Saturday, 09 February 2008
Onto new projects/Ravelry
I have joined Ravelry, which I have to say -- SO COOL -- that's it become very addictive. And i've realized that I've finished of almost finished 17 projects since the new year. And that's not including the sewing stuff. Unemployment can be a wonderful thing -- frees the mind to wander/wonder. Now I just need to get pictures of all this stuff posted. A digital camera would be soooo neat to have. But the unemployment thing can get in the way to.
Just picked up 3 skeins of Tahki Donegal Tweed at half-price, in an amazing blood red with black tweedy bit, from one of my LYS, Colorful Stitches. Not a place I usually go to, since the customer service SUCKS, and the owner doesn't quite get the whole "maybe i should like my customers" thing. And I also picked up some very cute fabric at my LQS (local quilt shop, natch) Pumpkin Patch, to make some reusable grocery bags, that I found online at BurdaStyle, and open source pattern site (sort like Ravelry, but for sewers) and then I found a pant pattern, and then a shirt pattern, and now I am back up multiple baskets of projects.
20:15 Posted in Babble, Knitting | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email this
Friday, 08 February 2008
Sometimes you must put it aside
"Office life and real life had to be kept separate. On weekday mornings, you locked the door on your unacceptable self; you let it out again after five. This was the arrangement by which I knew I had to live. But only for the time being" -- Joyce Johnson. Minor Characters: A Beat Memoir (1983)
If it were only that easy. Sometimes you end up closing it off completely, and never letting out your unacceptable self. (almost dangled a participle.) There are those moments when you want to shyly offer to open the box and let others see that creative, unique self, and you do, and noone seems to be paying attention.
I am certainly not pointing to any recent offering, just musing on the nature of creativity, and acknowledgement of art and craft in a world that willfully undervalues/misunderstands the nature of craft -- the "gosh, aren't you clever and craft-y" response to creativity, albeit maybe not art, because what you do is what countless grandmothers, spinster aunts, and crabbed old ladies rocking in chairs do when they are not starching dollies and making cookies.
And that would be undervaluing and marginliation of their work as well -- though sometimes some of that work might be better off unmade/undone, because there are moments when the craft is overwelmed by the "what was i thinking?" point of the process.
20:00 Posted in Babble, Books | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this







