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July 31, 2006

2KTOGed

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July 29, we got legal. :) There were games, prizes, finger puppets, Mexican food, margaritas, and cupcakes. There was much laughter and quite a lot of knitting! It was 95 degrees outside, but we took some lovely outdoor photos anyway.
Thanks to our knitting friends who attended and showed their support: Best Woman of Loops fame and her winged munchkin, The Grumperina, the Dilletante Debutante and family, Ride, Knit, Read(who has got to be the knitting blogger who lives closest to us), Fallingblox and his lovely lady. The DD gave a lovely toast: "What fate has knit together, let no man frog." :) So what if only ten percent of the guests got it? :) Omar's mom and sister are knitters, so I'm sure they appreciated it. There are some more photos here. You'll notice the dress I'm wearing is not the one I posted before, and no, I don't want to talk about it. ;) All in all it went very smoothly.
There is more exciting news. We are packing up and moving across the country in less than a month! After a full year of feverish job searching, I finally secured a job teaching high school English in a small charter school in the Phoenix area. My first day is August 17! This has all happened so fast, I haven't knit a stitch in months! But I am planning to cast on something simple and in the round to ease my transition from single lady of leisure of the Northeast to married and gainfully employed diva of the desert! I flew to Phoenix on Sunday and came back Tuesday, so all in all, it has been the busiest week ever. Omar is also getting his own little web business set up, so everything is changing all at once.

July 5, 2006

Drawn!

I made some cryptic comment about how knitting would be representing in our wedding, right? Well, here's it is. Our invitations, I think all that will receive them have, so it's safe to flash them here.

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Looks like our engagement photo from over a year ago:

They were drawn by Omar's bestest friend he has known since they were all about legos, who is also our best man. He is not a knitter, before you challenge the technical impossibility of the drawing ;)

Also sweet to note is that the yarn they are tied with is from a tiny ball given to me by a friend, along with my first set of circulars about five years ago, long before either of us could knit. It was years before the needles saw any action, but now they've made many hats. But this is the first time I've used the yarn.

Holy crap, 24 days!

July 3, 2006

roots of thread

First off, thanks for all the happy wedding wishes and compliments about the dress and shoes! We are really excited. At first, they sent me the wrong size dress, so hopefully the right size is making its way from the UK right now!
Does everyone remember the world's largest swatch? I was one of the first to cast on a tivoli/picovoli, but many, hundreds even, have finished theirs. Mine is in balls.
However, I am really in need of some seriously mindless knitting. Also, since I stopped knitting so much, I've noticed I've been having symptoms of carpal tunnel, namely my hands going numb at night while I sleep. Screw that! If knitting will keep my wrists limber, I'll have to suck it up and do it. So I've suckered Omar into casting on the super-orange tivoli for me again. He is concerned I may never knit again (because of my obsession with state quarters as my all-consuming new hobby). Actually I've been doing a little bit of crochet and cross stitch.
When I was visiting my grandparents in Iowa in May, my grandma brought out some cross stitch quilt blocks that I talked her into buying when i was eight or so. Of course I promised I would do them all myself. But time took its course, and as often happens to young girls, my thoughts turned away from sewing to lighter matters, like literature. =P
Anyway, my grandma, who is 89, offered to work on some of the squares if I would, too. Now I was never a champion cross-stitch student. I pretty much gave up when I found out that all the crosses had to go the same way. However, this is a very special thing for me to work on a craft project with my grandma, who was not a knitter or a crocheter. She is skilled in hand sewing, embrodiery, needlepoint, cross stitch, and mini-quliting. She made my Cabbage Patch dolls a wardrobe that would make Xavier Roberts weep. So I've been working on one of the 28 squares for this quilt. By the way, grandma has already cross-stitched full-sized quilts for all five of her grandchildren.

Here is some of grandma's needlework:
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Here is my grandma working on one of the blocks for the quilt. I took a picture of her looking serious and sewing, but then I asked her if I could take one where she was smiling and looking encouraging so when I felt defeating by cross stitch, this picture would inspire me.

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See those brown eyes? She's the only one out of my parents and grandparents with them, and I got them from her! She is really an awesome lady. She raised two sons and was an elementary reading specialist. She's the only one of my grandparents who went to college. I spent many, many happy days and summers at their house. I love you, Grandma!

Lastly, some wedding crafts. I got to go through grandma's cedar chest that will someday be mine, and it was an intensely emotional experience. Some of the things in there are hers, some belonged to my godmother, and others to my grandma's family. The cedar chest itself will one day be mine, it belonged to my grandma's "aunt," her mother's best friend. It was so touching to see all these carefully folded, ironed things that had been embellished by generations of women. I took a few things because I wanted samples of embrodiery.

Grandma gave me a brief embrodiery lesson, in backstitch and daisy stitch. "It looks like a worm with a hat on" she said. ;)
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We're not sure who embrodiered these Japanese lanterns, but I love them!
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This hankerchief is the most precious to me, though. It was embrodiered by my grandma and the teeny, tiny scallop edge was crocheted by her mother. I'm going to make a ring pillow out of it for our wedding. My grandparents are moving the week before our wedding, and traveling is really too much for them, anyway. So they will be there in spirit.

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