Not much here about knitting, today.
Helen and
Roger should be in Old Saybrook by now, but if so they won’t have been there
long. At least no Air France plane was blown out of the sky yesterday by explosives in
anyone’s underwear.
Lizzie’s
socks are ready for their Gibson-Roberts heel. I remember very little of how it
is done, but I do remember that it is a good idea to do the whole thing in one
sitting.
Will I get
that snood blocked today? Let’s try.
I pursued
the IK Freia cardigan through Ravelry yesterday, and found someone who claimed to
have knit it last year. The designer? The test knitter? I can’t find it this
morning. Her photographs were of the same sweater the magazine showed, and
included the photographs the magazine lacked, demonstrating how those tucks work
at the side seam.
Liz, thank
you (comment yesterday), for the reminder that exciting yarns were not in
evidence when we were young – even when you were, let alone me. And they are a great blessing.
And AnnP, thank you, for the quotation from Alexander McC*ll Sm*th. That’s pretty good. Scotland Street , as
you probably know, leads off Drummond
Place . The outer surface of the wall behind me, as
I sit here typing, is on Scotland
Street . The address of the people who flooded our
dining room is 1 Scotland Street . No 44, if there were one, would be down at the other end, a block away.
I served
for many years on the committee of the Drummond Place Civic Society. We
struggle to keep the ugliness of the modern world away, and we have an annual
general meeting with a speaker and warm wine. Alexander McC*ll Sm*th was
invited several times to speak to us, but was always too busy. Other
distinguished people who live here, or near here, have managed it.
Even less
knit-related
I have been
toiling, the last few days, to get a substantial fraction of my husband’s
magnum opus into the clouds. He still works in Word Perfect on a DOS computer.
I must therefore load each file, of hundreds, into a modern version of Word
Perfect on my desktop, and then Save it As a Microsoft Word document and Save
it In Dropbox. Lots of clicking is involved. I thought maybe my
modern-world-savvy sister or brother-in-law could think of a way to expedite
this process, some sort of macro, but they couldn’t, and I found that the job
was much simpler and sweeter once I felt I wasn’t being stupid by doing it this
way.
Today we’ll
associate the Man at the Tate with the files now in the clouds. I don’t think
he’s paying much attention.
Why the change of type-face? Not my doing.
I always love hearing about your corners of the world. I stumbled across this photo of some part of Drummond Place, taken in 1956:
ReplyDeletehttp://tinyurl.com/d5s3498
and there are even notecards with artistically done photographs for sale: http://drummondplace.org/PHOTOGRAPHS/Cards.htm
Was reading about your problem and do hope you pursue this. Surely the person occupying the flat above you has a duty of care to those in other flats not to allow water to escape from his/her property. I think that negligence is the key word here. Is this not why we buy liability insurance?
ReplyDeleteA. McCall Smith does seem to have a lot of irons in the fire.
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