It even has an icord nubbin at the top! I can't get a good photo of it from above, though, but the increases make a really nice pinwheel on the top.
Sunday, 18 November 2007
Beret
I knitted this at work last week when I was on inbound early in the mornings. This is the pattern. I love moss stitch now, and this is my favourite hat pattern I've ever knitted.

It even has an icord nubbin at the top! I can't get a good photo of it from above, though, but the increases make a really nice pinwheel on the top.
It even has an icord nubbin at the top! I can't get a good photo of it from above, though, but the increases make a really nice pinwheel on the top.
>stab arras with dagger
I just completed this Hamlet adventure game. I'm a bit obsessed with text adventures at the moment.
Tuesday, 6 November 2007
What I don't want for Christmas...

I was just checking whether the sixth edition of the MLA handbook recommends square brackets around ellipses (the answer is generally no, but maybe for clarity) and they tried to sell me a totebag! No, MLA, I do not want your crappy nylon totebag. Sadly, a member discount is not available on this item.
Saturday, 27 October 2007
"Autumn overlooked my knitting"
Blocking action shot for my kiri shawl:

I'm really close to finishing my Bridie too:

I was reading about Emily Dickinson (as the quote probably indicates) and found this excerpt from a critical essay about her from 1937 by R.P. Blackmur:
She was neither a professional poet nor an amateur; she was a private poet who wrote as indefatigably as some women cook or knit. Her gift for words and the cultural predicament of her time drove her to poetry instead of antimacassars...
I think that it's really interesting in the light of the whole pinny porn debate (summarised here very well) and what that means for women's activities in general. On the one hand I love the idea of writing (all kinds of writing, and not just women's writing) being something productive and useful like cooking or knitting, but the whole tone here (antimacassars!) is almost devaluing all those things together and putting them solidly inside the home. Yet, on the other hand, knitting and cooking are things I do for fun in my leisure time and the thing that makes me a bit uncomfortable about yarnstorm is the way they end up being fetishised and made into a whole aspirational value system (intenionally or not). It's not the beautiful things she creates that are the problem for me, it's the consumerism which gets elided by ideas about self-sufficiency and craft and all kinds of fuzzy-warm 'gentle' ideas. The idea is that spending money on beautiful things make the world better and I have a whole bag of issues with that.
Then also, somewhere in that middle ground between professional and amateur is the whole problem for the consumerism aspect of it: it's between creating something as a producer, and being at the end of a huge marketing industry that values stashing and acquisitiveness (the desire which makes pinny porn pinny porn!). It's such a weird dynamic going on between professional/amateur and producer/consumer at the same time.
I'm really close to finishing my Bridie too:
I was reading about Emily Dickinson (as the quote probably indicates) and found this excerpt from a critical essay about her from 1937 by R.P. Blackmur:
She was neither a professional poet nor an amateur; she was a private poet who wrote as indefatigably as some women cook or knit. Her gift for words and the cultural predicament of her time drove her to poetry instead of antimacassars...
I think that it's really interesting in the light of the whole pinny porn debate (summarised here very well) and what that means for women's activities in general. On the one hand I love the idea of writing (all kinds of writing, and not just women's writing) being something productive and useful like cooking or knitting, but the whole tone here (antimacassars!) is almost devaluing all those things together and putting them solidly inside the home. Yet, on the other hand, knitting and cooking are things I do for fun in my leisure time and the thing that makes me a bit uncomfortable about yarnstorm is the way they end up being fetishised and made into a whole aspirational value system (intenionally or not). It's not the beautiful things she creates that are the problem for me, it's the consumerism which gets elided by ideas about self-sufficiency and craft and all kinds of fuzzy-warm 'gentle' ideas. The idea is that spending money on beautiful things make the world better and I have a whole bag of issues with that.
Then also, somewhere in that middle ground between professional and amateur is the whole problem for the consumerism aspect of it: it's between creating something as a producer, and being at the end of a huge marketing industry that values stashing and acquisitiveness (the desire which makes pinny porn pinny porn!). It's such a weird dynamic going on between professional/amateur and producer/consumer at the same time.
Saturday, 13 October 2007
Myers Briggs typing
I got a link to a testing website from the Graduate School because they're running a course on MBTI. Apparently my style is ISTJ (Introspective, Sensing, Thinking, Judging) which is an Inspector. I was a bit less clear on the Sensing/Intuiting dichotomy, and that's where it's least accurate (because I'm a bit like INTJ too).
I thought it was really interesting, though! Matt's got a book on it, and it said in there that ISTJs really enjoy making things with their hands, and are often knitters! He tested as ISTP, and the book said they often like riding motorbikes and doing dangerous sports, so it's not right 100% of the time. It definitely highlighted the differences between us, given that we're the same on three of the dichotomies: I'm all about planning and worrying, and he's way less concerned and uptight about that kind of thing.
This was my breakdown of the careers that tend to be followed by my style:
So yeah, I'm thinking of maybe becoming an accountant?
I'd really like to go to the course they're offering on it, but I'm already skipping work to go to a careers one this term.
Your Profile
Below is a graphic representation of your profile. It shows that you have reported as an ISTJ – a style otherwise known as the Inspector.
| Very clear | Clear | Moderate | Corridor | Corridor | Moderate | Clear | Very clear |
|
E | | I | |||
S | | N | |||
T | | F | |||
J | | P |
| Very clear | Clear | Moderate | Corridor | Corridor | Moderate | Clear | Very clear |
I thought it was really interesting, though! Matt's got a book on it, and it said in there that ISTJs really enjoy making things with their hands, and are often knitters! He tested as ISTP, and the book said they often like riding motorbikes and doing dangerous sports, so it's not right 100% of the time. It definitely highlighted the differences between us, given that we're the same on three of the dichotomies: I'm all about planning and worrying, and he's way less concerned and uptight about that kind of thing.
This was my breakdown of the careers that tend to be followed by my style:
More Popular Occupations | Less Popular Occupations |
| Accountancy and Book-keeping | Artists and Entertainers |
I'd really like to go to the course they're offering on it, but I'm already skipping work to go to a careers one this term.
Tuesday, 2 October 2007
These are the reasons I'm excited this week...
Tuesday, 18 September 2007
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