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Rachael Herron

(R.H. Herron)

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Archives for September 2006

September 19, 2006

Have been for two days now in Venice, city of my heart. Lala is loving it, too, mostly because I only make her walk for about two city blocks before I make her sit down to drink something, coffee in the morning, wine and coffee in the afternoon, spritz and wine at night.

She had no idea I’d make her be so social — two engagements yesterday, one yarn involved, of course. The weather is perfect, warm and just a little muggy — we just missed days of rain, apparently.

I’d tell you more, but it’s evening, and that means time for wine and aperol and maybe a little pasta. Then a little more walking, and falling into bed with tired feet and happy hearts. Love to you all. More when I’m home, will most likely post on Sunday.

Ciao ciao.

https://rachaelherron.com/have_been_for_t/

Posted by Rachael 23 Comments

Why My Wife Is Hot

September 14, 2006

I was online last night, going CRAZY planning. You know, I’ve been good at compartmentalizing stress this year — not worrying or planning the wedding until 4 weeks beforehand, that kind of thing. This Italy/Belgium trip, I didn’t really plan it until last night. But boy, did I plan. I wrote pages of instructions to myself, where this is, where to put that, what to buy, what to pack.

The first day of travel we have to get from home in Oakland on an airport shuttle to San Francisco Airport to New York to Brussels to Brussels Midi to Charleoi Sud to Charleroi Airport to Treviso Airport to Venice. We leave at 4:45am on Saturday morning and arrive in Venice at 10pm on Sunday. The next day. But dude, I have the beer stop in Brussels Grand Place all planned out, so we’ll be fine.

Anyway. After I cooled down and got most things in line and settled, I started browsing online and ran across 43 Folders discussion of Moleskine hacks, and I decided I needed to get another Moleskine, only I didn’t know where was I going to get a new one by the time we leave, when every minute until departure is planned out…..

I got home from work at 7am, and Lala found me in my room, talking a mile a minute, searching for blank Moleskines. I found one, but it’s the larger size, and I wanted a smaller one. I was sure I had one, but I was wrong. Sigh. Resigned disappointment.

Get a call today from my wife, who says, "What kind of Moleskine did you want?"
"Pocket-sized sketch!"
"Do you want a pen?"
"A Pilot G2! Really, truly? You can do that? Get me those?"
"Yes! I’ve got them!"

That is one of the many, many extremely sexy things about Lala. She listens, even when I’m crazy.

And y’all, I’ll see you in about a week. I’ll be back next Friday. Don’t know how I will get you pictures, because said hot wife will still have the camera, because she’s all like, "I’m on tour, I need the camera," whereas she doesn’t understand about YOUR needs, does she? But I’ll get you pictures. Promise.

Be well.

Posted by Rachael 29 Comments

Central Park

September 13, 2006

Oh, boy, do I love this sweater.

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Specs
Pattern: Central Park, Knitscene (Interweave Press special issue), Fall 2006
Yarn: Araucania Nature Wool Chunky, color 123, ten balls used.
Size: 44 bust
Needles: 5US

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It knit up in about a minute, and the yarn was on sale through Webs, and I love it. Fits perfectly. The hood fits, and actually lays extremely nicely, seen here blurrily:

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The cables are the easiest in the world — the whole sweater is simple stuff, and if you’ve made anything beyond a scarf, ever, this would be a good next project.

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I LOVE the buttons I got at Lacis. They’re from the 30s, and they’re vegetable ivory. Huh. I thought that was just a fancy word for plastic, honestly, but according to wikipedia, it’s the tagua nut from the South American rainforest. Learn something new every day.

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Did I mention I love this sweater?

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Welp, I was thinking about taking it to Europe with us, but I just checked Venice’s extended forecast, and we’re looking at a warm 72 degrees, with scattered showers. That’s not heavy wool weather, huh? Looks like the same in Brussels, so we’ll have to rethink the wardrobe. Such a delicious problem.

Posted by Rachael 74 Comments

Lovely Old Man

September 12, 2006

I was at Lacis today, and I have to tell you what I heard. First, though, I have to make sure you know about Lacis, which is like nothing (literally) in this hemisphere, and perhaps the world. It is an old-fashioned notions/lace/craft shop, but when you hear old-fashioned, think turn-of-the-century. Pick a century. They not only have books about tatting, and tens of shuttles, they PUBLISH books on tatting. They have an antique lace room, where the pieces are so numerous they lie in drawers, waiting for you to pull and ogle. They have a bride’s room (I bought my veil there and have never felt so breakable and Anne-ish and lovely). A book room with books on knitting and crocheting and SO much about bobbin lace (who does bobbin lace? If you do, get thee to Lacis, even if you need to charter a flight), and Japanese crewel-work, and every embroidery idea you ever had. Can’t describe the wonders, really. Bethany, who tats, was beside herself.

I went today to look for buttons for the new sweater (picture soon! Pinky-swear!), and didn’t see any. Asked desultorily about some deco buttons I saw hanging in a corner, never thinking they had any more that the two shown (I needed seven). The gal behind the button counter didn’t let me get away with mere idle questioning, but asked what I needed them for, and then when she saw the sweater, pulled out boxes upon boxes. I finally settle on some vegetable ivory buttons from the 30s, a dollar each. A buck. Dude. They’re perfect.

But that’s not the story.

So I’m back near the book section, and I can overhear an old man speaking, a lovely old man with the crispest British accent, and he’s speaking to the manager (who is the one of the most gorgeous women I’ve ever laid eyes on, I always think so, tall, beautiful heavy black dreadlocks heaped in a Victorian fashion on her head, vintage clothing and high heels, and today, gasp, fishnets).

Lovely Old English Man is saying, "Yes, as a matter of fact, I do knit. It’s a funny story, quite amusing. You might like it. It was during the war that I learned. I was in hospital, recovering from quite a bad wound, and I’d learned to knit from a nurse. It was part of my rehabilitation, you see. So I cast on for a scarf. I knit, and I kept knitting. Funny thing, I didn’t know how to stop, so I just kept knitting. It wasn’t until a beautiful woman taught me how to cast off that I finally stopped, but by then the scarf was amazingly long, went for days, that scarf."

Here I lost the audio, while the manager asked him something. When I caught it again, as I crept closer and closer, he was saying, "so the tragedy was that I pulled all that work out. For her. Greatest act of love, I always thought. That I pulled all that knitting out."

The manager said, "What happened? With the girl?"

"Oh," he said. "She was much too pretty for the likes of me. Never did get her. Looked her up, though. A few years ago. I called the parish she was from, and the woman told me, ‘I’m so sorry to have to tell you she died, not long ago. A good life, though. Especially in the end. Much love and time in the garden and with her family. A very good life.’"

He paused. "Never forgot her. Much too pretty for me, that one."

Seriously, to DIE, isn’t it?

I was standing near him later and jumped into a conversation he was having with another employee — he wanted to know if sock knitting was ever mechanized, and he said that he thought not, not until this century, and I butted in and told him about sock-knitting machines, the hand-crank kind, about which I apparently know NOTHING, but I’m going to research and send him the info. I was rather smitten by this point and would have told him anything just to talk with him.

He’s researching a book he’s writing about the war, and started telling me about how the British women would paint their legs brown, with a black stripe up the back during the war, and how well the American soldiers would get on with their girls, because they’d come over with silk.

I opened my mouth to tell him about the gal I’d seen at a bar recently who had tattooed lines up the backs of her legs (HOT), and then I sensibly shut my yap. While I love this tattoo idea, I think I would have horrified my man, and I have to keep him in my pocket, so I can listen to him some more.

Now I’m off to research sock-knitting machines. Anyone?

Posted by Rachael 33 Comments

New Knitty!

September 11, 2006

The patterns that have me hooked:

Intolerable Cruelty. Almost too sexy to knit. Certainly too sexy to wear. Therefore, I must have it. Seriously. I don’t even know if I have the cojones to wear it, but I think I do.

Lizard Ridge
. Brilliant. Something to do with that Kureyon that you have leftover, that you love. And you might need more.

I’ve done more in the last two hours than I normally do at this time of day — paid bills, pulled things together for Europe, et-set-era, and I usually sleep till this time on my days off. So I win! Bethany is coming over to go on a hike with me and Clara, and then maybe I’ll just sit around and knit. Hooray! Now go read more Knitty.

Posted by Rachael 18 Comments

September 9, 2006

Oooh, do you ever just have the urge to blog, and you sit there, doing whatever you’re doing (in my case, being at work, trying not to laugh at someone who called for medical on an allergic reaction to latex while at a hotel — what do you think they were doing?), and you’re thinking all these smart funny thoughts, things that make you happy, things that you want to share, and then you sit down to blog and there’s nothing there?

When that happens to me, I make a list:

  • I am deeply in love with green lately. I finished a hella cute sweater yesterday, but I haven’t had time to put on buttons yet. You’ll see it soon. It’s the best, lightest color of drying grass.
  • I started a new sweater imMEEJiatly (the Sienna Cardigan from the latest IK), also in green, but this green is deep and rich, and yo, it’s cashmere from the stash. Stash cashmere. There aren’t two finer words that go together, are there? It’s from a cone I bought in New York from School Products more than two years ago, and I think it’s time.
  • I’ve learned that when I’m deeply grumpy there are things I should try.
    • Stand in front of a fan. I may be hot and may be in denial. Just go stand in front of a fan and see what happens.
    • Knit with cashmere. Seriously, it sounds like a silly thing to help the grumps, something light and fluffy to say in a blog post, but earlier today I was in a horrid mood, and the cashmere knitting was like a good therapy session. I can’t explain why. It just Is.
  • I was in a bad mood because of HOA woes (which are much better and much more deal-able now, thank you, although still rather prickly) but mostly because I got to see Lala for literally twelve minutes today. And that’s better than during the week. I do not exaggerate. Usually, during the work week, I only see her when I get into bed and she’s getting out, about ten minutes or so. And know what? That grumps me OUT, something that when looked at from a distance, actually makes me happy. I’ve never lived with anyone, never felt this for anyone. That want to see someone, that need to just breathe the same air, to just hang out in the kitchen and talk. And more than two years later, it’s just getting more like this. It’s really a fine reason to be grumpy.

That’s a long enough list. It’s my Friday, thank god, and I have a date with La tomorrow night. Hooray. Tuesday, I get to see Marie (of KnitCast fame) and her husband, coming all the way from Wales to Oakland. Well, I suppose she’s coming because they love San Francisco like I love Venice, but I’m stealing them and I’m going to introduce them to Zachary’s Pizza in Oakland.

And then less than a week from now, we leave for Europe! I have nothing ready to go! Haven’t got out a single bag, haven’t looked for the voltage converter. Dude. This is not like me. But I like it.

Okay. Back to knitting with cashmere. Oh, yes. Enjoy the rest of your weekend, whatever you’re doing.

https://rachaelherron.com/oooh_do_you_eve/

Posted by Rachael 14 Comments

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