tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9620168226018708132024-03-07T10:50:24.154-08:00i still have t e n s i o nand one more row isn't going to help anything.Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.comBlogger9125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-1995151902047840112007-01-11T06:24:00.000-08:002007-01-11T06:43:42.928-08:00Ten Things Thursday- Part 31. I think I accidentally discovered the center of the universe for young professionals last night. My friend Martha and I had dinner in Washington Square at a place called Publick House (formerly known as Anam Cara which I had been to before). There I was, stuck in a throng of people who were all well dressed, having intelligent conversations, and being well educated. How much of this did I actually make up in my mind though? I think it was projection...<br /><br />2. I might just be a lover of Belgian beer- I'm not sure. There's something about the orange peel and coriander that makes it unique- almost a white wine beer even. A good white wine at that.<br /><br />3. No matter what though, I'm a red wine kind of guy. Cabernet Sauvignon especially. I like to think the wine I drink is a perfect reflection of myself. Cab Sav, what with being so dark, so complex, and so bold, resembles how I view myself spot on.<br /><br />4. I once spent a whole summer that I had no money having nothing but cheese and cheap champagne for dinner. Luckily I wasn't alone in doing this.<br /><br />5. Yes, this has become a slightly alcohol related post. I figure we're adults, we have a past or present with it, why not mention it? <br /><br />6. One of my favorite Boston Moments was sitting with friends on a roof deck on Beacon Hill, drinking prosecco, and eating greasy pizza. I think that's why I'm so fond of prosecco during the summer- it's my attempt to recapture a moment that I could have lived in forever. <br /><br />7. I prefer not to drink and knit. But maybe there's such a thing as knitter's goggles that if you've been drinking and you're around someone wearing something handknit, they automatically become that much more attractive?<br /><br />8. The first thing I notice now when I go into a restaurant or in a new social situation is how many people are wearing a knit of any kind. My eyes tend to flock to it more than anything else.<br /><br />9. I had a fascinating conversation about identity last night that I want to expand into something more substantial. Knitting was a major part of that discussion naturally.<br /><br />10. I won't be drinking at all this weekend but I will be knitting. Back to basics- a cabled scarf for a co-worker. Then, planning stages for other projects. <br /><br />Happy Thursday everyone.Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-8538314638907404022007-01-04T13:53:00.000-08:002007-01-04T14:01:33.043-08:0010 Things Thursday Part 2I figured if I'm going to start something, I might as well actually keep up with it. With that in mind, here's version 2 of Ten Things Thursday. <br /><br />1. I've been slightly addicted to <a href="http://www.facebook.com">Facebook</a> recently- more for the odd reason of seeing how much I need to accomplish to seem like I'm in the same court as all the people I know from high school.<br /><br />2. Elsebeth Lavold Silky Wool just rocks my world. <br /><br />3. The EZ sweater is nearing completion. I've struggled with it a lot but now I'm being super meticulous and it's working out in my advantage. My hands already know what to do- they are just begging me to hurry up and finish. <br /><br />4. I'm wanting to hurry and finish because at the holiday party at work, my present contribution was a hand knit item. So, I want to finish that by the end of the month. The project? Why a pink scarf! The big question is- how will said pink scarf work? This needs to be established soon.<br /><br />5. I think I lie to myself. I believe I actually like knitting in groups as tonight I'm heading out to Woolcott and Co for some chatting and knitting.<br /><br />6. I've started to design stripes again.. almost compulsively to be honest. I'm hoping to make sure they at least translate into something knitted eventually. <br /><br />7. Me, I might just be a jewelry maker soon. That is, if my hands are ever free from...<br /><br />8. All the design projects I'm planning! I figure it's time to just go all out and see what this boy can do. There was this great quote sent at my work that basically said it's better to fail at what you love then succeed at what you hate. <br /><br />9. I might be falling in love with miso soup. Anybody have suggestions for amazing miso soup in Boston?<br /><br />10. The color brown. That's it. The color brown. It deserves two fragments it's so beautiful. <br /><br />- JeffKnitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-17737894975963997352007-01-02T05:15:00.000-08:002007-01-02T05:23:15.132-08:00My Knit Year's ResolutionsFunny enough, I don't think I've made any hard and fast resolutions for this year. Mostly I'm just hoping for peace inside myself and courage/energy to tackle the challenges that will be thrown my way. Throw in acceptance of things I can't change too- that's always a nice one.<br /><br />Knitting though- now there's a place to make resolutions!<br /><br />1. Try and become a more social knitter- maybe even attend a group of some sort.<br /> <br />2. Year of the sweater. While I've started over 3 times on the current sweater I'm working on, it's been more of a friend rather than a project. When I go home at night, I know the sweater is there to work on. As long as I pick fiber that I love, colors that excite me, or a pattern that I can't wait to finish, I'll have all the knitting needs I have met in the sweater.<br /><br />3. Eschew perfection but aim for precision and thoughtfulness in my knits. If a mistake happens, try and implement any technical skills I have to try and maneuver around it or get rid of it. But don't start the whole project over again if it can't be resolved. <br /><br />4. Experiment and/or design. While endless stockinette is fun, it's not so much of a challenge, is it? I resolve to pick up my Barbara Walker and EZ books and really see how I can get the images in my mind onto fabric. <br /><br />5. Get a better camera and blog more. Nuff said there!<br /><br />Happy New Year!Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-57592468295193262342006-12-26T12:08:00.000-08:002006-12-26T12:14:01.792-08:00Pre-Sale JittersYou know what's weird? Before a sale today at <a href="http://www.woolcottandco.com">Woolcott and Co.</a>, I'm getting the jitters. I think it's because I know how crazy I can go during a sale. And with the Pemaquid at 25% off, it might not even stand a chance because I could use some amazing, warm, and colorful alpaca hats. Well, not hats for alpacas but hats for me made out of alpacas (and definitely not made by alpacas though that would be quite a wonder to see)<br /><br />What else tempts me before a sale?<br /><br />- Lots and lots of Elsebeth Levold Silky Wool<br />- All of Barbara Walker's Knitting Treasuries<br />- Rowan Tapestry (I'm curious about making a Clapotis)<br />- Anything Elizabeth Zimmerman<br />- Fun kids yarns for 2 Baby Surprise jackets<br /><br />Oh there's just too much! <br /><br />So in 23 minutes, I'm off. Perhaps I should call my credit card company beforehand. Nah! Luckily I have some yarn protection inside that says Thou Shall Not Stash. Plus I may not have as much time for knitting now as the winter is picking up and I'm wanting to pick up some other things for variety such as beading, writing, and most importantly, knitting's new cousin, designing! This may even include a new business by me so be on the lookout. I'd love the support. <br /><br />What makes you giddy before a yarn sale?Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-71451221906657857342006-12-22T05:40:00.000-08:002006-12-22T06:10:30.719-08:00In A Knitting Haze (Mary Poppins Version)Excuse me in advance, I'm writing this post in a knitting haze. Unfortunately it's the bad knitting haze, not the good one. While I'm waiting for the big spurt of energy to hit me to rip back my Seamless Saddle Shoulder sweater, I've been trying to start a hat. But the same attention required for ripping back is needed with this cast on. One day I will learn <a href="http://sprboston.com/seanssoapbox.html">Sean</a>'s method of long tail cast on requiring no estimation. So now let's try and break through the haze.<br /><br />The Sweater: <br /><br />So far I've accomplished:<br /><br />- The Rocking hem. A beautiful masterpiece of purple/red hem hidden beneath the Coast Grey color of Swish Superwash from Knitpicks. The hem technique is great and made especially easy with the Knitpicks interchangable needles. Doing the hem inspired my first use of a provisional cast on (the crochet method), first time undoing said cast on, and making a hem of any sort. The people who've seen this part so far have enjoyed this color combination. For those searching KnitPicks, look for Swish Superwash in the Coast Grey and Bordeaux. One word of advice though. When doing a hem, do not watch Mary Poppins. Suddenly you'll find yourself singing<br /><br />"A spoonful of sugar helps the hem come together, the hem come together, the hem come together."<br /><br />- A Body and Sleeves. I proved it to myself that I have the knitting stamina required for long periods of garment construction. Granted there was no shaping needed except for some m1s on the sleeves but I always doubted that I could do that. Of course Sean never did and once again he's right! But I knew the challenging part was coming ahead. Luckily I had Julie Andrews at my side again.<br /><br />"When the hem's done and the sleeve's right, when the body's done, I simply remember my favorite knits and then I don't feel so bad" <br /><br />- Saddle Decreasing. Right before you start the saddles, you do this wonderful decreasing that looks like pearls that just jumped out of an oyster. Small, detailed, but gorgeous when in smooth alignment. To me, this was the most fun I've had with knitting in a while. By a while though I mean since the hem, the sleeves, and the body. This whole project has been a wonderful time. <br /><br />"Oh it's a jolly holiday with k2togs. No wonder that it's decreases that we love"<br /><br />Then everything fell apart. Big gaping holes due to the SSKs, more gaping holes due to no W&Ts on the neck, wrong size needles, and revelation that you can be so close but have to start all over again. <br /><br />"Sad saddle shoulder, sad saddle shoulder, sad shoulder-y, <br />a weeping is me, a weeping much to see"<br /><br />But then I remember it's knitting and I can rip it back. If Justin Timberlake can bringing SexyBack, I can bring RippingBack. <br /><br />And now it really doesn't feel that bad.Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-82331225477728790852006-12-14T16:54:00.000-08:002006-12-14T17:11:32.545-08:00No, I Will Not Confirm/Purl on DemandIt's a restless world enough as it is. But the workplace always seems to magnify that reality to an irritating degree. Constantly the phone is ringing, people are micromanaging you, and making you confirm this or confirm that. ENOUGH!!! I want to look them in the eyes and when they least expect it, whip out my knitting needles and (while still maintaining eye contact because I can knit without looking now) tell them that I'll get to it when I can. There is no emergency<br /><br />Unless I drop a stitch of course. Then you can send me another pointy red exclamation point e-mail. <br /><br />That's not life though. Life is a series of unanswered red exclamation point emails and confirmations. Except when you knit. Knitting is this wonderful corner office life where only the corner office exists. You don't need email- who the heck is going to email you about the status of your knit stitches (unless you're designing of course but for sake of argument, no designing allowed)? I'm not having to confirm any sort of knitting behavior to help ease the boredom of a co-worker or satisfy the ego/control nut whom practices micromanagement like it's a religion. No, my needles are my only supervisors. All they ask is for good wool and lots of use. Now there's a job description. <br /><br />I guess I'm learning how I operate now. I'm not a fan of interruptions in my daily work. Actually, I'm quite content with doing the same thing all day as long as I can track some progress. I'm one person who is not ready to be pulled in many different directions because it confuses the mind, which can be managed if you're doing something you enjoy, but not so easily when it's not your passion. <br /><br />So much of the knitting I do is an expression of where I'm at in my life. I consider myself an ambitious knitter in the sense that I step outside of my own comfort level in order to achieve results that will increase my confidence. I'm hoping to find a career that brings out that excellent side in me but I've still yet to make up my mind. I know that whatever I do, my knitting will follow. But I don't want it to follow me as a relief from my daily activities- I want them as an extension of my happiness that I know is possible in work. Luckily I'm learning there are a variety of skills that can be self taught that I'm interested in- programming, proofreading, editing, entrepreneurship, design. Funny isn't it? A lot of those skills remind me of knitting. <br /><br />I like how life is nothing but a stitch sometimes.Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-78229264227187215302006-12-07T13:06:00.000-08:002006-12-07T13:23:47.870-08:0010 Things ThursdayTen Things Thursday<br /><br />A brief read- the best kind sometimes.<br /><br />1) I usually can't function without some sort of white noise. I have a fan on at my desk and in my bedroom at all times to drown out the silence.<br /><br />2) My favorite dish is a simple Pad Thai from the small Thai place near my apartment. When I had bad strep throat in May and couldn't eat anything, I mustered up all my energy and pain coping powers just to eat it. It was the only meal I had for days.<br /><br />3) I haven't finished my education yet. I've been in a holding pattern trying to figure out what I want to do- I don't want to go back to school now just for the sake of doing so. <br /><br />4) I get to work an hour early every day- sometimes I'll catch up on emails. Most of the times I'm either reading the blogs or (now) knitting. My work is quite accustomed to seeing me during the morning in our cove area that overlooks Boston Harbor.<br /><br />5) I'm not phased by commute times and things like that. I have an hour commute every morning but I've always had it so don't feel like it's too long or feel the need to get upset about it. <br /><br />6) My dream is to be a freelance something. For a while I played around with the idea of being a Freelance Stripe Designer. If you know anyone looking for someone who can play with stripes well on a computer, please give them my contact info. A stripe portfolio can be furnished upon request.<br /><br />7) One phrase that makes me shudder in absolute pain: "mass produce" My ex used it. You can make the deduction from that one...<br /><br />8) I believe that knitting and Netflix are the perfect combination for urban life. When I get home from work and immerse myself in these two worlds, I feel at peace. Mostly I like to rent DVDs of TV series but I also have a fondness for things like Pride and Prejudice, Emma, Jane Eyre and etc.<br /><br />9) I get wicked bad allergies. I used to think it was because I was allergic to school. Now, I just think it's annoying and a waste of sick days. <br /><br />10) I realized that my neighborhood in Boston (Allston) has whole blocks dedicated to nothing but food. In the span of a few minutes, I can pass a Chinese restaurant, a coffee/dessert shop, a Korean restaurant, a Vietnamese restaurant, Italian place, Thai place, Mexican place, Indian, Asian BBQ, Pub fare, Asian bakery, Bubble Tea palace (at least to me). It's a whole kingdom of food!Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-21592050485582436932006-12-04T20:34:00.000-08:002006-12-04T17:37:05.799-08:00How to EZ TensionWell, another weekend has ended. I expected to return to work all in knots and unprepared for the work week. Instead, I entered the door with a wonderful vigor brought on upon the first snow and left with the same upbeat attitude. Today was one of those amazing knit days. I was able to gift an Irish Hiking Scarf in Cashmerino Aran to a friend (pictures this weekend hopefully). Her expression was of course worth all the hours that I put into it. I felt like I lived with the project and really understood how it worked by the time it was over. Blocking it was like getting prepared to say goodbye. Then, when it was all rolled up with a ribbon tied around it, I felt like I was giving a new friend to another new friend. I can already tell this will be a scarf she'll wear for years. <br /><br />While the joy of giving a present is hard to top, my weekend proved that I can be a master of my domain. Ok, not really. But I learned that I can turn a darn good hem. I'm starting my first Elizabeth Zimmerman sweater- and it's more than I could have imagined it to be. Some people might say the endless stockinette for the body is mind numbing and there might be some truth there. It's just what I need right now. I feel a great joy come over me as I'm working on this. It doesn't look like much now. Not much at all in fact. If you were to see me while I'm working on it, you'd be overwhelmed with this little grin I have on my face. That's where the power is- you'd know there's some magic going on there. <br /><br />The only bothersome aspect is the Barbara Walker inside of me providing some discontent about all the stockinette. All the time it's<br /><br />"Throw in some cables!'<br /><br />"You have so much of that lovely Bordeaux color left over- why not do some mosaic knitting?"<br /><br />"Come on, you can at least do a stripe Jeff"<br /><br />"What about that sideways stitch on<a href="http://knitty.com/ISSUEspring06/PATTjamesey.html"> Jamesey</a>? You always liked that one"<br /><br />"STEEK IT! STEEK IT NOW!"<br /><br />"Pssst. I'll give you a dollar if you do some twisted stitches"<br /><br />But I have to put her and her nagging to rest. Barbara, this is MY sweater. You can offer me your entire Treasury series but I won't budge on this; My Official EZ Tension Relief Sweater in fact. A suitable first project for the blog, no? <br /><br />The two knitting forces in my brain are at work but I have to let one of them take a break for a while. <br /><br />Now it's time for...<br /><br />HEINOUSLY TENSE MOMENT<br /><br />This time, my tense moment comes in the form of this whole blogging situation. I put so much pressure on myself to describe my knitting but the faceless crowd that is blogging makes it difficult for me. I love writing letters for instance- it gives me an exact audience to appeal to that I can steer my content towards. But this situation incurs so much tension. Who's going to enjoy what I'm reading? I'm always wanting to talk about how knitting makes me feel- to me it's just as important as what I'm knitting. I didn't want to write anything actually- why blog in the first place if it's not going to fit for me? <br /><br />I'll tell you why. My attitudes toward blogging are equivalent to this sweater knitting. The people whom I've really discussed knitting with know I was putting all this pressure on myself to make this first sweater- worrying about all the details. I think I took 2 weeks just to pick out the hem facings yarn. Wanting something to be just right is antithetical to progress if you take it that seriously. I don't want to do that anymore. <br /><br />One more entry made. A sweater on the needles.<br /><br />I'd say another tense moment has been overcome.Knitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-962016822601870813.post-77579100695498892602006-11-25T16:38:00.000-08:002006-11-25T17:03:59.937-08:00Knitting in Recovery...Well, the diagnosis is in. Despite all the hullabaloo about knitting being the new yoga, I still have tension. I don't know where it came from but as the months go by, the build up exceeds the amount that I can handle. Here I am now, off the swift, through the winder, and in a ball of stress. <br /><br />That's one reason why I've chosen this name. But as in one of my favorite movies, Clue, there's always an alternative possibility.<br /><br />Or maybe I've chosen this name out of sheer desperation. Sure, my decreases may not look perfect. I'm not so skilled at the picking up of those nasty stitches. DPNs are better used as mini skewers for an indoor BBQ when I pick them up. And my yarn choices may not always be stellar. But I'll be darned that if I put stitches on a needle, I'll always have tension. It can be loose or it can be tight but at least it's there. <br /><br />You'd think I'd stop there when it comes time to pick a name for a blog. No, absolutely not. Unfortunately my life is more about the meanings, sub-meanings, and counter-meanings of every situation. <br /><br />That leads to the absolute necessity to be accompanied by movies or more specifically DVDs of TV shows while knitting. My favorite and perhaps my first set that I knitted to was the quirky show Wonderfalls starring Caroline Dhavernas. And in a pivotal scene where she and her love interest first engage in a kiss, Jaye (the main character) discusses how the first date always creates this tension waiting for the first kiss and she believed it was gone- but the suave Eric admits what I'll always want to say..<br /><br />i still have t e n s i o nKnitta Jeffhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08159311250855919694noreply@blogger.com3