Sunday, November 28, 2010

The advantages of marrying a code monkey

My wonderful spouse managed to rescue the entries from the old blog and transfer them all to this blog, including comments. This blogdrive to blogger process took him a few hours that I could not have been able to afford at the rate he charges, so it is really a significant gift. The Spanish blog is full of special characters that required some fine tuning, but it all turned out perfectly. I love how my entries are all archived in a more intuitive way than the little calendar blogdrive uses.

It is a pity that all the images from the first posts were lost when voila cancelled my account about a year ago. There's also the issue of pictures disappearing from imageshack. But overall, I am happy with having all my blog posts here, comments and all.

I have a crappy picture showing some sock progress. If you strain your eyes you'll find increases about an inch below the needles, on the center of the sock.




Not gray socks

The pattern  (ravelry link) is written top down but I converted it to toe up. There are decreases down the leg which translate as increases when going upwards. I made the first increase but I am guessing that I will not get to the next increase, since the spouse does not like his socks that long. Given that the increases disrupt the pattern, should I get rid of them altogether? The socks are not tight, and I don't mind ripping one inch of sock.

Friday, November 26, 2010

New Blog!

So here it is, my very first post on my new blog. I'm still struggling with attachment issues to the previous blog, mainly because it was with me for so many years. But I'm sure I'll get over it. I might even be able to rescue my old entries and comments. Other than the contact form, I don't think I will miss it.

And for my first post, I have a couple of pictures of my husband's not gray socks:






Not Gray Socks


They have heels! Can you see them? They are so dark that it's hard to figure them out. Here's another sideways picture.






Not Gray Socks


I have not sent my sister her socks. I am waiting for some amazon stuff I ordered for her kids and I will send it all together. The socks were never intended as Christmas gifts but the timing seems perfect.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Socks completed

Here are my sister's socks, finally finished, cast-off and washed.

Sister Socks


And here are the spouse's socks, which I was knitting at the same time, though not at the same speed.

Not Gray Socks


They are greener, but I am having a hard time capturing the color with or without flash. I stole a picture of the original yarn:

Berroco Ultra Alpaca Fine Peat Mix
Which is ultra alpaca fine, 50% wool, 20% alpaca and 30% nylon. The colorway is peat mix.

I am getting ready to move to blogger, and I will post the link soon. I will leave my old entries here, as long as blogdrive allows me to.

Monday, November 22, 2010

Fiber arts videos




Crochet coral reef:



Very constructive use of crochet. I wonder how many people crocheted these reefs and how much yarn was used? I'm willing to bet they all used their stashed leftovers.

Fluid Knit dress:



Certainly beautiful but not practical at all. Who would want to walk around carrying a pump behind her? It's interesting to note that the artist used twisted stitches, probably to avoid straining the tubing. Or maybe to improve flow dynamics?

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Heels

The sister socks have heels. And are getting close to being finished.

Top view:
Sister Socks


Side view:
Sister Sock


The image problem is solved, but I am now having problems with blogdrive. I changed the format of the page, but those changes took forever to show up. Plus my last entry did not show up in more than 24 hours. Apparently, their servers were down during a power outage a week ago.

I started this blog more than 6 years ago. Back then blogger was already more popular than blogdrive. I did not use it because I liked writing my own html. Whenever I made a mistake, blogger overwrote my own code. Not a big deal, links got converted into text, images were erased... What really bothered me was that, if I tried to go back and correct my own code, it was gone, blogger had rewritten it and I had to start all over again.

Many years later, blogger dominates the market. Lots of new nifty gadgets have been introduced and it looks really cool. It works like a little black box that more or less covers your expectations without you having to write any code yourself. Which is good, because it is still erasing the original code whenever it encounters a mistake. So I still don't like blogger.

Still, I am considering moving over. I am willing to bet that their servers are never down. Also, I fear the extinction of blogdrive. It does not seem to be evolving and it actually seems to be shrinking (their helpdesk people used to reply right away, but now they don't even bother to answer). They have added a few bells and whistles to their blogs but you have to pay for them, not so with blogger.

I know this blog already has lost its readership, and it should not bother me to start anew. Still, it breaks my heart to think I would lose 6 years of entries and comments. Blogdrive does not even allow you an export function. And I don't blame them. Their business seems to be dying, why should they make it any easier for their users to leave them?

Sunday, November 14, 2010

A little color

The grey socks have a heel but no picture. Instead, I have pictures of a colorful experiment. Kathy over in Runs with Needles has dyed several sock blanks, which eventually tempted me to buy one.

Sock Blank


I left it alone for a while, but the recent epidemic of gray and dark green left me lusting after some bright blues, greens and purples. Undecided, I used all three colors. Actually, I used five different dyebaths. The result is a progression from deep purple to green.

Purple to Green Socks


There are a few irregular splotches here and there, so it is not a very smooth progression. I used plain food colorings and vinegar. Lots of both. All these bottles were new from the box when I began.

Food Colors


Lessons learned? I should have threaded stitches on both sides with waste yarn before dyeing. As you can tell, both ends kept unraveling. Some of the splotches can be blamed on those unraveled ends coming in contact with sections not yet dyed (notice that I am not blaming my own lack of hindsight or dexterity). Another lesson is to use two different rinsing pots and hold the blank from the middle while dunking it into these two pots. The middle is best rinsed under running water. The final lesson is to have everything ready before you begin and not worry about the cleaning (or anything else, phone included) until the process is over, even if the process takes about 6 hours.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Two pairs of socks

Imageshack tends to eat my pictures. Generally the old ones, so I used not to care about the broken links. But I've recently noticed broken links with some of the newer pictures, which is very annoying. So now I'm using flickr. I hate monopolies, but sometimes they make sense. Plus, I figure yahoo needs all the traffic it can get.

I started a pair of gray socks for my sister, who likes neutral colors. I'm using Maizy, since she's allergic to wool. This shade of gray is too somber for me and makes me not progress much.

Sister Socks


Now, the spouse had recently expressed some interest in a pair of socks, so I dragged him to a yarn shop and asked him to choose some yarn so I could work on two pairs of socks simultaneously. The idea was that if I got tired of the gray socks I could work a few rows in a different color. But what color did he choose? Gray. Comfort sock, a nylon and acrylic blend from Berroco. I promised to turn that yarn into socks later on, as long as he chose a different color for now. And he nicely went ahead and chose some green yarn. A very dark shade of green. Here are the two new skeins, side by side.

Berroco Sock yarns


The green yarn (which they kindly wound into a center pull ball at the store) is Berroco Ultra alpaca fine, a wool and alpaca blend in a color adeptly called peat mix. I am already working on it.

Not Gray Socks

Now I alternate between two pairs of gloomy socks, and there is yet another pair of gray socks in my near future. So much for bright ideas.

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

And more crafts


This craft at least is actually related to knitting. I ended up needing two blood transfusions back in March (thank you, anonymous donors!) and was still severely anemic, so for quite some time I was eating lots of iron rich foods. Among them, black beans. Beans, of course, have to be soaked before cooking, resulting in some really dark water.



After I don't know how many pots of black beans, I started to wonder if wool would take up the color. I know, it is not a pretty color, but it was something edible (so I could use it in my kitchen) and it was already available. Long story short, don't use vinegar as a mordant, use alum. The high pH itself turns the water from black to purple.



And then the yarn ends up with a pretty gray-blue color, that I certainly did not expect. Here are the before and after pictures.



I am only hoping it lasts, because the Serratia marcescens yarn I dyed last Summer has faded to almost white by now.
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