The Amazing Adventures of Tom and Bel

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Ach. Gott in Himmel!

To PDX peeps:

Mary Scott Huff, a hard-working knit designer, experienced a break in of her car on Thursday and lost a suitcase full of her lovely work. I don't know her at all, but I'm so sad for her, as I'm sure any knitter would be.
Please check her blog post. If by some miracle you happen to see any of these items, please get in touch with her.

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Bitter Much?

Okay, universe, I see that you are telling me I have no business going to the Sock Summit. After all, I'm on a yarn diet. I've got plenty of knitting books. I could practically open a shop with my magazine collection.
Perhaps it's completely wrong of me to be so angry, but you know, I wanted one. measly. class.
So now I shall have to take the mature road and pretend it's just not happening at all.

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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

SonOfAB..

In really, really, really irritating news, Portland's mayor has just revealed himself to be a predatory jackass -- and a big, fat liar. Ugh. I'm furious

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Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Oh, the Irony

On the list of things I find puzzling, this phone call currently tops it:

Me: Hi. I'm filling out your electronic form here, and it doesn't give me enough room to put my entire last name. But when I try to electronically sign the form with my whole name, it won't let me. What do I do?

Karen (the nice lady who answered the phone): Oh yeah. You'll need to electronically sign the form the same way you filled out that first page.

Me: So, wait: even though that's not legally my name, I have to sign that it is in order to finish this form.

Karen: Mmm-hmm. Or you could start over and take out the [maiden name] so that the last name matches.
Whaa? How is this right? Why don't the folks who code these forms just do it the same way on both pages? I know it's do-able, since (a) common sense tells me so, and (b) this is what my DH does for a living. (See, honey? I am listening when you speak.)
****

Anyway. Yesterday's weather was glorious. Sunny, breezy and perfect for a stroll down the bluff:






Z, as always, was fascinated by the juxtaposition of nature and industry:


We stopped for tea and cookies, and a thrilling game of "but why can't I have mama's water glass?"




Later, we took the big kids down to Columbia Park:









Once again, Z finds it all so stimulating:



(You will note Streamlined making its debut. I will report on that later this week.)

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Monday, April 28, 2008

Baby's First Trip to the Beach

We made a quick trip to Cannon Beach yesterday.








Ostensibly, we planned to introduce baby to the ocean.
While the big kids had lots and lots of fun...















...Z was unimpressed.


And moments later:


While we were at lunch, however, she did discover a new affection for cutlery:

so the trip wasn't a total loss for her. ;-P

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Monday, April 21, 2008

Hail Yeah

A typical Saturday morning at our house (frantic cleaning before the babysitter arrived) was interrupted by the arrival of crazy weather. DH grabbed cups and sent the kids off to document the day:



T took the front...



...while Miss N checked out the back.


It's a far cry from last Saturday, when we could actually have used the grill.

In Knitting News, I'm making excellent progress on the Streamlined pullover. Pics of that coming soon!

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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Can't Hardly Wait

I'm so psyched. One of my favorite LYSes, Knit Purl, is hosting a workshop with Catherine Lowe next month. Of course I signed up as soon as i possibly could.

She's not as well know by the current knitting generation, but she's been working in the knitting world for ages and is a technical genius. Really fine details and couture techniques are her specialty.
I'm so psyched that I get a chance to see her in action!

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Tuesday, October 23, 2007

I love the PNW

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Reason #456 to love Portland



In case you can't read the additional commentary, it says "dating losers."

So true; so true.

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Sunday, August 19, 2007

Winter is Coming

WHILE on my early morning hydrangea hunt, I enjoyed a rare bit of alone time in the rain.
The dampness and the slight chill in the morning reminds me that winter is coming, and winter out here is an oddly beautiful thing.
Especially on misty days like this one, when the dampness clings to everything, turning the tree trunks black and the moss pale green, and my immediate thoughts are turning this natural beauty into something knitted.
Random ideas which may or may not become actual projects are below...


Wood chips on a neighbor's lawn. I love the contrast of topaz and grey in this one. If I were going to try to knit this one, I'd do something in entrelac with a selection of browns and a few random grey squares.
(Though every time I look at these colors, I hear Paolo Conte in my head singing about "chips, chips... dah-tee-doo-di-doo...")


Gorgeous dahlia. I can't wait until we can plant these in our own yard.
This one seems perfect for a classic Fair Isle pattern, done on a white background and pattern shading from light to dark and back again.


Ah, Oregon plums (snagged from a neighborhood tree). These have a shocking lime green rim and delicious, moist flesh that is almost the color of cantaloupe.
I think perhaps a deep purple top with a lace overlay would give the soft effect this brings to mind.


Here I tried (and failed miserably) to capture the deep garnet color of the leaves with the light coming through them. The jet blackness of the trunk clearly comes through, so I'll chalk that up to inexperience on my part. Again, to try to capture this, I'd try Fair Isle (red and black is a pretty classic combination) with a dash of palest green perhaps embroidered across the surface for the moss.


A Japanese maple from down the block. I am obsessed by the soft, feathery quality of the leaves, and am determined to acquire one of these for the yard as well.
I think intarsia would be appropriate to adequately capture the shape and shading of the leaves.

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Hydrangea Ranger

AFTER a couple of hours of disastrous swatching last night re: Autumn Rose, I woke up at quarter to six with a bee in my bonnet. (Have I mentioned a slightly obsessive tendency regarding my knitting? No? Okay. Forget I said anything.)

It occurred to me that I'd been going about it all wrong, starting with the heathers on the Palette color card, when the thing I want most is to find colors that will flatter my skin.
This project, theoretically, will be my reward to myself for managing to give birth without losing my mind, and I want it to be something I'll wear for a while. So as my little mental bee was buzzing about, it lit upon one of my favorite flowers:








Hydrangeas are all over our neighborhood. I so love living in the rain forest.

These colors are terribly feminine, but I adore them and think the very geometric stitch pattern will butch it up a bit. I'll have to wait until Monday to get back into the yarn bins, but I have a very good feeling about this...

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

If It Ain't One Thing...

A Story (mostly) in Pictures, by Cher

Today was a typical PDX summer day. Beautiful cloudless sky:


I worked on some secret work knitting:


Picked up the hub at his office:


Envied the lovely brick courtyard space where said office is located:


Picked up the kids from camp:


And came home to find gobs of blood on the laundry room floor and a small dog with what appeared to be a massive head wound.

Once we cleaned him up, it turned out that the Tomster most likely scratched open one of his many moles on the wooden fence. Boy-O gave him a bath and a haircut (thank the gods - the dog was unspeakably foul), and we tried to figure out how best to stop him from pawing at his head until we can get him to the vet tomorrow.

So, one sacrificed map of Salinas, CA later....


A saltier dog was ne'er seen in this house, that's for sure.

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Thursday, June 14, 2007

Seeing is Believing


The giant thing on the front lawn that we thought was celery? Is now huge.
Turns out, it's an artichoke. There are actually several small ones growing there, high above my darling one's head.

Just another thing to love about life in Oregon, I guess. Giant man-eating plants.

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Saturday, May 05, 2007

Cinco de Hell No

Y'all: I so intended to leave the house, run some errands, pay a visit to my happy place (AKA Nordstrom's shoe department), and generally enjoy a lazy solo Saturday.
When what to my wandering eyes should appear?


Wildlife, y'all. Perhaps you need a bit of help to see: I was so stunned it took me a moment to get the camera.


Yes, folks, that there shiny tail is the OPOSSUM that just sauntered brazenly across my lawn.
Now, I'm from Chicago. We don't do wildlife. We do giant metallic beans, we do fountains with fancy laser light shows, but we don't do wildlife unless it is safely confined within the sanctuary that is Lincoln Park Zoo.
I may retire to my fainting couch until I've recovered from this daring adventure in living with Nature.
******************

In knitting news, the Lacy Waves Top has gotten awkward, and needs homebound attention.
My new tote-around-town project, however, remains dainty and small.



It's "Buster" from my favorite kids' book, Rowan Babies. I just couldn't resist this combination of shiny, happy shades of orange.

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