Saturday, February 25, 2012

CaysCrafts: Inspired and Energized

CaysCrafts: Inspired and Energized

Inspired and Energized

Spent yesterday at Stitches West in Santa Clara. Was a long day as it is quite a drive from Modesto and we hit some nasty commute traffic going in and as we left.  But, oh, so worth every minute behind the wheel.
My crochet group, Crochet Crusaders, mans the Warm Up America booth every year and we meet so many wonderful people stopping by to get info or drop off blocks for afghans. This year we had an extra large booth so had 2 tables and lots of chairs so folks could sit and crochet or knit a block or help assemble some of the blocks we already had.  Very nice,  Thank you, Benjamin!
I met several designers yesterday, a couple I have been in online groups with for years.  Drew Emborsky is much taller than I thought he would be!  LOL  I also met Tammy Hildebrand in the CGOA booth along with Amy Shelton. I missed Karen Ratto-Whooley.  She must have been teaching when I was out looking for her.
This year we there all day so I had time to do some wandering thru the marketplace.  Even though I have more yarn than some stores, I still love to look and pet the yarn.  I also love to look at the display pieces for inspiration.  This year there was a much larger crochet presence than in past years, but it is a Knitting magazine expo.  There were lots of buttons and bobbles and accessories.  Sensory overload to the max!
But, I came home inspired to finally get started on a couple of the sketches I have in my notebook, finish writing a couple of my patterns and get them in my Ravelry store, and maybe, just maybe, submit a pattern to a magazine.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

CaysCrafts: Kid Size

CaysCrafts: Kid Size

Kid Size

Penny and I were at the medical clinic about a month ago and it was pretty chilly out so we were sporting our Ridge Runner Fingerless gloves.  One of the nurses asked Penny where she got them, and of course, Penny told her that I made them.  Maria ordered 3 pair for her kids, ages 7, 9 and 12.  Wow!  how big is the hand of a 7 year old?  I tried doing some googling but didn't find anything very helpful.
More than one way to skin a cat.  I went across the street with my notebook, pencil and tape measure in my pocket and asked the parents of the little girl who lives there if I could measure her hand.  I asked her what her favorite color is and her reply was "I like all colors, but I really like pink."  I came home, got out some pink yarn, grabbed a hook and went to work.  When I was finished, I went back across the street, asked her try them on.
Perfect fit!  Yea!  She was so surprised when I told her they were hers to keep.
Now, back to the gloves that Maria ordered.  I did the 7 year old first in blue, then moved on to the 9 year old in purple and finished with the 12 year old in aqua.  Still waiting for delivery as mom has been out of town for job training.
I took pretty good notes as I down sized the pattern, but don't know if I should write it up and post the pattern to my Ravelry store.  Opinions please!

CaysCrafts: Watch Cap

CaysCrafts: Watch Cap

Watch Cap

For Christmas, I crocheted Peter Franzi's Watch Cap pattern for my new grandson (married my only granddaughter last March) in a nice blue washable wool.  I figured blue is the favorite color for most guys.  I also made a long scarf in color blocks using several shades of blue and brown.  Well, I have no pics of those as I got in a hurry to mail the package and forgot to get the camera out.  I've been waiting for the kids to send pics, but that hasn't happened yet.

However, Nic, my granddaughter, told me that Josh loved his cap and wished it was military green so he could wear it at work.  Military green, you ask.  Well, of course, He is a Marine. His birthday is next week, and I figured if he is wearing it to work, then one would just not be enough.  So*** I made 2!
Taking pics in the house really doesn't give a true value to the color, but it is Lion Brand washable wool in the color Loden.

CaysCrafts: Scrappy Steps Afghan

CaysCrafts: Scrappy Steps Afghan

Scrappy Steps Afghan


About a year and a half ago, one of my Wednesday crochet circle friends came to the meet up working on the Scrappy Steps Afghan.  I fell in love with the look of it, and boy-do I have scraps!  Well, with one thing and another on my plate, it took a long time for me to get to this project.  But it's now done and waiting to go to Project Linus.  You can find the pattern here.  It doesn't show very well in the pictures, but I did a border of several rows of ch 1, sc, ch 1 around in black.  Thinks it really sets off the bright colors of the afghan.  The finished size is approximately 40" x 40".

Thursday, February 16, 2012

CaysCrafts: On My Soap Box

CaysCrafts: On My Soap Box

On My Soap Box

Someone just posted on Facebook an article about how the Republican party is trying to rewrite history.  Well, this has got my panties in a bunch.  Not that I agree that it is OK to rewrite history, but they are not the first, and probably won't be the last.
When the Constitution was written, it was done by Anglo-Saxon males in a fight for independence from England.  But it did not include women, who were considered property at the time; slaves, also property; Native Americans, which we tried to wipe out completely about 100 years later. There were no Irish, Germans, Italians, Chinese or Jews among the founding fathers. These people all made their place in our history much later and at great sacrifice and suffering.
I think the most significant part of our history written for the benefit of the sitting government was our treatment of the Native Americans who were here long before any white men arrived on this continent.  Growing up, every book I read, every movie I saw depicted the Red Man as a savage and his only thought in life was kill and maim the settlers.  What a bunch of shit!  They were doing what we all want to do now.  Protect what we believe God has given us as our own country.  They were trying to protect their homes, their hunting grounds, the area where they gathered food, where they worshiped their Gods.  Not until I was an adult did I learn that the government tried to starve the Indians, broke every treaty they ever made with them, deliberately gave them blankets infected with smallpox to kill them because they weren't starving fast enough.The Army would make sneak attacks on villages, killing men, women, babies!  Custer was depicted as a hero, instead of the crazy s-o-b that he really was. They moved them from the areas they had always lived in to places where there was no hunting, no way to grow food and enslaved them to Indian agents who abused them by withholding supplies or provided supplies that were spoiled.  If that wasn't enough, then they marched them thousands of miles across the southern United States into the swamps of Florida where the bugs and mosquitoes gave them more diseases.  Then they changed their minds, and marched them back again to the deserts in the southwest portion of the country where there was absolutely no way for them take care of themselves.  The US government spent several years dedicating a unit of the army to track down and capture Geronimo, with his small band of Apaches because they refused to stay on the reservation and starve.
And less than 100 hundred years later, we were appalled that Hitler was trying to do the same things to the Jews in Europe!
Slavery was officially abolished with the Civil War, but this put thousands of Negros out of work, and the southern states were so decimated by the war the plantation owners could not afford to pay for the labor they had previously gotten for room and board.  There were abusive slave owners, but there were also kind men who took care of the people that they owned.  All slave owners were depicted as despicable characters in my history lessons.
I don't know enough of the facts, but the Chinese suffered as well under the hand of the government.  They were brought here by the thousands to work on the railroads, dams, etc.  But they were never allowed to be part of main stream society, they had to live in their own districts (China Town), and when their jobs were done, we tried to ship them back to China.
If all this isn't bad enough, we interred Japanese Americans in camps in our own country during World War II.  We took away their businesses and farms, ripped them out of their homes.  I sure didn't read about any of that in my history books growing up. I knew nothing of that until I was a mother and met a young woman not much older than myself who had lived in one of these camps.
The women who fought for the vote were shown as crazy ladies whose husbands didn't know how to control them, not the heroes who brought women's rights to the women of my generation.
This country is a melting pot from around the world and that brings good qualities and bad qualities from each nationality and religion that has found a home in America.  I embrace all the good things from my ancestors, both European and Native American, but I also don't want to ignore the atrocities that those people inflicted upon others.  To ignore history is to repeat it.  There is not much in our history that needs repeating.
Off my soap box now! and back to crocheting.