Monthly Archives: August 2025

Busy as a bee

We’re barreling towards September, and I am juggling several projects! I’ll have a new design out next week (Tuesday, September 2), another one ready for tech edit and test knit, and a fun online project for October. I had a photo shoot with my sister yesterday. She doesn’t work for cash, so we go out for our favorite lunch instead. Her: chicken and waffles. Me: usually the perfect fried chicken sandwich.

Lunch at Screen Door, PDX Pearl District

But this time I had a fried chicken salad. It’s salad, so it’s healthy, right? (Look away from the bacon.)

I’m still editing pictures, so you’ll see those later.

I’ve been looking for a way to store my everyday necklaces and earrings. Right now they’re jumbled in a pretty box, and they’re always tangled. I’m planning to use a big circle of knit fabric in an embroidery hoop, and add some hooks to hold the necklaces. Those hooks may be spiral stitch markers; we’ll see if they work. Earrings can go directly into the fabric. Wish me luck!

I started knitting with leftover yarn, but I really wanted something that coordinated with our bedroom, and I wanted it to be more interesting than a stockinette circle. Assigned pooling is doing the trick.

I bought this yarn, MadelineTosh Tosh Merino Light, at For Yarn’s Sake on the way to a meeting. I didn’t have the right sized dpns with me, so I bought these Knit Pro Cubics. They’re square shaped. I like them!

We’re heading into a holiday weekend. Hope yours is full of knitting. I hope mine is, too!

On the needles

And off, and on, and off, and on again! Sometimes it takes a while to figure out what your yarn really wants.

This yarn is A Chick that Knitz Singles Fingering in Tropical Flowers. I got it at Nash Yarn Fest, intending to pair it with another color for brioche plus pooling.

Here it is with Caribbean.

It was nice, but the stars didn’t really pop against the background.

I liked the contrastier combination of Wildflowers and Sassy. this is A Chick That Knitz Deluxe Sock. This pattern, Simply Stellar, is coming soon. It’s been a busy summer, and this will make a nice intro to fall knitting.

I frogged the blue version, and decided to try a different assigned pooling pattern, without brioche. I want this to be a cowl, and it has to be worked in the round because the motif has to be worked from the right side of the fabric.

I love how the colors pop against the background when it’s just the pooling yarn. The second color in brioche really didn’t add anything meaningful.

But do I want the motifs to be flowers?

Or volcanoes? I knit on this last weekend, while we were traveling to and from Ellensburg, Washington for a friend’s birthday/retirement party. And by the time we were halfway home, I decided I wanted flowers.

And voilà, my project was instantly transformed into a swatch! I needed to frog the whole thing, and work it from the bottom up instead of top down.

That meant choosing an edging for the beginning, and doing some math. Easy peasy. The nice thing about working it from the bottom up is that there won’t be any yarn chicken shenaningans going on. The edging is completed first, so I know there’s enough yarn for it. And I can knit the top of the cowl to be as tall as I want it to be with the yarn that’s left; the height isn’t a critical measurement.

I’m about halfway done, and looking forward to showing you the result. It’s an easy knit.

Cheers! (Cocktails at Julep in Ellensburg. Backwoods Barbie on the left, Rhinestone Cowboy on the right.)

What’s on your needles?

July in the rear view mirror

July was a jam packed month. Besides San Diego, I also visited Sisters, Oregon and Seattle, Washington. All fun!

I visited friends in Sisters. They took me to the Dee Wright Observatory, a structure built from lava rock. It’s at the summit of the McKenzie Pass in the Willamette National Forest.

Each window in the observatory looks out at a different mountain peak, and there are signs that tell you what you’re looking at.

They also make good photo ops! I don’t remember which Sisters these are. July was a long time ago.

Apparently it’s the North and Middle Sisters! This bronze was cast by students at Benson Polytechnic High School in Portland, Oregon in 1937, before my dad was a student there.

It was also a music weekend. Becky and I played in church. The other musical group was the Renaissance Sisters, who played baroque and renaissance music on soprano, alto, tenor, and bass recorders. Very fine work.

The church has a stunning view behind the altar. Is that Middle Sister, maybe?

Banjo welcomes you to happy hour…

On to Seattle!

Four of the five Adagio Babes met for a reunion. We all met through Sonata Piano Camp from 2000 to 2003, I think. We’re not playing a lot of piano these days, but the friendships last a lifetime.

We played tourists on a beautiful day in Seattle.

Mt. Rainier even put in an appearance.

It was a fabulous weekend. I’m so lucky to have met friends through music!

It’s been a little quiet around here, but I’m still knitting. More on that in the next post. How’s your summer? Or winter, down under?