Wednesday, August 15, 2012

i love finished objects








It is interesting to see how much time I have to knit when we homeschool!  It feels so good to finish a sweater.

He will have to wear it with a long sleeved shirt, since the yarn scratches.  That means it will have to be even colder when he wears it...  (I have a friend here who keeps on telling me that there is no point in knitting in Texas, it just never gets cold enough for a wool sweater.  I will just ignore her and keep on pretending that this year and the previous two were outliers.)

I wish I could pick up a book with a story and just read it, but my mind wanders when I try to do that.  Melva wanted another one of Stephanie Pearl-McPhee's books, and I read it too.  I can read her books while knitting. Reading about knitting too much while you should perhaps be doing something else, while you are knitting and should actually be doing something else (like sleeping...)  It is a vicious cycle.

Melva has been going from strength to strength:


She finished the first sock, and is now knitting the second, while fitting other, smaller projects in-between:


In one of her books Stephanie Pearl-McPhee writes that she once visited with a woman who had knit for 65 years.  She thought that this woman would be a mentor, would be the ultimate expert who could answer her questions.  Instead, she knew only one way to cast on and only one way to bind off, and could only knit certain types of patterns (I am paraphrasing, of course).  It turned out that she was not an expert, she could do the few thing she did very well, but she was not an expert knitter.

Melva is the opposite.  She is 11 and has been knitting for about a year.  She investigates all the options energetically, she does not have to memorize the advantages to different methods of casting on, they are so relevant to her that she just remembers them.  She sits and calculates gauge for half an hour before she starts to knit a dishcloth that she could knit in an hour.  Her attention to detail is impeccable.  She can fix a cable that was turned the wrong way around three rows ago. (We do not unschool - she does math and Latin and history etc too :)

Apart from buying far too many books on knitting, I had very little to do with this.    Given time and access to information, and a nudge in the right direction (even something a simple as reading about Ginny's boys and what they can do), now and again, can work what appears to be miracles.

And that is just another reason I love Wednesdays, and Ginny' yarn along :)  Cannot wait to see what everyone else is knitting, and I might even spot a book - fiction, not knitting or cooking or organizing - that could hold my attention!

Ravelry notes: here

12 comments:

  1. It's fun seeing kids craft. :) My 8-year old is constantly crocheting clothes for her dolls, her sisters' dolls . . . and even her brother's dinosaurs!

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  2. Wow - your daughter's knitting is amazing! Thank you for sharing.

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  3. Sounds like my youngest daughter with quilting/sewing see her page - http://www.sunflwrdesignz.com/ -- we are such good friends, beginnings were with needle and thread. You have so much joy to look forward to.
    Love the little guy's sweater, he is precious.

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    1. Thanks, he is a sweet little guy. I am so glad to share knitting with my daughter - there is always something to talk about!

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  4. Wow, your daughter sounds like quite the knitting prodigy! I'm fairly sure she knits better than me. And I love those socks!

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  5. your sweater is lovely and melva is astonishing, truly. prodigy comes to mind!

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  6. The sweater is beautiful; hopefully there will be lots of opportunity to wear it this year. Tell Melva, I want to be like her when I grow up!

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    1. They say it will be a great fall for gardening, at least! ("they" are the neighbors and one man at the nursery, but still!)

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  7. The sweater is lovely - I'm sorry to hear it's a bit scratchy, though. I take my son to the wool shop with me now so that he can approve yarn before I knit anything for him. We get some funny looks for walking around the store rubbing yarn on our necks but if it means the item is going to get worn more then I don't care ;o)
    Melva's attention to detail is very inspiring!

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    1. Thanks! Allowing them to feel sounds like a good idea, but I have not had the courage to take the boys with me into a yarn shop... Plus, the lady in the yarn store is a very good salesperson and I have very little resistance when it comes to yarn!

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  8. Sweater looks great. Melva is one incredible knitter!

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  9. The sweater is just adorable! I know what you mean....I continue to knit here in TX. I figure it has got to get cold her sooner or later. I have only been here 6 months,,, and I find myself hoping for snow! That is not so bizarre, I mean stranger things have happened...right?! lol

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