Hello again my dears, I hope you're all well. I'm back to get everything in order before the end of the month, when it's time to start on my Advent Updates. I seem to have accidentally left everything for over 3 months again, oops!
Covid is still a thing, although much less of a thing than it has been. Infection rates are up, which is to be expected as winter approaches, however, due to high uptake of the various covid vaccines in the UK, hospital admissions are just about manageable, and death rates have stabilised. This means that our government has decided Christmas can go ahead without interruption this year. There are some, myself included if I'm honest, who think it would be prudent to reintroduce some basic measures, such as social distancing, and mandatory wearing of face coverings when in indoor public spaces, in order to keep more people safe during the busy pre-festive period. Mostly though, people are acting as though everything is back to normal.
It's not of course. This was emphasised to me just recently, when a friend of mine died from covid. He was the first person in my age group who I knew to be taken by this disease. I didn't know him well, but I know others who did. The few times I met him, I liked him. He was a unique character, and he'll be missed by many. I won't wish that he rests in peace, because that's the last thing he'd want, so I'll say instead that whatever world he's moved on to couldn't possibly be ready for the punk rock party he'll be bringing!
My apologies if my mood is on occasion a little maudlin during this update, but it's that time of year. I had thought that I was getting better with autumn, feeling able to fully enjoy all of the things I love about this season. Then this week it's suddenly become a problem again. 3 days ago was the 9th anniversary of losing mam, and next week would have been her 72nd birthday. It's a little over 7 years since we lost Myra, almost 5 years since we lost Trish, and over 2 years since we lost dad. I have suddenly become hyper aware of my fear of losing Davie, even though dad broke the pattern by dying in the middle of summer, my subconscious is telling me that our family is "due" another loss. Grief is complicated.
On that cheery note, let's get into the knitting stuff, shall we?
FO's
These are the 5th pair of socks that I have made for Stephen, yet somehow they are the only pair that he can currently find both of. I can only assume that he will lose at least one of these within the next 3 months too. Somewhere in this house, Finn must have a secret stash of stolen socks, but I have thus far failed to locate it.
Knot Bad shared some Halloween amigurumi he'd made on his Instagram, which inspired me to make these Zombie Octopodes/Octopi/Octopuses! Except that only one of them actually has 8 legs, because apparently I can't count and crochet at the same time. They have an average of 8 legs...
See what I meant by the title of this post? I've been making a lot of socks recently! This particular pair are for Stephen's mum, or my "mum-out-law" as I call her (Stephen and I aren't married, so she's not an in-law you see!) We video call Stephen's parents every week, and one time we were talking about how we all have varying degrees of lymphoedema in our ankles, so store bought socks tend to dig in and leave marks. I explained that I don't have that problem, even though I also have Lipoedema, because nearly all of my socks are hand knit to fit me exactly, and I offered to make some for Stephen's mum.
This is my small offering to the 2021 Commit to Knit campaign. Although this is the first year since I've discovered this campaign, they have been going for a while, and they have supported several different charities. Last year, and this year, they have been working with several homelessness charities to supply plenty of warm hats, not just for the physical warmth and protection afforded by woolly head gear, but also for the love and care that goes into hand knitting something for another person. That tangible proof that someone cares can be a significant boost to the mental health of someone who has been forced into a terrible situation.
WIP's
I have made a few more squares for my crocheted Memory Blanket though. They're all just basic granny squares, using DK yarn. The 2 on the left are mini-skeins from Made by Penguins, the one on the right is Stylecraft Cabaret DK, in the colourway "Ocean", and I *think* the dark grey/green one is Third Vault Yarns Caroline DK, in the colourway "Death", left over from making a jumper.
Today I finished spinning the last of the singles for my Fluff to Stuff, although I think it's unlikely that I'll finish before the official end date, as that is the end of this month! To be honest though, I'm doing this more as a personal challenge, and I'm not so bothered about entering my finished objects into prize draws, so I'll be happy if I have this lot turned into something wearable (the plan is a simple shrug/cardigan) by the end of the year.
Stash Acquisition
Made by Penguins August Little Penguin subscription box. The colourway is called "Autumn Sunset", and it's so much more beautiful than my phone camera can show! It is quite clear that Lisa is all about the pink this year though!
Made by Penguins September Little Penguin subscription box. This colourway is called "Butternut Squash", and it's giving definite autumn vibes. I'm loving these little autumn leaf stitch markers too!
When September's issue of The Knitter arrived through my letterbox, it contained an ad for what I thought was a new West Yorkshire Spinners yarn - Signature Sparkle 4-ply. I'd just been thinking that I was quite low on purple colourways in my commercial sock yarn stash, so I went looking for some to buy, and ended up buying mostly blues. You might recognise a couple of them from earlier. Technically speaking, these are outside of my "Cold Sheep" allowances, as I didn't have a specific project in mind when I ordered them, but I did know that they'd be used for socks sooner or later, and I had just won £25 on My Trees, so it wasn't breaking my monthly budget!
I'll share a better photo of the non-yarn items later on, but here's a bit more information about the yarn:
Knitting Adjacent
When you're visiting your local English Heritage site, and you spot a zip-close pouch, the ideal size for 2 balls of yarn, and it's in a little pile of "reduced to clear", so it costs you less than a quarter of it's original price, you pretty much have to buy it. Who wouldn't want a project bag with pictures of the work of Capability Brown on it?
You all know how I love the work of SkeinHead. Sadly, I can't afford to own every t-shirt design that Mikie and India produce. However, they also put many of their designs onto stickers, and they've also made a brilliant Halloween pin badge with a pumpkin on it! So my laptop is now sporting a large holographic sticker of their "Knit and Purl can change the world" design, and the pin badge has pride of place in my pin collection.
Finn
Well, I say it's all *squee!* but actually, there's a fair bit of "OMG! What have you been in!?!?" In this case, the fetid mud surrounding a stagnant pond.
He is not especially fond of being bathed. I am not especially fond of bathing him. Or of cleaning the bath after I've bathed him! But this photo is a direct result of the behaviour exhibited in the earlier photo.
He can also make a nuisance of himself in the house. This blurry photo is him stealing the wrappers for my Marie Curie Quest Socks as they come out of the printer. He then runs about with them until they're suitably crumpled, then he drops them on the floor and tramples on them! This is in Stephen's office, which isn't the tidiest room in the house at the best of times, but with Finn in there it becomes utter chaos!
OK, so this is mostly an excuse to demonstrate that nobody in this house is a proper adult. We're both 44 years old. Stephen will be 45 at the end of this month. Yet we have glow in the dark dinosaurs, wearing Christmas jumpers, on our king-size duvet cover. The single duvet that covers the bottom of the bed, in order to protect our feet from a spaniel who likes to dig a nest at the bottom of our bed every night, also has dinosaurs in Christmas jumpers, but they don't glow in the dark. Finn doesn't care what's on the duvet, as long as he can sleep on the Big Bed with us.
I had to crop this one, because Stephen had fallen asleep on the sofa in the background, which is why Finn was all up in my face asking for attention. How dare daddy fall asleep, when he knows it's his job to give Finn AllTheFussels in the evening, in order to compensate for being gone for all the HoursDaysWeeks at work!
Penguins!
It is essential that I make a detailed shopping list every week, based on meal plans for that week (with some flexibility, to allow for my body and it's general unreliability as regards capability to cook anything more complex than a cup-a-soup, and even that might involve a certain amount of kitchen destruction, and/or scalding myself). We have discovered that this method saves us money, and prevents excessive snack purchases, when compared with our previous shopping and meal planning method, which was to go to Tesco every other day, and wander around with no goal or purpose, until £30 of snacks and a pack of fresh pasta had fallen into our basket. On the days we didn't go to Tesco, we ordered takeout. The pre-planned meals and weekly shop has also successfully condensed a daily half hour of indecisiveness regarding what we want for dinner, into a single weekly hour of indecision.
I know not if this idea was copied from Made by Penguins, or if having a giant crocheted penguin on your yarn stall is just such an excellent idea that it was thought of by multiple indie yarn dyers. All I know is that if there is a giant crocheted penguin on your yarn stall, then I need to take a photo of it.
Finally, a close up of the penguin progress keeper that I bought from the Knitting Companion stall at Bakewell. He's one of several progress keepers that I've attached to a bracelet that I got at Bakewell Wool Gathering several years ago, and now use as a combination charm bracelet/knitting tool.
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