Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ireland. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2024

Do overs

This post is old news.........I have been working on this sweater off and on all summer. I finished the first sleeve a few days ago then on to the second……everything was going smoothly I was on a roll a veritable knitting machine until I laid the second sleeve on top of the first, it was a few rows short. Do I knit a few extra rows to even them up, no, I tried it on, the second sleeve was tighter than the first.  Thinking back I could feel the caffeine in my fingers the day I knit 12 of the 4 row decrease repeats. So I ripped back and started over, I was knitting noticeably looser like I drank 2 glasses of wine but I didn’t then I noticed a mistake so I needed to rip a few rows. I laid sleeve 2 on top of sleeve one again to compare, without the needles in the sleeve the comparison was more accurate. Sleeve two was over an inch wider then sleeve one! Rip again and put my big girl panties on and do it right this time.  Knit firm but not tight. Well I ripped two more times—those do overs only involved a few knitted rows but still picking up 98 stitches but for someone who is numerically challenged…….I think I’ve got it now.  The yarn is a fingering Wool Addicts by Lang called Footprints it is 45% cotton, 42% wool and 13% nylon. It says superwash but my swatch shrank some. The pattern is Autumn Square by Hinterm Stein.  It has a little design detail, a square knit into the center of the garter stitch section in the upper bodice but each time I have gotten carried away with the simplicity of just knitting back and forth and missed the cue for starting the stockinette stitch for the square.  I like it without the square on my chest. Can't wait for cooler days to wear it. I did wear this sweater several days in Ireland.  --Ann--


Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Aran sweaters and yarn







 

We were on a tour so we went to lots of souvenier shops and just about all of  them were selling Aran sweaters many were machine knit I don't know if the machines in the top two pictures are knitting machines or what but what caught my eye was all the colors of yarn. Years ago Aran sweaters were either the natural cream or brown or dark gray now they area available in all colors.  I wish I had taken a picture of the many colored sweaters.  The kids sweaters were so much fun but all too small for my little granddaughters and I want the fun of knitting for them.  The sweater on the stand was hand knit as were all the sweaters behind the shoulder in that picture.  The shop at Blarney sold packages of yarn and I'm so glad I bought a package there because all the other shops sold odd balls and skeins, all of it Aran weight and seldom enough of one color to knit a sweater.  I will have 3 or 4 extra skeins. This is the same yarn that I knit last (click) winter but with a different label they even had the exact same color.  A pullover or a cardigan??  --Ann--

Monday, September 9, 2024

Ireland












 It’s been 6 weeks ago that we went on a tour to Ireland. The we was me and hubby, son, hubbie's two nieces with their hubbies and son.  The tour started in Dublin, hubby, son and I were a day late getting there because weather canceled our flight actually it was because weather backed up flights and our flight crew would have been on overtime and airline would have to pay a big fine. We rescheduled our flights drove home then back to the airport bright and early the next morning.  The trip was great after we got there. We spent a few hours at Glendalough which is like a national park with two lakes, trails to hike and the round tower and chapel ruins. There are ruins of stone churches and houses everywhere. We went to St. Patrick's Rock, Cashel dating back to 12th and 13th centuries. Blarney Castle was another stop once you start up the stone spiral stairs there is no turning back (absolutely no room to turn around) son got in position to kiss the Blarney stone, I did not.  I told the guide his grandmother kissed it in 1952 and they didn't have thick rubber mats to lay on then or a spray bottle of disinfectant.  Son didn't get backwards far enough to kiss the stone and didn't feel gipped.  Blarney Castle had information boards that explained the rooms and castle life.  There were also beautiful botanical gardens.  The scenery was beautiful and so green.  We toured the Ring of Kerry which is a scenic loop around a peninsula on the western coast and saw the Cliffs of Moher on a sunny day and the Burren then the clouds came in again.  The joke in Ireland is we had summer last Tuesday between 1 and 3. We had more nice weather than rainy.  --Ann--



Thursday, August 22, 2024

Reading list #3 2024


Tis a lovely day for a Guiness.........
or a lovely day for an Irish coffee

  1. A Dress of Violet Taffeta by Tessa Arlen story about a young woman with 5 year old daughter who is abandoned by her husband in  late 1800’s in England. She starts designing dresses to support herself and daughter eventually opens stores in London, New York, Paris and Chicago. Also a Titanic survivor. Good story and wonderful descriptions of fabrics and color.
  2. Meet Me in Monaco by Hazel Gaynor and Heather Webb as delightful the second time I read it as the first.
  3. The Birchbark House by Louise Erdrich children’s book probably 4th grade reading level just for fun.
  4. Yule Island by Johana Gustawsson murder mystery takes place on an island near Stockholm, Sweden. 
  5. Your Brain on Art by Susan Magsamen and Ivy Rose nonfiction to keep my kindle streak going. About the importance of art in our lives for our wellbeing. Lots of studies and physiology of how the brain works and responds to the arts. Interesting.
  6. The Women by Kristen Hannah for book club best book I have read in a long time about nurses who served during Vietnam war and their return to America.
  7. The Girl in Hyacinth Blue by Susan Vreeland I read this years ago and very few moments reading it the second time that “oh yeah I remember this” almost like I was reading it for the first time. It’s about a painting probably painted by Vermeer, the Dutch artist. Each chapter is about who owned the painting, how they related to the painting and how they acquired it.
  8. Manitou Canyon by William Kent Krueger book # 15 in the Cork O’Conner series.
  9. The Paris Novel  fiction by chef, food writer and editor, Ruth Reichl, delightful story about a young woman going to Paris after the death of her mother. A bit of a fairy tale in that the people she meets in Paris each contribute to her finding herself and understanding her mother. Short happy ending book.
  10. The Whistling Season by Ivan Doig for book club I just about quit reading it because I was going to miss the discussion but I said one more chapter and the action / tension picked up so I read to the end. The story takes place in 1909/1910 in Montana about a widowed father of 3 boys attending country school. Country school was the best 4 years of school of my life. 
  11. Girl With a Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier another book about Vermeer and his painting.
  12. Sulfur Springs by William Kent Krueger #16 in the Cork O’Connor series, lots of twists and surprises.
  13. Someone Else’s Shoes by Jojo Moyes a mix up of gym bags and a drastic change of circumstances forces two women to literally walk in the others shoes. It’s a story of friendship and overcoming hardships and relationships. Very good
  14. For All the World by Jean Grainger story takes place in Ireland at the beginning of WWI. 
  15. Murder in the Marigolds by Fiona Grace a very short book murder with a horticultural theme just for fun. 
  16. Lilac Ink by Jean Grainger Ireland about a young woman with polio in1938 overcoming obstacles and finding happiness and a letter in a bottle.
  17. Last Port of Call: The Queenstown Series book 1 by Jean Grainger the story begins in 1912 in Queenstown, Ireland  reverted back to the original Irish name of Cobh with Ireland's independence from Britan. The story is about a young woman and her daughter who inherit the big house and turn it into a bed and breakfast to support themselves. Cobh is the departure point for many Irish leaving Ireland.  Rereading these books after visiting Cobh a few weeks ago.  
  18. The West's Awake  by Jean Grainger book 2 of the Queenstown series. This series made me sympathetic toward those fighting for an independent Ireland.
I took a much longer break from blogging than I intended but then not much has been happening on the creative side.  We took a trip to Ireland with son and nieces and families.  It was a tour group and traveling with family was wonderful. We hope to travel together again in a couple years.  We toured the southern part of Ireland this trip.  My previous trips were all in the North to visit relatives so saw lots of beautiful new scenery. More about that in coming weeks.  I have been rereading the Jean Grainger books and trying to visualize  Cobh /Queenstown 110 years ago the only building that I'm sure is still in exactly the same place is St. Colman's Cathederal.



Thursday, March 17, 2016

Happy Saint Patrick's Day


 Happy Saint Patrick's Day! I've been plugging away at this quilt for weeks now and better to do it right than fast so it is not finished for Saint Patrick's Day 2016.  Next year it will be hanging on the wall. I'm going to keep at it until it is finished.    I figured if I cut the pattern along the outside stitching line I wouldn't have so much paper to pick and I could place the points on the  seams. I quilted the first Celtic knot.  So far so good.........only 17 more to go.
 And the back, I chose this green with the little hexagon design because it reminds me of the Giant's Causeway on the north coast of Ireland.  Hexagon shaped pillars or stone, legend says they were built by the giant Fin McCool.


 And Celtic knot number 2! had a problem with the tension I didn't see it because of the paper I was stitching through.  Fortunately it was easy to remove and left a scar so easy re-stitching.
 A Celtic Cross with a Celtic knot
A happy, generous nature, a friendly spirit too - these are the gifts Saint Patrick has surely given you - and may every day to come bring a generous part of all the happy things in life that keep joy in your heart.  an Irish Blessing
--Ann--

Monday, August 17, 2015

Big Things and Little things in Ireland and Scotland

Big thing.......my cousin's  climbing rose on the holly tree
Little thing......the multitude of blossoms that came down like snow when the wind came

big thing............. roses as big as saucers
little thing........... all those buds yet to bloom
big thing.....tree that died and was felled 5 feet in diameter

big thing...........the beech tree that blow over in the wind probably 200 years old and 6 feet in diameter

 little thing......all the flowers that weren't crushed when the tree blew over
big thing..........the trees that shade the lane
little thing.........the peep holes to the sky


big thing.............. holly flowers en mass

little thing.....individual holly blossoms
 Big thing..........leaves of the gunnera plant that makes rhubarb look petite
Little thing.............shamrocks growing under the ferns
big thing.............the emblems of Scotland


little thing........we call them weeds but the thistle poked the invading Vikings and made them scream which alerted the Scots to prepare to fight.  The Thistle is the national emblem.
                                                                              I don't know if this little flower is the flower of Scotland but it is tiny and looks like the flower on the castle pipe.


Big thing.........Celtic crosses for legends, this is where Flora MacDonald is buried who helped hide Bonnie Prince Charlie.

Big thing.............Celtic crosses for the mortals.
Little thing........7th century Celtic cross from the graveyard at Fahan where a couple of my ancestors are buried.  My big purchase.
Big thing..............Highland cattle
Little thing and a wee ditty............Heiley coos go moo because Highland cows don't say mow (rhymes with cow)
And that's the end of my travel pictures. --Ann--