After all Thursday’s excitements, there is remarkably little
to report.
No more news has reached me on the baby front. The
Dunfallandy blankie is on its way south. Rachel said on Thursday that Lucy’s
mother will be staying with them for the first few days. She is a retired GP,
and Juliet is not her first grandchild – the perfect mother-in-law.
I’m substantially further forward with Milo Bambino, a most
ingenious and clever pattern. I have progressed to the second of the six
graduated skeins. It’s too early to guess whether I need to worry about having
enough yarn.
And I spent some time with Mrs Gaugain’s Shetland shawl, as
promised, but without much result. The shawl is surrounded by a narrow garter
stitch edging on all four sides. I’ve got that. It is knit on 244 stitches from
start to finish.
But beyond that, every row is a to-me-bewildering succession
of “take” and “cast”. I’d need to try knitting it. How is the border pattern orientated?
And the centre pattern? How do they relate to each other? It is obvious from
the text that the centre is separate, at least in a sense, and that it has a
different pattern.
Franklin, perhaps ironically, was writing yesterday as ever
was – Friday
with Franklin – about the delights of knitting from 19th century
patterns. He was talking chiefly about swatches and stitch patterns – the sort
of thing currently on show at the Museum in Lerwick. But I am sure he would
enjoy untangling Mrs Gaugain’s shawl. I’d like to do it myself, had I but world
enough and time. After one had knit a few rows, perhaps one would be able to
chart the rest…
I’ve printed out all the patterns I want to take with me to
the EYF for yarn-buying purposes. As for lessons, I’m worried about Woolly
Wormhead’s injunction (amongst others) to bring along straight needles of the appropriate size. I never knit with
straight needles these days, unless they are dp’s – which would, of course, be entirely appropriate for hat-knitting. But
she doesn’t say “dp”, she says “straight”. I can see myself turning into one of
Franklin’s “Knitters we Meet in Hell” at this very moment.
A fuse blew here on Thursday evening. (You don’t really need
to know this.) Our fuse box is old and peculiar and well beyond my own
do-it-yourself abilities. I phoned our electrician this morning, an old friend,
and he said he would come, but he hasn’t done so. A third to a half of the
house lacks light, although the sockets, thank goodness, continue to function.
As the afternoon light was fading today, and I was setting
everything out in the kitchen so that I could find it and produce some sort of
supper, I thought of my father, reading Gibbon’s “Decline and Fall” in the
months when he knew he was going blind from macular degeneration. He never
actually said that that’s why he was reading it. Maybe I’m romanticising.
Woolly Wormhead's book "Going Straight" has all hats knit sideways on straight needles, and I've knit several. DPNs might not be long enough, but I expect they would work, if that is what you have. Convert to straights by adding rubber points to keep stitches on the needle.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear you have laid plans to attend your classes, and I look forward to hearing about your good time.
And thanks for the baby pictures!
Is there some reason you can't just knit back and forth on circular needles? I do that all the time.
DeleteMy father and his brother lost their sight to macular degeneration,that is a poignant picture of your father in the dusk. I have never read Gibbon, but when I hear it mentioned I think of Our Mutual Friend and some of the reading of Gibbons scenes that made me laugh out loud. I must be easily amused.
ReplyDeleteIf possible, I suggest asking the electrician to replace the old fuse box with a circuit breaker box. It's a one-time cost and then if a breaker is thrown by a surge, you just turn it back on. It's also a chance to have overly-comprehensive circuits divided, so that, for instance, there's always one power access point in each room that is on a different circuit.
ReplyDeleteCircuit breakers occasionally need replacing but it's fairly easy.