Archive for January 26th, 2007

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doing well a thing that is well worth doing

January 26, 2007

snowdrop hat, originally uploaded by cosymakes.

i can’t tell you how good it feels to be knitting for someone. this one was made mostly yesterday, finished today for a woman who contacted me thru the shop.  inspiration for the embroidery was the first snowdrop flower i spotted this season, just up the street from my house.  another craft blogger spotted one too!  you can see her picture here.

the only commissions i’m taking these days are those that will help with my book, and so since i can’t show you the book projects, you get this hat as a hint.

ingredients:
brown- recycled j crew sweater wool
red-purple- my hand dyed thrifted wool
blue-purple- mountain colors mill end

it’s difficult for me to knit every day and not be knitting for people. knitting is such a community thing for me, that this hat is a welcome respite.

i guess i have to keep in view that i am knitting for people when i design for the book, i just won’t be seeing any sort of completion until the book is actually in print. the thesis is somewhere in the middle, you can see the projects, but the culmination will be the gallery show. it reminds me of a theme in the book A Long Obedience in the Same Direction by Eugene Peterson. his book is about much more important issues… but the point is that often you just keep going/working/being faithful until you can finally stop. sometimes it’s not very gratifying, but you must do it anyhow.

if i’ve learned anything in my time at Regent College, it has been to claim art as my job, my good work. according to Dorothy Sayers, work is “doing well a thing that is well worth doing.” her thoughts have really helped me to claim my art. the idea that a good four/five hours of work a day is better than more hours and mediocre work has also been helpful. sabbath ideas have also been instrumental in making me an artist. six days of work, one day of rest- GO! just kidding… i’m not that legalistic. but it is a good reminder that i’ve work to do. and good work at that. i’m a much more confident artist after having been here. on a side note, it still throws ben for a loop when i say that i got a lot of work done today and show him my knitting.

speaking of having to do things… my book contact showed up in the mail yesterday. all it awaits is my signature. YIKES!

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garters and stockings

January 26, 2007


two garter options
Originally uploaded by cosymakes.

as i was sitting at school knitting yesterday, everyone who came to talk and lingered got regailed with this paragraph from Folk Socks by Nancy Bush:

The humble sock also played a central role in those marriages that did take place. Stockings were tossed rather than a floral bouquet. In Britain, to “throw the stocking” had special meaning for wedding guests. On the weddding night, the bride’s stocking was thrown among the guests, and the “lucky” person struck by it would be the next to be married. (The garter has taken the place of the sock in modern ritual–probably because it’s easier to get off.) In another version, the bride and groom would retire to bed, fully dressed but for their stockings and shoes. Their friends would appear and, with their backs to the blissful couple, take turns in trying to hit either the groom or the bride with one of their own stockings. The first bridesmaid and groomsman to succeed would, in theory, celebrate their own weddings before the year was out. In sScotland, when a younger sister contracted to marry, she would send her elder, unmarried sister a pair of green stockings for her to wear to the dance–green means forsaken. The Scottish older sister had it better than the one in Shropshire and other parts of England, however, as the latter had to go to the dance barefooted! (5)

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