TGIS

Published on Saturday October 28th, 2006

What a week. It began with a midterm exam in art history, for which I studied in between freelance jobs and my school job. Once the test was behind me, I started outlining my English paper. Wednesday I had to devote entirely to a proofreading job. The poor characters in this sorry text have only three gestures between them: furrowing their brows in concern, dropping their jaws, and running frustrated hands [sic] through their hair. The author is also laboring under the delusion that “glimpse” is an intransitive verb synonymous with “glance”. Proofreading this manuscript felt like touching up the gingerbread work on a bicycle shed.

So when I woke up Thursday feeling like a hangover victim, I was mildly intrigued at this empirical evidence that bad prose has lasting physical consequences. Alas, further study will be necessary to settle that hypothesis: it turned out I was getting a cold. I took the bus into town for my afternoon class, but the professor to whom the English paper is due failed to appear for the second class in a row. Peevish at this waste of energy and proofreading time, I trundled home and just managed to get the manuscript to the post office on time. I spent the evening writing an article for the school newsletter.

Friday I dragged myself out of bed and in to school, feeling as though I ought to have a company of dwarves named Sneezy, Snotty, Slimy, Drippy, Teary, Throbby, and Mucus to sing my theme song: Sniffle While You Work. By the time the last of the parents had inched through traffic to collect their children, I was fit for an evening of nothing but nursing my box of Kleenex and my mug of tea and watching Anne of Green Gables. This was bad for my English paper, but good for the Fishtrap Aran. I’ve made up the ground I lost in ripping plus another half a chart repetition.

Today I felt better enough to accompany my cousins to a performance of The Witches, by Roald Dahl. It was a delightful adaptation of the book, with some wonderful acting. It was pretty scary for kids, but deliciously so for six-year-old Sam, who loves that sort of thing. The best part was listening to him comforting his slightly younger cousin Adrian, pointing out that the Formula 86 Delayed-Action Mouse-Maker was only food coloring.

I also felt better enough to put some more thought into the yarn I’ll be dyeing tomorrow. Option B, the blue sweater, has the lead in the polls over Option A, the orangey-terracotta version, so I did a little swatching to see what I’d be getting into either way. TGIS can stand for Thank Goodness It’s Saturday, but Chez Blue Garter it has another meaning: Thank Goodness I Swatched! I’ll show you pictures of the sorry results tomorrow.

Orange, it turns out, does not play well with the other children. So it’s back to the drawing board for the Fair Isle Yoke sweater. In the meantime, I thought I’d measure out some sock yarn to see if I can dye it self striping. Grumperina’s latest caught my eye, and I thought it would be nifty if I could do two shades of green and have them alternate in synch with the cables. I knit up the first eight rounds of Hello Yarn’s pattern modified ala Grumperina, then ripped them out to see how long my color repetitions would need to be. Um…really long. I had to use most of the furniture in my living room as a niddy noddy. You should have seen me circling around the back of the couch, around the marimba stool, past the coffee table, over the rocker, and around the purple chair, paying out yarn as I went. I felt like a medieval penitent making the equivalent of the pilgrimage to Jerusalem in laps around a garden maze. 400 yards of sock yarn, my friends — that’s a lot of trips around the living room. And it may all be for naught if I can’t keep the resulting enormous skein from tangling hopelessly in the dye vat. Putting it in indigo will probably be a two- or three-person job. Let’s hope some of my classmates are up for the experiment.

11 Comments to “TGIS”

  1. Mebeth Comment Says:

    Anne of Green Gables! I think I may to watch it again after reading your post. I’m having fun imagining all of your living room furniture wrapped in yarn like bugs in a web.

  2. Monika Comment Says:

    I hope you are feeling better soon. I’m very interested in the outcome of your dyeing experiment.

  3. gleek Comment Says:

    wow, what a week you had! i hope that cold is gone soon for good. it’s that time of year again 🙁 sniffles everywhere.

    anne of green gables 🙂 i watch it whenever i’m sick!

  4. lisa Comment Says:

    Feel better sweetie! I am also enamored with Grumperina’s Hello Yarn Cable-y socks. I’m thinking of whipping a pair up myself at some point.

    Isn’t Anne of Green Gables the best to watch when you’re not feeling well? She nursed me through my recovery from my wisdom teeth removal!

  5. schrodinger Comment Says:

    Hope you are feeling tons better by the time you read this.

    Grumperina’s socks are really great.

  6. Jessica Comment Says:

    That’s a lot of walking! I hope you’re feeling better and didn’t wear yourself out with all of those trips around the living room. Good luck with the dyeing!

  7. Monika Comment Says:

    About the moebius vest. It doesn’t matter what yarn you use. E.Z. used a very thick one. That will be done in no time. I don’t like bulky, because I’m bulky enough. ;o)

  8. minnie Comment Says:

    i’ve actually got the self-striping book at home, and i do know that if you loosely tie the skein in numerous spots (loosely, so you don’t end up with white spots) you should be ok. and the book recommends 40 ft skeins, so don’t feel bad, lol.

    i’m looking forward to your results, either way.

  9. Katie Comment Says:

    So many adventures when your sick! I hope your ill dwarves leave you soon (they were here with me not long ago, sorry they found their way to you). I want to see the Thank Goodness I Swatched! swatches. What is that orange up to anyway?

  10. Veronique Comment Says:

    I’m glad to see I’m not the only one who’s used my living room furniture to measure yarn!
    Hope you get well soon.

  11. Nonnahs Comment Says:

    Good luck with all the experiments, and feel better soon!