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Heroes are Here! New Pattern, Partie Deux! (Plus a little history on the caduceus)

Heroes!

I created this pattern in honor of all the heroes in the medical field who go to work every day to help us all. Knit a hat, give it or keep it and post a pic of your finished product on Instagram to share the love! Hats up for those who help! And, as I said last post, this pattern series — Villains and Heroes — is free. Instead of paying for a knitting pattern, I simply suggest a donation to a charity of your choice that is helping people harmed by Covid-19. You can check out my previous post for more details on that.

Let\’s talk about a little fun fact: The caduceus, as a medical symbol, is actually a sort of \”misnomer,\” in a way. Apparently, over the years (and Wikipedia alleges the U.S. is mostly to blame), the caduceus has accidentally replaced the Rod of Asclepius, which is the \”real\” medical symbol. While the ancient Greek god Asclepius was considered to be the god of healing and medicine and carried a rod with a single snake, the Rod of Asclepius,  or the caduceus was actually the rod of Hermes, herald, messenger, teller of things … cool guy with wings on his feet … Paul Schaffer in Disney\’s Hercules … and the caduceus was carried in ancient times, by humans of Hermes\’ same occupation.

According to Wikipedia, \”The modern use of the caduceus as a symbol of medicine became established in the United States in the late 19th and early 20th century as a result of documented mistakes, misunderstandings and confusion.\”



Anyway, it is used instead of the \”correct\” Rod of Asclepius as a symbol of medicine nowadays. But really, what are symbols and traditions but social constructions? Things we, as a society, have decided together over time? Maybe we should just let the caduceus stand! I\’m goin\’ with it. I give you all my pattern, Heroes. (Sounds sort of Greek, doesn\’t it?) You can get the pattern in my Ravelry store as a free download. Forever. Knit on, friends, knit on!

Your knitterly friend,
Janelle



Heroes and Villains
Heroes
By Janelle serio
This stranded colorwork beanie is the second pattern in my Heroes and Villains set. Of course, you can tell from the pictures that this hat represents some of the heroes of today’s pandemic. Featuring the traditional caduceus (“ka-doo-she-us”) symbol— with its familiar staff, snakes and wings—along with some impressionistic crosses to represent the medical profession, this hat is a nod to those in the medical field who endanger themselves every day for the rest of us.
These patterns are and will remain free patterns so anyone can make and wear or make and give a hat to show solidarity with those most affected by Covid-19. If you feel so inclined, please feel free to donate to a charitable cause that helps those in need at this time. If you need some ideas, there are a few listed on the pattern page.

A word on sizing for this pattern

The size of this hat is determined using knitting gauge
·  Toddler/Child: 7st/8rounds/inch/2.5cm
·         S/M Teen/Adult: 6sts/7rounds/inch/2.5cm
·         M/L Adult: 5st/in/6rounds/inch/2.5cm


This can be accomplished by using an approximate corresponding yarn weight of:
·        Toddler/Child size: fingering weight
·         S/M Teen/Adult size: dk/sport weight
·         M/L Adult size: worsted weight


To fit head circumference (range):
·         Toddler/Child: 16-18in/41-46cm
·         S/M Teen/Adult: 19-21in/48-53cm
·         M/L Adult: 22-23in/56-58cm

Any yarn/needle combination that gives the gauges listed above will work for its corresponding hat size. Check your gauge in a portion of the colorwork pattern after blocking. Please use a combination of yarn and needles that gives your desired gauge for accurate sizing.

Finished hat size after blocking
Circumference: 15.5in/40cm (18in/46cm, 21.5in/8.5cm)
Length: 6.6in/16.6cm (7.5in/19cm, 9in/23cm)

Fit: This hat is designed with just a little extra length in all sizes to be soft and a bit slouchy. It has a firmer ribbing at the start to help hold it on, but choose your size according not only to your recipient’s actual head size, but also how you’d like your hat to fit.
In the photo on the front page of this pattern, the sample I am wearing is an adult M/L and my head is 21.5inches in circumference, and my actual crown height (measured center-top of head to ear lobe) is 8.5inches. 

Materials

Estimated yarn amounts (These are only estimates. Everyone uses a different amount of yarn when they knit! Be sure to have extra on hand.):
  • Toddler/Child: 122yds/112m total; 50yds/46m MC; 36yds/33m CC1; 36yds/33mCC2
  • S/M Teen/Adult: 126yds/115m total; 50yds/46m MC; 38yds/35m CC1; 38yds/35CC2
  • M/L Adult: 155yds/142m total; 62yds/57 MC; 47yds/43m CC1; 47yds/43m CC2

Yarn suggestions
Toddler/Child: Fingering weight yarns, some thicker dk sock yarns also work up at the desired gauge for this pattern (7st/inch/2.5cm) or can be made to using the right needles.
S/M Teen/Adult: Plymouth Dreambaby DK, Cascade 220 Superwash (I know it says worsted, but for me it always works up at dk weight!)
M/L Adult: Rowan Pure Wool Worsted, Cascade 220 (worsted)

Tools
Toddler/Child: One set each of US3/3.5mm and US5/4mm 16in/41cm circular needles; one set of US6/4mm dpns.
S/M Teen/Adult: One set each of US5/3.75mm and US7/4.5mm 16in/41cm circular needles; one set of US7/4.5mm dpns.
M/L Adult: One set each of US6/4mm and US8/5mm 16in/41cm circular needles; one set US8/5mm dpns.
All sizes: Stitch markers, a darning needles and scissors.

Abbreviations and special stitches
CO: Cast on
R: Indicates round number
K: Knit
MC, CC: Main color, contrasting color
K2tog: Knit two together
*to*: Indicates a repeat section
K1fb: Knit into next stitch as usual, leave stitch on needle, knit the same stitch a second time through the back loop. Stitch completed.
<!–[if gte vml 1]>

 

A word on sizing for this pattern

The size of this hat is determined using knitting gauge:

·         Toddler/Child: 7st/8rounds/inch/2.5cm

·         S/M Teen/Adult: 6sts/7rounds/inch/2.5cm

·         M/L Adult: 5st/in/6rounds/inch/2.5cm

This can be accomplished by using an approximate corresponding yarn weight of:

·         Toddler/Child size: fingering weight

·         S/M Teen/Adult size: dk/sport weight

·         M/L Adult size: worsted weight

To fit head circumference (range):

·         Toddler/Child: 16-18in/41-46cm

·         S/M Teen/Adult: 19-21in/48-53cm

·         M/L Adult: 22-23in/56-58cm

Any yarn/needle combination that gives the gauges listed above will work for its corresponding hat size. Check your gauge in a portion of the colorwork pattern after blocking. Please use a combination of yarn and needles that gives your desired gauge for accurate sizing.

Finished hat size after blocking

Circumference: 15.5in/40cm (18in/46cm, 21.5in/8.5cm)

Length: 6.6in/16.6cm (7.5in/19cm, 9in/23cm)

Fit: This hat is designed with just a little extra length in all sizes to be soft and a bit slouchy. It has a firmer ribbing at the start to help hold it on, but choose your size according not only to your recipient’s actual head size, but also how you’d like your hat to fit.

In the photo on the front page of this pattern, the sample I am wearing is an adult M/L and my head is 21.5inches in circumference, and my actual crown height (measured center-top of head to ear lobe) is 8.5inches.

<![endif]–>

<!–[if gte vml 1]>

Materials

Estimated yarn amounts (These are only estimates. Everyone uses a different amount of yarn when they knit! Be sure to have extra on hand.):

Toddler/Child: 122yds/112m total; 50yds/46m MC; 36yds/33m CC1; 36yds/33mCC2

S/M Teen/Adult: 126yds/115m total; 50yds/46m MC; 38yds/35m CC1; 38yds/35CC2

M/L Adult: 155yds/142m total; 62yds/57 MC; 47yds/43m CC1; 47yds/43m CC2

Yarn suggestions

Toddler/Child: Fingering weight yarns, some thicker dk sock yarns also work up at the desired gauge for this pattern (7st/inch/2.5cm) or can be made to using the right needles.

S/M Teen/Adult: Plymouth Dreambaby DK, Cascade 220 Superwash (I know it says worsted, but for me it always works up at dk weight!)

M/L Adult: Rowan Pure Wool Worsted, Cascade 220 (worsted)

Tools

Toddler/Child: One set each of US3/3.5mm and US5/4mm 16in/41cm circular needles; one set of US6/4mm dpns.

S/M Teen/Adult: One set each of US5/3.75mm and US7/4.5mm 16in/41cm circular needles; one set of US7/4.5mm dpns.

M/L Adult: One set each of US6/4mm and US8/5mm 16in/41cm circular needles; one set US8/5mm dpns.

All sizes: Stitch markers, a darning needles and scissors.

Abbreviations and special stitches

CO: Cast on

R: Indicates round number

K: Knit

MC, CC: Main color, contrasting color

K2tog: Knit two together

*to*: Indicates a repeat section

K1fb: Knit into next stitch as usual, leave stitch on needle, knit the same stitch a second time through the back loop. Stitch completed.

 

<![endif]–>

The Pattern
CO 96stitches using CC1 and smaller circular needles.
Join in the round, taking care not to twist.
R1:*k1, p1* repeat from *to* to end of round.
Repeat R17 more times. (8 rounds completed)
R9:*k7, k1fb* repeat from *to* to end of round. Do not break CC1 yet.  (12 stitches increased, 108 stitches total, 9 rounds completed.)
The body of the hat
Switching to larger circular needles and, using stranded knitting technique and MC and CC1, begin knitting color chart. Break CC1 after round 2 and pick up CC2. Continue on to complete color chart (Pattern repeats three times around the hat).
Once chart is complete, break both yarns. Pick up CC1 for crown decreases.
The crown
Using CC1, begin crown decreases:
R1: *k10, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R2:*k9, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R3:*k8, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R4:*k7, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R5:*k6, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R6:*k5, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R7:*k4, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R8:*k3, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R9:*k2, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R10:*k1, k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round
R11:*k2tog* repeat *to* to end of round (53 rounds completed, 9 stitches remain)

Finishing
Cut a long enough yarn tail to run through all the remaining stitches using a darning needle. Cinch stitches tightly together, tie off inside hat. Weave in all ends.
For best results, we block finished hat to smooth out colorwork stitches.
Colorwork chart
Pattern repeats 3 times around the hat. And in case anyone wondered: yes. This chart was a brainbuster.


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A Seafaring Man is LIVE! (Save 20%, no coupon needed!)

Hello, all! Just a note to let you all know that my new hat pattern, \”A Seafaring Man,\” is now live. And it is 20% off in my Etsy shop and in my Ravelry shop until this Sunday! No coupon needed!

The hat pattern has: three crown options; color charts for each of the 9 sizes in the pattern; a tutorial for the tassel option; and a tutorial for the the seamed, \”inside out\” 3-needle bind-off I used for the square topped crown. (Secret note: there are also recent posts here on the blog for help with those, and for help with pom poms! Check below this post for more info!)

The crown and embellishment choices in the pattern make for many different hats!

Enjoy, and if you make one of my hats, I\’d love a shout out from Instagram @freckledgirlknits, or you can post to my Facebook Page of the same name!

A big thank you to my Ravelry testers from the Free Pattern Testers group. I couldn\’t have down it without them! And their hats are spectacular!

In other pattern news, in two weeks, on May 15th, I will be releasing Villains and Heroes! Both hat patterns will be free. Instead of paying for a pattern, I suggest a donation in any amount to a charity of your choosing. More on that in a couple of weeks!

Happy knitting,

Janelle 💓

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How to Make a Simple Yarn Tassel (A Pretty Good One: My Two Cents)

Picture Tutorial for 6(9) in/15(23) cm Tassels
Materials include:
  •   26g/39g worsted weight yarn such as Rowan Pure Wool Worsted 
  •   A 3×6(8×15)in/8×15(20×38)cm sturdy piece of cardboard
  • Two lengths of yarn for tying and wrapping the top areas of the tassel
  • Scissors

        


1. Starting at the bottom of the cardboard, wrap the yarn around the cardboard the long way about 50 times. This will give you 100 tassel “strands.” If you’d like a fluffier tassel, feel free to wrap even more times.

Don’t wrap too tightly or you might bend your cardboard as I’ve done in the picture below! Tight wrapping might also shorten the length of your tassel or make it harder to remove from the cardboard.


2. Thread a length of yarn about 6in/5cm or a bit longer through a darning needle (or use your fingers) and run the piece of yarn under all the wraps at the top. Tie them together tightly at the top with a double knot. Carefully slide the yarn off the cardboard and lay it carefully onto a table. Smooth a bit if needed.
3.Cut another length of yarn about 10in/25cm long. About 1inc/2.5cm down from the top knot, wrap the yarn several times around all the strands, creating a “neck” at the top of the tassel. Tie off or tuck end into the wraps on the neck.


Carefully sliding a scissors through all the bottom loops, cut through all the loops to create tassel strands.



To smooth out the yarn strands, wet thoroughly as if to block and hang to dry. Once your tassel is dry, trim the ends to make them even. If you want to be fiddly, you can comb the strands out after they dry and before the final trim to really make them even. Tie them onto the corners of you hat!



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Yarn Along {January}

In case anyone wondered, the rules are roughly
 these: on your own blog, post this \”button,\”
seen here. Tell everyone what you
are reading and what you
 are working on right now. 

Hello, all! I haven\’t posted in the Yarn Along for the blog Small Things in a while, so here is my January post!

Right now, as part of my to-do list for my 50th year, I am working on list item #3: make birthday gifts for my two youngest daughters by the end of February (their birthdays are the 21st and the 25th). Amy Rose, turning 10 this year, will receive the Professor Meow sweater, designed by Claire Slade and seen on the Knit Picks website. I originally got this pattern (and bought the Wonderfluff yarn for it; a lovely mix of baby alpaca, merino and nylon fibers)  at Vogue Knitting Live in Bellevue, Washington in 2017, and in true procrastination fashion, I have been sitting on it until now.

Amy\’s sweater is my first real try at Intarsia and I have watched Sally Melville explain how to execute this technique on Craftsy (now becoming Bluprint) about 50 times. After a while, you just have to give it a go and stop living vicariously through someone else who can neither hear, nor see, nor really interact with you. I have learned that intarsia isn\’t insanely easy, but it also isn\’t insanely hard. You must be willing to blindly do as you are told, go very slowly, and it works out okay. Even so, I can tell that Professor Meow will do better with a bit of blocking once we are through!

Annie, turning 19 this year and living on her own for the first time, will receive a cowl that is taking an e-t-e-r-n-i-t-y to knit, with 400 stitches in the round (Okay, that number was my choice. The cast-on stitches were fewer, but not by much. I just started out with too much yarn tail, and there\’s no way I was going to remove 320 stitches just to start over with a smaller tail!). Those 400 stitches work together in a squishy slip-stitch pattern, and boy do those little guys love each other! They insist on hugging together in a pebbly, cushy way, so that after hours of knitting you feel like no progress has even been made. Have I already complained about that? Sorry. I can\’t hear you above my self-pity.

The cowl pattern is free (Is it? Really? Or is it an eternal sentence in hell?) and it called Array by Shibui Knits. I am using Lion Brand Wool Ease for Annie\’s and I plan to continue the eternal slip-stitch pattern for another couple of inches and then go off the rails a bit (for even more excitement) and switch out for stripes for a few extra inches, and then finally sew aaaaallllllll those stitches together for a totally closed cowl. Annie had better wear this thing.  Or else.

My reading is varied these days between audio and hard-copy books. My audio book right now is The Stand by Stephen King. I have never read one of his books and I\’ve always wanted to read this one. I do so love microbes, and the mayhem they can cause is incredible. They are amazing and terrifying little buggers! For those times when children are in the room and I cannot play the audio book due to not-so-kid-friendly-language-subjects-otherstuff, I can quietly read my paper copy of Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. Thanks to Annie, my almost 19-year-old daughter for that one! I loved American Gods and I am so into this book.

Yes, I know. I know. You can see I am fascinated by apocalyptic storylines and the more supernatural the themes, the better for me. In fact, you as you get to know me on the blog here (or if you already know me in real life — you know who you are), you will find I have a dark streak (humor, mostly…) that sometimes even freaks out my adult kids. But I like to think of it all as good, clean, end-of-humanity-as-we-know-it fun. After all, if we explore our fears, don\’t we totally control our worlds? No? Oh, well. \”What if….\” is still a good game, if you ask me.

Next up on the blog: I have no idea. First, let\’s make sure we make it to next week. 😉

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2019: The Year of the Bucket — er, To-Do List

Here\’s a recent photo of me. Ready for a new year
with a new stain on my shirt. 

This year, I have what I am calling the very exciting experience of turning 50. I truly am excited and for several reasons. First, if The Death Clock website is to be believed, I will live to be 99 years old, which puts me smack dab in the middle of my life, having another 49 years to live. That\’s plenty of time to get into the right kinds of trouble, and to accomplish a few things. More important, these remaining years will be much better than the previous ones — at least 20 of those were spent knowing nothing about life, and at least another 10 were spent knowing only marginally about life, but believing I knew everything about it. Now, I can wisely spend my remaining years knowing that I — and all of us — truly know very little about life at all. And that there are rarely any true absolutes. This sets me free; I now can be exceedingly inquisitive, seeking experiences and new wisdoms that can be found absolutely anywhere.

Another reason to be excited about turning 50 is that it is a good time to create a list of things I\’d like to do. I love listing. It is a favorite pastime of mine. Big picture-wise, I will likely create a master \”bucket list\” for the rest of my 49 years as people often do, but I think that for practical purposes, breaking that list down into manageable parts might be best. So this year, I\’d like to create a smaller list. More of a \”to-do\” list than a bucket one. That is what I want to share with you all here on the blog over the course of 2019.

The final reason that turning 50 will be an exciting time for me is Molly Shannon. Yes. I can stretch and kick and stretch … and I\’m 50 (or I will be …)!!!! My name may not be Sally O\’Malley, but this brings up another to-do list item: On my birthday, June 11, I plan to drive everyone crazy all day long (and maybe for the rest of the year, for that matter) acting out that character. At work. At home. At church (what\’s that you say? June 11, 2019, is a Tuesday and there is no church? I\’ll find a way). At the mall. All locations are fair game. Is a Rockette audition in my future? Maybe not. But I can sure act it out at random.

Although 2019 has not quite started, I am chomping at the bit to go, so here goes the first to-do list item: I want to leave the old blog and \”rebrand\” myself a bit. Just a very tiny bit. And here I am, with a new blog name and a slightly new look to the blog page. I never liked the name of the old blog much anyway. In fact, I have been wanting to change it for a long time, and I don\’t even know why I\’ve waited; it\’s not like thousands of readers will lose me. It\’s more like I will be telling people, \”Hey, my blog has moved,\” and they will be like, \”What blog?\”

Here are some of my plans as they stand right now: 

1. Work (for real) on The Master Knitter\’s Program through TKGA. Good grief! This one\’s been lolling around my life for two years or more! Okay, more. But who\’s been counting? Not me and that\’s why it isn\’t done.

2. Finish the precursory correspondence course to The Master Knitter\’s Program, \”Basics, Basics, Basics.\” That sounds like a good theme for 2019 as I organize a future! It\’s been so long since I sent in a lesson that Arenda Holladay surely has forgotten me … if she ever knew me in the first place. I don\’t think that first lesson of mine was such a doozy.

3. Make my daughters\’ birthday gifts by hand for once, for crying out loud! The oldest two are turning 31 and 19!! The 9-year-old needs one too, but probably has not been as damaged yet by broken promises from her mom and handmade birthday gifts.

4. Make my husband something — anything — and actually deliver it. This is not unlike list item #3. He did get three handmade items for Christmas, which was a good start, but I feel certain that I am still behind. 15 years behind.

5. Write!!! Yes, write. Here on the blog and elsewhere! Journaling, novel writing, all of it!

6. Continue to read and read and read. In 2018, audiobooks changed my reading life. Back in October of 2017, I committed to reading more often. Audiobooks to the rescue! Although I did read some paper novels, like American Gods and Paulo Coelho\’s The Devil and Miss Prym, among others, I took off with Heather Ordover and CraftLit! Now I have Audible and the library, too! Wowie Zowie you can listen to bazillions of books while you knit and sew!!! This year, I\’ve read 13 books to date, a record for my whole adult life. (I, like so many others, fell off the reading novels wagon post-college and never went back to my old beloved pastime of childhood. Mine is made worse by admitting that I graduated from college in 2008 at 38 years old! Other excuses include children.)

7. Go back to college — risky, I know, for my newly found reading habit. I\’ll have to work that out. I want to finish that Bachelor\’s in Dental Hygiene! Working on entering EWU\’s online program, probably at the end of summer.

8. Take a cool trip for my 50th birthday — in the works!!

9. Act like a giddy idiot on my birthday. Done. Always done.

10. Open ended — I am a gemini, after all. God knows what I may do.

There are many, many other ideas that could potentially enter my to-do list, and as they rumble around in my brain, shifting and trading places with one another, I will share them with you.

Let\’s do this — or at least try to. (See how I didn\’t say \”or die trying\”? That would be stupid. I have 49 years left. Dying while trying would be a total waste of resources.)

Here are a couple pics showing how I\’m getting started:

Amy Rose\’s birthday sweater — this is the back. The front will be much harder.
One word: Intarsia. This skill is on my lifetime knitting list, therefore this project
will kill two birds with one stone, so to speak!

Annie\’s birthday cowl. This is an example of a Christmas gift
becoming a birthday one.I have been working on this thing for 3 months.
With 400 stitches in the round, it never seems to end.
It needs to end by February 21, 2019. 

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Yarn Along {May}

Well, here it is already. Another month has passed and we are into Yarn Along for May! Time to share what we are all reading and knitting. If you would like to participate or find out more about this, here is the link to do so! Let\’s go!

As for my own reading, I am still slowly working through The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Bronte, and, on the recommendation of a friend, I also am listening to Mink River by Brian Doyle — through the magic of public library digital check-out — and to The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton through the CraftLit podcast library, presented by the always-lovely Heather Ordover. I read The House of Mirth in college, but never got around to The Age of Innocence. And since I haven\’t seen the Daniel Day Lewis movie of the same name, either, I figured it best to read the book first.

My 9-year-old Amy Rose and I are listening to Anne of Green Gables on the weekly schedule through CraftLit (this is Heather\’s current book) as well, and we are up to the third audio book in the A Wrinkle in Time series, A Swiftly Tilting Planet. An aside: here is how old I am. I own the boxed set of THREE Wrinkle in Time Books, purchased in the 1970\’s from a grade school Scholastic book fair. Now there apparently are FIVE books in the series, the last two of which were published in 1986 and 1989. I was 17 and 20, respectively in those years and by then was no longer thinking much of those books, except as a nice grade school/awkward junior high girl memory. Looks like I am in for two books, new to me!

I know my book list sounds like reading overload — but the books each serve their purposes. You know, one for driving alone to work, another for crafting, and the paper ones to hold in your hands when you can actually do so. The kid ones for Amy Rose\’s bedtime, etc. They are like knitting projects: A project to work on watching TV; another for work meeting or continuing education classes; another when you have time to really concentrate on those tough and complicated patterns (ha-ha — like that ever happens!). Which brings me to knitting…

My current knitting: I finished one sock each of two different patterns. One from Toe-Up Socks by Wendy Johnson called \”Rosebud,\” and I have been working on that one for a while (what was that about a more complex pattern?) and one from Nancy Bush\’s Knitting Vintage Socks. The first one has a nice lace pattern and the second has a ribbing named \”Oak Rib,\” and has a french heel (very fun to make as I have not branched out much from short row and flap heels!) and a round toe. That one makes me feel warm and cozy, as it is adapted from Weldon\’s Practical Needlework. I love feeling connected to the knitters of the past, never mind that the pattern is simple. We, present and past, are of one mind.

Here are some pics:

I am loving this self-striping  Jawoll yarn! It is a bit rough but seems very durable.
And I love the colors. The other yarn is by Dream in Color, Smooshy, colorway\”Strange Harvest.\”

I am hoping to finish these two by next month as I want to make a bigger project for me!

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My Kitchen has Been an Intermittent Mess (and my family room, dining room and pantry…)

We have been plodding away at redecorating our kitchen. And when I say plodding, I mean weeks and weeks of painting, thinking, cleaning, painting again … and this is after months and years of contemplating, thinking, planning, scratching the plans, contemplating, thinking and planning again … we move slower than almost anyone I know. Slower to act only than those who actually never do act.

Let\’s lighten it up! And, if you are a \”pictures-only, please,\” sort of reader, scroll to the bottom of the post to see our messy, colorful redecoration.

Last summer (yes the summer of 2017), my husband had a wild idea one sunny, Sunday afternoon. \”Hey!\” he said, \”Let\’s go to Fabric Depot today! I\’ll bet you can find some kitchen curtain fabric there!\” I looked at him and his three heads. A husband saying this? I really did think it sounded fun to drive down to Fabric Depot. And I had been talking about — at the least — putting some curtains up on the kitchen windows, even if we did no other fresh decorating in the 13-year-old kitchen. I wanted to try sewing some roman shades.. But I hesitated as my husband stood there, waiting for an answer; what was he up to? I had to admit that it was a nice day for a longish drive. And there would be fabric at Fabric Depot. Loads of it, all smelling all fabric-y and stuff. Mmmmm…. (Yes, I know the smells are probably dangerous chemicals. Don\’t ruin this for me…)

If there was an ulterior motive in my husband\’s idea, I decided I didn\’t care. The smells were enough for me. I put aside any suspicions. \”Let\’s do it!\” I said cheerfully.

A yarn bomb appeared on our truck as we shopped! 

Fabric Depot did not just deliver on smells, it delivered the fabric, after all. In fact, we both loved the new fabric so much that we planned to use it as our color palette and style guide. The cotton print was made to look old, whitish with faux tea/time stains and a richly hued farm-esque print with apples, vegetables, old scales and brown baskets. (Plus, while shopping, we got a random yarn bomb on our truck out of the deal — see photo. I know, crazy!)

Once we got home, I promptly sat on the fabric from July 2017 until February, 2018. All those months later, we got it out, and looked it over again. We had both been thinking about it and decided to use spring break to paint (well, I am the painter — I would paint after hubby had cleaned out all the cobwebs) not only the kitchen but also the butler\’s pantry and the family room. Why not? It needed it. Badly.

We used Home Depot\’s Behr paint, the semi-gloss in the \”better\” variety for our paint. I used a candied apple red for our butler\’s pantry, a hallway off the kitchen that leads to the formal dining room. We use the little room for coffee making and storing my huge collection of old dishes (well, part of my collection — I also have a hutch and a sideboard filled with them. I have a problem). This room took 2 days and three coats. Bright red is tough to get totally smooth!

I painted the kitchen buttery yellow, and it was pretty tricky on the ladder, reaching way over the deep cabinets to get to the wall. It took three days and three coats in there (the builder\’s paint was a dead red-brown flat color — one of my coats acted as pure primer over that dark color.)

And finally, I painted the family room deep brown. It was also very plain — the builder called the color \”Sawyer\’s Fence –\” we\’d call it \”The-bottom-of-your-socks-after-a-long-walk-on-an-unswept-for-five-days-kitchen-floor.\” And once you got up close to the Sawyer\’s Fence walls, you could also see it was very scuffed, aged and dirty. I confess: clean as we did, I still knowingly painted a bit of dirt right into the walls — more than once. Or twice. I\’m thinking of those spots as time capsules. This room — and I think I was sick of painting and not feeling as careful and leisurely about the activity at that point, plus spring break was over and this was the following weekend — took me 10 hours. Granted, no high, deep cabinets in here. Just the fireplace.

Then it got crazy!

We had planned to re-tile the whole kitchen backsplash, which I was really no longer wanting to do. I said to hub, \”Hey, can we paint the tile?\” He got so excited it frightened me. \”Yes!! We can! Why didn\’t we think of that? We could save so much money and time!!\” We immediately set out reading up on how to do paint kitchen tiles, and it turns out it is no big deal.

To begin, I used an old dental instrument to clean out all the old caulking under the existing tile. Then, we vacuumed the questionable crumbs, and whatever else we found, from the now-revealed crevice (Whoa! the house really settled!), and cleaned the stone tiles. They were icky grey and looked really dull against the new, vibrant yellow paint. We only sanded the tops where there was grimey grease that didn\’t want to wash off. This was one of the only places I used tape in the whole project (painter\’s tape and I have a dubious past) as I knew it would work for me around the tiles; I put it on the counters and just on the wall for a nice sharp line above the tiles.

I used 2 coats of Gliddon Gripper Primer on the tiles, followed by 2 coats of Behr untinted interior semi-gloss paint. I did not wait the recommended times to put each subsequent coat on; I just did each coat as the paint was dry to the touch. I will wait the 30 days recommended to replace the caulk so the acrylic paint can totally cure.

Then I got another idea: we were thinking of replacing the backsplash over our stove. It\’s a wall hanging, really, from Broan. But it was stone tile/resin. And 13 years old. Why not paint that, too? So I did. I used the same wall paint in our color palette ( I also had some green I had bought, just in case) and some cheap artists brushes. I painted the whole thing white to start (avoiding the grout in some areas to make it rustic), then added color to the center. Once that was dry, I painted the white over the color again and wiped much of it off with paper towels, dabbing or wiping depending on the texture I wanted.  I think I like how it turned out! And it was cheaper than buying a new one, for sure. I finished the backsplash over the stove with 2 coats of glossy acrylic sealer.

I am now 95% of the way done with the next part, actually making the curtains for the kitchen windows. I did not make the roman shades I had planned on. Instead, I found some cute, kitschy ideas for gluing fabric onto roller/pull-down shades. Blog posts I used are here and here. They are drying and hopefully will work well! If they do, I may just do them again for the sliding door.

Through all of this, I finished listening to audiobooks The Golem and the Jinni and Jane Eyre (the last one through the Craftlit podcast, which I adore! I highly recommend it when your hands are busy!). I also knitted some while waiting for various coats of paint to dry.

There are a few more redecorating items still to address, like the fabric covers on the dining chairs, and installing a new, white sink with farm/country style faucets. But this is what I have so far:

Ready-set-go!

Candied apple red butler\’s pantry. More to come in this special little room!! Stay tuned.
13-year-old, dry builder\’s paint. 

Yellow on red. Tough!

Much brighter. We all feel happier in here now!

Before: white yucky paint.

A small purdy brush really helps where tape cannot.

Warm and toasty TV/fireplace room. 

The paint does NOT look this severely yellow! I will try to get softer tones when I take real \”after\” photos, once
the whole thing is done.
The original.

One coat of white.

The finished wall hanging.

The windows waiting for covers. 

The famous Fabric Depot fabric. Farm motif and all!

If you do this project, you will make friends with a lot of adhesives.

I dried mine for two days plus. The spray adhesive stayed tacky for a while where I oversprayed a few spots.

Waiting to be hung!! 
More to come!

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#The100DayProject: There Comes and End to the Excuses

My project: #100photosonlivingacreativelife. You can
see it all so far on Instagram.

After a small flurry of paper sorting and neatly putting the whole thing into an envelope, she stopped abruptly and looked me straight in the eye: \”You need to work on your self-esteem. There are a lot of places to get help — books, for one thing. I have a whole library of things you could read. But get help.\”

I was stunned. Offended.
I didn\’t need to \”work on my self-esteem!\” I had just been accepted into the very limited-entry dental hygiene program at Clark College, where, over the previous four years I felt I had already beat back many of my demons. I had, in fact, excelled in college, and I was surprised by it, but proud of it. I was a single mom, after all, with four kids at home. In addition to that, I was about to marry my now-husband, the man of my dreams. I would have never believed in my whole life that someone like him — college-educated, smart, and an editor to boot (be still my English-loving heart!). He had a wonderful network of friends who had accepted me as their own — and this man was tall and handsome to boot. 
Wasn\’t I on my way? What could she mean?
Caroline was my advocate. This is the title of the person you are assigned through the Catholic church when seeking remarriage after a divorce. While this is a big topic, I realize, and a topic for another time, it was what I was choosing. My husband-to-be and I wanted to be formally married in the church, and I personally, after several years of attending Mass with him and careful consideration of the doctrine and church history, decided that I also wanted to be a full member. (Yes, another big topic! Especially since I was coming from a Conservative Baptist background.) 
I sat with Caroline that sunny afternoon after a year-long project for the annulment, a very large writing and counseling project that ended in 50 pages of my very personal information to be sent off to the Seattle Archdiocese. It required a lot of personal and intimate excavation. It was hard. It could be alternately enlightening or upsetting. And Caroline was with me every step of the way. Now at the end she was telling me I still had work to do — and from her tone, it sounded like a lot of work…

That day was many years ago, but I remember it well. I walked away from that conversation with my heels dug in. While I was sure that Caroline had the ability to see past other people\’s false fronts, with her grandmotherly ways and her sweet long gray hair, which was often held back on one side by a silk flower on her right ear, and her wise, wide brown eyes framed in a soft, Hawaiian face, she surely had nothing to see in me.

After all, I had been laid bare before her. She had seen it all, my life story, the good bad and the oh-so-ugly parts.

I still am not sure what it was that she saw specifically in my history or demeanor that caused her to call me out, beyond two especially bad marriages; in fact, maybe that was it. The history of bad relationship choices that revealed someone who thought of herself in a low way. There was also a childhood of bullying (wherein I was the the receiver), and some other happenings that I won\’t list here, but all those things I believed I had worked out. Through personal success and now this year of talking it all out.

Here is what I now know: You can tell yourself all kinds of stories about why you are okay as you are; you can choose to disbelieve those who would try to help you — all along the way. People like me (who have the deadly combination of denial and an independent mind) often ignore many signposts in life trying to point them to their own true personal direction; you could call it destiny, but that sounds trite and overplayed. Put simply, sometimes there is a just a better way to go, and we can\’t see it. We need help.

This is the reason I am doing The Artist\’s Way as my #the100daysprojecct. I am re-doing it to be sure, as I did it three years ago. That first time around, it was my oldest daughter who called me out. I guess I listened to her because she said I was a \”blocked artist,\” which sounded better than \”You need to work on your self-esteem.\” That time around was emotionally rough. Surprisingly, as I had said here on the blog before. But I got so much out of it that time that I wanted to do it again.

As time passed, I realized that the first time out did not feel complete. My journaling habit had become sporadic at best, and my writing (which I had once felt inspired to commit to) was like a dried up, dying plant in a hot window. I had, of course, had health issues, which are now largely resolved. But that wasn\’t even the biggest problem.

We sometimes put up our own roadblocks, saying almost anything to prevent ourselves from \”following our bliss,\” as Joseph Campbell said. After all, we have to get food on the table, raise kids, work out, eat right, and commit to absolutely every school/church/work/neighborhood/community activity/committee that comes along. Right? And boy, howdy, aren\’t all those causes right as rain? Every last one of them.

So, overcommitted, overworked and underfed, artistically inclined folks may start to feel trampled, beaten down and just plain bad. That\’s where I now realize I was. I had put absolutely everything else before my writing, knitting, fun-loving, crafty self and now I was even beginning to notice new phrases crossing my mind, like am I becoming depressed?

Maybe it turns out that we have to constantly work at it — fight against the inner and outside sources of interferences in our creative lives; fight for our need to be creative. After all, doesn\’t creativity problem solve? Get the work done? Come up with new and interesting ideas? It is a valid pursuit. And don\’t let anyone tell you differently.

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#The100DayProject

Morning Pages Journal #2. I get the fattest notebooks
I can find!

I am feeling all \”joiny\” right now! In addition to the Yarn Along from the Small Things blog, I have decided to participate in the Instagram #The100DayProject. I came across it last Thursday, poking around on Instagram while waiting for my dad at OHSU at his cochlear implant pre-surgery appointment (You can get into a lot of trouble in 2 hours. At least I didn\’t buy anything … I think. Well maybe a book or two. Thanks a lot, Amazon.)

First, I found Kim Werker\’s #yearofmaking2018 as I follow her (and sort of worship her). Then as I looked around at what that was, I noticed someone used Kim Werker\’s hashtag, and another one, the #The100DayProject one. Very interesting, I thought. In my waiting room stupor, I was weak. I joined them both. After all, they are related, right?

As I get back into my crafty self, I felt like these sorts of games/challenges/groups/participations/insanities/whatthehellamIdoings could help me along. After all, a lot can be accomplished in 100 days, or in 365 of them. And I like the framework of it all, even if am late to both games.

For my #yearofmaking, and per the rules, I am posting anything I made or worked towards finishing that day. Tonight, it was an old pair of socks that I\’ve recently picked back up: Wendy Johnson\’s Rosebud Socks from her book, Toe-Up Socks for Every Body. They seemed slow and hard months ago, but now suddenly they are not only not-so-bad, they are fun! I am not feeling so terrified of getting lost in the lace pattern now — why? Don\’t care; I\’m just glad for it!

#The100DayProjecct seems a little more \”formal,\” if you could say that. The rules say to name your project, and post something you make/made every day. Seemed like they should be related to each other, as in a greater project. I had to think about that one. My mission on this is still a little bit in development (I had trouble getting a project name that was not already taken, for example!), but I have decided to post one photo every day as it relates to my journey — no, overused word — my commitment to discover through The Artist\’s Way by Julia Cameron. 

My adult daughter handed me the book three years ago, announcing to me as she was working through it herself, \”Mom, you\’re a blocked creative. You need to do this, too.\” So I did it. I went through Julia Cameron\’s program. It was so shockingly powerful, moving and healing. It was raw and difficult — the sort of thing that as you work through it and you find yourself sobbing, and you are not sure if the tears are of of sadness, anger, relief or all three. Sometimes they might feel really happy and you may find yourself sobbing and laughing at yourself at once.

I will be posting more blog entries about this experience, but I can tell you: thinking back now, and re-reading my morning pages (journal entries as named by Julia Cameron, the author), I believe I only scratched the surface that first time around.

Me painting my kitchen … YELLOW! Totally
crazy, I know…

This past week was serendipitous. I was not working. My kids were on Spring Break and visiting relatives. I had time to reflect while I took my parents to appointments and painted my kitchen and pantry. I had quiet time to write and read, knit, journal and write … and think. And it was during this week that it occured to me that I should probably do the Artist\’s Way again, to revisit it, and to learn more. And it was this week that these other opportunities knocked to help me along.

So, here I go. Maybe you want to come with me. I have provided links to all the pertinent information above. Who knows what we will find?

My project for #The100DaysProject : #100photosonlivingacreativelife .  As I said, I plan to post one photo per day, and mention something important to me that was revealed by working through Julia Cameron\’s program. I realize some of the things I will say will be universally true, but they became true for me for the first time in my life three years ago. I am still working towards living freely as a creative and I love that the passage into that life never ends.

My \”Cool Morning Socks,\” all finished! 
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Yarn Along {April}

I recently started following a knitting blog called Small Things. I have really been enjoying it. The blog is lovely to look at, with soft, ethereal photos of writer Ginny\’s large family and homestead. It is a peaceful place of beauty and you can check it out here.  In her latest blog post, Ginny is encouraging all of us knitters/crocheters and otherwise fibery folks to share monthly what we are working on and what we are reading. Let\’s face it, in our group, we also tend to be bookish. You can follow along — and play along — by following the instructions over at Small Things on the Yarn Along blog page here.

I am following along, too, using the blog here, and Instagram! You can find me over at Instagram as freckledgirlknits.

Here is my entry for this month:

I just finished listening to The Golem and the Jinni on audiobook from our local library\’s digital checkout system, Overdrive. I loved the book. It is a fresh sort of fantasy story, with a lot of middle eastern and Jewish folklore and legends woven in. I feel like I learned a lot of new things while reading a compelling story about two mythical creatures brought to New York against their will in 1899. I will say no more, except that the book is not just an adventure. It raises a lot of questions and will get you thinking.

Now I am reading The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Bronte by Syrie James. I didn\’t have high hopes for a book like this one, as I was uncertain that a modern person — even an English scholar — could capture a voice for the story that rang true. After a trusted bookish friend told me how much she loved this book, I borrowed it from her. Now, halfway through the book, I purchased my own copy! I am simultaneously listening to (re-reading) Jane Eyre through the CraftLit podcast (binge listening to that last one, as this book was done on the podcast some time ago), and the two are wonderful together! Heather Ordover of CraftLit, English teacher/professor brings wonderful insights into the writing and times of the authors, which makes the books she presents thoroughly rich. Amy Rose and I are also listening weekly to the current CraftLit book, Anne of Green Gables once a week. For you knitterly readers, Heather Ordover also happens to be the author of What Would Madame Defarge Knit? and What Else Would Madame Defarge Knit?

The socks I am working on currently are a free pattern on Ravelry called Cool Morning Socklet by Marlene Berghout. I really like the pattern. The designer is very thorough in her instructions and even includes a little tutorial for her unusual short rows (new to me, anyway!) which include \”twin/shadow stitches.\” I am using some old leftover yarn from the very first sock class I took years ago from local Portland designer Chrissy Gardiner. The yarn is Dream in Color Smooshy in Happy Forest colorway. I only had 46 grams left (if I frogged the little sample sock from the class… which I had to do) and it is just going to finish the second sock!

Said goodbye to this tiny sample sock from my first knitting class ever. The lace on the back was horrendous,
anyway! I had no idea what I was doing.

Love the easy-to-follow lace pattern on these socks

The unusual gusset and short rows are pretty attractive