« October 2007 | Main | December 2007 »

November 30, 2007

Friday!!

So glad the weekend is here!! Here's some high energy Pearl Jam to kick it off!

Last night I worked on Cherie Amour - I hadn't knit a stitch since MONDAY. I was seriously feeling "off". I am now done with the hip lace section and am about five rows into the waist ribbing. I'm going to do a couple more rounds of that, then try it on to see how it's looking. I am a little concerned as I'm getting the gauge with Tahki Bunny Print, a lighter bulky yarn, and other people are using worsted weight. The original pattern says it's for bulky weight yarn, and it seems to look good so far. I'm not going to worry about it - we'll see what it looks like as I go along. If it isn't good, I'll just rip.

This weekend I have to do the parts on my shirt that I can do on my own. I went over the pattern guidesheet with my teacher on Tuesday agreeing on what parts I should be able to do on my own without a problem, and which I should wait for her on. She was telling me I could start the sleeves, but I am nervous about that. I might sew them (basting first, my new best friend in sewing techniques) together but I am not attempting to ease in the sleeves on my own. No way.

Other than that, Jim and I are going out with Stefanie and Tom for sushi tonight at our favorite restaurant, Blu Coral. We're going out to Morton's tomorrow night with Tim. I hate going out two nights in a row, but Tim made the reservations for tomorrow already so that's fine. I've been really good this last week - eating really healthy every day, small portions, and no wine since last Friday!

Have a great weekend!

November 29, 2007

Vacation Styles

I found out about this site through an article in the Wall Street Journal a few days ago. It is kind of fun to do the quiz and see what type of vacation works best for you. It seems pretty right on in its assessment of me and my vacation style:

As a mid-venturer, your personality fits between venturers and those more in the center of the personality spectrum ("centrics"). You share a number of characteristics in common with pure venturers. You like to travel, especially to foreign destinations and you seek new experiences and new destinations for almost all trips you take. You are also physically active at home and on trips. But, unlike your pure venturer friends, you don't want to take such extreme vacations and are more likely to plan your trips-set an itinerary of places you want to visit and schedules when you will be there. You also have more company. About 17% of the population has a personality that matches yours, vs. only 4% for pure venturers.
Your venturesome spirit leads you to seek out unique and interesting places to visit and especially to make each leisure trip different from others that you have taken. You may want to return to a place that seemed interesting but you didn't have time to explore on an earlier visit, but usually you simply want to try something new. However, there's a big difference between you and your true venturer friends: you like a comfortable bed at night (no sleeping under the stars), a warm shower, and meals that you can trust rather than taking a chance on native foods. You listen carefully to the unique travel tales of your friends and associates, or read heavily, to learn about the hidden, but interesting out of the way places that others have not yet become popular or have only recently gotten some publicity. The press has given your group a name -- the jet-set. Your interest in what's new and what's happening leads you to be one of the first to visit destinations that seem to have a new ambience, or book a few days at a new spa or resort you read about in a travel magazine, or tour a country that until recently was closed to visitors. Travel providers absolutely love you because you are central in making new destinations popular. Airlines, hotels and restaurants should give you special treatment since they benefit from the travel choices you make. You'll tell your friends about a great trip you just had and they will want to do the same when they get some time off.

Like pure venturers, you like adventure travel -- but of a different type. Physical exertion is fine, if it isn't extreme. If you took a bicycle tour of New England in the fall, you want to stop at interesting places for lunch and bed down at night in a quaint inn, rather than sleep out under the stars. And you prefer to have a van follow behind to pick you up and ride to the next overnight stop in case you or your partner feel a bit exhausted.

History holds a great fascination for many mid-venturers. But if you've seen Buckingham Palace and the Eiffel Tower, or traced Paul Revere's route in New England, you don't need to repeat the experience. Rather, you'd prefer to stop in lesser known old cities and enjoy the ambience created by old buildings that exude their own sense of importance and romance, especially if they're not listed in guide books. To discover an ancient monastery, old fort or historic building quite by chance and wander through quiet interiors unhampered by crowds, offers an opportunity to imagine what mysteries it holds and tales of romance or tragedy.

Even your media habits don't follow the norm. Typically you read more than most -- books, magazines and newspapers -- and watch TV less. When you turn on the "tube," you are much less likely to prefer any of the top ten sitcoms or "soaps." Instead, you'll seek out dramas, special news magazine format shows, and selected sports (as football and basketball; you have less interest in baseball or hockey). Consistent with your travel interests, you particularly like fact based television shows or dramas in a historic setting, and programs that explain the workings of some of our modern marvels. You hold definitive opinions about much of what you see happening in the world, especially politics, and strongly prefer commentators who agree with your views.

Exercise and good health habits -- proper diet, some use of vitamins and supplements, and following a disciplined routine to get enough sleep and exercise, even when you travel -- are more likely to be part of your daily commitment than is true for most people you know. You may prefer participating in individual sports, such as skiing or singles tennis, rather than those that are more social such as golf or bowling. You are likely to own exercise equipment at home, a treadmill or a stair climber.

You like technology and probably have a heavy loading of it as part of your daily life. Typically you will not be the first to try out new hi-tech products-that distinction belongs to the pure venturers. You're likely get on the bandwagon when they new product or service has shown that it has some relevance to your daily business or home life. But you are still willing to buy these items long before they have become so popular that they have dropped dramatically in price. More than is true for most groups included in this personality scale, you are likely to be an opinion leader. Since you show a willingness to accept innovation and change, but with a common sense attitude about it (use what is good and discard what doesn't help in some way), others look to you for guidance and direction on what to buy, choices to make in their lives, and the kinds of trips that they might like to take. This combination of character traits-mild risk taking, common sense in the decisions you make, and a friendly and outgoing personality-usually contributes to success in your career. More than most, you are likely to hold a senior position of responsibility in your company and will continue to advance in the future.

In looking for destinations that will satisfy your intellectual curiosity, seek out those that measure higher for venturers. You share so many traits in common with that group that most of these places will help ensure that your next trip will hold the enjoyment and contribute to the kinds of memories that you want. But make certain these places have adequate hotels and restaurants.

November 28, 2007

Sewing Success!

I got my graded skirts back last night in class and I got a B+! I think the teacher must have graded on effort, not results - I actually said that to her after getting my grade and she downplayed that, saying that she could tell I knew what I was supposed to do and was learning. She also said what everyone else has - that sewing takes lots of practice to get good. She said that when she started she had trouble getting her topstitching straight for awhile.

So whew! What a relief. I know I shouldn't care about grades in this program anyway, as I already have 1.) an undergrad accounting degree 2.) a master's in tax and 3.) will have an MBA one year from now. However, that perfectionist tendency comes out and I can't just ignore the whole grading aspect.

Yay!

Also, my button-down shirt is actually coming together very well! I made all the darts in the front and back (it has normal darts in the front and then these long "princess seam" type darts in the front and back) and everything still lined up (notches, raw edges, etc.) when I basted the shoulder seams and side seams together. It actually fits quite well!! I have to do something about the length of it, which I could have done before I cut out the pattern, but this time I was primarily just trying to get everything to fit together correctly. We are using sergers to finish all the seams on the shirt, so I got mine threaded just in time!!

I'm so glad I stuck with this even though I was so frustrated before. Thanks again to everyone for their encouraging comments - it helped so much more than you can know!

November 27, 2007

Holiday Gifts

I have a few more knitted gifts to make this year besides the ones for the kids - mainly for this party Jim and I attend each year at a close friend and co-worker's house on Christmas Eve. On Christmas Day, we see Vicki and Frank, the cousins (our age) and the kids, but on Christmas Eve we really didn't have much of a tradition. My friend Mary at work started inviting us to her Christmas Eve dinner party, which is comprised of a small group of couples. It's a great time and a nice holiday tradition for us, so I'm glad we started attending.

Anyway, for the guys I will be giving bottles of wine from our Michigan trip, but for the women, I will be making gifts. I figured out that I would make a felted bucket hat (Bonne Marie pattern) for one older lady who loves hats, and a pair of Fetching gloves for one of the other ladies. I checked my stash as I thought I had a skein of Debbie Bliss Cashmerino Aran in just the right color (she likes pinks and wine colors) and the skein I had was DB Cashmerino Chunky instead, which I checked the yardage on and it is significantly less than the Aran. A trap for the unwary....

So rather than screwing around trying to find two skeins of the right color of yarn in a LYS (as I went just over one skein on my first pair) I decided to just buy it on Ebay just now. Here's the picture from the auction:


dbcasharan-wine

Bad picture, but isn't it a pretty color? I think it will make very pretty Fetching gloves.

As far as other gifts, I am debating whether to make my admin anything this year. I think she would like a pair of Fetchings too, and maybe I can squeeze them out of the light blue skein I have in stash by making them a little shorter. For the other guy in my department, I think I'll do a Morton's gift card - last year we got him a gift card for one of those Brazilian steakhouse restaurants and he and his wife really liked it.

For the exchange at Vicki's and Frank's - we always buy both of them gifts and buy the kids gifts - the three you saw on my blog are the only ones as cousin Tracy is the only one who has kids- but then draw names for the cousins. This year Jim and I got his cousin Michael and his partner Tommy. They are both 30 and live in St. Louis. Michael is pretty fashion forward and is a regional manager for a national clothing store chain and Tommy is more domestic and works as an event planner. Damned if I know what to get them. I don't have the inclination to make sweaters, and I have no ideas on home decor as I haven't seen their house. Any ideas? Maybe a pair of Dashing fingerless gloves for one of them, some other small knitted gift for the other, and a restaurant gift card? Anyone know of good St. Louis restaurants? I think Tommy doesn't eat meat, so no steak. Any and all suggestions would be appreciated!

November 26, 2007

Started Cherie Amour!

I needed a knitting project that was at an appropriate stage to work on today during a mind-numbing 1 1/2 hour conference call (that seriously involved someone reading every word of a 20+ page IT project business requirements document - yeah) so I decided to start Cherie Amour this afternoon.

So far, so good - right now it kind of looks like a pile-o-wool (and maybe Halloween-themed wool at that) but at least you can see the colors.

112607 002

I am using some Tahki Bunny Print from my stash that has been waiting patiently for a project for the better part of two years. I got it on sale at a yarn shop closing (maybe 40% off?) and it is the second colorway I got (the other was a blue-green mix that I used for a sweater that I need to redo the sleeves on.)

As it's knit from the bottom up, in the round, and is a longer tunic style sweater, I even put it on waste yarn just now and tried it on to make sure it would look right around the bottom and it fits well. Not clingy, just right.

November 25, 2007

Weekend in Pictures!!

OK, I just had a monster post written and I flipped back and forth editing and previewing it too many times in Typepad so I LOST THE WHOLE THING. I know I should save drafts. My bad.

So I had a great weekend - this will be a post of few words, many pictures as I can't write all of that out again! The pictures say it all anyway...

Drive Thru

112507 007

Cabo Hoodie

112507 008

Mirepoix

112507 001


Sewing - started shirt - crooked on J.Lo but not sewn that way- not sure about print but it is COTTON so should be easy to work with:

112507 005

If this doesn't show my newly revitalized commitment to sewing, I don't know what would:

112507 006


Picture-Less (Free?) Updates:

- Got serger threaded and WORKING with Jim's help for final lower looper threading detail - figured it out now and I am now a serger threading pro after two hours of time well spent.

- Tilted Duster - no pic - cast on at Thanksgiving and finished back and both fronts that day. Will be trying on after seaming top sections for go-no go decision!


- No pics from Thanksgiving, but I got a bunch of other digital photos from the last family get-together in September (MIL/FIL's 50th wedding anniversary)


- McKenna wants me to teach her to "sew"; some soft purple yarn, special kids' knitting needles (one red, one blue, both blunt pointed) and a plastic crochet hook will be included among her Christmas gifts - we'll see what sticks!!

- Tried new restaurant/wine bar in Downers Grove called "Stillwater" with Jim - pretty good, but not outstanding

Hope everyone had a fabulous (holiday) weekend!!

November 21, 2007

Awww, I Am So Thankful for You Guys!!

I just was reading the comments from my "Frustrated" post yesterday and you all are the best! It is so appropriate that the day before Thanksgiving (in the U.S.) I see even more than ever what a great group of friends you all are! Thank you so much. It means the world to me to hear that sewing is, in fact, difficult, and that it will come in time. Please don't let this post discourage you from adding your thoughts to the other one yesterday if you haven't already commented, but I can tell you I feel sooooo much better already reading the comments. My heart is so warmed by the encouragement and it really has helped already. I won't be giving up!! I really haven't been doing this that long, so I really need to be more patient and less tough on myself. That perfectionist tendency of mine is such a double-edged sword. It can be really helpful sometimes, but very much an impediment other times.

Thank you again - for those of my friends in the U.S. who celebrate Thanksgiving, as well as all my other great friends from around the world - please know how thankful I am this year for each of you.

November 20, 2007

Frustration

I had a very very frustrating sewing class tonight. I brought Skirt #2 and Skirt #3 with me to class. Both had different issues.

Skirt #2 had the zipper sewn in, but I had trimmed the seam allowances on the waistband too early so the facing didn't fit together right; also its fabric had been worn away in spots near the zipper from taking it out and reinstalling it so many times. It just needed a hem.

Skirt #3 was the one I restarted this weekend (I keep re-starting skirts to try to get everything perfect.) On this one, I got the stitching-in-the-ditch done pretty well when connecting the skirt's waistband to the facing, and the zipper was right. Also the side seams were lining up almost perfectly with the waistband and facing seams. It needed a facing and hem when I walked into class.

On Skirt #3, I figured out the stitch in the ditch (not done right on Skirt #2) but still had trouble getting everything to fit together. I hadn't followed the pattern's instructions on either skirt, based on my teacher's direction to put in the waistband first, then the zipper, so it would go to the top of the skirt, but then didn't know how it was all supposed to come together. I showed it to the substitute after I got the facing on and she was less than helpful, saying that she wished I would have shown her before I put the facing on. Whatever. THANKS.

My original plan was to do the hem on Skirt #2 first so I'd have something to turn in. However, I didn't have time to hand sew the hem, so I machine sewed it. Which would have been fine if I was able to figure out the blind hem foot and stitch on my machine. I was able to do it on a swatch when the (substitute) teacher figured out how to fold it for me (I could NOT understand the diagram in my sewing machine's manual to save my life) but could not figure it out on the skirt. So I sewed it like a jeans hem and said, done, whatever.


I turned in both skirts, with a note saying that I was sorry this wasn't my best work, but that the shirt (next project) will be better. However, they showed a video in class on how to do the shirt, and aside from the fact that they used a GLUE STICK in parts of it to baste pieces together, everything looked impossible. It is taking everything in me not to quit this class, and honestly, sewing altogether.

I'm looking around at my serger, my new sewing machine and all of the fabric I have, and saying, I really have too much into this to quit, and there are a lot of techniques I have mastered (although not as many as the skirt required.) On the other hand, I am saying, maybe I just say I gave it a shot, my best shot, and I should know when to give up on something that is not my forte (understanding construction of things.) I understand the construction of different items after I've seen them come together, which is better than I was about this, but I still don't understand the facing/waistband/zipper intersection.

I am trying to figure out which way to go here and I am trying to be positive about what I've learned so far (which is a lot) and stop dwelling on what I don't know yet. But I'm having serious doubts and wondering if I should do something that isn't going against the grain (no pun intended, well maybe so.) Knitting always WORKS for me. No problems. I just wonder if I should just concentrate on that and on the knitting designs that are swirling around in my mind that I want to create, and that I know I can create.

Sorry for the Debbie Downer post, but I'm really upset and am just trying to get this out and figure out what to do. A big part of me just wants to quit this class and all of this sewing on a deadline (which is stressing me out doubly because work is going crazy). The other part of me says that I've gotten this far, that I need to persevere and see what else I can learn.

On one positive note, a big reason I think I am messing up is that we stopped doing the samples in class. I think maybe if I'm going to stick with this, I need to come up with my own samples of things and do them over and over if necessary until they're perfect. Zippers, and the infamous waistband/facing/zipper combo. In my mind, the issue is figuring out the point at which I should give up and call it a day, though. Maybe this shouldn't be this difficult, and that's what's bothering me. Is this really this HARD?

November 18, 2007

Weekend Recap

I feel like I got a lot done this weekend!! Got a lot of knitting in, got back into my Voyager audiobook (3rd book in the series by Diana Gabaldon) and am really into it again, started and got about halfway through another skirt, bought a new sewing chair, and even did some closet purging a la Tim Gunn's Guide to Style.

First, I worked a lot on Bounce and actually finished it except for sewing in the elastic at the waist.

111807 002

I also finished the second sleeve on Drive Thru but don't have a picture, as I didn't start the yoke yet (so nothing of interest to see yet.)

I am almost done with the first sleeve of the Cabo Hoodie and am really liking how this is looking now. More of the white streaks in the second skein of Malabrigo are coming through on the sleeves and it looks more balanced now.

111807 001

Here's my second skirt from the same pattern I'm using for my class project - the first one just needs to be hemmed as I finished the facing on that yesterday too. I'll show that one then. This one needs a facing and hemming.

111807 003


I bought a new sewing chair today as mine was being shared with the computer and also doesn't work well for sewing (back is not close enough, seat is not short enough to be comfortable for that.) Here it is - it is super comfy on my back (which was hurting every time I would sew for awhile in the old chair.)

111807 004


I worked on my closet as well, "purging" a number of things that were OK but weren't fabulous and/or I hadn't worn them in a while. The big Container Store bag is all the giveaway clothes; the Ulta bag is the giveaway shoes and the garbage can contains a number of dead sandals that had outworn their lifespan.

111807 005

Overall, I got a lot done and am happy with my weekend!! I just don't want to go back to work. Thankfully it is only a short week: Monday through Wednesday (at 2 pm.)

Hope everyone had a great weekend!

November 17, 2007

Look at who was having fun with my fabric and patterns!!

111707 001

About Me

  • I'm a happily married 30-something obsessive knitter and sewer(ist?) My day job is in tax at a mid-size public company, but my dream is to find a way to make money from my true passions! I'm RobinM on Ravelry if you want to stop by and say hi!
  • Yahoo! Avatars
Blog powered by TypePad
My Photo

Credits

  • Credit to Matthew Harvey for Percentage Bars code below; also thanks to Tricotine for her help with configuring in TypePad!

Knitting WIPs

  • Mentionable (Knit and Tonic)

  • Lacy Little Top (LanaKnits)

  • Forecast (Stefanie Japel - Winter 2005 Knitty)

  • Mirepoix Bodice (Fall '07 IK)

  • Silk Slip (Knitting Lingerie Style)

Sewing WIPs

  • Anna Tunic -Amy Butler Design

  • Shirt 2.0 - New Look 6407

  • Green Paisley Skirt - New Look 6758

  • Knit Wrap Dress - New Look 6429

  • Knit Top - New Look 6729

Waiting in the Wings

  • Orangina (BSCF Version - Gauge Rework)
  • Blanche - Just Call Me Ruby
  • Marlo
  • Sahara (Stitchdiva.com)
  • Long Sleeved Ballet T (back issue of IK)

Pattern Reviews

  • Pattern Reviews

Blogs I Read

KALs

music