Diversion

My family surprised me with this adorable mug for Mother's Day.  His name's Herdy, and he might be our new best friend. 

I'm careening toward a deadline this week.  It's raining.  It's Monday.  All good reasons for a little diversion.  You need one, too.

 CLICK HERE to spend some time smiling with Herdy and friends.

Some Kind of Fluke

fluke.jpg

Today I'm knitting a hat which is supposed to resemble a sea creature.  I have a swell drawing of the thing I'm trying to make.  I learned when doing the drawings that just because I can imagine something doesn't mean I can draw it.  Turns out that just because I can draw something doesn't mean I can knit it, either.  Go figure.

Another lesson I'm getting:  Sea creatures are not sweaters.  I had no idea I was stuck in a rut, but it seems to have happened.  I keep wanting to knit the same shapes I always do for garments:  Bell-shaped sleeve cap, cylindrical body tube, rounded neck hole, etc.  None of those pieces (which my body seems to want to knit no matter what my head is telling it) are going to yield a hat that looks like a critter.  I have to turn off the autopilot and think.  This must be really good for me, because it's kinda hard.

I've been looking at photos (thanks, Internet!) to try and immerse myself in the architecture of creatures.  It's helping, a bit, but my real problem is figuring out where increases and decreases go to make natural-looking animal shapes.  It's not intuitive.  And getting it wrong means lots of frogging.  This must be really good for me, because it's kinda hard.

Also, nature loves symmetry, so I have to do lots of things in matched pairs.  Which is fine, except it means that I have to write down each step with extremely painstaking precision in order to repeat (and possibly reverse) it for the other side of whatever thing I making.  And if it's wrong, I tear out that page and start all over again.  There is almost as much paper on the floor as there is yarn, which is saying something.

But don't worry; I'm doing my best to figure it all out so you don't have to.  By which I mean, when you pick up my new book and decide to knit a hat that looks like a sea creature, I want it to be as fun and easy for you as possible, with all the tricks already sorted out.  This must be really good for me, because it's kinda hard.

Lucky Cat

Surprising me (gobsmacked, actually, but I tried to be cool) Lindsay picked up her knitting again.  She's been doing other things for a while, like acting in plays and playing the bass guitar, so I didn't expect her to get back to knitting any time soon.  But there it is:  Smallies live to surprise us. 

She needed cat ears, and right away.  "How do I knit triangles, Mom?"  I drew her a chart.  "Can you take me to get a headband, Mom?"  I got the car keys.  "Think I could cover the headband, Mom?" I told her how to work knitted cord.  Didn't even have to show her - just told her verbally and off she went.  My kid can knit!  What a Mother's Day present!  She doesn't even know she gave it to me.

We felted them and put them together.  "Do you think we could make a pattern for these, to give away?  Other knitters need lucky cat ears, too."  Yes we can.  CLICK HERE to get your free Lucky Cat pattern.

Lucky Knitters.  Lucky Mom.  Prosperity and Joy for all.  Happy Mother's Day!