Non-yarn related fun!
http://www.googlism.com/
G’wan. Stick in your name. See what google thinks of you.
According to googlism:
tvini is extremely hard
tvini is next
Ooookay then!
http://www.googlism.com/
G’wan. Stick in your name. See what google thinks of you.
According to googlism:
tvini is extremely hard
tvini is next
Ooookay then!
I didn’t pick anything ending earlier than tomorrow.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=36599&item=8100043299&rd=1
Froth from Cherry Tree Hill normally retails for 36 bucks a skein. At 500 yards on a skein, this would make about five scarves or some really cool shawls. Two skeins would make a medium to large sweater. Right now the bidding’s at about a buck and a half, and this person has two skeins (two separate auctions). I found a cool sweater pattern and almost bid on both skeins, and then decided that this sweater, knit in tan loopy yarn, would make me look like I had skinned and sewn up a terrier. You may have better luck.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=3105&item=8100743531&rd=1
400 yards of scarf or afghan yarn for 5 bucks? You can’t beat that with a stick.
I wonder how these two would go together:
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=3105&item=8100351184&rd=1
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=36596&item=8100350335&rd=1
This one’s an okay deal – I just am about twelve years old and love the way they called it “doo doo.”
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=3105&item=8101014912&rd=1
Well, I had a long car trip this weekend, so I managed to finish up the “Flowers On The Go” tote and show the unfelted version(note dinosaur for scale) to the young lady who’ll receive it as a birthday gift.
This was a challenging pattern. Not necessarily challenging because it had me doing new things, but because I felt it was unclear in spots. It had two outright inaccuracies, one involving the number of stitches picked up for the bottom band, and the other involving the three-needle bind-off which attaches the handle to the top triangles. I wrote to the author of the pattern this morning, and she confirmed that yes, they fixed that about a week after it was released, but I guess I got one of the old copies. The author, Bev Galaskas, was very nice, though, and eager to fix anything else that seemed odd.
Nonetheless, it came out of the washing machine and looked really great! My husband thought it looked like a miniature sweater. It took 2 1/4 skeins of Lopi and a lot of time and effort, but it was all worth it. I just needed to block it and let it dry, then needle-felt the young lady’s name on it, and…
I attached the handles sideways. In other words, instead of running parallel to the long side of the bottom of the bag, they were perpendicular. ARRRGGGGHHH!!!
Why does this matter? Think about holding a paper grocery bag closed. You don’t bring the short sides together, as that would be awkward and bulky, and would gape. If you carried it at the end of your arm by your side, it would bump your leg. So you bring the long sides together. The mistake I made brings the wrong sides together. And of course I placed the flap for the button based on where the handles are, so that’s wrong too.
That’s not really something you can fix easily. Frankly, I think I’m better off just re-doing the whole damn thing tonight. I guess I’ve learned a lesson about double-checking EVERYTHING, because it didn’t occur to me that I should watch the order in which I was doing the triangles and i-cord, but now that I look back, obviously it was going to make a difference. Grr. Well, live and learn. My ‘bright side’ disposition leads me to say that at least I can use this bag as a canvas to practice needle-felting on.