Monday, February 29, 2016

Last minute trip

We realized we had a mostly empty weekend, and couldn't let that happen. We decided to squeeze one last ski trip in. Our original plan was to go to Sierra at Tahoe since there a lot of easy routes there. A bunch of things happened, and we ended up going with a different friend to Northstar. I had a bad impression of Northstar because the last time I went there someone mistaken my rental skis for theirs. I was also concerned because mountain map had mostly blue and black trails. Our friend assured us that their blue's weren't as hard as other places blue's. 

In order to avoid getting up at 4 am, we drove up Saturday afternoon. We got lucky and found a cute little place near the lake. It had a table big enough to play games, and lovely view of the sunset. I will consider staying there again. Maybe even in the summer, since it is right on the lake. 


It turns out Northstar has all the runs Squaw is missing. Squaw has great beginner runs, and I assume great black runs, but not so much in between. Northstar's blue's are a lot easier and wider. It was a lot of fun skiing them. We even managed to do a Black Diamond route, partly because our crazy friend tricked us. We spent the whole day doing blue trails. It was nice having things that were just the right amount of challenging. Northstar is my new favorite place to ski.


We had lunch mid mountain. This is a picture of my overpriced, but delicious burger, and the view I had while eating it. The hill behind my burger is the one we went down after lunch. Crazy! It was the first time I ever skied on the back side of a resort. 


Here we a picture of us courtesy of Northstar that proves I made it to the top of the mountain. They have a place called Tȱst. It has fire pits and waterproof beanbag chairs you can rest in while admiring the great view. At 2 pm they have a champagne toast. I wasn't sure I was going to make it because I was really tired after the back mountain runs. The timing was perfect, so right after finishing the back mountain I could head right up there and then just one more run down then I could rest. I'm glad I went, but getting down was crazy. Of all the trails to not be a easy blue... It was crazy, narrow, crowded, right near an edge, and since it was the end of the day it was slushy bumpy snow. I think going down the black route may have been easier. 

It was a fun trip. Hopefully I remember how to ski next year.

Book Review: Eleanor

I was having brunch with a new friend and we got to talking about books. She had similar taste in books to me and recommended this book. I added it to my to read list. When I got home I posted my last review and went to look for a new book, and there was this one. Happy coincidence. 

I did enjoy this book. It was very engaging and I didn't want to put it down. My impression while reading it was that is was really weird. It starts out as a sad story that is completely plausible in the normal work. Then it gets strange, but not necessarily a bad strange.

There were two things I did not like about the book. The first is a spoiler, so if you don't like those don't read it. The end of the book negates the rest of the book. There is a lot of weird stuff including time travel. The character manages to undo not only her past, but part of her grandmothers and most of her mother's. The second is I didn't like a half of the characters. Many seemed completely incapable of dealing with their reality, and let their tragedies destroy not only their lives and the lives of their families. 

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Coffee sock

I have named this project "Coffee Sock", because while knitting everyone kept thinking I was making socks. This yarn would make beautiful rainbow socks, so this may happen in the future.


This was made with the leftover ball of mini mochi. I made a hat with rest of it, this is almost exactly what I had left. I'm not going to write an official pattern, because I incorporated the lace pattern from another pattern. But I will share how I did it.

Instructions:

Step 1: Go to Starbucks. They were selling these travel mugs a year ago, maybe they still are. The idea was you can open it and write notes to yourself with a dry erase marker, then put the clear cover back on and the notes stay undisturbed. I saw this and bought one to make a knitted coffee cup.

Step 2: Pattern
With DPN Cast on 6 stitches.

This makes a flat circle for the base.
Row 1: kfb 6 Times (12 sts)
Row 2: [kfb, k1] 6 Times (18 sts)
Row 3: [kfb, k2] 6 Times (24 sts)
Row 4: [kfb, k3] 6 Times (30 sts)
Row 5: [kfb, k4] 6 Times (36 sts)
Row 6: [kfb, k5] 6 Times (42 sts)
Row 7: [kfb, k6] 6 Times (48 sts)

Rows 8-10: Knit

Begin Lace Pattern:
You can find the lace pattern here: It is free.

Repeat Lace Pattern 5 Times.

Knit 3 rows and bind off.

Step 3: Fiddle with the coffee sock to get it positioned properly around the cup. No blocking is necessary.





Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Bags not hats

It seems that my sewing equivalent of hats is bags. I have been focusing more on getting through some projects I had been meaning to sew but never seemed to get around to. With the help of a wonderful friend who has been helping me figure the patterns out, I have finally started getting things finished. 

The first project was inspired by a shopping trip before christmas. I had purchased a learn to embroider kit. The patterns were very cute. It took me a while to get started because the beginning involved an iron, which was on a different floor than my project. Once I got started I really enjoyed making it. I thought it would be a lot harder that it was. I had a book of sewing projects that had a bag with a hand embroidered bird. That bird was a different one, and on a hexagon shape. but I don't didn't think that was a crucial detail. I found some cloud fabric to go with my bird and made this little bag. It is a perfect size for a small knitting project. 


Project number two was from the same book. It is a pencil case with pieced pencils. It would be more useful if I still actually used pencils on a regular basis. This one took a long time to get started because it requires lots of little scraps of fabric. I get the impression that most serious sewers get this after a while. I am still new to the sewing, and I am not inclined to keep tiny bits of things I may never use. I managed most of the colors, but my wonderful sewing friend gave me some colored scraps that worked perfectly. The way this is pieced is very forgiving; you just end up with different shaped pencils. The zipper on this pouch was not as cooperative as I would have liked. Overall I am happy with how it turned out. 


The next bag I am not happy with. This was a sewing club project. I braved dealing with the new teacher there, it was a mistake. I was really excited about this bag. I thought it was cute, and a good shape and size. The construction is also very interesting. I could have done without the zipper tab on the side, but a minor issue. The major flaw with this bag is that despite it having a lining fabric all the inside seams are visible. I remember my first sewing club class we made a bag and the teacher thought it was awful to have a bag with no lining so she told us how to modify the pattern to add one. That teacher, Michelle, would never have left this bag as is. The biggest issue I have with the current teacher is her inability to alter the pattern. I made the bag as is, but I don't like it. I doubt I will ever use it. 


The last project is very similar to the first. This time it is a tea cup with tea themed fabric. This bag I managed to remember how to do make it without any help. This time I didn't have a string, so I made one out of some left over cashmere yarn. Fanciest string ever. I have one more bag of this type on my to make list, but I haven't made the embroidery yet.


Monday, February 22, 2016

Stitches West 2016

Every year I say I'm not going to go to this because I don't need more yarn, but every year all the knitters I know get all excited about it and I end up going. This year I signed up for a market class  as I usually do. I like being able to go on Thursday evening as it not nearly as crowded. 

I thought I was going to be wandering around by myself Thursday, but I ended up finding 3 friends. It made the whole evening so much more fun. Also hugging a giant felted dinosaur makes everything more fun. 


I saw these adorable little jellyfish. I thought the lady said the kit to make them was $25, but the sign as I noticed later said $15. That's a lot more reasonable, I might have gotten them in that case. But they are so cute. 


Friday was the day of my class and a day to go see all the yarn things I wanted to get a second look at. It was another lucky day of running into people. I found 4 people I knew before I even walked through the doors. 

I had a project list with yarn requirements. I didn't want to end up with a bunch of single balls of yarn that would just end up as hats. I found a lot of very pretty yarn that would have fallen under this category. I resisted all but one ball of this, and that was was 80% off so not too bad. 

One very clever thing I saw was this odd things called "sock blanks". They take two strands of sock yarn, machine knit it, then dye it in crazy colors. Then when you want to knit your socks you knit two at a time right from the blank and you end up with two identical crazy colored socks. I thought this was an awesome idea, but I didn't want crazy socks. Maybe striped socks, but they didn't have a blank for that.


After shopping for a bit I headed to my class. I walked right by the information desk, so I asked where it was rather than figure it out myself. The lady directed me the opposite direction I thought I was supposed to go. I figured she probably knew what she was talking about, and it made sense with previous year's instructions. I walked over there, my class was not there. I looked at my badge with the class location, and tried that. Which was on the complete opposite side of the convention center. When I got there a hotel lady was blocking the hallway saying the door was locked. Pretty soon the rest of the class started to show up, also confused. The lady from the hotel went to go figure out what to do, so I walked down the hall. My class was not on the list for the room it said it was in. As a group we decided to walk to the information booth to find out where to go, and found the teacher for the class. She directed us to a room on the second floor completely not where anything said to go. But, it was a room full of looms, so perfect for a rigid heddle weaving class... Except we weren't allowed to sit at the looms. The looms were for a different class. We all had to crowd around her little teaching table at the front of the room. Some people didn't even get chairs. The entire "class" was watching the teacher warp her loom and weave a few rows. It wasn't much better than a live youtube video. I went and complained after, and was promised a refund (which I have not received). Not a happy experience.

This is my very healthy lunch... They screwed up my order as usual, but I got it free!


Another stitches find this year is a thing called Creativebug. They seem to be trying to be Craftsy. I don't think they have succeeded. Craftsy is awesome because they have in detailed classes. CreativeBug seems to be more project based, like a video pattern. Their site is subscription based, I have no plans at continuing it past the year I got. It is very overpriced for what you get if you don't have the Stitches deal. But with the stitches deal, it is worth a year of new random crafts. 

One project was a beaded bracelet, so I went to the bead store at Stitches. I found these lovely metal beads. 


All the things! The ball "Wool and the Gang" was my free creativebug yarn. I had been looking at this yarn online for a while, so it worked out. The coolest thing I found was two different kinds of retro reflective yarn, so I can now make nighttime safety hats. I took this picture with a flash to show how bright they are. I found some neat buttons; some heart shaped ones, and some buttons that look like already sewn buttons. Both are super cute. The most unexpected purchase was the cute knitting and sheep themed fabric. It will be perfect for future project bags. 


Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Book Review

I really wanted to like this book. I love doodling and I liked the idea of having a draw in book to learn some new things to doole. 

I don't like this book. Some of the drawings are cute, but the instructions are terrible. You would think the first section of the book would be the easier one, especially considering this is basically a workbook. It is not, you clearly need some previous drawing experience. The drawings aren't doodle cartoons, they look like full on anime characters. Not easy to just doodle. 

I also didn't like the physical size of the book. With a name like doodletopia you would think you would be making little doodles. The pages are huge. When you start adding shading and such, it becomes a lot to do. It isn't a little doodle anymore it is a full on art project.

I did like one section of the book. It was making two different things, animals usually, using the same starting shape. I thought that was interesting to see. I would have liked to see that section expanded more, with more options and practice pages.

I received this book from Blogging for Books for this review.

Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Escaping the Madness

In what turned out to be a highly successful attempt to avoid the absurd traffic a large sports inconvenience was going to cause, we ran off to the top of a mountain hoping it would be far enough. 

On the way up I spent the whole car ride trying to finish this cowl for Steven. My original plan had been to make two. It did not go as quickly as planned. I got Steven's finished though. It was so warm he basically wore it for this picture and it spent the rest of the day in his pocket. 


These are the previously mentioned skis. I love my skis. They are the best skis. They would only be better if they were blue and had the same pattern on both skis. I will just consider this encouragement to not look down while I ski. The poles were nice too, and since our last lesson taught us what to do with them they weren't just an annoying stick to carry around.


Since we had these fabulous new skis I braved the full mountain trail. It wasn't as hard as I remember it, so that was nice. It was still long and I got tired. We took a break here. Not a terrible place to rest at all. It had a great view and the other way a view of the really steep part we had just gone down. So there was a fun mix of really awesome skiers and people falling all over the place. 


On our second night we tried out the local sushi restaurant. Squaw Valley has much better food options that dodge ridge... One of the house rolls was topped with seared beef. Weird enough to try and take a picture of. It was actually pretty good. 


Our second day of skiing had even better views than the first. The sky was soooo blue. The birds were really enjoying it too. I know this because one almost ran into me while I was starting down the slope. It almost made me fall over. I thought birds flew south for the winter...


Steven made a giant snowball and threw it at me. 

Squaw Valley has an Olympic Museum which I wanted to see before we left. I planned to see it Monday morning before we left, but we finished skiing early Sunday, so we were going to wander over there right before it closed. Luckily we did this, because it turns out the museum is at the top of the mountain. So our wandering turned into rushing out of the room trying to get to the tram in time, which takes 15-20 min to get to the top and hoping to get to the top. We made it, good thing too since we didn't have tickets for the tram that worked on Monday. 

The thing that I found the most amazing was how terrible their equipment was in the 60's. These were the kind of ice skates used. These look awful! I had better skates than this and I was never even a senior level skater. Their skis weren't much better either. Crazyness. 


This is the rink at the top of the Mountain. I almost wished I had my skates with me, but then I remembered how tired I was from skiing. I took a picture instead.






Monday, February 1, 2016

Book Review

I have mixed feelings about this book. There are some good points in it. Some good enough that I am going to pass it along to someone I think it will be good for. Going over the good parts in this case would be more like a book report than a book review, so I won't be doing that. There are good things in this book. If it looks like something that would appeal to you, it is definitely worth a read. 

However despite giving it a pretty good rating I did have a few problems with it:

The book is very clearly written by a woman for women. She tries to avoid this fact by repeatedly saying that anyone can benefit from it, and denying that it is geared toward women. I found this distracting. I think she should have either owned that she was writing to a female audience or just let it be. 

The author has a tendency to have large quotes from other sources. I didn't find the first few to be overly relevant or helpful, and I found myself just skimming over them. I think a good portion of them could have been weeded out. She had plenty of good things of her own to say, she didn't need to waste space repeating other people's words.

Lastly, there are some exercises in the book that are supposed to help you think about a certain thing in a new way. They seem overly involved to me. Most of them seem like they might have a purpose, but in order to do them you would need to have a dedicated time to sit down and do them. But, the way they are presented in the book is more of a quick thing to do. I may try a few out sometime, but overall they don't seem to be as refined as they could be.