Of use

There are several handmade things that I use in my daily life, yet haven't been finding worthy of photos and blog posts, because they are so ordinary and so simple. Yet these are also the things that I use daily, like the kitchen towel hanging on the oven handle. My mother has crocheted dozens of these loops onto kitchen towels and gives most of them away; the drink coasters in the photo below are ones that I've made several of and which get tucked under glasses, mugs, and a teapot. Sometimes it's the little things that make a house a home.

Kitchen towel with crocheted hanging loop

Kitchen towel with crocheted hanging loop

To Be of Use

The people I love the best
jump into work head first
without dallying in the shallows
and swim off with sure strokes almost out of sight.
They seem to become natives of that element,
the black sleek heads of seals
bouncing like half-submerged balls.

I love people who harness themselves, an ox to a heavy cart,
who pull like water buffalo, with massive patience,
who strain in the mud and the muck to move things forward,
who do what has to be done, again and again.

I want to be with people who submerge
in the task, who go into the fields to harvest
and work in a row and pass the bags along,
who are not parlor generals and field deserters
but move in a common rhythm
when the food must come in or the fire be put out.

The work of the world is common as mud.
Botched, it smears the hands, crumbles to dust.
But the thing worth doing well done
has a shape that satisfies, clean and evident.
Greek amphoras for wine or oil, 
Hopi vases that held corn, are put in museums
but you know they were made to be used. 
The pitcher cries for water to carry
and a person for work that is real. 

Marge Piercy

Crochet drink coasters

Crochet drink coasters

The other door

Beach stones, ready to cover with crochet

Beach stones, ready to cover with crochet

Yesterday we packed up the office my father ran his business out of for 31 years. I've spent almost every Saturday for the past several years working there, sometimes other days as well, getting involved with every level of the business. When Dad went on vacation, I covered for him. When Dad got sick, I covered for him. When Mom was on vacation or out sick, I brought Dad sandwiches. When Dad was running just a little late in the morning, I would walk over to the bakery and get coffee. Growing up, there would be days where we met Dad at the office after work, did our homework, stood on a stool to help at the register, filed client cards, answered the phone. On a few occasions, I went to the office so I could type up my homework (yes kids, once upon a time, you had to turn in typewritten papers at school, banged out one letter at a time directly onto the paper). 

Dad is not retiring just yet; moving out of this office is the first step in reducing the amount of time he spends commuting and working. Tomorrow I'll go back to the office with one of my sisters and we'll do some cleaning and take out the last of the boxes before Dad hands over the keys to the building manager, and that door will close behind us. 

I'm waiting for the other door now, the one that proverbially opens as one closes. There may be many doors (at least one of them being not having to get up early on Saturday mornings).

"Nothing is carved in stone" - that'll be my Dad's sense of humor for you

"Nothing is carved in stone" - that'll be my Dad's sense of humor for you

In the meantime, I now have this handful of beach stones, which we were using to hold down the curling wallpaper along a window ledge. I'm going to sit down and start covering them with crochet. One of them reflects Dad's sense of humor, and I think it will be the one I start with. 

Sock in progress

Priorities: I remembered to put this project bag in my purse before leaving the house today, but I forgot my office keys, so I wrote most of this post sitting at a coffeeshop waiting for the building to open.

Sock Recipe: A Good, Plain Sock by Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, knit with Malabrigo Sock in colorways Turner and Playa

Sock Recipe: A Good, Plain Sock by Stephanie Pearl-McPhee, knit with Malabrigo Sock in colorways Turner and Playa

Although I cast on for the second sock immediately after binding off the toe of the first sock, this has been marinating a bit in my project bag while I focus on getting projects that are on deadlines finished. I've also been fussing a bit about the needles. A simple sock is soothing, pleasurable knitting for me, but I'm still working out which needles I want to use. I have a set of aluminum dpns that I've had for years and which are just the right length. However, it's a set of 4, and I prefer working a sock with a set of 5. A few weeks ago I picked up a set of 5 steel dpns which are lovely but just a little bit too short for my hands; I ordered a longer set that will hopefully turn up soon. I also have 2 short circular needles that would be great if the needles were just half an inch longer (I have big hands). I've probably got a single long circular in the right size, but I'm not a fan of knitting a sock on a single circ.

It's a lot of fussing for a pair of socks, especially a plain pair earmarked for travel. Lately, though, I have been opting to have a project in progress at all times that is just for me, with no deadlines and no specifications other than the ones I set myself, something that is for fun and that I will get to use when it is done. Earlier this year, when I spent a few weeks traveling, I packed several pairs of socks, mostly commercially produced, with wicking and arch support and machine washability. I packed the one pair of handknit socks that I own, knit for me years ago by Opal, which I had been keeping safely tucked away and treasured. Well, on this trip, those were the socks I wore every day except for the one day that I did laundry and had to wait until they were dry. Wool is excellent for travel socks - they don't pick up foot odors and can be worn repeatedly before washing (wish I could say the same about my boots). Knitting myself a pair of socks means making a nice treat for myself to wear on my travels in 2013! 

Ravelry: A Good, Plain Sock

Sample Yarns | Natural Plant Dye

Back in September I mixed up a batch of dried pomegranate rind dye and experimented with it; here are the results!

Natural plant dyed yarns

Natural plant dyed yarns

These are all basic kitchen cotton yarn (Peaches & Creme 100% cotton). From left to right: dried pomegranate rind and lemongrass (yellow), dried pomegranate rind (yellow), fresh mint (leaves and stems) with iron mordant (gray), and fresh mint, dried pomegranate, lemongrass with iron mordant (brown). 

Wool yarn dyed with dried pomegranate rinds

Wool yarn dyed with dried pomegranate rinds

This sock weight wool yarn was dyed with dried pomegranate rinds. I then overdyed it with either dried kukui leaf dye or dried bamboo leaf dye - I'm not sure which. Either way, it didn't change the color much, if at all.