Posts Tagged ‘Knitter Pride’

This Week on the Needles – who’s got the Clap?

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

Welcome back to another thrilling discussion of my knitting, and the trails and frustrations involved there. This week, we’re going to talk about what I’ve been working on for oh, too damn long now.

I’m knitting a Clapotis scarf – referred to as ‘the Clap’ in my local knitter’s circle. If you’ve never had the pleasure, I can’t recommend them enough. It’s an easy pattern, and the end result is a nice beginner lacework, on the bias to make it extra flowy and soft. The pattern recommends a silk-wool blend, but as I can never follow a pattern 100%, I’ve been working mine in a lovely bamboo. The resulting red-orange-gold scarf is rather pretty, and has the added bonus of being earth-friendly as well as cuddly.

There’s only one problem – if you saw me knitting at RWA this year? It was the same scarf. I’m not this slow, normally. And yes, I’ve lost some of my normal knitting time to other events that weren’t entirely expected. But some of the time, I’ve just not picked up my needles even though my hands were free. I don’t hate the pattern. Quite the opposite in fact. But I finally am beginning to understand my friend who called it ‘tedious’. It’s a long row of knits or purls, with a few twisted stitched to force you to count (or, if you’re like me, employ everything from washers to twist ties as stitch markers). Every twelve rows you get to do something different, drop a stitch and rip it down. That’s it. The Clap in a nutshell.

So I haven’t finished it yet (though I am close to the end now – it’s narrowing back down so I can finish the far side.) It’s Hockey Season in another month, and ideally, I will have it done by then. It’s a reasonable goal to set for myself. Even if I have trouble early, as the pre-season games start I’ll be able to get a lot more done. Yes, I knit while I watch hockey. It’s the perfect combination for an evening, really.

Well,  unless you’ve got the Clap – in which case you need the hockey to distract you.

The best laid plans go oft ARAN…

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

With my apologies to Robert Burns, it’s time for another knitting post. Today I need to talk about my terrible addiction to that most notorious drug of sweater and sock knitters – the cable.

I love cables. They are fun to knit, they look really impressive when you’ve done a long chain of them, and most importantly, they aren’t half as tricky as the rest of the knitting world would have you believe. (Actually that last secret is true of knitting as a whole. I shall have to do a post on breaking the great secret of knitting – that’s it’s all easy – open for all of you.) It’s not even math, like some elements of knitting, it’s just counting. I don’t even do the counting in my head – I have a stitch counter on my iPhone that I can set to count for me. I color code my cables on the needle, then label a row on my counter for each cable. When I increment the whole project one row, each of the cables increments on their own counting system, so I always know where I am. Easy Peasy, Lemon Squeezy.

There’s a problem to loving cables, though. Once you realize how easy they are, the tendency is to start putting them on everything. Like a flame paint-job on a car, cables work best with a little restraint. A thin line down the side of a kilt stocking is okay. A twenty-stitch wide knotwork probably doesn’t belong on a footie-slipper. It’s the knitting equivalent of getting a sweet flame paint scheme on your ’82 Omni. You can do it, but even ironically it looks a little off.

Okay, back to trying to figure out how to put triangular knotwork on the earflaps of a hat.

Telling a Good Yarn

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

This past weekend, Debbie Macomber received the Nora Roberts lifetime achievement award for her contributions to the Romance genre. In addition to her wonderful stories, Ms. Macomber also  has a number of knit-along books where the patterns from her Blossom Street stories come to life in exciting new dimensions. I have always loved the idea of people inspired to craft by their connection to a story, whether it’s dedicated propmakers replicating Dr. Jones’ Grail Diary or items from the ill-fated Dyer expedition to Antarctica to the wide assortment of musicians and makers that flocked to Catherynne Valente’s Palimpsest and added their own touches to its wonder and magic.

It taught me why I continue to knit whenever I get the chance – as I’ve said, it keeps me calm in difficult situations (like surrounding an introvert with 2500 new people). Even better, it provides an instant connection with other people who knit or do other crafts. No matter where we may be with our projects, there we suddenly had a common ground as Makers of Things discussing our passions.

These thoughts spawned an unusual thought in my head – for too long, my knitting has been the unwinding act that I use to step back from my job or my writing and immerse myself in something else for a while. Instead, I wonder if I should use it to draw myself deeper into my craft. I’ve new ideas in the wake of RWA, and plenty of things that make me more excited about my craft (and my crafting) than I’ve been in ages.

The Con Game

Monday, July 26th, 2010

A very wise friend of mine once said that it was difficult to tell the difference between a writing conference and a support circle for Asperger Syndrome sufferers. I try to remember that when I go to conferences because, theoretically, it should help to know that everyone else is just as introverted and uncomfortable as I am.

Note that I say should.

To be honest, I don’t do the conference thing well. Like a lot of writers, I suffer from terrible Imposter Syndrome when I meet other people who practice my craft. It doesn’t matter that I have a full shelf over my desk with all my works on it, I still feel like the kid who’s snuck into the party and will be thrown out as soon as they figure out I don’t belong. This is why I started taking my knitting to conferences, it helped keep my relaxed. As an added bonus, it provided a safe neutral topic I could talk about without seeming nervous.

Writing is a solitary business – it’s a profession that is, for most of the year, carried out in semi-vacuum.  It’s you, your beta readers, your editor, your agent and occasional forays into media-marketing. There’s not a lot of face time for most writers, even the ones who are lucky enough to have a local support group with whom they can share the trial and triumphs. The great majority of us are introverts, and the idea of being in a social situation leaves us uncomfortable. We get together anyway, and eventually we either build up our courage (or have a drink to settle our nerves) and we say hi to somebody. Because as much as it can be a rough road to walk alone, it’s also pretty cool to meet someone on the same road and be able to catch a few pointers, or warn them away from a few pitfalls. Some of my dearest friends are people who I met at writers’ conferences.

I say all of this because this week is RWA – that the National event for Romance Writers of America (of which I am a member). It’s a big deal, sells out early, and is generally awesome. Take all those things I just said about having issues at a regular conference, and triple them. Then add in the discomfort that this will be my first RWA, and you can imagine the sort of stomach churning terror I am dealing with.

Seriously. I eat Tums like they’re a fifth food group.

That said, I try to think of myself, despite all evidence to the contrary, as a friendly sort. So if you’re at RWA, and you see me (I’ll be knitting, probably a red-orange clapotis scarf, I haven’t decided yet), please come say hello. We can always talk about knitting.

Released, or perhaps unchained

Saturday, July 24th, 2010

Blood Crimes my new story for the Pathfinder RPG setting has been released into the world, or at least has started showing up on Paizo’s Pathfinder Tales site. You can find it Here. Go read it, I’ll wait here.

Are you back? You probably noticed it was a serial release – they’ll be putting out a chapter a week for the next four weeks. Be sure to visit again each Wednesday to read the next thrilling chapter.

Likewise, head over to The Galaxy Express to read my contribution to Parallel Universe. The Literature of Hope hits a lot of the things that make Science Fiction Romance one of my favorite genres to read or write.

Keeping up with Appearances

In other news, this next week will see me at RWA, trying not to melt in the heat even while I work on knitting and learning. After that, it’s a trip to GenCon, where you’ll be able to find me in Author Avenue. Look me up and say hello!

Ravelry and You

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

Or more precisely, Ravelry and Me. We’ve talked about my knitting before. A lot. If you’re not interested in more about my knitting, then run and hide, because this post is for all my stitches. Today I want to talk about Ravelry.

For those who aren’t in the know, ravelry.com is a social media site for knitters and crocheters – a place to knitwork – I mean network – with other fiber-friendly folks who will understand your addictions. It’s got a lot of knitter specific stuff, like places to show off which books you own, or post pictures of yarn in your stash. It’s also got a place to talk about what you’re currently working on, as well as a way to track projects you’re thinking about for the future. For a slow knitter like myself, (I crawl at anything that’s not socks) such a site could be invaluable.

Of course, it’s a social media site, so I am terrible at it. This is why you don’t find me on facebook, and my Goodreads account is tired to this blog. I understand my limitations, and this is simply one of them.

That’s not to indicate that I don’t just adore Ravelry. It’s more a highlight of my own failings. Still I try to get out there once a month and poke around, update my Works-In-Progress, post some new pictures. All the things that a good member ought to do to look busy.

I don’t e-mail terribly often. And I don’t always respond as well (or as quickly) as I could, but I’m out there. I do (mostly) post pictures of my knitting out there. And I’m pretty easy to find (jchay). If you’re wandering about in Ravelry, go ahead and say high. I will even say hi back.

Sometime next month. Probably.

Knitting, and Knowing One’s Place…

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

I knit. I am a knitter. I’ve read before that you shouldn’t define yourself by what you do, but rather by who you are. Even so, I’m comfortable announcing that I am “someone who knits.” This gives me certain things in common with other knitters: I lie – constantly – about my stash of yarn, to myself and everyone else. “It’s not that big.” “Sock yarn doesn’t count.” “I’m not as bad as (insert other knitter’s name, whose stash you feel is out of control).”

Of course, all those lies go the other direction as soon as you’re around someone who appreciates yarn. “16 ounces of first-shear baby alpaca and mohair goat, dyed and then handspun.” “I had to repurpose the master closet to hold it all.” “And that’s not counting sock yarn…” It is, in some respects, the knitter equivalent of dominance displays – the wool-pack has to know its own pecking order, and stash is as good a measure of “cred” as any.

In that respect, and taking the above into consideration, I’d like to think my stash is pretty middle-of-the-road. After all, it doesn’t require its own room, or a special cedar inset closet. But it’s also well past the “store it in a basket by the easy chair” phase as well. Not that I don’t have a basket of stash yarn out there, but that’s the showoff yarn – like the special guests china – there for other people to notice, but never to use.

I suppose the root of any collection of things is a desire to, as Hunter Thompson famously said, “Take it as far as you can.” For me, the stash has become a statement of places I’ve been and people whom I love. This handspun wool is from North Carolina, that hand-dyed was a gift from one of my first-readers. In theory, I assign hoped-for projects to my stash yarn, but strangely enough, when the time comes to start something new on the needles, I’m back in the store buying yarn for it specifically rather than raiding the stash.

Except for socks, of course. But then sock yarn doesn’t count as stash.