Showing posts with label knitting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label knitting. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 October 2014

This Weekend ...


... I bought two sea bream from our friendly new market fishmonger and cooked them according to his instructions.  They were delicious.

... I made a blanket for the homeless from three lengths of the 7 mile scarf I'd helped knit to link Aldermaston to Burghfield earlier this summer.

... I enjoyed lunch at No 1 Harbourside (pork & sage arancini with spiced apricot jam, baked English Camembert with courgette pickle and a salad of green beans, spring onions, raisins and cumin seeds).

... I was greatly encouraged by Will & Testament, a film documenting the life and work of Tony Benn, one of my heroes and a continuing inspiration to all who strives for justice and fairness.

... I baked batches of cookies (cranberry, white chocolate and walnut) and scones for a Bristol Pound Open House, and hopefully persuaded a few friends to sign up and start spending them.




Wednesday, 1 January 2014

Out with the Old. In with the New.


Time for the annual roundup of the year's highlights.

Top of the list has to be our summer holiday in the Inner Hebrides, when we finally introduced our Iona to her island namesake.  I've been meaning to blog about it ever since we returned but have never got round to it.  But I'm determined to do so, so until then all I'll say is that the photograph is of the view from the living room of our lodge on Colonsay where I spent many happy hours reading and knitting (that's when I wasn't spending many equally happy hours exploring the island by bike).

On 6 January I attended my first Quaker meeting and have been going ever since.  After years of searching for somewhere I can continue my spiritual journey I believe I may have found it with the Friends.

My younger daughter was offered the university place of her dreams, at Falmouth, to study illustration.  After a year of travelling up and down the country attending open days and returning for interviews, this came as a great relief to all of us, although I did enjoy the opportunity to visit/reacquaint myself with several lovely cities.

In May I accepted the challenge to live on £1 per day for 5 days.  I am grateful for the generosity of the friends who sponsored me and the opportunity to raise the profile of extreme poverty in Bristol via two interviews on BBC local radio.

I continue to volunteer for the Bristol Pound and in the autumn was elected to the Board of Directors to represent the individual account holders.  The local currency is over a year old now and I'm really looking forward to playing my part in its continuing success.

Now that the girls have both left home I've been doing more singing.  In the summer I took part in the biennial Sing for Water on Bristol's harbourside and then I finally plucked up the courage to join the Gasworks Singers.  This is an offshoot of the Gasworks choir (of which I've been a member for many years) and is a much smaller group who sing more often at festivals and charitable events.  There was a fairly long list of songs to master before our first gig at the North Bristol Arts Trail but I managed and can now relax and enjoy the music, the friendship and the spectacular shared lunches.

There have, of course, been occasions on which to try and set the world right.  In April I paid my first visit to Aldermaston to protest against the obscenity of nuclear weapons.  In June I was in London to highlight world hunger, a week after I helped feed 5,000 people with food that might otherwise have been send to a landfill site.  It does sometimes feel as if we're bashing our heads against a brick wall but if that's what it takes to create a better world for everyone then I for one am prepared to carry on.

Fortunately there are plenty of reasons to be cheerful and that's what I plan to concentrate on in 2014.

I'm looking forward to:
  • taking my elder daughter on a European city break (Prague?) after she sits her final degree exam and then to attending her graduation ceremony in the summer
  • campaigning for the Green Party in this year's local and European elections and persuading people to consider the environmental impact of their vote
  • getting my head around Quaker faith and practice and perhaps attending the Yearly Meeting Gathering in Bath (even if it's only for a day or so)
  • helping to convince more individuals and businesses of the merits of the Bristol Pound
  • listening to the debate on Scottish independence and (hopefully?) witnessing the birth of an independent Scotland in September
  • carrying on baking, campaigning, composting, crocheting, gardening, knitting, protesting, reading, recycling, singing, walking,  ...
Happy New Year to all of you!

Monday, 30 December 2013

On the Sixth Day of Christmas


I made progress with my tea cosy.  I adapted the pattern, using double pointed needles to fashion the side opening, which gives it a neater edge.  I fear I may need to swap my double knit for a thinner yarn for the bunting, which will require a visit to Vicky at  Paper Village, but I'll give it a go with double knit first, given the size of my stash!

I also said goodbye to my elder daughter who is on the first of two trains heading back to Glasgow for her final semester.  A lot rides on the next few months and I hope they bring her the success for which she has worked so hard.

PS  I apologise for the dismal quality of the photograph.  There are so few daylight hours at this time of year.

Sunday, 29 December 2013

On the Fifth Day of Christmas

I've started knitting a tea cosy for my daughter, who shares my belief that a cup of tea solves (almost) everything.

I'd like to have posted a photo of the pattern I've bought from Ravelry but I note that it's copyright so if you want a sneak preview then you're going to have to click here.

I'm knitting it with wool from my stash.  The pattern's easy enough but I'm not concentrating as well as I  should as I've had to unravel it several times already!

Monday, 8 April 2013

50/365

Here's one I made earlier ...
I'm on a roll.  However before you go thinking that I dashed these off today, I will confess that they were knitted sometime last year, leaving only the grafting of one toe to finish late last night.  Having produced a pair of socks and a cowl for my older daughter last week I thought her sister deserved something for herself.

I used a Red Heart pattern and a self-striping sock wool (Ricoh Superba Mexico in Green/Lilac).  I love watching the pattern emerge as I knit.  I don't want to stop.

49/365


When my older daughter was home for Easter she took a fancy to her younger sister's cowl.  So I said I'd knit her one.  I chose Jen Geiegley's GAP-tastic pattern on Ravelry and Sirdar's Big Softie wool in graffiti.  I had a day and half to finish it and I did it - just!


I hope it will keep her warm in her cold student flat until the sun comes out again.

Saturday, 6 April 2013

48/365

Ta da!
My elder daughter, who lives in Glasgow where is it often cold and wet, requested a pair of thick socks to wear with her Doc Martens.  So I knitted her these.

I found the pattern on Ravelry (Sarah Moore's Snow Day socks which you can find here).  I used Rico Essentials Soft Merino Aran, of which I bought three balls but used just over two.  They are a softer green than the photo suggests.

In contrast to all the other socks I've knitted these were worked from the toe up, which I think I now prefer.  The heel was a doddle to turn.

I love the way they slouch round the ankle.  So much so that I think I may knit another pair for myself!

Wednesday, 3 April 2013

47/365

and they shall beat their swords into plowshares,
 and their spears into pruning hooks:
 nation shall not lift up a sword against nation,
 neither shall they learn war any more
If I had £100 billion would I spend it on ...

... building more hospitals, employing more doctors and nurses, ensuring that every child had access to a good school, investing in the public transport infrastructure, supporting individuals and their families with physical and mental needs, sponsoring medical research, providing shelter for the homeless, funding research into sustainable energy, ensuring that everyone is paid a living wage, eradicating extreme poverty ...

or would I spend it all on a nuclear deterrent?

Hmmm.

Thursday, 24 January 2013

Monday, 31 December 2012

In 2012 ...



I knitted and crocheted




I cooked and baked




 I sang and listened to others sing




I involved myself in politics and campaigns










I supported local independent traders






 I went out and about in Bristol ...





... and in London




I went on holiday to St Ives


I started running and went on a diet and ...!


I survived the Jubilee but entered into the Olympic spirit.

I made holiday lists and managed to cross most items off them!

I met Fatmumslim's Photo a Day Challenge but didn't quite meet my own challenges to photograph A Month of Dinners or my Advent countdown.

All in all it's been a good year and I've certainly had fun trawling through my posts and reminding myself of its highlights.

Here's to 2013!

PS  I've thoroughly enjoyed reading other bloggers' reviews and greatly admire those whose photos are better displayed than mine.  Any tips on how to create mosaics on blogger would be much appreciated.

Monday, 5 November 2012

Half Term Projects - Update

I'm afraid I didn't manage to get through my list.  I made chutney, bread and Christmas cake, finished the bunting and met up with some former workmates.  I discovered another trader who accepts Bristol pounds (The Folk House on Park Street) but only after I'd paid in sterling.  Still, I'll be better prepared next time.  I started my book but didn't got very far.

As for the rest (and the back bedroom in particular!) .....

However, as in the summer, I did other things - delivered leaflets and processed data for George Ferguson's campaign, went out to lunch, had friends round for dinner, attended a WI wine tasting evening and a mayoral election hustings, and finished off two more knitting projects.  Not as much as I would have liked, but just about enough.

Tuesday, 30 October 2012

Ta Da! Moment - (Gryffindor?) Bunting


When my elder daughter moved into a new flat I promised her some bunting to cheer the place up.  I used a very simple knitted design in red and gold 4 ply acryllic yarn from my stash, which I knew would at least go with her curtains.

I finished the bunting (all 250+ cm of it) in time for her sister to take it up with her on her half term visit.  It has apparently met with her approval.  Her flatmate has dubbed it her 'Gryffindor' bunting, which I am assured is a compliment!  

Thursday, 25 October 2012

Half Term Projects

I found that drawing up a list helped me to make the best use of my summer holidays, so I have decided to repeat the experiment for the October half term holiday.

So here it is:
  1. Turn 1.5 kg of green tomatoes into chutney
  2. Discover more traders who accept Bristol pounds
  3. Release a few more books
  4. Tidy the back bedroom
  5. Bake our Christmas cake
  6. Read Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami
  7. Bake this loaf of bread
  8. Visit Cheltenham for the day
  9. Finish knitting bunting for my elder daughter
  10. Make our Christmas pudding
  11. Catch up with a few old friends
I'll keep you posted on my progress.

Saturday, 9 June 2012

World Wide Knit in Public Day

Do you remember my floral bunting?

Well, this is where it ended up ... on a bus shelter on North Street, as part of Paper Village's celebration of Worldwide Knit in Public Day.

Here are the rest of the decorations:






Unfortunately I was at Stourhead, singing with the Gasworks Choir.  I did however take my knitting!