... I must be dreaming a wonderful dream ...

- Igor(ina): "It's easy to kill thomeone, and almost impossible to bring them back again."
Polly: "Almost?"
Igor(ina): "Well, if you don't have a really good lightning rod. And even if you have, they're never quite the same. Cutlery tends to stick to them."
... "The Tales of Beedle the Bard" is available for preorder!
Yes, I already preordered my copy of both editions... 
- Whereabouts:at work
- Mood:
hungry - Sound:Last.FM: Otis Redding - Try a Little Tenderness
Some enabling per request of
joannahurley
My favourite designs in the Myth & Magic:
( Pictures )
The sunny summer evenings... look at the balcony behind Neko. The picture was taken yesterday after 9 pm.
"It was left to the genial Irish prelate James Ussher, while he was bishop of Armagh, to fix the date with absolute precision. According to his workings, which he managed to convince his clerical colleagues were impeccably accurate, God had created the world and all its creatures in one swift and uninterrupted process of divine mechanics that began on the dot pf the all-too-decent hour of 9 A.M., on a Monday, October 23, 4004 B.C.
- - -
At the start of that late October week, in the year that modern Christian calendar would style 4004 B.C., the Deity organized the basic consepts of light and dark, sun and moon, wet and dry. He then made every ocean, inlet, river, sandbar, meadow, desert, mountain, icecap, and fjord: The struture of the world, its topography, and the geology that forms the core of this story were complete. By the morning of the twenty-sixth, the Thursday, God had seen to it that life had been begun, and by that evening every first microbe, newt, spider, serpent, eagle, cat, horse, and monkey had been duly set in place, to creep, crawl, swim, fly, leap, spring and deploy its opposable thumb to climb.
By the following day the botanical phyla were all in place: Every rain forest, grassland, savanna, peony, orchid, rose, palm, apple, pine, and daisy had been left on earth, contentedly to bloom. All of Milton's "rocks, caves, lakes, fens, bogs, dens" were now fully accumulated: An earthly paradise was set, ready to be lost.
And by the Saturday, most important of all, emerged those creatures who would lose it. The first two examples of ur-human, in the bipedal and upright (but otherwise subtly different from each other) forms of Adam and Eve, had been created in the Garden of Eden. They were at this stage blissfully unaware, of course, and therefore untroubled by the Fall (which would come later, via agency of the already created serpent and apple).
Recorded history would now formally begin. Human beings were in place, made in the image of their Maker, and they could do with their world more or less as they and their Maker between them pleased. Thus was it all done. Come midnight on the Saturday, with all this frantic labor done, the weary Divinity slept, having declared that all he had created was good, and fully ready to begin the adventuring he had ordained for it for the next six thousand years and more. *
- - - - -
* Few outside the world of rigid Christian fundamentalists the strict interpretation of James Ussher's arithmetic, which he explained in his monumental work of 1658, Annalis Veteris et Novi Testamenti. But nonetheless a 1991 survey showed that fully 100 million Americans still believed that "God created man pretty much in his own image at one time during the last ten thousand years" and anecdotal evidence now suggest that this number is climbing. ---"Source: The Map That Changed The World by Simon Winchester
- Mood:
cold
I have been good and updated my wish list, though it still lacks all the items I have under wishlist_additions tag.
I am also insane: I'm going to stitch the design for Linda's bourse over one on 36 count linen.
The design is actually quite problematic... I have monochrome and four different colour schemes (of which I have two different versions) and I can't decide which one to stitch! So, I let Linda decide for me... she doesn't know how it looks like, but I have asked her to tell me which colour out of those four she prefers.
"You have a large envelope awaiting"
I had a notification of a large envelope few days ago, but as I have been a bit tired I haven't bothered to go to fetch it - until today. And it was just what I hoped it would be: my order from Interweave Press' Hurt Book Sale!
And here's few of my favourites:
From left to right:
- Domino knitted linen baskets.
- Cashmere Crossings shawl from the Wrap Style.
- Tapestry Garden shawl from the Wrap Style.
- Kuba from the Knitting our of Africa.
Doctors and results
All the results were "within normal limits" (I have to remember to ask my hemoglobin as I am curious to know is it still 120 (which is within normal limits... lowest "normal" is 117)), but I got new call time from the head physician of the health centre for next week.
That doesn't mean that I don't have asthma, back in stone age my brother had perfect spiro results but he got asthma diagnose anyway. No one knows what is my normal, so even the generic "normal" may be reduced flow for me (once again, I sang in a choir, my lungs are "strong").
And... mr. GP wrote the missive for thorax x-ray, but he never told me that I can just walk right in to the local hospital's x-ray unit. He only talked of the spirometry.
How the Heck someone like him is allowed to do work with patients?! (Ok, I know there are worse: like that GP who prescribed aspirin for former neighbour of ours because she suffered of stomach pain... she died of ovarian cancer couple of years later, and it's likely that she might have survived if the doctor had gave a damn. (Yes, in theory I could have a lung cancer, but with my rather cancer free family history (I know of three known cancers within the last three generations, two of the cases were lung cancer, both of them smoked heavily, 50% survival rate (my uncle's cancer metastized(sp?) to his brains before it was diagnosed...) I don't worry about that possibility too much.))
- Sound:Last.FM: Karunesh - For the Joy of It All
After 18 hours of sleep (after being awake 26 hours) one almost feels like a human being again. And adds ability to sleep on the list of Advantages of what-ever-drug they gave me at spirometry (even though I got an allergic reaction from it).
And I got another reason to dislike that GP. I spesifically said to him that I can not use medication with any kind of starch in them and this bright fellow prescribed me medicine which has... corn starch, my worst enemy.
I know that corn allergy isn't one of the common ones, but you could imagine that a doctor would believe the patient noticing that he does not know me. I can take it if our regular Jane and John Does don't understand that I really am allergic and don't choose what I put in my mouth just to be nasty, but this guy is an actual doctor... When it comes to Ventolin(e) either the dose could be bigger or I have to learn the finesses of discus, but at least I got no symptoms from it (unlike from Nasonex, my eyes are itching - known side-effect) and it's nice to breathe freely again.
Anyway, retail therapy... I stumbled upon fabric sale and came home with two plastic bags full of fabric (click the thumbnail as usual):
My reason to go into a fabric store was that little tan piece on the upper right, as I need it for model's lining. Others... well, they just wanted to come with me. 
The blues on upper left were the expensive ones, but I couldn't leave them there... rest of the fabrics in the big picture were in One bag full of fabrics only for 10€ sale so I just picked up everything I thought could be useful for me or my mother. (That white webbed fabric for example will end up in dye pot and after that I will sew couple of airy home tops. Those flowery fabrics end up serve my shirt demo - and rest of them... who knows, they would be great curtains, for someone who likes lighter shades (like my mother).
That ant fabric (who could resist a black fabric with metallic red ants on it?! Even less when it was in One bag full of fabrics only for 10€ sale...)) will probably end up being something more comfortable, I actually can see it as a dressing gown, and there's so much of that fabric that rest will probably end up being nice, short, "airy" nightie... just to have a matching set, you know. *grin*
And the books: 'Dictionary of Jewish Biography' ($43.80?! I paid $16.5... and mine was bought from a Finnish store and they had to order it for me (odd thing for a sale book, don't you think?)) and 'Hand-stitched Boxes' ("List Price: $24.95", I paid ~$10, and this one had to be specially ordered too).
I have to say that based on short browse that box book is really worth those 7 euros it was in sale. Imagine book filled with instructions for several dirrently shaped and sized boxes made of fabric and there's instructions even to those beautiful sewing cube boxes I have been drooling all over 'net.
- Mood:
awake - Sound:Bill Laswell - Shining Stone (Watu Jilang)
Spite of not knitting very eagerly I couldn't resist few homeless books at Interweave Press' Hurt Book Sale... From this moment on I am eagerly awaiting 'Knitting out of Africa', 'Domino Knitting' and 'Wrap Style'.
Whole pile with postages 42 euros (postage is about 2/5 of the whole amount).
Apparently I just proved that I am a book collector.
Though, I reasoned every single of them: KooA sounds interesting as I am rather fond of "African style" because it's generally colourful and strong.
DK because I have heard about domino knitting and have an instruction for it, but it's lousy, so I hope that this book proves to be better as these domino pieces would be great quick little projects and whenever I have enough of them I can just build a blanket out of them (assembling such thing is another issue altogether).
WS was clicked in the cart because lately I have suffered shoulder pain related to draft (If the temperature is any lower than 20 and there's any wind I may end up with stiff shoulders).
In general
I have been in pieces since yesterday's grocery store trip, but despite the pain, exhaustion and all the other "nice" issues (you could almost think that there's something in wrong with me O_o *grin*) I have been productive designing wise. All of them will come out as complimentary designs so stay tuned for the details... 
- Sound:Tabu Ley Rochereau - Paquita

The pumpkin on the right is modified. In the pattern said pumpkin frowns and taking the base idea behind this design and the general look of it I really couldn't understand a frowning pumpkin...
So, I opened my designing software and played a bit. I like this version of The Pumpkin much better. (Notice the cat on the crock!)
- Mood:
sleepy - Sound:The Cruxshadows - Sympathy For Tomorrow
I have been asked would I be interested to take part to a book project, and I have given preliminary promise to be one of the writers.
It will never be a best seller, but I see it as a possibility to affect opinions and, do what I have always wanted to do, be a publishing writer. 
It would also be a good possibility to practise my writing style.
Stitching
I have been practising my French knots (-> best tutorial ever <-) and realised that silk may not be the best choice of fiber when doing it. I have also been wondering how it is possible to fell in love with your own design?
It is partially due choice of floss, as Atalie's Lhassa is simply beautiful when stitched, but partially it is about the design being just so... me, but so unlike me.
Nevertheless, it's beautiful.
Kitties
Her Highness has been very co-operative: she didn't kill me when I gave her her antibiotics last night and this morning she took her painkillers nicely. Though I am quite sure that that paté I had mixed it with had something to do with it.
Now I will just wait a while and give her morning meds when she's high enough not to care. 
And, as I have no stitchy pictures, let me introduce you gorgeous man who sleeps on my left side:
- Sound:Last.FM: Nina Simone - Just Like A Woman
I will finish my fourth model today, then I will stitch Spring and after that, if I have time and inspiration I will see about the fifth model. If I don't have the inspiration it can as well wait for July launch - taking that it won't end up being a catastrophe (model, not the launch).
There's no reason to boil my brains and get sick just because I worry too much. It does nasty things to one's creativity and I can't afford to lose that.
To-Be-Read/ Books
I have found one of my long gone bad habits again: reading in bed. (When I was married I kind of had other things to occupy myself with and it made me forget joys of reading in bed...)
When I was younger I used to read in bed before falling asleep, though sometimes it caused me insomnia because book in question captivated my attention and forced me to just keep on reading (I read Stephen King's The Green Mile in one night because I couldn't put it down (or rather put them down, as it consists from six parts)).
And thanks to this newly found bad habit of mine I have finally been able to draw few strikes to my To-Be-Read list. (Two books in two days just by reading in bed... fact is that I am fast reader, still.) (Admittedly both of those books are only from two to three hundred pages, but we have to acknowledge that everyone is not Stephen King.)
(Currently my bed time story is Muistelmia kuolleesta talosta by F. Dostojevski (I prefer to use more or less direct transliteration) which is number 10 in my TBR list).
When it comes to reading no one won't find reading in bed unusual, but I do remember those odd looks I got during my earlier years if I happened to mention that in my home we were allowed to read at dining table while eating.
And I found it odd that people found that odd as for me it was completely natural... You know, it would have been so terribly boring and unimaginative just to feed one's body so we preferred to feed one's mind too.
It is just quite odd that I was in my teens before I actually understood that my family is odd if you compare to an average Finnish family (but then, I was seven or eight before I realised that joulu (Yule/ Christmas) is actually religious holiday to some people... I have always been tad slow). I was over twenty when I realised that it actually may be the reason why I have so many communication problems with Finns: we just don't share same culture and it causes clashes when other part doesn't understand that you can actually do things differently without being bad person. (I know, I digress... I think I should try to sleep a bit. If cats let me.)
- Mood:
half asleep...
It was only day before yesterday when I drooled over Les marquoirs d'école and today I received a big envelope from a well-wishing friend... guess what it contained? 
Ten points: one (1) copy of Les marquoirs d'école! Am I one happy camper now or what?! 
In addition to that I realised today that one of the things close to perfection is 40 count cream Newcastle linen. Here presented with some glorious flosses.
- Mood:
bouncy, happy, tired - Sound:Candy Dulfer - I Can't Make You Love Me
A challenge to get me back to reading, as I have been dreadfully lazy on that matter last two years.
Pick 12 books - one for each month of 2007 - that you've been wanting to read (have been on your "To Be Read" list) for 6 months or longer, but haven't gotten around to.And my list (in no particular order) - original names in parenthesis:
Starting January 1, 2007, read one of these books from your list each month, ending December 31, 2007.
By the end of the year you should've knocked 12 books off of your TBR list!
- Eclipse of the Crescent Moon (Egri csillagok) by Géza Gárdonyi
- Oikeusjuttu (Der Prozess) by Franz Kafka
- The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Writings by Edgar Allan Poe
- Sivuvaikutuksia (Side Effects) by Woody Allen
Sarastus (L'àube, Editions du Seuil) by Elie Wiesel23rd of AprilOtelo by Daniel Katz13th of MayKannibaaligalaksi (The Cannibal Galaxy) by Cynthia Ozick3rd of April- Sinuhe egyptiläinen by Mika Waltari
- Karamazovin veljekset (Bratja Karamazovy) by Fedor Dostojevski
Muistelmia kuolleesta talosta (Zapiski iz mertvago doma) - ' ' -23rd of AprilJazz(Jazz) by Toni Morrison 5th of AprilOrja (The Slave) by Isaac Bashevis Singer17th of May
TAST
Haven't forgot that! I just need to get myself going with it, all those biscornus just are too tempting to be left alone, even for a day - or few hours.
*gasp*
Not that much progress (thread needle -> stitch three stitches -> snip -> rethread needle -> repeat ad nauseam is tedious, and a wonderful method to slaughter time), but once again few stitches closer to the end.
But with this pace I won't get second part finished before this month ends. If it takes an evening to stitch one vine...
T-A-S
By the way... read the comments:
Do I feel good now?!And then...
Piece of literacy: Francis Crawford of Lymond, the (Zombie) Master of Culter.
- Sound:Last.FM: Creedence Clearwater Revival – The Working Man
( Read more... )
- Sound:Morcheeba – Be Yourself
There haven't been that much stitching... as I slept 15 h in Sunday.
I did stitch Alter Echo...
Anyway, we had a happy dance today! (It'd have happened yesterday, but it's quite difficult to stitch when you're glued to the keyboard...)
Info:
- Design: Morning Wizard
- Designer: Jennifer Aikman- Smith
- Fabric: 28 count Quaker linen. Mocha (IIRC)
- Other:
- I left wording and sun out because they didn't strike my fancy.
- Colours are tweaked
- Newspaper is changed to be The Daily Prophet

Though, I've a problem: what next? I could think of Stitching Devils, but I don't have enough black denim - as I decided to make my mother's knitting bag from that, and I've reserved all denim I've for that. And Dovey has a place in my rotation already.
Dragon Soul QS? I've no fabric for it, and I lack some of the threads... Can't start Loy Krathong even I've the flosses and fabric as I've no dyes to dye the fabric.
So... it's either You're Never Too Old... or Taj Mahal - though I still don't have that #8 perle.
Maybe I just get wild, compromise, and stitch Futurecast. It'd be good for variety's sake.
Must resist...
Argh, new things to want/buy: Big Girl Knits - 25 Big, Bold Projects Shaped for Real Women with Real Curves (allow me to disapprove using word girl)
And the official quotes...
'One of the advantages of being disorderly is that one is constantly making exciting discoveries.'
'If you smoke after sex then you're doing it too fast.'
- Woody Allen
- Sound:Sade - By Your Side
Ten hours worth of sleep is a good thing, though I'd have spent few more hours in soothing warmth of my bed... How so I'm not well?
But, got kind-of-tagged by Christine and Ash. Here we go...
- One book that changed your life:-
- One book that you'd read more than once:
Anything from Stephen King, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy "trilogy", almost anything from Agatha Christie. - One book you'd want on a deserted island:
Just one?! - One book that made you laugh:
Anything from Douglas Adams. - One book that made you cry:
Unemphatic b*stard doesn't cry when reading books. - One book you wish you'd written:
Once again.... just one?! Anything from Stephen King. - One book you wish had never been written:
Hmmm, there are few... in general any book which has been excuse for genocide. - One book you're currently reading:
I try to reread Transplanted Man. - One book you've been meaning to read:
Lord of the Rings, as I'm about only person on the face of Earth who hasn't. - Tags:
asilverdragon
bits_2_whole
chanda_m- Rósa
- Angela
- Selina
- ... anyone actually.
P.S. Note to self: first snowfall while writing this. Short though and already melted away, but snow.
- Mood:
achy - Sound:U.D.O. – Heart of Gold
It seems to me that dawning HD has give me new inspiration when it comes to stitching Panda. It looks like a panda nowadays, and it's possible that estimation I gave to my mother (I said that P. should be finished in 15th of November) is quite accurate.
Last update and how it looks like now:
Libraries!
Note to self: Candida Höfer - Libraries.
- Sound:The Casinos – Then You Can Call Me Goodbye
You just got to love Finnish library system. After I checked my emails in library I happened to pass their books for sale stall (selling old and/or non-interesting (for general public) books is habit in local libraries, and sometimes you can find really good deals as they usually ask tops 1€ per book) and found two books (Spies by Michael Frayn and Half Broken Things by Morag Joss) in whopping price of 0.2€ per piece.
So, two new old books (they're barely opened deducing from their appearance) for me and 0.4€ to local library. I think I'm on the winning side in this deal. 
Btw, I seem to get perverted pleasure from 'jumping' on the yard in my favourite skimpish (few cms above knees, quite giving collar and nice cut) home dress. (This makes my life much cooler so I'm just victim of weather and not having an air conditioning.)
I foresee angry glances from local female population as male population seems to like it...
- Mood:
satisfied











