the everyday adventures of sabrina

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give Eamon money!

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my friend Eamon does this wacky thing every year. he always wears a mustache — except when he doesn’t. and he looks so sad and weepy without it! only money can help restore Eamon’s stache, happy demeanor, and self-respect… can’t you help? think of the kids!

Hey, all! If it’s November, it must be Mustaches for Kids time! I’ve signed on again as a Grower, bringing happiness, facial hair, and– most importantly– cold hard cash to the children of Chicago. For those who don’t know, Mustaches for Kids is an international volunteer-run organization whose chapters choose local children’s charities and raise both money and awareness for them through “Growers”– people like myself who have agreed to shave their faces and collect pledges from generous donors willing to sponsor 30 days of non-ironic corner-to-corner mustache growth.

As last year, we’re working to help the Off the Street Club (http://www.otsc.org/), Chicago’s oldest boys and girls club. Mustaches for Kids Chicago raised over $13,000 last year, and my own generous donors brought in an amazing $1,542– three times my original goal. This year, my goal is a staggering $2,000, and since the bar is set so high, Kay and I are going to put our money where my mustache was: if we hit our goal, Kay and
myself will double that with an additional $2,000.

Can you contribute? If everyone on my list could contribute just a dollar a day for 30 days of growth, we’ll nail the goal and possibly smash the all-time Grower record. Of course, any amount is appreciated, and anyone who
donates this year will get a SURPRISE GIFT from me! Plus, you can donate with just one click:

https://www.paypal.com/xclick/business=info@otsc.org&no_shipping=0&no_note=1&tax=0&currency_code=USD&item_name=Mustaches+for+Kids+-+Stache+Gordon

Since all donations are directly to Off the Street Club, it’s fully tax-deductible! And don’t forget: email me a copy of your receipt to receive your FREE GIFT!

In addition to the SURPRISE GIFT, I’m selling off the naming rights to my mustache just like last year: if you’re my top donor by midnight this Sunday (November 25th), you’ll be able to name my lip rug ANYTHING YOU WANT for the duration of the grow-a-thon. Whether you want a living memorial to your favorite pet, a plug for the name of your killer startup, or just want to burden me with yet another crude nickname, it’s up to you as long as we can print it on the website. Luc Garneau was the big winner last year with a $151 donation, squeaking past Jonathan Boudreaux and Christopher Czajka’s $150 donation, Price-is-Right-style– will it be as cutthroat this year? It’s in your hands!

I know some of you are still asking: is this for real? The answer: yes. A horrible, horrible yes. The proof:

Saturday:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/eamonandkay/2046026352/

Sunday:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/eamonandkay/2047749240/

Yesterday:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/eamonandkay/2051036105/

Photos can be faked of course, so here’s video of me getting shaved, as filmed by the fine people at CBS News Chicago:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JLB7bfWV8sQ

There you have it: photographic evidence of my commitment. And now that you know that I’m in: are you? And always remember: the mustache is just a heart you wear on your face. Made of hair. And combable.

____________________________________________________________
Eamon “Stache Gordon” Daly
Grower, Mustaches for Kids 2006, 2007
Winner of the Abe Frohman Award 2006
http://www.m4kchicago.org/

PS: since you were so patient with this email, here are some incredibly embarrassing photos and an even more bizarre video from last year’s Stache Bash:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/eamonandkay/sets/72157594394761622/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRbFkKIkA28

And feel free to forward this to your friends, your co-workers, and your worst enemies– I have no shame!

you know…

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i think i’m sufficiently worldly in the ways of the internet that not much really surprises me, but this Megan Meiers thing both shocked me and really upset me.

what horrible, horrible, horrible people are these people to create a fake myspace account for the specific purpose of tormenting a depressed child? to incite others to join in on “the joke”? and then to disclaim guilt when she hangs herself in her closet, because it’s not really your fault because she was already depressed? what sort of vile person must you be?

i don’t think i even want to know.

hrmf.

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so i wanted to try entrelac, and, coincidentally, wanted to knit a scarf to go with my new coat, out of some really lovely Valley Yarns yarn i bought this year at Stitches Midwest. i found this tutorial a few days ago while browsing ravelry for projects that people had knit out of yarn i have in my stash, for ideas, and thought oh hey! beginning entrelac project == scarf == perfect! so this evening, i fetched out a pair of #8 needles, my two balls of yarn, and cast on.

the ravelry description of the tutorial remarks that it is “masterful.”

my ass.

i cast on and knit the foundation triangles easily enough — i love doing short rows, so that’s fun, and plus i can knit backwards now so it’s not completely maddening. but on the second row — i knit the instructions all the way across, and came up with… triangles, not diamonds. ???

so i figured, oh, i obviously did it wrong, ripped back, went back, started again, got the same result, reread the instructions, thought it meant that maybe you make the triangle then you go back over those triangles and add more triangles on top (thus completing the rectangles), though that was not how it looked from the pictures, tried that, … got this:

entrelac eyuck

so at that point, i threw up my hands and went back to Teh Intarwebs to find a better tutorial. one that perhaps lies less…. i still like the idea of entrelac for this scarf, so i just have to find better instructions. oh well. i was really hoping to make a start on this project tonight… dang. i found this tutorial, which seems clearer, so maybe i’ll give that a shot tomorrow.

(at least in the mean time, my newfound skill at knitting backwards may help me finally, finally finish the Boring Scarf.)

in other, more successful news, i spun up and then navajo-plied about half of that braid of red roving from my SP:

handspun

it turned out pretty well, i think! it is a DK-weight, and fairly even. it looks more purple than the roving did, but i like it a lot — it turned out as a slightly violet maroon. and this amount spun up to a little over 200 yards. i’m not sure what i’m going to do with it. we’ll see how much the rest comes out to, i guess.

my Montana Wheat sock, with yarn and pattern from my SP, is also coming along nicely:

sock in progress

the pattern is actually very easy — and it got easier once i stopped knitting with a deathly tight gauge. (the last things i knit, two pair of Dashing, are knit out of worsted weight yarn on slightly small needles, with a tight gauge. i had a death grip on the needles most of the time i was knitting those!) the yarn is, also, absolutely magnificent. it’s soft and fuzzy and the colors are mind-blowing. it’s a little too dark to see the pattern very well, especially with my camera, but i’m pleased with it. i’m about 4 rows from starting to turn the heel. it’s weird… i might actually finish a sock some point in the near future! i’m not sure how i feel about this…

the ripple continues apace:

Ripple afghan

and just to wrap up this three-day weekend, i dyed up some sock yarn:

sock yarn in a sink

gotta go hang that up to drip-dry over the bathtub before i go to bed, then hopefully i can wind it up into (regular-sized!) skeins in a few days after it all dries. then maybe someone out there should watch her mailbox because i think what she needs in her life is more sock yarn…. but that is all i am going to say on that!

it had to be done. i needed a break from the *Baudelaires. i mean, i haven’t actually finished a pair of socks since, like, may. it is now november. something had to change!

Montana Wheat sock, just cast on

pretty easy pattern so far (she says, all of two and a half inches in). i think the next real challenge will be trying to remember how many repeats i’ve done of the wheat head patterny bit, while knitting on this as a transit sock. man, the yarn is spectacular!

A gift from my SP!

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running about a week behind here — I got a wonderful package from my Secret Pal the other day!

as modeled by my sun bear:

Goodies!

first, a pattern for Montana Wheat Socks and a wonderful skein of hand-dyed sock yarn from another indie dyer, Mountain Colors. the yarn is Bearfoot in Winter Sky, a beautiful blend of dark blues and purple, in superwash wool, mohair, and nylon.

next is a 50g sliver of Fleece Artist Blue Faced Leicester, in a bright undyed white, which — i know a bunch of you heathens are looking at me funny right about now — is a specific breed of sheep whose wool is legendary to spin. i’ve heard a lot about it but have not had the opportunity to try it myself, though i had wanted to — so now i can! i would no doubt have already broken it out of its braid were it not for…

Sock yarn and roving

third is a huge braid of 70/30 merino wool/silk roving (or top. i always get the two of them confused.), in a great reddish purple blend — the silk is undyed white and it is really luminous. i pretty much immediately plonked my butt down on the comfy chair with my louët and started spinning:

Bobbin full of singles

and finally, my SP knit me a really cute hat!!!

Hat!

i don’t know what the pattern is (hey, you try googling “knit seed stitch hat” and see what you come up with!) but it’s really cute, and it’s knit out of the softest wool/alpaca blend. when i first got it (in between cuddling it — ask D.) i was initially a little sad because it wasn’t cold enough to wear it, but today i swear i saw snow in the headlights of an idling car while walking home from the L after work tonight, and i was certainly freezing my $%^& off wearing just my little black hoodie (which was FINE when i left for work in the 55°F morning, but not so much in the 38°F evening!), so you never know — it might get broken out a little earlier than i had thought!

and, even more belatedly — i seem to never have blogged about my last gift from my SP!!! (Sorry! :( ) i got a tiny box in the mail a little while ago, and opened it up to discover the most ridiculously cute stitch markers ever:

Cheese stitch markers!

yes, it’s true: i have tiny cheese wedge stitch markers! they’re fantastic. and each wedge is smaller than a dime! so cute. i was honestly thinking about buying myself a second set just to have more of them. actually, these are part of what prompted me to pick my clapotis back up — an excuse to use my cute new stitch markers. and you know, that time, i finally finished it! so maybe they are the good luck stitch markers of project completion.

and there you have it! my SP is spoiling me rotten. :) i’ve really got to get finished with the Anti-Baudelaires so i can cast on one of these sock yarns! (i made a mistake on the A-B’s today, on the el on the way home from work — i got confused, or something, who knows really, but i twisted the cables two rows early. i haven’t even knitted back around yet, so i could go tink back and fix it, but … is it really the spirit of the Anti-Baudelaires to fix mistakes? i think it’s sort of anti-Anti-Baudelaires. and yet, a really short cable twist followed by a really long cable twist are going to look pretty dippy. i feel conflicted. i swore not to fix mistakes, but . . . that was really sort of predicated on not making any, you know what i mean? maybe i’ll put these aside temporarily and cast on another pair of socks anyways, just to go do something different for a little while. what do you think, O Humble Peanut Gallery?)