I knit Andrea Mowry's Bright Lights shawl out of my own handspun, and there are very few joys more joyful than knitting something where I've managed to spin the perfect yarn for the situation. The project was great for taking out and about - simple and intuitive. As usual (I ranted about it here ) Andrea Mowry writes out the pattern as if they are a bunch of individual rows, rather than a simple, cohesive pattern. She wrote it out as a 16 row repeat, when it is actually a two row pattern, with one tiny tweak every 16th row. And then there are 30 finishing rows that are the same as the pattern repeat, but written out separately. The whole pattern is 8 pages, but the actual information needed could fit on an index card. I guess that's modern pattern writing. Why do I keep buying and knitting Andrea Mowry's patterns when I don't enjoy her pattern writing style? Because they are simple and effective and (usually) very wearable. Once I had the hang of the pattern I did...
It's been a busy few weeks, in a very fun way. lots of shows, some travel, just a generally good time Last weekend we say two shows (one straight play, one musical), this week we are seeing four, including one that Leon's choir is putting on, a new Australian musial, a cabaret and a pole dancing competition. It's a lot of fun, and also busy, busy, busy. I've still had time to read and craft though. The reading has included 5 short stories from Amazon's The Edge of Everything series of coming of age stories (I got them from NetGalley). They were all fine, but made me feel old and jaded. I did make some progress with my non-fiction reading and next Friday I will have a post up featuring three Object Lessons - Fist, Concrete and Laboratory. Now I'm reading Friends of Dorothy by Sandi Toksvig a LGBTQ women's fiction - if I had to classify it. It's the story of a couple who move into a house where the previous tenant, as old woman, has not actually left....