Yes, I know, unoriginal title, but my baby is two! (And yes, I know, I have another baby now, but this one's still my baby too.) I can't believe it, as I am repeatedly told, they grow so quickly.
So we had a birthday party with a few friends and relatives, and because the weather was so nice last weekend we were able to have it outside in the (newly revamped - thanks Alex!) garden. It was lovely, and required minimal organisation on my part, because I am not with it enough to think about these things in advance at the moment. The cake was made the night before, and on the morning we decided on what the cake would be - it turned out to be a wellyphant cake (as in the book Elephant Wellyphant, which she loves).
And to go with it we had lion fairy cakes (because she loves being a lion and roaring).
And that's the last birthday for this season (the birthday season runs from October to April in this house), so six months off before we all become another year older.
And really annoyingly blogger won't let me upload photos at the moment. So I'll try again later.
Monday, 19 April 2010
Saturday, 27 March 2010
Make do and knit
We had a K1S2 group outing to Make Do and Knit today, and had a great time! R was very good and slept most of the time. Oh, there were some wonderful yarns and fibres, in gorgeous colours... mmm... And we had fun trying big knitting with Ingrid Wagner, spinning with Kate from a mill in Halifax, drooling over buttons and just stroking lots of yarn. Photos to follow!
Wednesday, 10 March 2010
Tuesday, 23 February 2010
New arrival, or welcome to the land of sleeplessness...
Yes, baby Rebekah finally made her entrance into the world last week, 13 days overdue and weighing 7lb 6oz. Not a great labour (induced) but not too bad either, and no pain relief again, although not by design (I'd just decided I wanted an epidural when she decided she was coming - the anaesthetist didn't even make it in time). My hospital report, under pain relief, just says 'attendant support' (wonderful husband!) but there was also a bit of knitting in there too, until the cannula in the back of my hand made it impossible and I had to give up. I can recommend it though.
So we are now in that peculiar version of hell when all three children are up in the night for varying lengths of time, and I have no idea what day it is or what time, and just sleep when I can. Admittedly we are no strangers to sleeplessness, given Hannah's ideas on when and how much to sleep, but unsurprisingly it just got quite a bit worse last week. Just as well these babies are damned cute then.
But I have discovered one thing that makes the nights bearable - knitting podcasts! I can listen whilst feeding (it's a two handed job at the moment a lot of the time, and takes about an hour per feed) and get my knitting fix that way, even if I can't actually do any knitting. My current favourite is Lime & Violet, but I'm still trying different ones out.
So we are now in that peculiar version of hell when all three children are up in the night for varying lengths of time, and I have no idea what day it is or what time, and just sleep when I can. Admittedly we are no strangers to sleeplessness, given Hannah's ideas on when and how much to sleep, but unsurprisingly it just got quite a bit worse last week. Just as well these babies are damned cute then.
But I have discovered one thing that makes the nights bearable - knitting podcasts! I can listen whilst feeding (it's a two handed job at the moment a lot of the time, and takes about an hour per feed) and get my knitting fix that way, even if I can't actually do any knitting. My current favourite is Lime & Violet, but I'm still trying different ones out.
Sunday, 7 February 2010
Pin wars
I bought myself some new pins the other week, because I don't have enough left in the old box for most projects. I thought they were pretty much the same as the old ones, a pin's a pin, right? Apparently not. These pins are rubbish, the attrition rate per project is astounding. Worse than slightly bent pins is what happened to these two:
For the observant among you, the other 9 patches are on the back.
Lastly, I managed to get a photo of the pinwheel blanket in progress, as I was transferring it onto the next size cable:
That kink went right down between the feed dogs and got stuck. I've never seen that happen - usually either the pin or the needle breaks. I've since had one more do this, and then one that shattered, and I mean shattered, the needle (think bits flying everywhere and Chris threatening to make me wear safety goggles).
So, I've gone back to the old pins. No problem there, and I've now finished the mini-quilt project I was working on, and yes, it did get finished in time for Saturday. It was a 90-patch quilt, for my Nana's 90th birthday:
Lastly, I managed to get a photo of the pinwheel blanket in progress, as I was transferring it onto the next size cable:
It's quite a bit bigger now, each round is over 300 stitches, and I've gone up to the longest cable. I'm going to try and keep going till I've finished the ball, no point having a small amount of yarn left over now is there?
Saturday, 30 January 2010
Currently working on...
Time for the usual (occasional) round up:
Reading - Colour: Travels through the paintbox by Victoria Finlay.
Found this in the Oxfam bookshop and am enjoying it a lot, especially as I've just finished indigo and am now on violet (my favourite colours). Very interesting, even if it is more about pigments than dyes. Next up is the reading group book, The Family Tree by Carole Cadwalladr, which will probably be a breastfeeding book, if I can remember how to read while feeding.
Knitting - Pinwheel blanket, as blogged earlier. I've finished the squishy baby blanket, which has turned out very soft and squishy and worth doing even if the yarn was a nightmare, so I can now concentrate on the pinwheel. Currently it measures about 12 inches across, so a fair bit more to go then.
Sewing - currently in between projects, I've just finished felt monsters (had the craft workshop today, and had lots of kids making monsters - they were brilliant, loads of creativity and perseverance and quite a bit of good sewing!) but there is another project in the pipeline, though as the deadline is next Saturday and the baby is due on Wednesday, I may have left it a bit late. Ooops.
Reading - Colour: Travels through the paintbox by Victoria Finlay.
Found this in the Oxfam bookshop and am enjoying it a lot, especially as I've just finished indigo and am now on violet (my favourite colours). Very interesting, even if it is more about pigments than dyes. Next up is the reading group book, The Family Tree by Carole Cadwalladr, which will probably be a breastfeeding book, if I can remember how to read while feeding.
Knitting - Pinwheel blanket, as blogged earlier. I've finished the squishy baby blanket, which has turned out very soft and squishy and worth doing even if the yarn was a nightmare, so I can now concentrate on the pinwheel. Currently it measures about 12 inches across, so a fair bit more to go then.
Sewing - currently in between projects, I've just finished felt monsters (had the craft workshop today, and had lots of kids making monsters - they were brilliant, loads of creativity and perseverance and quite a bit of good sewing!) but there is another project in the pipeline, though as the deadline is next Saturday and the baby is due on Wednesday, I may have left it a bit late. Ooops.
Tuesday, 19 January 2010
A moan, and more knitting...
I'm really struggling with this pregnancy now. My bp is up (which I've never had a problem with before), my pelvis is hurting all the time despite the painkillers even when I'm resting, and I'm so slow on the crutches it took me 20 minutes to pay for the parking and walk back to the car at the hospital today. Just as well there's only a few weeks to go now.
Still, I had a lovely midwife at the hospital today, we were discussing genetic syndromes which was very interesting (she has a different one in her family), and they were very nice about carrying my stuff around for me so I didn't have to struggle with coats and bags as well as crutches, which makes a huge difference. Still no induction though, as, in the words of the doctor, 'it wouldn't work'. I don't want a long slow labour (or worse), so I'm glad not to be induced, but I do wish Lentil would hurry up and make up her mind to come out - she's obviously still quite happy in there for the moment!
So, to take my mind off things I've started two blankets. One is the diagonal baby blanket, in a lovely, soft, multicoloured chenille yarn that is horrible to knit with. I've had it in my stash for ages having got it very cheap (probably because no-one else likes knitting with it either) and was wondering what to do with it - it needed an easy pattern that doesn't involve being able to see your stitches. It will make a lovely baby blanket though, and if I make a mistake you can't see it at all.
The other is the pinwheel blanket, I love the geometricity (is that a word?) of the pattern and am really enjoying knitting it, though as I'm doing it in sock wool it could take a while. I might try it again in some much bulkier wool afterwards to see what the difference is, but I chose the sock wool because I just love the colours, and I'm using 4mm needles so it's quite lacy in a way. It's nice to be back in the knitting habit after the post-Christmas hiatus.
Still, I had a lovely midwife at the hospital today, we were discussing genetic syndromes which was very interesting (she has a different one in her family), and they were very nice about carrying my stuff around for me so I didn't have to struggle with coats and bags as well as crutches, which makes a huge difference. Still no induction though, as, in the words of the doctor, 'it wouldn't work'. I don't want a long slow labour (or worse), so I'm glad not to be induced, but I do wish Lentil would hurry up and make up her mind to come out - she's obviously still quite happy in there for the moment!
So, to take my mind off things I've started two blankets. One is the diagonal baby blanket, in a lovely, soft, multicoloured chenille yarn that is horrible to knit with. I've had it in my stash for ages having got it very cheap (probably because no-one else likes knitting with it either) and was wondering what to do with it - it needed an easy pattern that doesn't involve being able to see your stitches. It will make a lovely baby blanket though, and if I make a mistake you can't see it at all.
The other is the pinwheel blanket, I love the geometricity (is that a word?) of the pattern and am really enjoying knitting it, though as I'm doing it in sock wool it could take a while. I might try it again in some much bulkier wool afterwards to see what the difference is, but I chose the sock wool because I just love the colours, and I'm using 4mm needles so it's quite lacy in a way. It's nice to be back in the knitting habit after the post-Christmas hiatus.
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