiber Fest allows various charities to set up shop, so to speak.  For several years the locally-headquartered Warm Up America! has been co-hosted in the vendor hall information booth, and this year they were given their own space.  As previously reported, I took quite a few items to donate.  I debated whether to switch to a large duffle bag but decided that might entice me to bring back more yarn than I need,* so I decided to pack into the suitcase (unfortunately, not an expanding type) and a couple of totes, one of which looks enough like an oversized purse that I could carry it on the plane as my personal item.**

I also took these two sleepy kittens which a friend is collecting for her local library's Welcome Baby project.  I made them out of scraps of dishcloth cotton plus a bit of acrylic for the light purple face:

The pattern says to use DK weight yarn and mine
are of worsted, since that is what I have handy.

I made sure to get a photo of the luggage before unpacking:

Saturday night I spent a couple hours post-supper relaxing to videos and running in ends and making sure everything has tags.  I tried to photograph them by groups, but a couple items hid under other things so are in a different group.

These are blanket pieces.  WUA takes 7"x9" pieces and has
volunteers sew them into blankets.  I was trying stitches.

Eighteen hats - the nineteenth was hiding under scarves.

Four shawls, assorted sizes and shapes.

Eleven of the scarves.

Three hat-and-scarf sets.  The middle one is of a handdyed
acrylic I purchased at DFW Fiber Fest two years ago.

One more hat, a pair of mittens (also handdyed yarn), and a
striped pair I decided I don't like enough to keep.

These scarves were still in a drawer when I took the other photo.

My total is 2 blanket pieces, 19 hats, 3 hat-and-scarf sets, one hat-and-mittens set, one large pair of mittens, 13 scarves, and four shawls.  Most have a label from the yarn; a few have printed washing instructions.  I had an old worn-out duffle I'd left with friends that one brought to me, and I packed everything into it.  I was surprised that they all fit!  I printed a donation form and marked everything included.  So when I walked up with the donation, the volunteers offered to unpack and I said they didn't have to do it, I was happy to donate the duffle as it couldn't be used as luggage reliably.  One started to ask me to fill out a form and I pulled out the one I had, which was in an outside pocket.  They got very excited as I had written the number of each item on the form - the volunteers told me many people just do a checkmark at the type of donation.  Hey, it's not my first donation!

_____________________________________________________________________

* Not that I truly need yarn, you understand, but there are show colourways to collect.  And so on.

** Handily, it plus my computer bag fit under the seat in front of me, always my preference since I don't like struggling to reach into an overhead bin if I can avoid it.

15 September 2024

Socks and Shawl and Star Trek®

By some cosmic serendipity, on Star Trek Day (the show originally launched on September 8, 1966) I happened to be at a store and found socks:

I haven't watched all the sequel shows, but I am a proud Trekkie and definitely adhere to its teachings:


Last night I finally pulled out my big suitcase to begin packing for DFW Fiber Fest and realized I may have to use something larger:
Those are all the scarves and hats and blanket pieces I've made for Warm Up, America!  Not as many as I would want to donate, but it's what I made in the last year.  I also have one hat on the hook, another granny beanie, and I might have yarn enough for a third either that style or something else.

I'm also working on two toys:

A friend is collecting them for her local library.  I am using scraps of cotton worsted from the leftovers another friend provided to me.  Because they are stuffed, I really want to finish these before I go.  They have been my carry-around project for waiting in line and such, and I'm about to start the faces.  A couple long meetings this week and they will be finished.

I've printed my class information and handouts, and have supplies to gather but thankfully no homework.  Because I also have to finish at least one make-along shawl.
Almost done with the second tail, then to separate at the
waste thread for the square down the back.  I like how the
stripe of add-in yarn seems very purposeful.

I've accepted that I won't have both shawls finished.  Retired friends and acquaintances keep telling me how much time they have for knitting and crocheting and travel and hanging out with meetups and other activities and so on and on - I'll get there!  Still counting the years before retirement.

02 September 2024

Rainbow and Emergency Yarn Hats

In theory, I've been on a yarn diet this year.  It does have a number of exceptions, such as finishing a yarn series I began purchasing last year, and yarn purchased while traveling or at festivals because these are really souvenirs.

Of course, I have added to the stash otherwise, such as at the fiber group swap (which I decided doesn't entirely count because I swapped out more yarn than I brought home) and because a friend has been giving me her leftover bits to pass along to another friend who does a lot of charity knitting.  Some of which I decided would be transmitted in the form of hats, and since much of the yarn is wool and wool-blend sock yarn, which is quite fine, I've made most of the hats by holding two or three strands together.  I did do one with the yarn just singly:

I liked the neon-splash yarn enough to make this hat with
the sock yarn singly, but it's a very plain basic beanie.

When I found several balls of rainbow-y yarn I decided to figure out a way to highlight the colour changes instead of working the threads together.  This means using very fine needles, and lots of stitches, because I had to use the yarn singly because otherwise the colours would mingle.  The problem is that most of the yarns will make stripes if you knit at the number of stitches in a sock, but hats use many more because heads are bigger around than feet.

How to emphasize the rainbow for the ribbing?  Usually this is worked as part of the hat and thus with a large number of stitches around.  I decided to use a ribbing taught in a class many years ago at a historic home, where we learned to make ribbed mitts in a 18th-Century style.  This ribbing, instead of being done longways, was worked shortways.

Thus I made a long, skinny piece working one row knit, one row purl, one row knit, and repeating these three rows until it was long enough.  Luckily this happened in an orange bit so the stripes came out fairly evenly around.

Next I  grafted the starting row to the final row, and picked up stitches around.  I decided to use four balls, two that appeared to be rainbow sequence, and two that alternated the rainbow rows with grey, alternating the balls.  So I used safety pins to mark each quarter, counting the ribs, and two to mark the start of the round:

Having the two pins was helpful because I had to switch back and forth from a knit row to a purl row at that point because I wanted to use stockinette stitch to keep the stripes most clear.  So I needed to know where to switch and not accidentally continue.  I wouldn't need to do this if the hat were all of a single yarn, as the one at the top of this post is, but to keep the four panels clear I had to work intarsia, which means switching from one yarn to another at a seam:

Above are the inside and outside of one of the three regular seams.  However, the fourth seam is where I had to switch from knit to purl, and because there was only one strand of yarn I had to do a pick-up-and-knit/purl-together maneuver, which left a less pretty seam:

The final result looks fairly nice overall:

At the end, I decided that if I were doing it again, I would have started one of the grey-and-rainbow balls from the outside, and the other from the inside, so the striping would be the opposites.  On the other side, as you can see in the first pair of seam photos above, the yarn has very short stripes, which I also didn't know until I started using it.

Why am I talking about emergency yarn hats also?  I was visiting the friend who had been giving me the leftover yarns, and was trying to travel lightly.  So I also did not take many projects.  I had a cat ball that I was making for a friend, and since I was traveling on Granny Square Day I took some bits of yarn to make a hat.  Which I finished while there:
While packing I had a third project, and thought that might be excessive for a four-day trip, so I left it home.  Which meant that when I finished the pink hat, I was in need of a project!  Preferably one that used the needles I had with me, which were the size I usually use to make a double-strand sock yarn hat, because I thought the friend would have more leftovers for me.

Nope, she'd been working on other projects since my previous trip, and had only one scrap of cotton yarn in the collection box!  What is a fidgety fiberista to do?

My friend's plan for that day was to check out friends' new yarn shop (they had recently moved from their old location), then to attend a knit-and-crochet monthly hangout.  So I definitely needed a project!  I decided that I would buy some "emergency yarn" at the shop, thus helping friends and having things to do, and make charity hats so the yarn would leave my stash immediately.

At the shop I picked up a hank of Cascade Heritage Wave, and also one of Cascade Yarns Cherub Chunky Wave because the "Spring" colourway looked so pretty, even though I didn't have the correct needles.  Both were orphans, the last of their kind, so how could I not adopt them?  One of my friends insisted on using their ball winder to prepare the Heritage Wave, and pulling from both the inside and outside of the ball, I was ready to go!

When we got to the meetup, somebody had brought a bin of yarn and unfinished projects from an estate clearout.  Had I known, no shopping would be required, but I don't mind helping my friends.  Out of curiosity, I sifted through the bin, and most of the yarn was novelty or mohair, neither of which is my favourite.  In a bag at the bottom, with a couple of pattern magazines, was a half-finished blanket.  There wasn't enough yarn to finish it, and none of the patterns matched, so I decided to rip it back to a scarf-width size (since it was long enough) and bind off.  Hence the photo above.

My friend was leaving the next day (as I left to return home) for a fiber retreat at which everybody contributes to a charity collection.  My friend had seven hats and nine scarves. I told her that in my religion the number 18 is a powerfully positive one, so I gave her the scarf and hat to include in the collection.

And between the emergency yarn and some from the bin, I now have five more hats for charity:

The two deep rose ones on the left are from the Cascade Heritage Wave, both in variations of Barley Hat.  I had to finish the second one with some bits of yarn from the donation box.  In front is the hat from Cascade Yarns Cherub Chunky Wave, a basic plain beanie.  Next to it on the right is a hat of black-and-red yarn that was a partly finished sock, with not enough yarn to make a second one.  I filled it out a bit more with some black-with-red-tinge sock yarn from my friend's donations, and it's also a Barley Hat variation.  In the back is a granny beanie I made from some of the leftover yellow and gold of the repurposed blanket.  I thought of another scarf, but I'd been wanting to try this pattern and the two complimentary colours seemed just right for it.  There is enough yarn for another (for which I am reversing the colours, not that it really matters) and there might be enough remaining for a knitted beanie or mittens.

I think it is most appropriate to return these to Texas, so will be donating them to Warm Up, America! at DFW Fiber Fest later this month.  Before I make any more, I want to finish at least one of the make-along shawls; it took a while to get the rhythm of the pattern and I had to graft in a stripe of a different yarn at one point because one of my colours might run out.  All good for now, and I plunge ahead!