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Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Gratitude and New Life



In this season of gifts to celebrate God's gift of Love I have much to ponder.  In Feb. I am going to be a grandmother !

Usually at this time of year I think a lot about Mary, Jesus’ mother, but this year I find myself for the first time identifying with Mary's Mother. Did she have the same sense of wonder and awe about this new life being 'knitted" together in Mary's womb?  I know that I am feeling so excited and gratefu1 for this new life coming into our family!

To celebrate our new baby boy’s birth, I am posting a baby sweater I designed.  I call it “Always Have on Hand Quick Knit Baby Garter Stitch Jacket”  It has a buttonhole on each front edge so that you can put the button on the correct side for a boy or girl.  As you securely sew on the button, you will also be closing up the buttonhole underneath that button.  Here’s a picture of the completed jacket:
 
And here’s another one I’ve made for a friend where I used various color yarns.  Also, there are buttons basted on each front edge since I don’t know whether the baby is going to be a boy or girl yet…


You can download the pattern here:

In the quiet dawn a new Love comes gently into our world.  May you celebrate that Love this Christmas and always.
Love, Mary



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Friday, September 2, 2011

Wow…It’s September Already!


September means school is beginning again (in spite of delays caused by Hurricane Irene!) and fall knitting classes will  begin soon! 
To let people who live in my area know about my classes, I am putting an ad in the Towson Times, our local newspaper:
 
So, if you want to sign up for a class, please let me know.  You can email me at notesfromknitclass@gmail.com to register or get more information.  I am really looking forward to the fall session starting: getting to hear about everyone’s summer, seeing what returning students have been knitting over the summer, meeting new students, and most of all, experiencing the privilege of getting to help others learn a skill that I love!

Speaking of what students have been knitting over the summer, my youngest student, Faith, has just finished a sweater for her Teddy Bear!  She has now started making a Plump (see August post to read about what that is…). 






In my August post I mentioned one of my favorite authors, Susan McGeown.  She has been gracious enough to let me interview her for my blog.  Here is her interview:
·         Who taught you to knit?  How old were you?
My mom taught me to knit and crochet.  She was a talented seamstress, too.  On Christmas I would get boxes of handmade Barbie and Troll clothes.  It was usually my best “pressie”.

·         What was your first knitting project?  Do you still have it?  
I remember buying peacock blue and gold yarn and working diligently on a zig-zag pattern crocheted afghan.  I was probably about seven.  I never finished it but I worked on it for a long time.  I was always faster crocheting than knitting and, much to my mother’s consternation, I regularly “made up” patterns when I crocheted – some successfully and some not. 

Traveling to England in my 20’s got me hooked on Fair Isle sweaters and I made a pile of them for myself and as gifts.   Had great fun with the round knitting needles and watching the pattern slowly develop.  I think there are some still upstairs in the attic in mothballs.

·         What has been your favorite project you knitted?    
I knitted my father a sweater for one of his significant birthdays.  It had pictures of things he loved:  computers, kites, books … worked into the pattern.  I used graph paper and one of my Fair Isle sweater patterns that I altered for my purposes.  It was wild and out there but it worked!! 

I knitted a sweater for my husband when we were first married.  I made it to his color and design specifications (black, grey, white with a v-neck).  It turned out horribly ugly.  He still wears on cold winter evenings and all of us who are forced to look at him wearing it cringe.

·         What are you knitting now or have finished recently?   
I crochet Afghans now in the winter … huge, big, heavy ones.  (Pictures below)  I chose the colors and make up the patterns and just crochet and crochet until they’re too big to work with anymore.  Then the kids and friends and family fight over who gets them!  


I’ve been crocheting big sweaters, too.   


I can’t sit and “do nothing” with my hands.  I’ve never claimed to be particularly skilled or talented, either – I just need something to keep me occupied!!  (Ha.)  I have to have a project that I’m working on but, I need projects that don’t require a lot of thought; mindless work.  I spend so much time focusing on writing, that in the evenings, I just like to “veg”:  watch t.v., hang out with the family, and crochet or knit. 

I don’t knit or crochet in the summer.  It’s too hot.   I saw a woman the other day working on a small knitted baby sweater and that appealed.  (Probably because of its ease of portability; you should see me loading myself and my current afghan project in the family minivan when we are going on a road trip!).  I think I’ll try a little person sweater this winter – with my own twist, of course.

·         Do you ever put knitting into your books?
I haven’t put knitting in … yet.  I’ll have to think of that for my next one, maybe!  In my book, Joining the Club, I made my heroine Elaine a passionate quilter; she sewed to relieve stress.  (I’ve done that, too.)  When her life started crashing down, she went to her work room and sewed and sewed and sewed and lost herself creating gorgeous quilts.  I love how she pointed out that sewing was a lot better than drinking because she could still drive afterwards.  Ha  J

·         How did you become a writer?  Did you know that’s what you wanted to do early in your life?
After one of my close friends read my first story, A Garden Walled Around Trilogy, she asked me where I got the story idea.  I replied, “You know how you have stories in your head?  Well, I finally just wrote one down.”  My friend looked completely blank.  It was on that day (I was about 45!) that I discovered that everyone doesn’t have stories in their heads.  From the time I was a little girl, I would amuse myself with stories that I would develop – sometimes over days and weeks.  I honestly thought that everyone was like me.  Sometimes it takes a long time to discover the gifts God has given you!

·         Anything else you’d like to say about your writing and your books
One of the things that I’m most proud of in my books is that my characters are realistic.  None are perfect; they’re all just trying to get it right.  I want the spiritual component in every one of my stories to be realistic, too.  I don’t shove it down your throat.  I try not to be preachy.  My spiritual characters are realistic, too – they’re not perfect, they’re just forgiven.  My goal is to be a woman after God’s own heart (see I Samuel 13:14) and make God smile with what I do. 

Visit my website (www.susanmcgeown.com).  All the first chapters for all of my books are available to read.  Leave a request in my Guestbook and I’ll send a free e-copy of any one of my stories that can be read on e-readers or computers.  I’m not looking to become rich and famous; I just want people to read my stories.

Thanks for asking such fun questions! 
Sue McG  (Philippians 1:20-21)



Something that gives me great joy in the fall is watching leaves slowly drift down.  I even have an app in my I-phone (appropriately called “Leaves”) where I can watch autumn leaves swirling around at any time of year!  So, dear readers, look out windows, sit outside or take a walk, to experience the joy of the autumn leaves.
Mary




Wow…It’s September Already!SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Friday, August 5, 2011

Summer Knitting and Reading


"Properly practiced, knitting soothes the troubled spirit, and it doesn't hurt the untroubled spirit, either."
~Elizabeth Zimmerman
The above quote from Elizabeth Zimmerman is so wise and true.  And sometimes the heat definitely “troubles our spirits”, doesn’t it?  This has been a HOT summer in Maryland, so there are probably a lot of troubled spirits out there who could use some restful knitting time…
Along with plenty of knitting this summer, dear husband Max and I have been doing a lot of reading.  He is currently reading a novel A Well Behaved Woman’s Life by Susan McGeown, an author who actually knits (although her books are not about knitting).  He is finding the main character very appealing and likes the way the pastor of the church that the “well behaved woman” attends uses various women from the Bible as his sermon topics.  And, I’ve been reading Susan’s novel Rules for Survival which I love.  I especially like the definition of charity versus mission.  You will have to read the book to discover what that is!  If you would like to learn more about this dear and wonderful author check out her website at: www.susanmcgeown.com/

What’s been on my needles recently:  a “Plump”…
Doesn’t she make you want to smile?  I’ve named her “Purple Polly Plump”.



What’s been on my students needles: the Cable Yoked Jacket.


I originally knit this jacket to wear on the trip to Charleston when my dear niece Lucy was graduating from college.  For some reason, I either did not make notes of how I made it or I lost my notes somewhere.  So, a couple of years ago when a student saw me wearing it, she wanted to make one.  She and I pieced together the pattern and now a number of my students are making it.  Here’s Virginia modeling hers: 

This is the time to start any Christmas knitting that you’re planning to do.  Getting it started now will prevent staying up all night on Christmas Eve to finish a knitted gift, saving you much anguish!  The internet is full of great patterns such as the free patterns on my blog at http://tinyurl.com/4ghnuom  .  One of the quickest projects from an earlier post  is my pattern for my “Leaf Bookmark & Necklace”:
Use as a bookmark
 






Wear as a necklace










Another great source for patterns is http://www.ravelry.com/invitations .If you are not a Ravelry member, I urge all knitters to go to the website and sign up immediately! 


As August continues to “simmer on”, find a quiet cool spot to sit and knit, read, dream, or renew your spirit.  One of my favorite places to do this is our pond that my son Chris built for us:

With cooling and calming thoughts for all my readers,
Mary






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Sunday, July 10, 2011

Knitters' Blessings

Recently one of my knitting students (who is a dear friend) found out that she has cancer.  So, Lynn (also a dear friend and knitting student) and I decided to ask other members of our friends's knitting class if they would be interested in knitting a joint caring/prayer shawl for her.  The response was overwhelming!

My "task" was to write up a pattern for a small square to give out to each student.
Lynn's assignment was to notify all of the knitters from past and current classes about the project.  She also did the math (thank goodness!...math is definitely not one of my strong points!) and bought the yarn we needed.
Then we distributed the yarn and the pattern to each volunteer knitter.  Soon, squares started flowing in!  Even my youngest little student knit on it and helped sew the squares together.

 
 Each time I opened my front door and found a square that had been left by one of the knitters, I experienced a Sacred Moment.  Surely each knitter was being the "Hands and Feet of God".  What a blessing to me the making of this shawl has been.  Please keep our ill friend in your prayers.

 In honor of my friend and student, I am putting up a free pattern
for the Square Directions that we gave to each knitter who was working on the shawl:



 


and also the Instruction Sheet of how to put the shawl together and a bit about how we organized it.






We received so many squares that the shawl was becoming too long, so I used the extra squares to make a little Cushion/Shawl Carry Bag.  Here is a picture of that:




What's Been on my Needles lately:
A nifty "Braided Scarf" from this website:
http://olgajazzzy.blogspot.com/2010/12/cable-braided-necklace.html


 I used Lustersheen yarn by Red Heart from my yarn stash.  It's a thin yarn about the thickness of lace or sock yarn.  To make it your create little "buttonholes" evenly spaced along each of the 2 strips.

 I made the evenly spaced holes about 10 rows apart instead of the 8 rows that the pattern specifies.  I'd like to say that I did that because the yarn was so thin that it looked better...but...true confession now, I "goofed" and miss-read the directions.  All of my students who are reading this will love hearing that their teacher actually made a mistake!  Right now, dear students, you can take me off any "pedestal" that you have put me on!

 Oh, and I found the perfect button for my necklace:


 And, so dear readers as I finish up this post, please remember to be aware of being God's Hands, Feet, and Mouth...then this world will flourish with Love...
Mary
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