Archive for September, 2009

The One With The One With All Ten Seasons

*Knock*

*Frantic barking*

IT’S HERE!!!!!!!!!

Something I’ve been wanting to get for years and years!

Thanks to my most generous husband who bought it for me. :) We can now enjoy every single episode of FRIENDS when the kids aren’t screaming.

Oh by the way, I’ve joined Twitter. You can stalk follow me (I don’t know how, but somehow you can follow me!) here, I think.

I’m very new and very clueless at it so please play nice! :D

And uh.. let me know if you want me to follow you. :D Leave a message!

So Quiet Here!

Anybody lurking around still? :D

Here’s what I’ve done for spinning:

This is blue merino roving that I bought from the Bendigo Wool show. I had 150g of it and managed to spin them into 2 bobbins of very fine singles- a great improvement from slubby thick/thin singles!

Then I plied them together:

Looks good no? :D I’m so proud of my first, non slubby handspun!

I wrote down the yardage but misplaced it (whats new?) and will have to reskein it to find out the yardage again. Grrr.

Now for pictures of little Chubbs who fell asleep at the table in Nad’s arms:

He’s into sucking his thumb nowadays and has been very interested in his toes/feet. He would grab on to them and stare at them while gurgling to himself! Very very cute.

And this is what I’ve been doing with myself these few days:

I’m designing some knitwear for kids! This is the first ‘sample’ I’m knitting up.

It took many days of planning and rough sketches before I sat down to start knitting this. (Actually, I was trying to finish a shawl as a gift to my neighbour for her wedding before I cast on *yet* another project.)

While writing this pattern this morning, I did the calculations and wrote everything down. BUT, had to rip back 3 times because I couldn’t get the stitch counts correct!

It was when I spoke to Lulu over msn that I realised that I had written;

8 x 8 = 48

on the very top of the pattern.

-__________-

And I am supposed to be one of the top students in maths class!

I must say, however, that I have new respect for all the knitwear designers out there who have amazing designs offered for free. It takes A LOT of patience and calculations to get stitch counts correct! To translate a design from a sketch on paper to a ‘real’ knitted garment takes a lot of brain juice and time. The generosity and ingenuity of these many designers warms my heart and I think one should never take free patterns (or even paid ones for that matter) for granted, let alone breaching copyrights and doing other despicable acts like selling them illegally etc. Doing such things will only discourage designers and jeopardise the availability of these free patterns.

I am trying to give back to this awesome community of knitters by coming up with these patterns which I hope will not cause me too much anguish and time to write. I might have to look for some test knitters but will advertise for it after I’ve knitted up a successful sample.

The yarn in this project is Malabrigo Merino Worsted, one of my favourite yarn (seeing how I’m selling it in my store). And the colourway is also one of my most favouritestestest – Oceanos.

I’ve been winding my skeins by hand into yarn balls instead of using the ballwinder to wind them into yarn cakes. Although I risk having the skein slipping from my knees while I catch falling children/ wipe their snotty noses/ die from a myocardial infarction, I still prefer the feel of a ball to a cake in my hands. If ya know wad I mean.

Besides, a yarn ball is harder and I can fling it in the direction of Nad’s head when he says something unpleasant to my ear. Tee hee.

Some photos to distract you

Photos were taken with my mobile phone – which explains the graininess and low quality.

Sorry people. I’ve been busy again. It’s so hard to get things done around here with the kids

HOW do people have 10 kids and still stay sane!?!?

On the news side:

Our regular place for grocery shopping, Spud Shed, has been burnt down a few days back. See this link.

Both Nad and I are shocked. We were just there a few days before it was burned down. The staff there have always been very kind to us and they adore the kids. They sometimes give us free veges and their produce have always been fresh, despite their low prices!

They have made living here very affordable for us when we were broke. God really helped us by showing us this little treasure trove.

We feel very very sad for the owner and the employees. And also sad that we would now have to shop in the bigger, more expensive supermarts now.

Nad was just telling me a few days ago, “When you choose the spuds (potatoes), don’t choose the small ones! They are so difficult to peel.”

Well.. now I can’t even choose them! Because Spud Shed has burned down. :(

Will try to update soon. Am doing a lot of crafty stuff now. Too many at one go, actually. Kinda overwhelmed. Which is not good. Coz they are supposed to make me relax.

What have you been up to?

If I don’t want to be a Doctor…

Owning an online wool store (www.yarnandkisses.com) and having to deal with posting out parcels every week, I often wonder to myself what goes on in the letters/parcels sorting process.

The geek in me…… okay, who am I kidding.. THE Geek, ME, loves to watch or read about large scale productions or processing and I’ve often fantasied about taking a tour around the postal facilities.

That’s right. Should I change my mind about being a doctor (trying my darnest best now to get into MBBS in 2 years time), I would want to be a postal worker. (Not a worker gone postal… although that’s another story altogether)…

I did a search on Google and found this link with a video that shows how USPS works. However, the video didn’t satisfy my curiosity as it didn’t have much details. I need details! Tell me how the whole system works!

So I found this link. (As you can see, I SEEM to have loads of time to search for stuff that ‘normal’ people don’t give a 2nd thought about.. hehehe).

Ohh I had trouble keeping my heart from skipping beats. Such detailed explanation! (Somewhere, someone reading this is going to say, “Shut up, you dork!” but I don’t care. :P   )

Machines that can READ HANDWRITTEN ADDRESSES AND POST CODES! Can you IMAGINE THAT?!?! Woohoo! This must be the greatest invention ever!!! (Who cares about inventions like lightbulbs and toilet bowls when you CAN HAVE A MACHINE TO READ HANDWRITTEN ADDRESSES?!?!?)

This is why everyone of you should write PROPERLY and LEGIBLY so that these awesome machines can read your handwriting and send the letter to the correct address. Okay?

And oh… it doesn’t stop there!

Check this out!

Because these items (packages) vary so greatly in size it is difficult to design a machine which would accommodate all of them. Instead, packets are sorted manually. Sometimes they are placed on a conveyor and sorted by operators along the track.

One may wonder where can one apply for the position of ‘sorting operator for packages along the conveyor’?

I’m pretty sure I’m not just speaking for myself. I’m sure you’d want to be a Sorting Operator For Packages Along The Conveyor too! Who wouldn’t like such a brilliant job?

It’s a pity that stamps are canceled (or ‘chopped’) by machines nowadays (did you also know that they have machines that can detect the ‘right side’ of the envelopes by searching for the presence of stamps? They can even FLIP THE ENVELOPES to search for the stamps!!!!!!) err.. where was I?

Oh.. it’s a pity that stamps are canceled (or chopped’) by machines nowadays because a Manual Stamp Chopping Operator job comes pretty close to the Sorting Operator For Packages Along The Conveyor job for me! I wouldn’t be able to choose between these two if I had to. Maybe I can go on rotation?

I’m pretty sure I will be dreaming of touring postal facilities tonight.

Oh come on……! I’m sure I’m not the only one who thinks about these things often from time to time!

Off to write a cover letter: RE: APPLICATION FOR THE POSITION OF MAIL SORTING OPERATOR ALONG THE CONVEYOR

Napa the Pear!

I finished this!!!!!!!!!!

I finished it last night and did the stem and leaf this morning. Sunshine named it “Napa”. I have no idea why.

I’m very honored to be chosen by Salihan for her free kit! I was unsure at first as I’m very very bad at crochet but I’m so happy that she sent it to me as I’ve learned so much from crocheting this pear!

Salihan sent me a ball of Panda Zoomy (I chose green) and some brown and some green yarn to crochet the stem and leaf. And also safety eyes for the pear. And of course, her awesome pattern.

I had to buy a 6.5mm crochet hook as I didn’t have any, I started on the pear, frogged, started again, frogged again… and then just when I got to the end of the increases (which was quite a lot done!), I went to Salihan’s video tutorial and found out that I was crocheting WRONG!

Lets just say that I did unnecessary steps and was using much more yarn than ‘normal’ and it really looked like I was running out of yarn. So, I FROGGED IT AGAINNN!!! My mum did it for me so that I could avoid uncontrollable tears pouring out from my eyes if I were to frog it myself.

But there is a silver lining in every dark cloud…… I learned the proper way to crochet and enjoyed the process much much more. It’s no longer something ‘frightening’ to me. :D And crochet, although uses more yarn than knitting (to obtain the same sized object), is much much faster. I finished Napa in less than 2 days (not counting the froggings)!

A note to people who intend to crochet this though – You MIGHT run out of yarn! I didn’t have enough at the end and had to cut away the long tail from the first ‘cast on’ (is that what you call your first slip knot in crochet? I have no idea!) and joined it to the end. Even then, I didn’t have enough to decrease all the way and was forced to close up the pear without completing the decreases.
Maybe I’m just a loose hooker (haha!) and use more yarn than others?

So if you’re a loose hooker (this never gets old!) like me, best to stand by with more yarn!

Oh oh! I forgot to mention that I embroidered the mouth in another shape than the original pattern. It’s a kissy pouty lip mouth ( ’3′) <– like that. Does it look cute? Hehehhe!

Once again, thank you Salihan for giving me the chance to crochet this pear.

If you are interested in this pattern, pop over to Salihan’s shop. She has patterns as well as finished pears for sale. :)