About Bevin

Requiring tambourines at all attempts at enlightenment since 1997.

Private?

I used to have a LiveJournal, and I used to write a lot of private entries. Not for the first couple of years mind you, but I definitely did later on. Now that I have this WordPress account, I’ve been trying to find ways to import my LJ posts, which has led me to read a few of the old ones. Oof! I want to be able to use whatever my current journal is to write “in the moment” angry-at-the-world posts every once and awhile… but that will be hard unless I can find an easy way to make entries private. I know there are some plugins for making individual entries private, but I need to make my whole Archive category private (the one that will contain my old LJ entries).

Who knows what I’ll end up doing. I’ll have to talk to Josh about it tonight, and in the meantime get on with the knitting!

John Varley's "Mammoth"

I heard about John Varley fairly randomly, browsing the internet learning about various new SciFi authors. He’s supposed to be quite good, and has a decent amount of books out, so lately I’ve been mooching his books through BookMooch and getting the odd one at Half Price Books when Josh and I make our weekly trip. -grin-

This if my first venture into his writing, but so far I really like it. We’re reading about a billionaire of a man who will pay any amount of money to get what he wants, and his team has recently discovered a full, frozen, Mammoth body in the tundra (I think we’re in Canada at this point). Buried with the Mammoth? A man. Wearing a wristwatch.

Ooo, suspense! Haha. Either way, it’s managed to grab my attention so far, and if it weren’t for my marathon knitting sessions as of late, I’m sure I’d have more of it read. I’ll let you know what I think of it when I finish.

Hem

This is a group I’ve recently really gotten into, and have been telling everyone about. I’m in love with their style, especially on their album Rabbit Songs. Here’s an excerpt from their Wikipedia entry:

Hem is an indie folk-rock band, fusing together a mix of traditional American music with newer style. They consider themselves to be a “countrypolitan” band. Band members include Sally Ellyson (vocals), Dan Messé (piano, accordion, glockenspiel), Gary Maurer (guitar, mandolin), Steve Curtis (guitar, mandolin, banjo, back-up vocals), George Rush (bass guitar), Mark Brotter (drums), Bob Hoffnar (pedal steel guitar), and Heather Zimmerman (violin).

As most of you already know, I first found out about this band through a Liberty Mutual commercial, and at that point just had to get more of their stuff. For those of you interested in seeing said commercial, it just happens to be here on YouTube. Coincidentally, it will also provide a snippet of my favorite song for you to listen to, Half Acre.

I’m not exactly sure that I’m going to provide track-by-track reviews or anything for the artists I ultimately post in the Music category, because that would take up too much of my time. But I think I would like to have a record of bands that I’m into at different points in time, as well as have a way to let any readers know what I’m listening to these days, giving them an opportunity to check them out as well.

Odd Behavior

Sometimes I wonder… on the one hand we’re supposed to tell each other everything, but on the other hand he feels like there are some things he “can’t” talk to me about. Often that’s because he thinks (aka- knows) that I won’t understand what he means. Sometimes we just have trouble getting ideas across to each other, which wouldn’t bother me as much if I didn’t feel like it was only my inadequacy that prevented him from understanding my point of view, rather than just a mutual miscommunication.

Of course, we’ve talked about all of this before, and it hasn’t really gotten us anywhere. Some days he just gets into a depressed sort of mood that’ll last the weekend, which I can deal with, but just as often I feel like these moods aren’t related to that at all, because the feelings aren’t based on a mood, but real misgivings about something.

We’lll have to work it out sometime I figure, but before then it’s a bit hard to wait. Often he doesn’t like talking about things that bother him, because he prefers to forget about it for now and push it into the back of his mind. Especially when he “knows” that hashing through it now won’t fix anything. It’s hard for me to deal with sometimes, because I’d always rather “hash it out” so to speak, even though I still might not understand in the end.

Either way, he’s been a gigantic help with my website, and for that I’m extremely grateful. I wouldn’t know any of what I do were it not for him.

In other news we headed out to my parents house on Saturday for dinner. Spent most of the evening there and played some card games, which was fun. Flux and Mille Borne. We had a distinctly southern meal that night: fried chicken, potato salad, corn bread, and red rice. Okay, so the red rice doesn’t count because it’s guamanian food, but who cares. I had fun that night, but we didn’t get home until almost midnight, which wasn’t all that fun.

I think I’m going to start up another category in my blog here: Books. I read a lot (or at least try to) and I think it’d be cool to talk about books I’m reading or have read.

I really hope I can keep this blogging thing going, considering that I plan on talking about so very much.

Forrays Into Felting

I knit my first felting project a couple of weeks ago. One day, in the magical world of the interweb I found a website called Elann.com. They had their own brand of yarn that they sold (a lot of it very cheap!), and a ton of free, albeit a bit odd, patterns. Immediately I ran to my friend Kelsey and showed her the wonderful goodness that was Elann yarn. Some time later I still hadn’t managed to come by the means of shopping online, nor had I come up with a viable project to use their yarn for, so I tucked the site away in my bookmarks folder and forgot about them.

Some time later Kelsey comes over and lo and behold, she’s made herself a felted bag! And where did she get the yarn and the pattern? Elann. She bought some of their Peruvian Highland Wool and used one of their free bag patterns on the site. Kelsey is an awesome knitter, and one of the things I admire about her is her capability to just dive right in and start a project, modifying it to fit her needs as she goes along. I, despite my best efforts, cannot do that. I have to plan out everything in advance, and if I’m not sure something is going to go well, I put off the whole project and it likely won’t get done.

But boy was her felted bag beautiful. A dark forest green background with alternating blue and purple mosaic patterns circling the body. She used Manos del Uruguay in some moss and forest greens for the strap of the bag and some of the flap. I was envious, and just had to make one.

Of course, that was last fall, and it’s only now that I’m getting around to making my own bag. I’ve had the yarn for a few months which I bought from their website along with some yarn for a lace skirt and ended up starting the skirt first. That remains a UFO (UnFinished Object), but for some reason at the time an ankle-length lace skirt seemed less daunting than a felted bag. I think it was the idea of having to do all that swatching. Oof.

When I finally started knitting the bag, I ventured online to find out about how to do this mosaic pattern. It turns out that the technique I’d be employing was “stranding,” rather than “fair isle” or “intarsia.” With stranding you carry your unused color behind your work as many as 5 (sometimes 7) stitches, and with fair isle it seems that the “hardcore” fans will say that you never carry your yarn more than one or two stitches along. Traditional fair isle patterns also have a constantly changing background color. Now, as far as I understand it (feel free to enlighten me if you know!) intarsia is still colorwork, but involves large blocks of color. I’ve often seen intarsia patterns with big diamonds.

Once I started knitting the bag and figured out how to hold twice as many strands of yarn in my right hand, things went quite smoothly. The Peruvian Highland Wool was great to work with, and it only took me a few days to finish the body of the bag.

Ways In Which I Messed Up:

1.) I knew I’d taken a picture of Kelsey’s bag, but I’d neglected to look at it again before starting the bag, so like her, I ended up running out of the background color “Bisque” before I got to the last 5 rows or so at the top of the bag.
2.) I didn’t do a gauge swatch. Disliking gauge swatches as much as I do, and knowing that I might not have enough yarn to do so, I subsequently found that the Lumpy Bumpy Yarn by Charlene in Fall Colors that Farmhouse Yarns makes doesn’t felt at the same rate as the Peruvian. I didn’t figure that this would be an issue, because I didn’t mind having a wider bag strap or a bigger flap. Turns out that with this yarn and the way it felted, the flap of the bag bows out toward the edge, giving it a slightly triangular shape.
3.) I didn’t do a gauge swatch. Yes, I’ve said this one already, but it’s important. Because I didn’t know the felting rate of the Lumpy yarn, I didn’t know how long to knit the bag’s strap, due to the fact that I had no idea how much it would shrink.
4.) I didn’t do a gauge swatch. I know, I know, but because I didn’t, it turned out that the Lumpy yarn felted at a vastly different rate than the Peruvian.

In the end, I had to sit in the tub for an hour in hot water hand-felting the Lumpy yarn part of the bag so as to not felt the body of the bag any more than it already was. That stuff likes to felt. A lot. That, and it felted so much that I ended up stretching it post-felting process with my life-saving (in so many ways) Joy of Cooking behemoth.

The bag looks great, and I immediately set out to make a second one. This time I used stash yarn back from when I still lived on Whidbey Island with the folks, Lumpy Bumpy Yarn by Charlene in Kaleidoscope. It has royal purple, aqua green, turquoise blue all mixed in, and every skein is different. Some skeins were lighter, so between colors they’d fade into lavender, moss green, and sky blue. It’s so gorgeous.

That bag happens to be drying now, and (again) because I didn’t swatch, it’s more of a messenger bag style, being a bit wider than long… completely the opposite of the first bag. That, and the flap is a bit short I think. But all and all, it’s realy pretty and I think the recepient will love it (yes, this is a gift).

That’s it for my felting experience. I’ve been taking color orders for subsequent bags for all of my friends, because the Peruvian yarn for a whole bag will only cost about $20. Woo!

Next episode: lace? AHH!

Scarves

If you’re a knitter, then you’ve definitely been through the Scarf Phase. This is when you suddenly become obsessive about scarves and want to make one for everyone in your family, all of your friends, and even some of your coworkers. Sometimes you even make up people to knit scarves for, and someone help you if your favorite scarf yarn goes on sale.

Now, while I’ve been in and out of those phases often enough, I fear that I’m entering yet another one. You see, I participate in an online community called BookMooch where I trade books with other book-lovers for points, which I spend on books that I want. One book that I’ve “mooched” recently is a knit-a-day calendar, which the smarter of my readers will realize isn’t a book at all. Regardless, I mooched it in the hope that I might find one or two patterns that I really liked. I wasn’t optimistic due to online reviews I’d read, but what the heck, right? It’s just points.

Turns out that this calendar has maybe 5 useful patterns in it that I’ll actually want to knit someday, one of them being a knitted gecko scarf, but we’ll talk about that in a later post. The other useful pattern is called “Linen Stitch Variegated Scarf.” While I’m quite aware that there’s a good chance I’m hopping onto this Linen Stitch bandwagon very late, it still looks about as awesome as can be. It’s a very simple pattern to use and really makes use of the variegation in your yarn.

Once I saw the pattern and realized that I just had to make it, I looked up where I could find the yarn. Now, I’m usually not an acrylic fan, and Red Heart often makes me cringe, but this pattern just looked so good in TLC Essentials worsted-weight yarn, which happens to be made by Red Heart. Naturally the next time Josh and I are out near Crossroads Mall, we stop by JoAnn Fabrics and whaddya know, it’s on sale for $3/skein! They had some gorgeous colorways as it turned out, and I just had to get 4 of them. Two in a burgandy/tan/dirt/cream colorway, one in a green/pumpkin/dirt colorway, and one in a blue/tan/dirt.

Since this is my blog and no one as-of-yet actually reads it, I’ll edit this post tomorrow and post pics of the yarn, including the scarf I’ve already started.

Now, since this is my knitting blog, and I get to ramble all I want, I also got some other yarn on this money-saving trip (hint: joke) to JoAnn’s… this one requires size 5 needles. I needed something with a smaller gauge to knit up some ruffled cuffs in Nicky Epstein’s book Knitting Beyond The Edge. Normally you’d attach these to the sleves of your sweater, but I thought they’d look cute on their own under your long-sleeve shirt, or alone with a t-shirt. Of course, it turned out that the yarn I practiced the pattern on was totally wrong, because the thing is huge. Basically it’s much better for wearing on my ankle under my jeans.

So. I bought some worsted weight to make 4 (or 8!) wonderful linen stitch scarves, some cheap purple lace-weight to try my hand at the cuffs again, and some size 3 dpns. Those should help out with the cuffs and double as some sock needles when I finally get around to diving into the sock world. Watch out!

Next episode: my first felting experience.

First Knitting Blog

I’ve downloaded WordPress! Because it likes to consider itself fairly nifty, apparently I can write both my knitting blog and my personal blog within the same blog, but link to just one “category” or another from my main website.

Anyhoo, I’m here to talk about knitting, more knitting, and even more knitting. Since I’m obsessive, I personally won’t mind, but if you don’t like knitting, I wouldn’t recommend this blog.

That’s it for my first knitting blog, I’ll go onto the iMac and grab my knitting photos to load into my online gallery.

In addition, I think I’m going to start a Tea category for my blog(s). Mmm.

First Blog

I’m actually getting somewhere when it comes to setting up my website. How cool is that?

Now I have to say, that I’m not going to really do that whole “database creation” thing that I would do if I were a Master Programmer/DemiGod, so the blog here is going to be a WordPress blog, and I’m using Gallery as my photo album manager. Josh has been a huge help, mostly because he just gets the necessary bits and tells me to go customize them. What does this all mean? It means that while Gallery seems to be a wonderful open source way to display my photos on my website, it also means that I’m using the exact same theme and color scheme for my album that Tricia is using. Hey, I can’t help it if we’re just both awesome, and Gallery has very few (good) choices! I might change my mind later, as there is one other theme that I might be happy with. But for now, we’re using the one that I think looks best.

Now, my website is going to consist of many things, I think. I want to have a knitting blog, and I want to have a regular blog, and instead of combining them together I think I’d rather have seperate blogs, so that any of you who don’t care about knitting (or vice-versa) don’t have to read all of it.

Here’s the main thing though: I have no idea what to call my knitting blog. Josh and I had a bit of a mis-communication when it came to naming my respective blogs. Personally, I thought it was a fine idea to just use the url blog.bevinaguero.com for my regular blog, and knitblog.bevinaguero.com as my knitting blog. I thought it was a nice, simple way to differentiate between the two, and it meant that my minute number of visitors wouldn’t have to remember something silly like “KumquatPiecesPersonified.bevinaguero.com”. Naturally, it seems that Josh and I disagree on this topic. Now, while his opinion is appreciated, it’s not going to really make much of a difference when I make my decision, except for the fact that now I’m not sure whether I’m right to try and make it “simple”. If you are a reader of this blog (probably because I made you do it), I request that you let me know what your own opinion is. Should I think up a “clever” knitting blog name, or stick with something simple like knitblog?

In other website news, I won’t just be talking about my personal life and knitting, although the two seem to be quite interconnected lately. I’m also going to be talking about tea, since that seems to be another big part of my life. I shall try to keep the blogs seperate and not talk about knitting here. And just so you know, my gallery link is here.

Onward!