Monday, July 27, 2009
A finished project
I finally finished hemming this skirt over the weekend, though I haven't managed to get a good photograph of the whole thing yet.
I have so many projects at the moment that just need, say, half a sleeve knit or to be blocked and assembled. Should be more to show sooner rather than later...
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
July 4 weekend
And speaking of urban wildlife, I spotted this guy when I was walking back to the train. Bugs don't bother me at all, especially outside — in fact, I think they're pretty fascinating in all kinds of ways — but I can see where cockroach haters might get squicked out by this.
I got a fair bit done over the weekend on some long-standing projects too. I've been socking away all of the grey handspun from the last few years that isn't enough for a sweater, but definitely have enough now. It's pretty much all sportweight-ish, and will likely end up as an Icelandic-style cardigan with a patterned yoke. There are three different charcoal varieties (a mohair faux-boucle, some romney/alpaca/glitz and a small skein of what I'm pretty sure was Lincoln/mohair singles), three skeins of light romney/sparkle on the right and 12 oz. of a medium, warmer grey romney/mohair.
I finished all of the pieces for Yank, but had returned the book to the library and need to get it back to have the schematics to refer to before I block the pieces. There's no real hurry on that, since it's JULY, but it would still be nice to finish it up.
I also did some sewing(!) on a skirt from Favorite Things. I used some cheap-but-cute cotton that I got at Jo-Ann's at some point, one print for the body of the skirt and another for the flounces. The especially nice thing about this pattern is that while it doesn't call for a zipper, all of the elastic is at the back so there's still a nice, smooth front. I've gotten into the habit of tracing off pattern pieces onto waxed paper in case I want to make other sizes or just not wear the original pattern to tatters.
All of the flounces attached to the panels:
Initially, I was hemming it on the machine and it just looked like crap. I could tell it wasn't going to hang well. So I ripped all of that out and started hemming it by hand. It's slow going and my stitching certainly isn't going to win me any ribbons at the fair, but I'm enjoying the process and pretty happy with how it's turning out. Curved hems, though, can bite me, the gorgeous, tempestuous creatures.
The weekend also included a couple of spectacular sunsets. This one was the night of the 4th, as far as I can remember.
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