After waiting a couple of months or so, I finally got my invitation to sign up for Ravelry yesterday.  I’m still exploring, but so far I’m enjoying it immensely.  As someone who came very late to the online knit community party, I find it valuable and more importantly, inspiring, to read about and look at so many people’s projects. 

Since I learned about Ravelry on someone else’s blog (unfortunately, I can’t remember which), I thought I’d post about it here and maybe someone who is interested would learn about it from me.

Ravelry is an online knit/crochet community that has all sorts of features, from forums to a yarn index to a pattern index, etc.  One feature I like so far is that you can search for projects by yarn-type.  I’m hoping this feature will help me get through my stash!

Right now Ravelry is in beta, but you can sign up for an invite and wait for an invitation, and like it said, it took a couple of months for me to get my invitation.  But it was worth the wait!

For our anniversary, I told Mick to look on Etsy and buy me something he thought I’d like.  He bought me a handmade spindle and some wool, which was a very nice surprise:

fiber_spindle
Today I set out to spin a little.  Turns out it’s kind of hard!  Here is my first attempt at making yarn:
first_attempt

I have to admit I’m not very good at reading and then following directions, so this attempt was lame, at best.  I feel quite certain I wasn’t doing it right because it didn’t spin very smoothly.  That said, it looks more like yarn than it did when I started out.

I’ll have to keep practicing…

Not only is it Fall, the best time of year, it’s also knitting season.  I pretty much knit year-round, but there’s no question I get a surge of knitting energy when the cooler weather arrives.

I blogged about my Christmas knitting a couple of weeks ago and I have since begun another gift.  When I get bored of knitting one, I can go to the other, as both of my current projects are “long-haul.”  Good thing I’ve started my Christmas knitting early!

wip_4
I will continue posting “teaser” photos of these projects and when the gifts are given I’ll post complete pictures and patterns, where applicable.

I am also itching to start another sweater for myself–I’ve got the design in my mind and now I’ve got to detail it.  I’m still dreaming of submitting a design to knitty.com, you know…

This is the title of my favorite Crowded House song.

Fall is also my favorite time of year.  So much so that I got married in the Fall.  To be more specific, I got married 9 years ago today (October 3, 1998).

image 
The photo above was taken on our first anniversary.  The champagne flutes were the ones we used at our wedding and the idea was to use them every year on our anniversary.  I think we’ve forgotten to do it more years than not though.  The cake in that picture was from the top of our wedding cake and unfortunately, did not keep well.  It looks pretty though!

Anyway, I’ve said before it’s fun to be married (see #94) and it is.

To celebrate this grand occasion, Mick and I are going to dinner at the new restaurant in the Casa del Mar Hotel.  Frankly, the old restaurant in this location was pricey but not the best food-wise–though the location made up for it a little.  The bar at Casa del Mar is one of my favorite places.  I am looking forward to trying the new restaurant, and will eat with an open mouth, if not mind.

Fall is about more than my wedding anniversary, however.  I’m not sure why I love it so much–especially since I live in a place that only has one-and-a-half seasons, if that.  I think it’s the lead up to the holidays, the return of cooler weather, and the good vibes I feel this time of year.  Oh, and the food, my God, the food–there are so many yummy food holidays this time of year.

To celebrate the Fall, I made an Autumn Celebration Necklace yesterday:

386_fall_garnet_1000_cu

The pendant is a brushed silver leaf with a pretty little red garnet.  I think I might make a few more of these with different colored gemstones.  Its a simple celebration of this happy time of year.

Happy Fall!

Update 9:17pm:  The restaurant, Catch, was definitely better than the old one.  Certainly try the crab fondue, pork loin, and chocolate terrine if you ever go there.  Mick had the NY strip steak, which was delicious as well.

After making jewelry for over 6 years, I finally got my maker’s mark made (tee hee, say that three times fast).  Back when I had my logo designed, I also asked them to design a maker’s mark, but for whatever reason, I never actually got the stamp made.

Most of my jewelry making friends have stamps so I decided it was time to get mine made.  I contacted Rio Grande, sent them my artwork, and patiently waited about 4 weeks while my custom stamp was made.

Yesterday, I used it for the first time:

369_DIL_garnet_back_1000
I’m quite pleased to have it.  It’s a little awkward to use, but I think now that I’ve practiced a bit I’ve got it down.

Most of all, I’m glad to have a unique stamp that shows the world that my work is my work.  There is kind of a sense of pride in that.

Meanwhile, after some success at selling on Etsy, I am making jewelry like a mad woman.  Stay tuned for more new pieces this week, including a little custom work.

Well folks, I thought I’d gotten away from using peace symbols in my jewelry, but apparently I was wrong.  Today in the studio I made a couple of necklaces featuring the peace sign.

The first is a tassle-style necklace.  The tassle can hang in front or back of the peace sign, and although the necklace tangles easily in storage because the chain is rather delicate, it hangs beautifully when worn.  It’s a sexy necklace.

353_peace_citrine_tassle_500

The second is more rustic looking:

354_peace_labradorite_500
In this version I used a nugget of labradorite as an accent.  Labradorite is a lovely stone, and in the last couple of years I’ve seen it used more often–most notably in the Sundance Catalog.

The necklaces feature fabricated clasps:

353_peace_citrine_tassle_1000_2

Both necklaces are available for purchase in my Etsy store.

I mentioned here that I’ve started my Christmas knitting, which means that although I constantly have something on the needles, I can’t really blog about it.  However, a couple of weeks ago I started a project that I’m really pleased about and I think it’s going to be really cool when it’s completed.  Here is a preview:

wip_whole

I’ve been wanting to do an Aran-type design for a long time and although I’m not sure where the inspiration for this particular design came from, I knew it was the perfect opportunity to try Aran knitting.  Using the Sweater Wizard I designed the bare bones of the project, then I took out my trusty Big Book of Knitting Stitch Patterns and searched for something I liked.  The front and side patterns came from that book.

wip_left
The pattern for the back center of this piece came from here.  It is the Wide Multi-Cable.

wip_center

I’m very pleased with these stitch patterns because the large center cable echoes the pattern on the left and right sides of the piece perfectly.  The mini-cables on the sides work very well for under the arms.

Designing this piece was a bit complicated, but not so much that it was daunting.  Yes, yes, I know math is hard, but even with my meager skills, I was able to do it.  Of course, it’s not done yet!  Unfortunately, I won’t be able to show the finished work until after the gift is given.  Until then…

About a year ago, I made these little sweaters for my friend’s twin boys.

Over the weekend, I finished another, this one for my cousin Ashley’s baby who is due in November:

madison_cardy
Again, I used this pattern:

Fran’s Hooded Baby Sweater

The yarn is Caron Simply Soft, which I find to be a good baby-knitting yarn since it is soft and easy to care for.

The baby, who is a girl, will be named Madison.  Mick and I will be in Oregon when she is born, and I can’t wait to meet her.  Ashley asked me to video tape the birth.  I’m skeered!  Since it is the closest I’ll probably ever come to actually giving birth, however, I’m going to do it, in fact I’m excited about it.

I’m not much of a baker.  Not because I can’t do it or don’t like to do it, but because having baked goods around the house is a little dangerous for me.  I tend to want to eat them all at one sitting.

Yesterday, however, I hosted a brunch for some friends and took the opportunity to make and bake some of my favorite foods.  I also used it as an excuse to bake something I’ve never tasted but have wanted to for a long time:  red velvet cake.

More specifically, red velvet cupcakes with cream cheese frosting:

cupcake

This is the recipe I used:

Paula Deen’s Red Velvet Cupcakes

If you’re ever looking for an easy recipe that packs a lot of punch for your effort–these cupcakes might be the answer.  They are seriously decadent and the frosting, my god, the frosting.  I could take a bath in it, it’s so good.

Which brings me back to why I never bake anything.

Sometimes I feel like a bit of a poser when it comes to crafting because I’m relatively new to it.  When I was a kid, I didn’t do much in the way of making things, although I did write a lot.  I remember I used to make little satirical “magazines” (more like pamphlets) based on Better Homes and Gardens.  They were made out of construction paper and I’d staple the pages together then draw pictures and write “articles.”  That’s as close to crafting as I ever got.  Wait, that’s not true–I remember I had a little metal loom that you’d put elastic loops on and weave them through to the other end to make potholders and such.  That’s the closest I ever got to crafting.

loom

Now, a day doesn’t go by where I’m not making something.  I don’t think it’s because I didn’t have the interest when I was younger, it’s just that so many other things got in the way.  And it wasn’t that I lacked creativity–I made a lot of stuff for my doll house and my Barbies had some pretty sweet digs (I used to make waterbeds for them out of zip lock bags and my record albums formed the walls of their houses).  All that said, I was never a crafter like my sister and mom were, and I certainly never considered myself an artist.  Frankly, I still don’t.  There’s something about that word, that label, that I really don’t feel qualified to apply to myself.

Not that it matters.  I create a lot of stuff that can be called art, for lack of a better word.  I enjoy making it, people like it, and they even buy it.  If I don’t feel like calling myself an artist, then I’m not sure it makes much difference.

I’m not saying this to knock myself down–I love what I create and think it’s for the most part beautiful.  Maybe I just don’t like labels.  Maybe I don’t want to be defined by any one thing because I’m so likely to change my mind and switch to something else.*

But enough about that.  The new issue of Knitty is here and there are things I’m going to have to knit:

Patch Pocket Raglan – There are some really talented male knit designers out there.  This is an example.  I totally wish my husband would start knitting–I think it would suit him and his programmer mentality well.

Mr. Greenjeans – Hooray for the raglans!  I solemnly swear I will not knit myself a non-raglan sleeve sweater ever again.  (And how cute is her haircut)?

Flower Power – This, frankly, is a must-knit.  I already have three recipients in mind.

I have already started my Christmas knitting and have one project that I’m very excited about well underway.  Unfortunately, I can’t really blog it because what if the intended recipient happens upon my blog?  Unlikely, but possible.

*  The one label I do use in reference to myself is “atheist.”  I only do that because I think it’s important to identify myself as such, and in terms that the rest of the world can understand (well, maybe not understand, but at least know the meaning of).