Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Fire 'Em Up!


It has come to my attention that I have not been paying attention to my studies...any studies. My mind has been addled with dreams of wool of all colors, shapes and sizes.

Some of them are natural wool, some of them are all dyed in the most wondrous colors, some of them appear to be spun thick n' thin, and some are chain-plied, too.

And hats! Hats have been dancing in my head as well...well, I'm afraid what's left of my brain after all that activity has to be quarantined for use towards an upcoming Physiology exam in two weeks.

Two weeks! My second exam covers the following subjects: Neurophysiology, Transport Processes, Synapses, and Muscle Physiology. And I have to find room in that brain of mine to fit in all these stuff amidst all the wool that's made its way into every crevice and nook and cranny...

Tough work ahead of me. Hmmm...come to think of, even the house is such a mess. Where are my notes???

Wish me luck!

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Last Call For Summer


Although I live in SoCal, I know my garden is not going to look the way it's looked throughout the summer. So here are a few leftover flowers still blooming - the yellow ones are soon-to-be cherry tomatoes!

Here are the two new skeins I finished today, and are currently hanging out to dry on the patio.

This is Gallica, the second skein plied with gold embroidery thread this morning and now photographed together.

And this is Emerald Isle, 2 skeins done on my Ghstworks drop spindle

My Type Of Scary...


It's Halloween and I have to be honest - I haven't figured out what to make art-wise for my Halloween yarn swap. I guess it's that overly critical Me who thinks that nothing is good enough to give away because it has to be...PERFECT! Oh well, I know I have to get crackin' in that department.

So, to help me feel inspired, I'm pulling out my list of favorite scary movies. As an aside I am reading The Historian, which is about vampires, most notably Count Dracula, but it's a bit meandering at the moment. But the fear is slowly building though - so I know it will be a wonderful scary read.

Here is a partial list of my favorite "horror" movies. Some of them I remember from the 80's when I was just in my teens, because my mom always would take us to see these movies with her. Some of them really resonated with me, and some...well, my mom wasn't into those slasher movies after all, thank goodness.

If you're curious, the links will take you to their trailers on Youtube.

The Orphanage
Pan's Labyrinth
The Others
28 Days Later
Ghost Story (1981) This had Fred Astaire, Douglas Fairbanks, and Melvyn Douglas
The Changeling (1980)
Dead and Buried (1981)
Shaun of the Dead (After all, their movie wallpaper isn't headlining this post by accident!)

I have been busy in the spinning department. I did finish the YarnZombie batt and am getting ready to give it a rinse. I also finished my shetland kettle dyed roving from Shunklies. I swear my index finger is getting callused just from drafting it! That, too, is getting ready for its soak and then I'll take a little break and continue with my wip's. The list is growing, and Christmas is fast approaching so I best be ready!

I also bought this a few minutes ago from Watermelon Yarns on Etsy. Maybe something I can use for my swap after all!

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Crazy Play


Ay, Chihuahua!

Pretty In Pink


Let me introduce you to my second successful tam! I could have made it longer but I was afraid I'd run out of yarn and so I finished it according to the original plan. Leo says it looks perfect and I love it.

This is made using the mystery handspun I won at WWKIP Day at El Dorado Park this year. I swear sometimes it felt like dryer lint was included in it, but in the end it turned out great. It's really thick and warm! Perfect for the fall.

Which reminds me...wasn't this morning just gorgeous??? Reminds me of a perfect fall morning, with its crisp fresh air and that slight chill in the air. I love love fall.

I restarted spinning Yarnzombie's Every Little Thing batt last night. Guess who buried herself under its softness!


Poor Truffles...or rather, lucky Truffles - all snug in her woolen mixed batt.


Yesterday while browsing at Borders, I found The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova. I've heard about the book vaguely but it wasn't until I turned it over and read the description and I was immediately hooked. Vampires? I'm in!

On the spinning front, I haven't been spinning as much as knitting tams and hats, but last night, I set about to spin the batt I got from YarnZombie. I plied it with gold embroidery thread I found at LisCat and for a minute there I had no idea what I was doing. It takes practice to spin bulky yarn and even this isn't that bulky - but I think I succeeded.


Gallica. 54 yards



I miss spinning fine yarns...

Friday, October 10, 2008

Don't Be A Slouch!




It's handspun!


And it's a FO!


Woot! I finally finished my second hat! And this time, it fits perfectly! Well, it could be a bit bigger and next time I'm gonna make it way bigger - kf&b every other stitch, then keep on going!

I used my own handspun from Gale's Art on Etsy and had only about 15 inches left of the yarn from the first skein before I tied it close. I love love it! I'm calling this one, "Don't Be A Slouch!" because it isn't exactly a slouchy hat...

On the dyeing front, I dyed my third batch of fiber yesterday, this time dyeing some of the cotswold locks. I really should start experimenting with blending colors because this yellow just ain't gonna cut it. It's like I'm in kindergarten or something and teacher is introducing the Crayola colors all over again.


Not to worry - I'm gonna be a bit adventurous today and attempt to come up with purple!

I'm not going through dyeing the 10-lb box of mill ends as fast as I thought I'd be doing but I'm slowly working on it. Working with a crock pot has its disadvantages - work goes really long and slow since I need to let the fiber "cook" in its dye bath for 3-4 hours and then let it sit to cool for about the same amount of time before I rinse and spin it, then dry on the rack.

Thank goodness, for the first time in my life, I don't want all this stuff done, like, yesterday!

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Home...Revisited

Looking back at my posts I realized that I never did post any photos of our visit back home! So I've picked a few shots for now to show where we went on our spring vacation this year!


This is Boracay island in the morning. Very early morning - like 6 am. You need to click on the image to view the complete collage of photos all blended into one. It just rained ever so lightly and the sun's trying to come out from behind the clouds. But if I had waited another hour, you wouldn't be able to see the beach because it would be filled with people! Hundreds of them!

We stayed in a nice little one-bedroom cottage and it had its own little patio where you could hang out and also hang your recently washed clothes to dry. Next door was a cool little hideaway coffee shop that when you're finally tired of all the instant coffee mixes that's available year round in the country, you can get the real thing fix at Real Coffee and Tea. Wow, let me tell you...just when my caffeine headache was raging and I really really really was in need of the real thing, the sight of their shop and the sign was like...well, an oasis in the middle of the desert.

I visited Boracay 19 years ago and it wasn't this crowded at all. There were only a few big resorts on the beach and everything ran on generators so your cottage had little torches and gas lamps and a mosquito net hung from above your bed. The boat dropped you off right in front of your resort and you could walk the entire length of the beach (very smooth white sand - like powdered milk!) and only come across, maybe, 10 people along the way. These days, you can't get five steps ahead without someone hawking "Island hopping" or diving trips, or handmade shell or bead jewelry.

It's not a BAD thing...it's just like night and day. Now the beach front is teeming with big and small resorts and now realtors are selling hill properties because there aren't any beachside properties left at all. Hmmmmm...I wonder where the toilet water goes...


This is a coconut vendor we came across during our "island hopping" trip that same morning. I love his smile and although we weren't in the mood to have any fresh coconut (Leo was suffering from a bout of indigestion from not-so-fresh-coconut-juice-with-ice), he was very nice.

The night before we had stayed at my friend's house on top of hill overlooking the river on one side and the little barrio on the other side. This was the view from our balcony that morning and although I could have gone to the other side to take pictures of the Aklan river (which overflowed about three months later during Typhoon Fengshen and killed lots of people), there was a dog patrolling the premises that morning and it wasn't feeling too friendly to visitors at the moment. It was a big one, too.

And the long shots that I took from the front view? Well, it was in another camera that didn't end up with us after the trip. So...c'est la vie, wee camera.

The house was designed by my friend's husband, a Frenchman who wanted to have something of a French country home with Philippine touches here and there. He even imported pine trees to surround the home...but really I'm just showing the view for now. They're pretty protective of their home.



Now, imagine Hershey's kisses all lined up in rows and you have Bohol's Chocolate Hills. They call it Chocolate Hills because when it rains, the hills look brown and thus, resembled those chocolate kisses.

These hills were naturally created through the centuries by erosion of coral.


On the same island, we found the smallest marsupial called the Philippine Tarsier. They are literally tiny! With huge eyes that are basically screwed into their skulls and so they need to turn their heads to see side to side. Very cute critters, too! Unfortunately, it is said that their numbers are dwindling because the island is getting crowded and already there are talks of building an international airport on the island, which I don't get because about an hour away by boat, there already IS an international airport.


Okay, can you imagine having this garden at home? With all these huge flowers just hanging all over? Well, it is just beautiful and we just couldn't stop taking pictures of the garden it was sooooo pretty! Sure the day was hot and clammy, but with a view like this, who cares?




Honey...where's my pina colada???


In the southern island of Mindanao lies Davao city, and there's a nearby island called Samal. There are some beautiful white sandy beaches there - this isn't one of them. This is where my father's beach resort is located and for many years, he lived in this house with my stepmom. These days, the beach house is empty because he now lives in the city so they can be close to the hospital since my stepmom has lupus and emphysema.

But isn't this just gorgeous? Who wouldn't want to live where the ocean waves lap just outside your door?

Before I say good-bye, here's something else that's just amazing about the islands. The seafood!!!!! Now this is a prawn...not a big shrimp. A prawn. And they're just delicious!

Leo couldn't agree more...