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    • Lesson 1: The Welt
    • Lesson 1b: A Cast On
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    • Lesson 4: The Gusset
    • Lesson 5: The Heel
    • Lesson 6: The Foot
    • Lesson 7: The Toe

Knitting, writing and other joys

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Knitting, writing and other joys

Category Archives: Thoughts

Adjectives (or a lack thereof)

25 Tuesday Oct 2011

Posted by Katherine in Thoughts, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

change in the weather, descriptive paragraph, ornamental kale, writing prompt

October flames through maples and turns the elm to gold.
November denudes sycamores as night shortens day.
December settles snow upon the pine and buries the sleeping bulb.
I hibernate with knitting and my pen while my soul yearns for spring.
[Katherine M]

kale

I belong to an online writing group for women through The Story Circle Network. Our October writing prompt was to compose a descriptive paragraph using only three or less adjectives. The response was astounding. Everyone’s piece took on a poetic tone. Here is one at this LINK to the blog, Stones and Feathers. My offering is here above the photo of the ornamental kale that decorates my front steps. As all else succumbs to the change in the weather, the kale just grows prettier and prettier.

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The Public Library and Digital Books

08 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by Katherine in Favorite Things, Thoughts

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

library, overdrive

There is not such a cradle of democracy upon the earth
as the Free Public Library,
this republic of letters,
where neither rank, office, nor wealth
receives the slightest consideration.
[Andrew Carnegie]

The main branch of the Allen County Public Library dominates the the west side of downtown Fort Wayne, Indiana. Every time I drive past it I think, it says a lot for a city when its public library is one of its main features. Now the library offers another feature: downloadable eBooks and audio books.

I’ve mentioned in other posts that I enjoy eBooks, produce eBooks for clients and I am in and ongoing search for eBooks and digital audio books that won’t bust my budget. Last week, I dug out my library card, went to the ACPL website and took the plunge. I downloaded the OverDrive Media Console to my computer, and the OverDrive app to my iPad. Then I logged in with my library card and have been enjoying digital files ever since. I discovered that it was easier for me to manage the audio files in OverDrive rather than iTunes. Also, I hope that the eReader for the books will become more sophisticated over time. It needs a dictionary and more options for configuring type.

The folks at the library were so responsive and helpful that I got started with this adventure with very few problems. I highly recommend it.

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Follow Your Heart

06 Thursday Oct 2011

Posted by Katherine in Thoughts

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Apple, computers, Steve Jobs

… almost everything—
all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure—
these things just fall away in the face of death,
leaving only what is truly important.
Remembering that you are going to die is
the best way I know to avoid the trap of
thinking you have something to lose.
You are already naked.
There is no reason not to follow your heart.
[Steve Jobs, 1955–2011]

I bought my first personal computer in 1982 from Radio Shack. It was a TRS-80 with no hard drive and 4k memory. I’m not a techi but computers fascinate me. After I graduated from art school, I did my work on a drafting board with T-square and triangle until, one evening, I walked past a cubical where a coworker was trying out a new computer. I’d spent a frustrating day drawing lines with a ruling pen and plopping ink in all of the wrong places.

“Could I draw a 1-point line on that in camera-ready quality?” I asked.

“Sure,” she replied.

I’ve never looked back. The computer was an Apple and the year, 1987. I’ve been laying out publications, drawing cartoons, optimizing photos, creating websites, and doing hundreds of other things on a long line of Apples ever since.

Thank you for your vision, Steve Jobs.

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Band of Brothers

22 Thursday Sep 2011

Posted by Katherine in History, Reading, Review, Thoughts, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Why do men fight who were born to be brothers?
[James Longstreet
about Ulysses S. Grant]

They were classmates and friends at West Point. They were army buddies and fought together in the Mexican War. Their high opinion of each other never wavered even when they were enemies during the American Civil War. They were friends after the war and then Longstreet paid his ultimate tribute to Grant upon hearing of his death, “General Grant was the truest as well as the bravest man who ever lived.”

I devour all sorts of history books—not only those about the American Civil War. Some books capture my interest enough that I go through them repeatedly. Most of these books are compiled, sorted and examined works by historians of a later generation. In my search for new histories, I came upon the memoirs of Grant and Longstreet at Project Gutenberg . Not only is the content of these books fascinating to me, but the prose is well-formed. These men who were raised without the most advanced of educational opportunities wrote in a clear, cohesive and interesting style.

From Manassas to Appomattox, Memoirs of the Civil War in America was written by James Longstreet and published in 1896. The Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant were written in two volumes and published shortly after Grant’s death in 1885. I am reading them side by side since they discuss events in a chronological order from opposite sides. I’ve noticed interesting details that that give insight into the authors’ ways of thinking. For example, Grant called the northern army, the National Army instead of the Union Army. As I continue my journey through these two books, I grow in gratitude that these authors shared their experiences with us.

Poignant is the word I’d use to describe this reading experience.

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Fall Classes—Schedule for Sara Jane’s Yarn Shop

09 Friday Sep 2011

Posted by Katherine in Knitting, Ongoing Projects, teaching classes, Thoughts

≈ Leave a comment

Education is not preparation for life;
education is life itself.  
[John Dewey]

The photo shows the projects that I will present in classes on Saturdays this fall and early winter at Sarah Jane’s Yarn Shop. The classes include The following:

  • Heirloom Counterpane Pillow
  • Textured sock and mitten set that emphasises gussets
  • Twisted-stitch mitts/mittens
  • Jacobsburg mitten that emphasises chart reading for texture and color patterns
  • Unfinished project class where we solve problems and get projects finished

For more information, download this printable PDF file.

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The Gentleman from Indiana

05 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by Katherine in Favorite Things, Reading, Review, Thoughts, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Booth Tarkington, eBooks, Project Gutenberg

Cherish all your happy moments:
they make a fine cushion for old age.
[Booth Tarkington]

I’ve been scouring Project Gutenberg (source of the bookplate above) in my ongoing quest for free (or really inexpensive) eBooks. I’ve rediscovered an old favorite, Booth Tarkington. As a child, I read Tarkington’s Penrod and Penrod and Sam— stories about the adventures of little boys growing up around 1900. This time, I started with Tarkington’s first book, The Gentleman from Indiana. I enjoyed it and have now launched into reading his two Pulitzer Prize winning novels, The Magnificent Ambersons and Alice Adams. I’ll have plenty to read if I simply stick with Hoosier authors. A few of these include:

  • Lloyd C. Douglas, (Magnificent Obsession)
  • Ross Lockridge, Jr (Raintree County)
  • Rex Stout (Nero Wolfe series)
  • Kurt Vonnegut,Jr (Slaughterhouse Five)
  • Jessamyn West (Friendly Persuasion)
  • Lew Wallace (Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ)
  • Gene Stratton-Porter (Girl of the Limberlost)
  • James Whitcomb Riley (children’s poetry)
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The Wings of the Morning

18 Saturday Jun 2011

Posted by Katherine in Reading, Review, Thoughts, Writing

≈ 3 Comments

Anyone who says they have only one life to live
must not know how to read a book.

After spending my retirement savings (or so it seemed) on eBooks last year, I decided to find free ones this year. Project Gutenberg is a treasure trove. I have downloaded all of the available Louis Tracy books and am enjoying them a lot. They are kind of like Agatha Christy’s books. Tracy wrote at the turn of the last century in Great Britain. I’d never heard of him but am inspired to find more of this sort of book on Gutenberg.

(I wonder if this is the sort of book that was called a “penny dreadful.”)

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Ravelry group or not?

03 Friday Jun 2011

Posted by Katherine in Knitting, Knitting Sites, teaching classes, Thoughts

≈ 7 Comments

The best kind of friend is
the kind you can sit on a porch swing with,
never say a word,
then walk away feeling like
it was the best conversation that you ever had.

A friend suggested that I start a group on Ravelry since I’m formatting patterns to sell online as PDF files. Apparently a number of designers have groups. The idea was that I could answer questions, clarify instructions, gather suggestions and share the tidbits that I share when I’m teaching a class. When I investigated the process of setting up a Ravelry group, I discovered that I need to list three people to invite to join the group. Therein lies my first quandary. What if I listed someone who didn’t want to join the group but didn’t want to hurt my feelings by saying, “No”?

Bottom line, I’m exploding with ideas and would love to share them with someone. What do you think about the group idea?

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Memorial Day 2011

30 Monday May 2011

Posted by Katherine in Thoughts

≈ 5 Comments

Each one has to find his peace from within.
And peace to be real must be unaffected by
outside circumstances.
[Mahatma Gandhi]

1968

Memorial Day has its origins with the American Civil War. Each generation, in the intervening 150 years, has had its own war, and has had to seek its own peace. For me, peace is the operative word.

I study a lot of history, especially about the growth and development of the United States. Most of those histories are about one war or another. I have gleaned the opinion that wars are caused by arrogance, greed, tunnel vision/bigotry and just plain meanness. I abhor war. I’m also not too keen about the people who rush headlong into war.

On Memorial Day, I honor not only the people we have lost because of war, but also the people we have found. The photo above shows my best Navy buddy.

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GoodReader—Good Idea

23 Monday May 2011

Posted by Katherine in Review, Thoughts, Writing

≈ 6 Comments

Good ideas are common.
What’s uncommon are
people who’ll work hard enough
to bring them about.
[Ashleigh Brilliant]

I have recently been blessed with an iPad 2 (I should have mailed announcements to explain why I’ve become such a recluse). Actually, my world exploded with interesting things, and endless ideas and opportunities. Not far into this new experience, I started dreaming of ways to put my publication design experience to use on this relatively new media. This past year has been my year of the eBook—reading, researching, producing… Meanwhile, I’ve focused upon layout and design of knitting patterns to publish as printable PDF files.

My friend, Mary in Ann Arbor, emailed me today about reading knitting patterns (in a PDF file format) in the GoodReader App on her new iPad2. She could annotate it with highlighter marks to keep track of where she was on the pattern. I rushed to get the app and experiment. WOW! It works. It also shows me what I need to do to make my patterns GoodReader friendly.

It doesn’t take much to make me happy — yarn, knitting needles and a few well-placed pixels.

This is a shot of the iPad screen showing
a PDF knitting pattern with a highlighted
line to mark the place. The line is easily movable.

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Sock Workshop

  • Mastheads
  • Sock Workshop
    • Lesson 1: The Welt
    • Lesson 1b: A Cast On
    • Lesson 2: The Plain Area
    • Lesson 3: The Leg
    • Lesson 4: The Gusset
    • Lesson 5: The Heel
    • Lesson 6: The Foot
    • Lesson 7: The Toe

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