More craft bragging:
Henry scarf (from Knitty) made with Bendigo Woollen Mills Colonial Navy shade 007 dyelot 279 5 ply 100% wool. 580 metres per 200g ball. $10/ball.


This is the scarf I started last year intending to give it to my father for Christmas. I realised I wouldn't finish it in time so abandoned it. Then I realised in February it was going to be too small so I ripped out the entire thing and started again on bigger needles. You knit it lengthwise. The pattern consists of 24 rows and you go through it seven times. Each row took me about half an hour to knit. So, yes, it took a really really really long time!


I gave it to my father for his birthday when we had dinner this week. He seemed to like it!
Urchin hat made from some yarn that Anita L gave me (unfortunately there were no tags attached so I have no idea what sort of yarn it is): (The hat really doesn't suit me as well as Ysolda so sorry you have such a poor model.)


Urchin hats (from Knitty) made with Lincraft Big Wool. Colour: Purple, pink, green/white/scarlet/black. Dyelot: 1, 07093801, 07043206. 50% wool, 50% acrylic. 40 m per 50g ball. $2.99/ball.
This:

became this:


This:

became this:


And this:

became this:

I found this pattern in a Patons book (I think) but I can't remember which one (it was for their Ostrich yarn, I think). You cast on 40 stitches on 15 mm needles and then knit in garter stitch for about 2 to 2.5 m. Then it will stretch one way as a scarf and the other way as a shawl like so:


For this one, I used Lincraft Mega. Colour: Purple. Dyelot: 06115103. 60% nylon, 40% polyester. 105 m per 50g ball. $2.99/ball. So this:

became this:


I'm stockpiling these things to sell (hopefully) at the FEVA fundraising concert How Sweet the Sound. I've been told they'll have markets this year. I'm not sure whether selling my work is such a good idea—I have too much of an emotional investment in it and never know how much to charge (considering that one Urchin hats takes me about three or four hours to make and it's unlikely someone would pay more than $20 for a hat), and then feel like I shortchanged myself if my work doesn't sell for much ... But that's really not why I knit, and I guess if these don't sell, they'll always be useful as presents for people.
Bible: Isaiah (ESV) 28/09/2010
seen: Tropic Thunder 26/09/2010
seen: The Life of Mammals 24/09/2010
seen: What a Girl Wants 19/09/2010
seen: Jerry Maguire 19/09/2010
seen: The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 06/09/2010
seen: Tomorrow Never Dies 05/09/2010
seen: Nanny McPhee 28/08/2010
read: Mercury (Hope Larson) 27/08/2010
read: Spellcheckers Vol 1 (Jamie S Rich, Nicolas Hitori de, Joelle Jones) 16/08/2010
read: Solipsistic Pop Vol 2 (Solipsistic Pop) 16/08/2010
read: Chiggers (Hope Larson) 15/08/2010
seen: Josie and the Pussycats 14/08/2010
seen: Mr & Mrs Smith 14/08/2010
seen: Step Up 2 13/08/2010
How to recalibrate the home button on your iPhone.
Unsolicited manuscripts accepted by Pan Macmillan with certain conditions.
Thought Balloon is a group blog in which the writers tackle a new theme every week? month? with one-page scripts. This URL is for their Phonogram ones.
How to sew a zipper on a knitted garment.
Issues organised by tale.
Online magazine that publishes fairy tales that are not reworkings of old tales.
Journal that publishes fairy tale writing.
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Not to downplay your hard work and excellent knitting but, even though those are beautiful hats, my favourite thing about this post is the title