Thursday, October 19, 2006
I'm not enjoying making the CIC sweater verymuch. The pattern just isn't the greatest and will make a lot of annoying sewing together. But I press on and here are the sleeves so far. I started them on one needle but two stitches are added every four rows and they grow fat so one has been set aside til the other is finished.

Diane is figuring out a pattern for own use and I'll probably copy her as she's smarter and I'm lazier.
 
posted by Betty Ann at 6:58 PM | 0 comments
Sunday, October 15, 2006
You Are Most Like George W. Bush

So what if you're not exactly popular? You still rule the free world.
And while you may be quite conservative now, you knew how to party back in the day!
What Modern US President Are You Most Like?
 
posted by Betty Ann at 11:44 PM | 1 comments
Friday, October 13, 2006
All righty! I would go ahead and put these socks in the mail but I work every minute of every day that the post office is open and since the go to an alien land, I must fill out some form and go in person. These are the Opal Tutti Fruitti socks made from yarn ordered from somewhere in Europe. Apparently, there wasn't much made in this colorway. It turns out, by the way, that ordering from Europe is cheaper than U.S. even adding in postage. They just sell it cheaper there by far.
Empie didn't finish his socks so I took them over. They look pretty good for his first effort. He probably meant to stalk and kill them once finished ... or sleep on them. As Diane suggested, he was proably just trying to get on my good side by pretending to have an interest in knitting. He has always been dishonest ... purrs when he really means "Get your hands off me so I can run away."

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posted by Betty Ann at 7:04 AM | 0 comments
Sunday, October 08, 2006
I haven't been working on the CIC sweater lately. Instead, I've been teaching Empie to knit. I don't know how he does it lying down but it seems to be coming along ok. The yarn is Opal Tiger. They will not fit him. I wonder who he's making them for. He's not know for generosity.
 
posted by Betty Ann at 1:08 PM | 1 comments
Sunday, October 01, 2006
The front and back of the CIC sweater have been finished for a while. Because I don't know how much farther the daffodil yarn will go, I decided I'd better make the neckband before starting the sleeves and discovered I don't have a needle with a big enough eye for the yarn. It's been years since I've attempted anything like this and it's reassuring to know there's plenty of help in the Children in Common knitters.

One of them, Claudia, has a yarn shop in Hudson, New York. (This is a page from Claudia's website.) This morning there was an email from her remarking on a new book, Knitting for Peace, that has devoted five pages to CIC. Claudia said in her email that her family roots are in Lithuania and she can imagine people related to her having to give their children to orphanages because they can't afford to feed them. She feels she's knitting for extended family. I haven't finished one thing for CIC yet but really am drawn to the idea that it's "real." People are genuinely involved in this effort and you don't have to wonder where your money, socks, toothbrushes are going.
And speaking of Russia and eastern Europe, I've had the joy of meeting several university students in the workplace this summer. These kids came from all parts of Russia (east, west and Siberia), Romania and Moldova. They were all smart as anything and came to the U.S. through agencies that sponsor them for four months to work and travel. They pay the agencies to come here, buy their own tickets, pay the agencies part of their salaries while they're here, pay rent, transportation, everything. The agencies put them in housing, move them around and provide the "personal taxi" transportation to and from work. The housing sounds nice. Some are at the beach, some in houses with yards and, since they're young it's probably not strange to them to find themselves living with kids from other countries and of the other sex. I didn't take pictures of them while they were here until the last one, Natalia, was left. This sweet girl from Moldova wasn't the most fluent in English of all the students so I didn't learn as much about her as I wanted. She did tell me that in her country there is no frozen food.

I just fell in love with Russian girl, Sveta, who I knew briefly. Most of the kids will change their names (or even countries as I noticed Natalia became Russian after enough Americans responded to "Moldova" with guesses that it was in the Phillipines and "Where in the heck is that?") Sveta, however, got right in my face, within my limits of personal space, and said her name over and over and over and over until she was satisified with my pronunciation. Then she taught me a few other Russian phrases. She promised to email me a picture and I'd certainly love to get it but as the mother of a teenager, I have little hope.

These kids worked two jobs while they were here, often 6:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. six days a week. They had two jobs and would get a day off each week from each job but not on the same day. It was tiring for them but some, at least, said they were bored when they weren't at work. Some sent money home. Hopefully, all went home enriched and with positive experiences in the U.S.
 
posted by Betty Ann at 4:08 PM | 3 comments