Monday, July 29, 2019

Food for the Body, Food for the Soul

Tour de Fleece finished on Friday.

I spent the last day of the "race" replying my "Strung-out Frog Prince" yarn, because it wasn't balanced. (I had put more twist into spinning the fiber than I had during the plying, so it wrinkled up.) I ran it through the wheel again, adding more twist, then I washed it and hung a spray bottle on it while it dried as a weight. I'm happy with the result.

I didn't get much more spinning done with the drop spindle, although I did a little bit each day. If you compare with the photo from last week's blog post, you can see some progress, however.


The knitting of the Coastal Skies shawl is finally done, but I still need to weave in the ends and block it. The pattern is Knockout Round by Ann Weaver.


I finished it while we were still out of town visiting the kids, and fortunately, I had brought along another project to work on: my "Trickle-brick Socks," using the pattern "Trickle Socks" by Katie Douglass. I started these in November 2015. They got shoved aside to do other things, like doll knitting and shawls. I had one pattern repeat done past the ribbing. Now I'm almost to the heel turn. 


Billy needed some pants for warm weather, so I made these cargo pants. I used the same pattern as for the jeans, but left off the back pockets and added the side pockets instead. I shortened the length by reducing it 1" and then turning under 3/4" before hemming. Then I turned the edges up to make a cuff.


From having raised two boys, I have learned that boys shouldn't have more pockets than they need. It's just more to go through before you do laundry, removing tissue, bubble gum, crayons, frogs, rocks, notes from the teacher, etc. I will make another pair of these for Emil, who will be joining the cast in September, assuming all goes well. (He's paid for, so it had better go well.) I might vary the pants pattern a bit.

In this week's story in The Doll's StorybookVeronika teaches Charlotte how to sew. They make the dress Veronika had on in the picture from last week's post. Veronika started at the beginning, explaining all the tools you need for sewing. If you don't usually read the stories, you might like to read this one, just for fun, especially if you like to sew.


I've been meaning to make kimchi again, something I used to do frequently. If you aren't familiar with this dish/condiment, it's a kind of fermented vegetable, similar to sauerkraut. If eaten raw, it is purported to contain beneficial bacteria, the way yoghurt does. I cut up some cabbage, carrots and green onions, and put them into my kimchi press along with some special seasonings and salt. There are various recipes for this, and I picked one I had ingredients for.


I left it for four days. I ended up with 6+ cups of kimchi. (One partial jar is not in the photo.) I put the jars in the fridge. It will keep a long time. Yum!


We've had an indoor basil plant before, but haven't managed to keep it alive for long. This one is doing well after a month. The instructions said to keep it in a sunny spot and keep the roots wet. My solution to keeping the roots wet is to have a dish of water to keep it in. I keep adding water whenever it's soaked up, so the roots never dry out.


Pandora moths have shown up, lying dead on the trail or in our yard. I've seen one or two a day. I was curious, so I looked them up to see what they were. I found this report on the website of our local radio station. We're learning about the local wildlife. These are interesting.

Sunday evening (last night) we went to one of the local meet-ups. This week's meet-up was at Bevel Craft Brewing. They let you taste first and pick what you like. Food was provided by a food truck. I had lettuce wraps with tofu and peanut sauce. It was yummy!


I managed to walk two miles a day for another week.

What's on my needles: The Trickle-brick socks.

What's on my sewing machine: Clothes for Emil.

What's in my hoop: Still the Whole Cloth Quilt. No work done on it this week.

What's in The Doll's Storybook: Veronika Sews.

What's on my iPad/iPhone: Finished Cadenza by Stella Riley. Then listened to Episodes 1 and 2 of The Report, a podcast from Lawfare that explains the unredacted sections of the Special Counsel's report. (I have listened to part of the actual report in audio, but there is a lot I don't understand, and this other podcast explains things a layperson needs to know to understand it.) Now listening to From This Moment by Elizabeth Camden, who also wrote The Rose of Winslow Street, which I read (listened to) a year or so ago.

What's in my wine glass: One on One Bachelorette Chardonnay 2015. Not my favorite, but then Chardonnay isn't really one of my favorite varieties. The beer was a nice change.

What's my tip of the week: You don't need to backstitch if you are going to sew over a seam, but in some places where you might need to secure stitches but you might not want the excessive stitching, there is another way to secure stitches so they don't show.
Turn your work to the inside/wrong side. Pull on the bobbin thread slightly.


When you see the top thread come through to the back, grab the loop with a needle, pin, awl or something else that will fit through the loop. Pull on it until it comes out and is on the back of your work.


Then tie the top thread and the bobbin thread together. I like to use a square knot. Once it's tied, you can cut off the excess thread. In this case, I was sewing on a pocket, so I tied the beginning and the end of the stitching. It won't come out unless the thread breaks.



Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.

Monday, July 22, 2019

Taking the High Road

Tour de Fleece ends this week. 



So far, I've managed to spin a little bit each day. I'm plying the Frog Prince yarn now. 




I had to leave the wheel at home when we went to visit the Beaverton kids for the weekend. I took my drop spindle with me and managed to spin each day we were there. I'm using my Golding Tsunami drop spindle and this Ashford merino and silk top roving I started a few years ago, before I got my wheel.



Jolena received a new dress during the week using the fabric she picked out at The Stitchin' Post in Sisters during the quilt show. With it, she's wearing a pair of the new shoes we received from FairyTaleLOVEit on Etsy. The owner lives in the Ukraine. The shoes and clothes are expensive, but they are very well made and cute.



One reason we picked this week to go to Beaverton, which is close to Portland, Oregon, was to visit the Portland Highland Games in Gresham. DH decided to wear his kilt and everything that goes with it. I made these kilt hose in 2011 after taking the class with Mary Scot Huff at the Sock Summit. This is the first time he worked them.



He didn't have his ghillie brogues (shoes) yet, so he won some black walking shoes. We found the ghillie brogues at the games.


Our son and his boys also dressed in kilts for the games. It was easy to spot them coming. Very few children wore kilts to the games.



During the opening ceremonies, we were entertained by a bagpipe band.



There were a lot of interesting competitive events, such as the Kilted Mile, a foot race for men, women and children. (I believe the children's event was just one time around the track.



We watched the men's Caber Toss. They have to get a long log-shaped piece of wood balanced and then toss it so the top hits the ground first. Then they are successful if the other end lands between 9:00 and 3:00 from where the tosser is standing.



We left to watch the kids participating in their own versions. This our grandsons' cousin Leo tossing the caber. He was good at it.



Johan did well at the stone toss.




Soren is a good runner. He did well at the Farmer's Walk.



Johan also medaled in the sheep toss. For the kids, they used a stuffed animal sheep with the stuffing replaced by rocks for weight. (If you look over the pink tape in the photo, you can see the sheep flying through the air, well over the tape.)



We went to a local park on Sunday so the kids could play at the splash pad (which they call a spray ground) and the playground. Then we went out to eat. DH and I stopped off at Noble Woods Park for a walk with the dogs before going on to watch the kids at 53rd Avenue Community Park.

The pups went to the groomer on Tuesday, a few days before our trip. Here they are, enjoying their post-grooming stupor.



The sunflowers along the Larkspur Trail are beginning to bloom. Soon we'll be back to walking the trail.



We're on the road today. It will be good to get home.
What's on my needles: Still the Coastal Skies Shawl. Almost finished!

What's on my sewing machine: Costumes for the dolls.

What's in my hoop: Still the Whole Cloth Quilt. Finally making progress!

What's in The Doll's Storybook: Heat Wave.

What's on my iPad/iPhone: Finished The Flirt by M. C. Beaton. Now listening to Cadenza by Stella Riley. We also listened to more of The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs by Steve Brusatte while driving.

What's in my wine glass: Grifone Primitivo from old vine Zinfandel 2017 vintage. We found it at Trader Joe's. A good buy for a nice wine.

What's my tip of the week: If you can figure out a way to do it based on how your dishwasher is configured, you can sort the cutlery as you put it into the dishwasher rather than as you take it out. It's much faster, because you usually put the various items into the dishwasher one or a few at a time and taking them out all at once. It does take training family members, though. You will have to make the decision about whether the training is worth the effort.




Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.

Monday, July 15, 2019

Scenes from Sisters

You may know that the second Saturday in July is the Sisters Quilt Show. Since we live so close, we decided to go. I decided to take Veronika with me to get some photos, because she's a quilter, too. (She sat inside my purse most of the time.)



There was a long line of cars going into town. We finally found a place to park in the high school parking lot, which is about 1/2 mile from town. Quilts are hung inside and out. It was quite breezy, so there was a lot of flapping around. The sun was almost straight overhead for some of the shots, so some of the photos are partially backlit. I did my best. Here are some scenes from the show:









We stopped in at the Chamber of Commerce, because DH was stung by a bee on his hand and was also looking for a rest room. They assured us they had no bees, so that bee must have been a tourist. (They had a nice rest room, but there were port-a-potties all over town.)




While we were waiting for DH to use the rest room, Veronika decided she wanted her photo taken in front of this quilt.



(She shouldn't have had her shoes on the furniture, but she wanted to get close, and she insisted she had cleaned her shoes while in my purse. I might need to clean my purse.) There were other interesting quilts inside the building.




Of course, most of the quilts were outside.



Veronika wanted her photo taken with this quilt, so everyone would know she had attended. You can't tell, but she had to work to keep upright with the strong breeze.


The quilts seemed everywhere.






We took a break for lunch, which was also in my purse. We found a grassy place to sit, and Veronika came out again to eat with us. I let her sit on my new T-shirt, so she wouldn't get her slacks dirty.



There were activities for nonquilting family members of quilters.





















It was like attending a farmers' market or a fair. There were lots of booths selling things and promoting their wares.



This place had live music.


Again, everywhere you looked, there were quilts on display.















We had some other business in town besides looking at all the lovely quilts. A few weeks ago, on our way north to visit the kids, we dropped our clock off at the clock repair shop in Sisters. It hadn't been working since the move, so we hoped to get it repaired. We took it into Beacham's Clockmaking and Repairs



It wasn't easy to find it among all the quilts.



Of course, there were quilts hanging in the shop, but also lots of clocks. (That's our clock, up high on the wall and second in from the right.)


 

We took a look around the shop while waiting to find out if the clock was ready.  It was.





When we found out our clock was ready to go home, we decided that DH should go get the car and try to find a closer parking space. While he was doing that, I went into the Stitchin' Post, which is in the same block as the clock repair shop, but just around the corner.



That was the most crowded place in town.



I went around and looked at everything. Many other people were doing that, too.


Of course, quilts from the show were hanging in the shop, too.



I wanted to get some photos of Veronika in her favorite kind of establishment, possibly for a future story. I let her pick out some fabric for a new dress. Of course, as a fellow quilter, she had to have the one with scissors all over it.



She wanted to watch while our fabric was cut. She told the nice lady that no, she isn't an American Girl doll, she's a Götz, but she thinks that American Girls are pretty, too, they just can't lie down and watch the clouds, because their eyes close.



While we were waiting to pay (there was a line), we looked around the knitting part of the store.





The line moved quickly, because they were very well organized. Veronika waited patiently for our bill to be rung up, but she couldn't stop looking around. She almost forgot to take my credit card and the fabric. I had to give her a nudge, because other people were waiting, and DH had just arrived, having moved the car to a closer spot.




We went around to the clock repair shop, found a close parking space, and Veronika and I were assigned the task to keep someone from taking it, while DH went to get the car, now parked a block away. By then, people were leaving, so it was easy to keep the space free.

We were all worn out, so we headed home. It was much faster without the line of traffic.

Also this week was some spinning. I finished about half of the fiber.



I'm well into the second bobbin. I will ply the two singles together when I get it done.

I managed to walk 2 miles a day every day this week except Saturday, when we only went 1 1/4 miles, because we needed to leave to go to Sisters.

Plans for this week include more spinning, and preparations for the next story.
What's on my needles: Coastal Skies Shawl, a few more rows done (mostly while driving to Sisters and back).

What's on my sewing machine: Summer clothes for the cast of The Doll's Storybook.

What's in my hoop: Still the Whole Cloth Quilt. A few more inches finished.

What's in The Doll's Storybook: Fuzzy Town––A Play.

What's on my iPad/iPhone: Finished The Flirt by M. C. Beaton, then listened to The Player: Rockliffe, Volume 3, by Stella Riley. Now listening to Rake's Progress by Marion Chesney.

What's in my wine glass: Still the Kirkland Cabernet Sauvignon. The box has lasted a long time. It must be like the "warm fuzzies" in this week's story.

What's my tip of the week: I learned from our veterinarian that baby oil or mineral oil will remove pitch from in between a dog's toes. Pitch will pick up gravel, pine needles and other debris, making walking uncomfortable for a dog.




Note: This blog post was produced on the iPad and the MacBook, using the iPhone for some photos and some photo processing. No other computer was used in any stage of composition or posting, and no Windows were opened, waited for, cleaned or broken. No animals or dolls were harmed during the production of this blog post.