Showing posts with label Enablers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Enablers. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

A colourful spring is on its way

As I type this, the view from my window is basically white on dark things.  Finally: snow!  It's very pretty though definitely not colourful.  I don't know about you but while my relationship to colour has been up and down over the years, after a few rounds of peaceful muted winter shades I am ready for a whole lotta green.  I'm not there yet, but I will be.

This old thing is the perfect hat for February, don't you think?

That's lucky because the stars have aligned to put me into not one but two colour-specific workshops this spring.  The second one is the one you'll care about for sure - it's for knitting, more on that in a moment! - but the first might appeal too: I'm taking a three-day course in colours, emphasis on paint, as they related to interior decor.

Maria Killam is the instructor - Lynn put me onto her and I've found her advice to be incredibly helpful as I choose all the stuff for our house.  Her focus is on how undertones affect a colour and its ability to play nicely with other colours, and since reading her e-books and following her blog I have definitely caught myself on the brink of making huge errors on tile and cabinetry.

Thanks to Maria's insights, we are making (almost) all the hard finishes in the house - the floors, the counters, the cabinets - totally neutral and timeless so that our paint and fabric choices can change whenever we want something fresh, and the whole place will still look put together and current.  I mean, it's far from a hardship to think of retiling a space when you have somebody like Ray you can call to do it, but he's going to retire eventually.

White: the perfect, peaceful frame for repeats of a single colour

When I mentioned Maria's approach to Jan, who is herself an artist, she shrugged and said "I just pick what I like," and I have to say, that attitude has always worked well for her.  For me: not so much.  You all know about my decision-making issues and on top of that - we are doing THE WHOLE HOUSE.  I am responsible for four bathrooms, my office, the master bedroom, the entire main floor. I haven't even looked at the basement yet but it'll need flooring too and also paint and I would really like my laundry room to be a place I enjoy spending time because let's face it: I spend a lot of time in the laundry room.   And when that's all done... I have to do it all over again at the condo so we can quickly rent or sell it.  Jury's still out on which.

If you only look at floors you will still have a lot to sort out. The beautiful 1942 hardwood floors in our original version of the house went with everything we threw at them, but I noticed issues in the basement when we had to choose laminate floors and laundry room tile.  You know what?  Flooring makes a huge difference to a room, and to the way one room flows into another.  Yeah, you probably knew that.  I probably did too, but I didn't appreciate the magnitude of the subject until I had to start choosing my own and got it wrong.  The whole process helps me understand why interior designers are such an important asset - many of us have the ability to choose what we like and make it work without professional assistance, but few of us have the time to go through all the things that won't work so we can get to the ones that do.

The tile floor in the old part of my favourite downtown bank tower.
Too much fuss in a way but I wish I could have little triangles in my house too!

I remember telling Jan another time how excited I was to think of our house looking like it was in a magazine and she said, "Why would you want that??" which made me laugh because so often, rooms get staged so far beyond real life for a magazine that of course, I never would want that.  Her question made me clarify what appeals to me about those idealized rooms and the answer is, they don't have paper clutter all over them.  They show the potential for future living, not the mess of past living.  My favourite magazine rooms suggest a backdrop for creative ideas to blossom, unlike the actual rooms I usually occupy, which require me to look away from clutter and things that have to be taken care of as soon as possible.

So, I still want my house to look like it's in a magazine, but what I really mean is, I want built-in storage and lots of doors so I can tuck activity-specific things into space-specific places and always have a clean place to work.  And I want all the colours to blend so beautifully, without jarring, that they cultivate my mind instead of distracting me from my ideas.

The idea of colours that are warm and encouraging without being bright or invigorating is fairly new to me.  I used to have an entire wardrobe of what I thought of as Crayon Colours - I loved one outfit in particular that paired a bright red with a bright version of navy, because it made me feel like a drawing in a comic strip.  I always, always matched my shoes to whatever I was wearing on my legs and had tights to go with all of my office footwear, most of which was suede because I loved the texture.  My living room walls were bright yellow and I couldn't put enough red check and bright florals onto the furniture.

And then life got so busy, and I was so tired, and before long, my entire wardrobe was black, and my living room walls were white, and my furniture was all upholstered in a sage green solid fabric.

I don't want so many bright colours any more.  I want peaceful spaces.  Subtle shifts in muted colours calm me down and I like that.

And yet...

When I look at yarn, I'm drawn to colour of all kinds!  Muted and soft, or bright and cheerful.  I love working with yarn dyed by independent artists, people who clearly love colour and love creating combinations that are exciting and fun.  I mean, how many pairs of stripey Vespers do I have?  (that's a rhetorical question, please don't hurt your brain by trying to count them all.)

Also: I'm good at colourwork. I don't do it often right now because it's less portable than a sock and hello, Time Constraints, but I do have stranded knitting skillz. Remember the time I knit this sample for Kathi Taylor when she was writing Fearless Fair Isle Knitting?


So, when Trish told me she'd signed up for a colour workshop at this year's Knitters Frolic I asked her to sign me up too. Yeah, I know, I should have just done it myself, but I was walking to a meeting when she called and it wasn't like there was time to spare because Stephanie Pearl-McPhee is the instructor!!  Yep, after all these years in the same city I am actually going to a talk given by The Yarn Harlot.

I told Holly because I knew she'd be excited and it turns out she got a spot too, so Yay!  There was only room for 24 participants and it sold out quickly.  Actually, all the instructors and topics this year are great, and I wish I had time to do more courses.  I will however make time for some shopping in the marketplace, even though I really, really don't need more yarn right now.


And now, back to my view of white on branch.  Isn't it wonderful that snow is so textural and sparkly?  I mean, if you have to look at a complete lack of colour, it's so nice to see those other special qualities.

Hope your day has special in it too no matter how otherwise uneventful (though really, in my experience, there is a lot to be said for uneventful) and I'll see you tomorrow.



Friday, April 25, 2014

Knitting Aids: a film and audiobook resource list

Even people who don't love reading love a good story, Mary said, opening the weekend with a sweeping generalization.

(I still think it's true, though.)


Also: it seems not unreasonable to assert that many knitters are multitaskers.

Be honest.  Who among us can stand not to be productive while doing something otherwise undemanding?  I personally know several knitters who took up the craft specifically so they'd have something to do at games or other sit-and-wait activities. For knitters,  films and audiobooks or even, if they are blessed with a high degree of commitment and/or manual dexterity, regular books can justify what would otherwise be just knitting (horrors!)

Films and audiobooks are responsible for all the things I've knit so far this year, and there are a lot of those things (26 at last count, in just 15 weeks.)  So today I thought I'd share some of my favourite knitting aids in case you might enjoy them too.


Costume Drama Miniseries

Bleak House
Dickens, given the British miniseries treatment with great acting and fabulous costumes.

North and South
Gaskell, ditto on the miniseries treatment but pretty much dripping with romance and wow, seriously fabulous costumes, or maybe I just loved the scarf-over-coat treatment in an early North scene.  Also some really nice trains.

Middlemarch
I have to say, I found some of the characters in this story maddeningly dim when it came to managing their personal affairs - but the plot moved well and the scenery was fantastic.

The Mayor of Casterbridge
This is another story whose conflict relies on the characters' near complete lack of self-awareness or understanding of others.  Still: absorbing, and extremely well-acted, and offering loads of knitting time - what more do you want than that?

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Shorter than the miniseries above, but still: great costume drama.  Yay!


Other hours-long yums you probably already know about:

Call the Midwife
Lark Rise to Candleford
Cranford


Movies

The More The Merrier
The plot of this gem turns on the wartime shortage of accommodations in Washington, D.C, and the resulting throwing-together of Jean Arthur and Joel McCrea.  What can I tell you? It's just charming.

Talk of the Town
Another Jean Arthur movie, this time with Cary Grant and Ronald Colman.  So much fun.

Laura
Great theme music, Gene Tierney, and Dana Andrews in one of my two favourite performances by him (the other being The Best Years of Our Lives.)

The Ghost and Mrs. Muir (since we're on the subject of Gene Tierney)
I love the theme music to this one, too.  Any good romance story has to have a good reason why the relationship won't work: here, it's that half the partnership is dead.  You know of course that they'll work it out somehow, but it's still a great movie to knit along to.


Audiobooks and otherwise

You can get these things on CD, and there are apps for for practically every sort of device to listen to them as an audio file from Audible, Amazon, or the iTunes store.  And probably many other places as well which we would like to support so they stay in business, yes?  I'm linking here to Audible files at Amazon, because Amazon has so very many customer reviews for your decision-making reference.


The Invention of Wings, by Sue Monk Kidd
I won't lie: this historical novel narrated by two different female characters - a slave and her sometime mistress - ran just a little bit long for me.  I wanted to hear what happened next, and the narration is amazing, and the story itself is absorbing, but one of the main characters is presented as (and was apparently in real life as well) incredibly slow to act on her objectives.  At times, one might even say wishy-washy.  It's still well worth reading or listening to, just - be prepared to want to shake her.

Me Before You, by Jojo Moyes
This is pretty much a romance novel that pits a working-class English girl against a more refined, but suicidal and quadriplegic, English man.  I know that sounds like a downer, but it's not at all written that way and the narration is superb.  Also it's one of the books I heard the longest time ago, while being one of the ones I remember best, which is a pretty strong endorsement.

600 Hours of Edward, by Craig Lancaster
Edward has Asberger's and occupies himself with a lot of lists and rituals, such that after the first chapter I thought, There is no way I can stand 600 Hours of Edward.  After the second chapter, I wished there were more like 900 Hours.  Great narration, too. 

Sylvester
This is an abridged version of Georgette Heyer's novel which would be an awful thing if it weren't narrated by Richard Armitage, whose capacity to produce a huge variety of distinct character voices in addition to top-notch narration is deeply impressive.  I'm pretty sure I've now bought everything he's narrated, but Sylvester is my favourite.

The Ocean at the End of the Lane, by Neil Gaiman
I've listened to several books by Neil Gaiman, who is one of the few writers I've come across capable of narrating their own work.  That is a complete understatement regarding his skills on the reading front, by the way.  He is fantastic.  I also enjoyed The Graveyard Book, Neverwhere (as an e-book) and The Anansi Boys (ditto.)

The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky
There were a lot of things about this coming of age story that made me sad, but I wanted to listen to all of it, and since that's ultimately the point of storytelling I feel it belongs on today's list.  It's got a great narrator, too.



Knitting Aids In Progress (aka, what I'm reading now)

A Dirty Job, by Christopher Moore
A young widower/new dad gets stuck unexpectedly with the job of being a sort of assistant to Death.  Hilarity ensues.  Truly: this is a comedy, and the narration is fantastic.  There is a lot of very creative and enthusiastic swearing though so if you're still interested after I've said that - you might have to rely on earphones, depending on who's around when you're listening.

The Seamstress, the memoir of Sara Tuvel Bernstein
The true story of this amazing woman who survived Ravensbruck is riveting, but the narration is absolutely right, too.  I feel like I'm listening to a much-loved elderly neighbour telling me about her life over tea and coffee cake, and even though it's a painful life, she is just such a positive force it feels uplifting to hear about it.

... and an e-book

This is probably not something everybody is going to want to try, but I was given an iPhone a few weeks ago and it turns out I can prop it up on something, then sit back and knit while flipping along the screen-sized pages of an e-book.  And enjoy the book without dropping stitches, to boot.  So this is what I'm reading now, and can so far recommend:

Code Name Verity, by Elizabeth Wein
This so-called YA book is the story of two friends in WWII - one is a pilot, the other a captured spy.  And they're women.  The reading pace of the audio sample I heard emphasized my impression of it as sombre subject matter, but I decided to trust the great reviews and buy it as an e-book.  Turns out it's funny, even when punctuated by references to torture, which is quite a feat.  Can't wait to read the rest.



Hope there's something in here that gets you through the weekend.  I myself expect to be flat-out swamped and lucky to watch or listen to anything, let alone knit, before Monday, but we live in hope, right?

Take care and I'll see you here again in a couple of days!


(ps: the socks are made from Vesper sock yarn again... 'Thankful' colourway.  and let me tell you, I I'm especially thankful to have bought a new linen sweater to match the orange stripe.)

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Crafty Enablers

There are sooo many great craft sites on the web.  Here are some of my go-to favourites:

Craftsy

Craftster

Ravelry

The Daily Knitter

Interweave Knits

Vogue Knitting

Knitty

Knitter's Review

Knitmap (this gem will find the nearest yarn store, wherever you are!)