Saturday, July 27, 2019

572

Just for the record, this is post number 572, with no particular significance to that number.

Trivia, mostly useless!

The heat in Wisconsin continues.  Today it was in the low 80s, although the humidity level is manageable.  I don't know how people manage to live in the south over the summers.  I guess it's all in what you get used to...

I'm very frustrated with my computer right now, or maybe with my phone... I'm never sure.

The two are not on speaking terms.

I think I have to enlist the geek squad to help.  I can't get my pictures from my phone onto any of my computers.  I also can't get them off my tablet to the computer!  I plugged the cords into both units and I seem to have only a recharge cord; at least that's the only thing that currently happens when I plug them in.

I had lovely photos that I wanted to post, of things I've recently completed or worked on, but nope!  Not happening here.

I guess I need a ten year old.

So here are a few gratuitous photos to which I do have access!!








Sew on!!

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Summer Business

I have a love/hate relationship with summer.

I love the freedom from coats and jackets.  I love sitting on the patio with a beverage and listening to the bird and seeing the flowers.

I hate the hot, hot weather and the air conditioning.

I also love the air conditioning at night, when it would be too hot to sleep without it.  And I love ceiling fans and open windows.

We have in the condo these wonderful ceiling fans with remote controls which can turn the fan on, off, higher, lower, to help control the temperature of the room automatically.

Except I think mine are haunted or something.  I set the one in the master bedroom to 71 degrees.  And there it remained until today.  Today for some odd reason the temperature was set to 74.

I was doing laundry, folding the load from the dryer in the master bedroom.  It seemed warm in the room, and sure enough, it said it was 77.  I noticed the 'set' temp was 74.  Now it seems like even at 74 set, the actual should not be 77!  The fan was on low.  I think it has to reach 2 or 3 degrees above set to go higher, but no way am I happy at 77, especially not when folding a load still warm from the dryer.

I turned it down to 71 again.  Hubby says he did not change it.  I don't know why he would.  Maybe it has some sort of internal brain that only holds a set temp for so long and then spazzes out... who knows.

I'm happier sleeping in a room that is 71 than one that is 77.

What did we do without central air?

And then sometimes it's too cool at 71, especially when you're sitting and watching TV.  That's when I pull on a quilt or a sweater.  Hubby will say "are you cold?"

No, I just like turning blue at the toes and fingertips!

Summer.  Love it or not, it's pretty short in Wisconsin, so I guess I will just have to suck it up for now...

Sew on!

Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Independence Day, Part 2

What does Independence Day mean to you?

What I think of is the hard, hard work that people did between 1776 and 1783 when the Revolutionary War was actually over.  They endured hardship, deprivation, arguments among themselves as to what they were fighting for; they risked their very lives committing 'treason' against what they perceived as unfair governing by people across the ocean, who didn't know what was going on here other than what they heard months after the fact in letters.

It wasn't easy, people!  I think they came up with a pretty good system.  But we might be wrecking it.

It isn't easy today either.  Many, the vast majority, do not exercise the right to vote, and then complain a LOT when the officials that do get elected don't do what they think should be done.

I'm disappointed in so many ways in today's political situation.  We elected an administration that doesn't have a Servant's Heart.  It wants to punish children for the actions taken by their parents when they were minors... and yet we don't wish to improve the situation anywhere in the world but here at home.  "Yay, we're the BEST!!  Sorry, the rest of you are just stuck in unsafe and hazardous conditions, and don't you dare try to come here to improve yourself or escape danger!!"

And now, tanks.  Yeah, TANKS.  On the Mall in our nation's capital.  Oh boy, can you imagine how great that looks??  That went on in 1930s Germany and Japan and is now the norm in Russia, China, North Korea.  That's who our administration admires!  OK, not all of them.  But who's standing up and saying no?  A minority.

I have heard lots of snappy quotes about real men.  'Real Men don't eat quiche', 'Real Men don't ask for directions', but Real Men, the kind that I admire, wear pink shirts, eat quiche, cherish their women and children, stand up for what's right.

Kind of like John Wayne, or at least the characters that were portrayed by him.

Strong.  Silent.  Protective.  Defender of the down-trodden.  Didn't say much until it was time to say something.

We have forgotten what it's like to have Principles.  Truth is no longer True.  People are offended if you say you don't like something they're doing, even if what they're doing is wrong. Voltaire said "you can do anything you wish as long as you are willing to accept the consequence of your actions".  But they're saying hey, let's just say it's OK to do it now.

Independence means that I will can disagree with what you say and still defend your right to say it.  We have forgotten that too!  These days we're not happy with just disagreeing with what someone else says, we must totally destroy them in order to 'win'.

Win??  Why is it that you can only be right by making me be wrong?  Why can't we just agree to disagree, and not become disagreeable?  No, now we have to call people names and belittle them because they disagree with us.  I am only big by making you small.

I am praying for this country on her birthday.  We need to become what our name says, United.

The United.  States.  Of America.

Please God, let it be so.

Amen.

Monday, July 1, 2019

Holiday Week

This week is a national holiday... Independence Day is Thursday, July 4, 2019!



I normally would be working at the quilt shop on Thursdays, but since this is a holiday, I will not be there, since we're closed.  But after last week, I'm glad to be off two of my regular three days of work this week!

Vacation Bible School was a blast.  The staff did an amazing job!  There were somewhere around 68 little attendees, half of whom were five and under.  I was crew leader for a group of six; three threes, two fours and a five year old.  One cried all day for two days; one sucked her thumb and needed to be carried for four of the five days, and the two boys ran ahead of everyone, regardless of whether they were going in the right direction or not!  But we learned a lot, and sang and danced a lot, and generally had a really great time.

But now my knee hurts.  A LOT.

I hope to spend much of this week sitting and resting the limb.  

today I finished reading David McCullough's book 1776.  I really enjoy David's books; previously I read The Johnstown Flood and really enjoyed that.  I've also seen him on Book TV on CSPAN 2, although lately that's been nothing but political discussions and I don't enjoy those...  But 1776 was a great read!  It reads like a novel except that you recognize the major players as real people.  It's the story of the Continental Army under General George Washington right up through the end of the first year of the American Revolution.  

I learned several things I didn't know before.  Like the war wasn't a war for independence at first, and that the 'founding fathers' who wrote the Declaration of Independence were mostly non-combatants with a couple of exceptions.  

If you are looking for a good book about what it means to be American, I can recommend 1776.

 Next up for me is John Adams, also by David McCullough.


I'm also slogging my way through Alexander Hamilton's biography, although that goes from his early childhood all the way through his death from dueling with Aaron Burr, and I think it may take me as long to read it as it did for him to live it!

Meanwhile, I'm waiting for delivery of the biographies of Nathaniel Greene and Henry Knox two of Washington's best military leaders.  Knox owned a bookstore.  He might be my favorite Revolutionary General of all time!

Hope you're enjoying your summer too.

Read on...

Monday, June 24, 2019

What's New?



Today was the first day of Vacation Bible School (VBS) at our church.  Since this is the first year I'm not working full time, I volunteered.  Well, I volunteered to be a snack lady, but since the snack people appear to be firmly entrenched from previous years, I was recruited over to the team leader position.

Oh dear.

Little did I know.  It's always that way, isn't it?  But my youngest granddaughter has been a team leader for the past three years or so, and if a 12 year old can do it, how hard can it be, right??  Famous last words!

My team, the Meerkats, group 5 (of 6), turned out to be largely made up of three-year-olds.  One is not quite three yet, two have just turned three, and one is about 3 1/2.  The other two kids are about 5 years old, and they know each other from preschool.

Evidently every year there is one child who starts out crying.  And a couple who want to be carried.

I have them A.L.L.

I love little children... really I do!  But trying to carry two three-year-olds down a flight of stairs is a challenge, to say the least.  Add my crabby knee and you get Challenge times three!

Lucky me, I had a helper to carry all the paraphernalia and keep the schedule out.  He came complete with a clip-board, bless his heart!

We played some games, did some dancing around, looked at the fabulous jungle sets and the cardboard cutout animals, and had some fun making and then eating bug snacks from strawberries, pretzels and chocolate chips.


I hope tomorrow there's less crying and more singing!  At least tomorrow they should know how to stay together in a group not to run off.  Maybe.

I'm thinking it's going to be a llllooonnnggggg week!

Party on!

Monday, June 10, 2019

Hobbies

Definition of hobby 
a pursuit outside one's regular occupation engaged in especially for relaxationWriting is just a hobby of his.Her hobbies include gardening and bird-watching.********************That is the definition according to the Merriam Webster Dictionary on line, although for purposes of full disclosure MY hobbies are not those being quoted of in the above note!It should more appropriately read "Her hobbies include sewing, knitting, reading and writing.Last week was pretty hectic.  I worked my normal three days plus taught a class on the Wire Frame Tote Bag one evening.  Saturday there was work plus a graduation party.  Friday was errand running and I managed to squeeze in some sewing time in addition to cleaning the glass in both the patio and storm doors.  It's amazing how good they look now!



On Sunday I did not go to church.  I go to church nearly every Sunday, and it felt a little strange, not getting up early to go.  However, I was scheduled as a Lector for our After Weekend Worship on Monday, so I decided to sleep in on Sunday.  DH did go on Sunday morning, so after he left I made some tea and sat down to watch CBS Sunday Morning live for once instead of watching the recording later.It felt pretty decadent, sitting on the couch with tea and toast.  But there on the coffee table before me was some knitting and a new magazine.  I guess that's my version of laying around eating bonbons!  So I could anticipate two hours of uninterrupted free time and I took full advantage.

First I knit a while on this sock, the second of the pair.  The yarn is from Simply Socks and the colorway is Sometime in April.  I love the way the striping is rainbow-ish without being a slave to red-orange-yellow-green-blue-purple.   I picked out a color for the heel that goes well and doesn't disrupt the striping.

After that got boring (plain vanilla pattern, just continuous knitting) I opened a project bag and discovered this little beauty!  It's my first experiment with short socks.  I particularly liked the black seeds in the Watermelon patterned yarn.


Somewhere along the line I put aside this green 'pair' after knitting one sock.  It's also now in the queue, although I have to finish one or the other of the above socks to get the needles required to finish this pair.  The yarn is a bit heavier than the fingering I used for either of the other two, so they will make great winter footwear.  They feel nice and look kind of camouflage-y, the jungle version.

Last time I was down in the sewing room last week I spent some time searching for my wool pressing mat.  Lord knows where I put it the last time I used it!  In digging around and rearranging, I came across a bin of knit fabrics, some of which I bought at the local Stretch and Sew store, which closed up decades ago.  I decided that since I need new white tee shirts every summer, I should pull out the pile and see what I can stitch up.  That required some heavy lifting, since the box with the garment patterns in it was holding up one end of a small shelf unit that is sitting on some bins.  This is how my life goes... one thing leads to another which leads to the rabbit hole and ZIP!!! She's off and running, original errand forgotten.The new task required DH to hold up the shelf unit while I subbed out boxes.  Luckily he was available and not too crabby about the whole process.  The result is several new tops, most of which are decidedly unexciting but have no underarm staining and no spaghetti sauce spots.  But these two are not plain in color, although the same pattern was used for all the tees.  It's a basic S&S tank pattern with a dropped shoulder and no sleeve.  Easy to make and easy to wear.

And now I know that my serger works, that I remember how to sew on knits, and that I still fit into the same sized pattern I did two years ago!  All in all, the week was a success.Sew or knit on...

Friday, June 7, 2019

Sticky L and Other Musings

My keyboard is not cooperating today.  And hasn't for the past week or so - but I'm not sure why.

The L key sticks.  This is a bummer when your email address contains two of them!  I just tried to sign in to work on this post and I got the message "We do not recognize this email".  Well, no wonder!  You cannot spell global without a couple of Ls!

So now my right ring finger has learned how to really smash the keyboard.  I used to sit three cubicles away from someone who smashed his fingers down on the keyboard.  I always wondered what he was angry with, to type so furiously.  Maybe he had a sticky L too.  I hope that nothing was spilled to make the keyboard stick.  There are only so many words you can type without Ls if you expect your blog to make any sense.

Life is so busy right now I don't have time to blog much anymore.  I feel sad about that because I love to write.  I read Rita Farro's blog every day just for the pleasure of hearing good sentences strung together in my head.  I think it's one of the reasons I love to read - that hearing of sentences pulled into paragraphs and creating chapters of stories...

Today Rita wrote about hobbies, and asked the questions how important are hobbies, and how do you pick them?

So Rita -- my short answer is very important, and I think they pick you!

Since I was able to reach the foot control on my grandmother's treadle sewing machine I have been sewing bits of fabric together.  She made quilts when I was little, and also knitted and crocheted items.  (She made fabulous doilies, but that's another post!)  I watched her and played with her scraps and eventually she let me sew things with that wonderful machine.  I.Was.Hooked.  For good and all.

I think from then on, there has never been a time when I didn't do some sort of needlework.  It has been a God-send.  If I start with necessity, sewing gave me more clothing during my high school years than I could ever have afforded to buy.  It then became a pleasure as I made things for my two babies and my first home.  I branched out into making gifts for others.  It contributed a small amount to my income (like the farmer's wife and her egg money).

It then became a social outlet when I first worked at a fabric store and then joined a guild.  At some point it became a necessity, like breathing.

However, it also lead to reconnection with less immediate family, group projects, and other major fiber addictions like yarn, and beads, and on and on...  I think it must run in families (or packs??) since my aunties and cousins have been bitten by the same bug.

Then I found other sewists - via the guild and shopping activities.  Some of my best girlfriends are sewists, and it has bonded us with sewing to start and moved on to make us more like sisters.  It's good to have such wonderful female friendships.  It helps us through the tough spots.

Maybe it's more of a calling.  A vocation!

Since we moved to the condo, well actually since before then, since I retired from my full-time office job, things have been hectic.  I work part time at a quilt shop, alternating between two and three day weeks.  My 'hobbie' led me to that.  I volunteer at church in several capacities, some of which require some 'homework'.  One of those activities involves our quilt guild.  Was it fate, or ??

This week I need to get my act together and plan some activities for the church quilters sewing retreat.  It's a six hour session instead of a three hour normal get together, so we try to have some fun, learn a new pattern or a new technique, play some Quilter's Bingo, eat and just have a good time.  Since our preschool quilts are done, I'm not sure what we're going to work on... I'll need to spend some time in my sewing room!
This is last year's quilt.

Too bad I have to spend all that time with fabric and patterns... LOL!

I also want to take a little trip to the garden center.  It's finally warm here is SE Wisconsin, and I need some color on my patio.  The deck is gray, the rails are white, the furniture is black.  Not a happy situation... especially for someone who enjoys color!  I have a couple of empty pots to fill, maybe with some geraniums or some Impatience or anything else that might be available.  I have morning shade and afternoon sun.

Time to get a move on it.  DH went out to breakfast with the other 'boys', and he'll be back soon.

Sew on...


Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Catching Up

This last five months have flown by... literally and figuratively!  It seems like a few weeks ago I was packing to move and it's almost June.  You know what they say, time flies when you're having fun.  :-)

We moved on January 4, a Friday.  I can't say enough nice things about Two Men and a Truck!  Although they need to change their name to THREE Men and a Truck... those young fellows worked their tails off to take TWO truckloads of things from our old place to the new one.  They were so careful, and so kind about my tons of books and all the boxes marked 'sewing stuff'.  They were extremely nice and went away with a big tip at the end of a long day.  Thank you boys!

My sewing room is coming along.  I won't say nicely, it's slow going.  There are no shelves on the walls like there were in my old house.  Things are still in boxes.  I actually have opened them all so I know what's in them, but there are still a good half dozen at least that haven't been unpacked.


This is part of the mess I had on December 28 of last year.  I'm so happy to report that what I have now is nowhere NEAR that big pile.  Although DH has declared a moratorium on cardboard boxes!

I'm sure the recycling guys in our condo development are happy that they've seen a major reduction in cardboard from my unit!

My daughter and I went to a big book sale at State Fair Park last week.  All the books were from the Half Price Book Store clearance.  There were lots of older books and tables full of kids and young adult fiction, history and crafting books... I never made it back to the fiction section.  We filled a grocery cart with books and neither one of us exceeded $50!  I scored a newer Betty Crocker cookbook and two from Rachel Ray, along with two bagfuls of mystery and fiction, and a coffee table book called the Encyclopedia of Rock and Roll.  Awesome!


FYI...

Sew on...








Sunday, April 7, 2019

My Warranty Is Expiring...

My warranty is expiring and all my parts are wearing out!

LOL!!

Not really, but it could seem that way.

I have injured myself in the past without really knowing exactly what it happened, but my recent knee problems are bordering on the ridiculous.

As a teenager I fell from a skateboard (when it wasn't even moving) and tore ligaments in one of my knees.  I don't remember which knee.  If I could find my confirmation photo, there would be a clue in it, because I received my confirmation/communion on a crutch.

As a youngster I tripped on a small string barrier supporting some hedges and fell on the sidewalk on one of my knees.  I don't remember which knee it was.  My mom might remember but she's been gone for 20 years.

So therefore when I woke up one morning with a stiff knee it was no surprise.  Long car trips or marathon sitting causes stiffness and the knees always moan and groan about trips on the stairs of more than two flights.  But after four hours on my feet at the store, the left knee was doing more than moaning.  More like screaming at the top of the lungs.

An x-ray showed arthritis and degenerative joint disease.  Meniscus damage doesn't show on an x-ray, it requires an MRI, but my insurance wouldn't pay for an MRI until I failed physical therapy.

OK, PT it is!

After one session of PT I was taking the two steps up to the house from the garage and heard a loud POP!  Pain radiated up the thigh and down the calf... so we went to Urgent Care.  Result:  this was a pretty spectacular fail of PT, and an MRI was scheduled.

Meanwhile I was hobbling around using a cane, and icing the knee pretty steadily.  and resting....

The only benefit of the whole situation was more time for knitting.  Although going up and down the stairs has been slow business.  One day DH was talking to someone and he said "she went to bed an hour before me and I passed her on the stairs".

Ha. Ha. Ha.

So now surgery is scheduled to repair the meniscus, and hopefully after a week or so I'll be walking normally.  Hopefully.

All I can say is thank goodness for skilled surgeons and medical personnel.  I feel very confident that thigs will turn out fine.  At my preop appointment my surgeon asked whether I minded if he prayed with me.  No sir, I do not mind.  In fact, I'm very pleased and happy that you are being assisted in all this by the Great Surgeon!

Thanks be to God.

Keep on keepin' on!

Tuesday, March 5, 2019

There and Back Again...

Something happened between Christmas and today that had me baffled.  Blogger changed some things or I changed something or I neglected to change something, and well, we fell out of sync or whatever.  But today I had what I can only call divine inspiration and tried some back door stuff and here I am again, or so it would appear.

Randomly, since December we moved house, I had eyelid surgery, it showed, we spent a month unpacking and getting rid of cardboard boxes, it snowed, the weather got VERY cold and then warmed to freezing, my sewing room got halfway put together, I hurt my back, then hurt my knee, it snowed, it got cold... duh.  It IS winter and it is Wisconsin after all.

Or so said one guy they interviewed on the news one evening.  Quote "I don't know why you people think it's news... it's WISCONSIN, what did you expect?"

I love that guy!

In the shop we got some fine new things.  Before we moved house, I made some sample soft books for small kids.  One was Noah's Ark, the other was this fine book on dinosaurs.



After the move and the eye surgery, I finished the black and while Escher quilt that was supposed to go to my SIL for Christmas.  I have it pressed and am waiting for 108" wide black backing so I can get it quilted.



I ran out of one of the light fabrics and I cut the bottom off the first five rows one block north of where it should have been cut... which would have resulted in a shorter, but wider, quilt than was intended.  That would NOT do.  I searched high and low as much as I was able to find more of the red Spin Dot that is in the centers.  No luck.  I got a small piece from the shop and attempted to replace the half blocks that I messed up.  then I discovered that the one stripe I needed for TWO of the blocks was gone.  I did find an appropriate substitute, but that meant remaking an additional four blocks, and disassembling two rows at least part way.  It was time consuming but not impossible, although it would have been much easier had my sewing room, or at least my big ironing board, have been put up for use.  But it's all set up now, and I did finish.



Miss Kitty has been adjusting at a decent pace.  She still tries to sit in my lap when I'm trying to knit, but at least she stopped whining ALL the time, and she has for the most part given up on rattling all the closet doors.  She discovered a couple of squirrels outside the living room window, so Cat TV is back on the air.  Not that you can tell from that face...


I participated in the Kaffe Mystery with Free Spirit fabrics.  The monthly packets were interesting.  One month a snowball of gorgeous Kaffe prints and your basic contrast fabric, and then next month a checkerboard of same... I did the dark.  I'm glad I chose that because I think it was the most impressive in the end.  I can't wait to complete the top.  

Each month you were encouraged to post a picture of something related to the mystery.  In October they asked for a seasonal picture.  I posted my blocks with a cute little pumpkin on my kitchen table, and I won the prize for posting!  When it arrived I was quite impressed with its value -- a layer cake of Kaffe plus a packet of fat quarters in all of my favorite prints in RED, which I love!  So I posted the photo above with a Thank You message to Free Spirit.

Now that I'm laid up with a knee injury the sewing me be a bit more difficult, but I can knit!  In a class at my favorite local yarn shop Cream City Yarn in Brookfield, WI, I knit an adorable baby sweater from a pattern called Welcome to the Flock by Julie Farwell-Clay.  Here's a link to the pattern on Ravelry.  Pattern  It's not free (it's $6) but it's so cute that if you knit for babies you'll probably want to buy it. 

Mine will probably be a baby shower gift in the fall.  I have enough yarn left to make a hat of some sort.  I'm not sure about making the hat in the pattern because I prefer baby hats that a-cover the baby's ears and b-tie or somehow fasten on.  Nothing's worse for me than a baby who looks like he/she feels cold, and a bare head looks cold when it's sweater weather!

This is a long enough post for today.  The knee and back are not comforted by a lot of sitting at the computer, and I have some prescribed exercises to do before physical therapy happens tomorrow.

Keep calm and carry on...

Thursday, December 27, 2018

8 Days and Counting

One week from tomorrow the moving van shows up and starts carrying out furniture and boxes.  One. Short. Week.

I am so not ready, and yet readier than I'll ever be, to move.  Ugh!  Moving... it's awful and wonderful at the same time.  I cannot wait to move into a condo again.  No more moaning about having to shovel the snow.  DH, not me!  Never me!

Of course this year there hasn't been a lot of snow, so go figure.

Random happenings in 2018 that I did for the last time, or for the last time here in this house:

 Daughter's wedding box, craft project with granddaughter Miss A
 Getting "the eye" from Miss Kitty
 Painting and cleaning the rental unit...
 Getting new patio doors installed
 Last meal around the old table, now we eat around the new one.
 Snowman coffee!  The snow melted the next day...
 Baking Christmas cookies!  They were delicious.
 DH finally bought a new recliner.  He did a good job.  It even has a USB port for charging your phone while you lounge.
Pea Soup, with the after Thanksgiving ham.  I figured no one but me would be eating it so I used California Blend veggies instead of just plain carrots.

Boxes upon boxes are filling my rooms.  I don't know how much you can pack in a day, but I have my limits.  I was teasing DH that anything not packed could stay for the next occupant.  He hasn't packed anything of his yet, so we'll see how that goes!

Time for dinner.  I'm ordering pizza.

Pack on...

Monday, December 17, 2018

Knitting Lessons

I love to knit.  I love blogs about knitting, especially Stephanie Pearl McPhee, aka the Yarn Harlot.  She's written tons of great blog posts and about a dozen books about knitting that are easy reads and will make you alternately laugh and cry, sometimes within seconds of each other.





One of the gifts I ordered for myself this Christmas (story for another blog post...) was SP-M Casts Off.  It arrived today, and I cannot wait to open it.  It's not a new book.  Published in 2007, it's a travelogue through the land of knitting.  But it's new to me and I'm really looking forward to a good long late night, not ready for sleep read.

 
A friend from our quilt guild admired the socks I knit and I offered to show her the ropes if she wanted to stop over some day.  She's been sitting in a lot of waiting rooms waiting for her DH to finish up with OT and PT in recent days, which is perfect knitting time.  i.e. nobody makes eye contact, usually people are anxious so they're not really chatting, and no one stays long enough to distract the knitting person!


I do not profess to be an expert, but I did take that knitting workshop last summer and I have actually finished five complete two-sock pairs of socks!

She came today for the second lesson, turning the heel.  Her socks are striped in multicolored yarn with a gray stripe between, and they're going to be so cute.  She started off with four double pointed needles and ended up with the nine inch circular needle, the one that gave me such fits I pulled it out and threw it on the table.  I could not manage it.  I gave it to her when she left.

 I wish I had taken a picture of her sock.  She's doing so well on it I feel like I've hatched an egg or something and I'm watching my chick start to walk around!  Silly, I know.

But I feel like telling Stephanie McPhee thanks.  Thanks for inspiration, for making knitting so sexy popular and for allowing me to see that even she makes mistakes but always gets back on the needles.

You should read some of her stuff.  Really.

Knit on...