Wednesday 13 November 2013

The Jayne Toque & Mothers Love

The cunning hat
I have been working on a hat that has become iconic to the science fiction show Firefly; if you haven't seen it I recommend you do. Now this hat is supposed to look like the photo to the right.

The not so cunning reproduction
Unfortunately it looks like this. Now there are a number of reasons for this. I used a different weight of yarn, plus I changed from orange to yellow too soon, plus...plus-plus-plus.
The real reason is that I rushed.
I know not to rush. Rushing is the death or disfigurement of many a needlework project. It's as bad as, or worse than, starting something and then forgetting about it for 10 years ... yeah, I've done that.
You end up with parts the are uneven, sides or ends that curl, or tails that can unpredictably (well, maybe not THAT unpredictably) pull loose and pretty quickly you have a tangle of yarn rather than a hat. That has not happened and I pray it does not.
I guess I rushed because it's for my son. I haven't had the chance to make anything for my son for - oh, a long time indeed! So when he said he wanted a Jayne hat I was all over it. It was bad enough that I'd promised to make other things first. So when it finally came to being able to knit this, I couldn't do it quick enough. So, here's the deal: I'm going to give it to him, and offer to make another one closer to the "original". Regardless, I believe he knows I love him, and I guess in the end, that's the point.

!UPDATE!

Well, as you can see he just loves his hat. I cannot believe he wears it in public! See that face? Thar face is why I made it. That face is why I went through DOZENS of patterns on line, and finally knitted by the seat of my pants, to get it done. Completely worth it.

Monday 11 November 2013

Remembrance Day and Remembering

As I sit here gently weeping for all the service men and women around the world who have given and risked their lives for freedom and safety, I also think of those who gave more.
Yes, more.
I would like to remember those who gave their health, their minds. I want to remember the individuals who came home maimed almost past recognition, crippled (and I hate to use that word, but it is applicable) for the rest of their days and/or traumatized so deeply that every day is torment.

LAUREN

I met Lauren (not her real name) when I was in my 20's. I was having a rare afternoon away from my children, enjoying a solitary (and quiet) coffee in a little diner not far from the P.N.E. in Vancouver. Alone in a corner sat an elderly lady. She smiled at me and we exchanged a few comments. After a while I joined her, not wanting to continue calling across the restaurant possibly disturbing others. That's when I got a clear look at her face. My shock was obvious from my expression, and Lauren began to tell me her story.
During the Korean War, Lauren had been a nurse in an medical unit near the front. She related several incidents and told me about many of her more memorable patients. One evening there was a bombing run. She was in the wrong place at the wrong time; some fuel exploded and she was burned over about 70% of her body. She was certain that a guardian angel was watching over her, as she had no internal burns at all; hence she survived. She underwent treatment in Asia and was returned home after several weeks.
The burns to her face, torso and arms were so severe parents didn't recognize her. They visited her a few times in the Veterans Hospital and then stopped coming. They never spoke to her again. None of her family did. She never married, nor had children. Lauren gave us all her future working to heal our wounded.

Gregory B.

Gregory was the uncle of an acquaintance. Somehow we got talking about people in our families who had seen war duty. In WWII he was in some kind of reconnaissance plane when it was shot down. His back was broken and his left arm and both legs shattered. He lay alone in the debris of his flight, among the bodies of his comrades for two days. Eventually he was found by an allied patrol and rushed to an aid station and from there to a medical unit. He underwent three amputations. He had to recover for quite a while before he was stable enough to even be transferred to England for further treatment. But knowledge of spinal injury was not then what it is today. He spent the last fifteen years of his life in traction in a veterans hospital and died of massive organ failure. He gave his health that we might be healthy.

Lesley Cross

This tale is very personal: This is my dad. My father went to England at the onset of WWII to join the RAF. After training eh became a  reconnaissance photographer, and flew in the tail section of a Lancaster in The Golden Triangle, which is a part of South-East Asia. I know that he did many highly classified things because to this day his records are sealed, even to family members. I do know that these things mentally scarred him for life.
I wish I had known him before mental torment took him when I was 6. Occasionally, though, I got glimpses of his inner struggles. I remember my dad as a drinker. His drinking was so common that I really didn't know it was abnormal. I'm told, though I cannot verify, that he didn't used to drink that much...that it kind of crept up on him as time went by. What I saw was that if he happened to talk about his war service he drank a LOT more! It was like he had to drive the memories away: now we know he was self-medicating. I saw it in his eyes. I saw it in the quiet private tears he shed when he thought nobody was looking. Eventually he medicated himself to death. He gave up his sanity, to return the world to a sane state.

Please remember these selfless souls, the scarred and disabled and demented. Think of the ones who, in the end, gave up so much more.

Sunday 3 November 2013

Christmas Stocking tree decoration

'Tis The Season!

Or almost anyway. These are the little tree decorations that I've made quite often in the past. Usually I put a miniature candy cane in each one and then give decoration and candy away to some one who needs a seasonal pick-me-up. They're also a great use for those 1/5th skeins you have left over at the end of nearly every project, plus any odds and ends you have kicking around like ribbon, for instance. They take me about 20 minutes to half an hour if my arthritis isn't too bad.

Abbreviations Used In This Pattern

  • Ch = chain
  • S = single stitch
  • Sl = slip stitch
  • Sts = stitches
  • Tog/tog = together

Chain 21.

Row 1: S in 2nd Ch from hook and S across, Ch 1 and turn.
Row 2 & 3: S twice in first S of previous row, S across, S twice in last S. Ch 1 and turn.
Row 4: S across, Ch 1 and turn.
Row 5 & 6: S first 2 S tog, S across to last 2 Sts, S 2 tog, Ch 1 and turn.
Row 7: Sl in the next 4 stitches, Ch 1 and S in each of next 11 Sts, Ch 1 and turn.
Row 8 - 28:S across, Ch 1 and turn.
Row 29: S across, fold stocking in half lengthwise, so that it is in an L shape, Sl "front" and "back" together as often as needed to close the stocking down the front around the toe and across the bottom, Sl once and cut off a 6 inch tale. (Alternatively to this row, you can finish at the end of Row 28, cut a very long tail and sew the stocking up using the long tail.) Weave in the beginning end, and turn right-side out. Attach a loop of ribbon, cord or yarn to the back top of the stocking and you're finished!

You can get away with as little as the yarn (left over of Cascade 220), a crochet hook (Aero 5.0 mm) and a pair of scissors for this project. I like to use a tapestry needle (John James, size 13) to run the ribbon through.


It will look kind of like and inverted T. Fold it to finish at roughly the point where my hook is pictured, toes together.



This shows the finished stocking, before adding ribbon. As you can see, they are only about 3 1/2 inches high ... just big enough to take a mini candy-cane.
I've made these in the past with quite small lengths of yarn of various colours in stripes. I've also used variegated yarns, which is rather fanciful. They're fun to make and are a good project for younger beginners, since they work up so quickly and will be on display for all to see and admire.
This pattern is free to take and use and share. All I ask is that, if you are able, you make a donation to a food bank or children's gift charity.
Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, Blessed Yule & Happy Holidays.