Potholders

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

Unraveled Wednesday: 11/1/23

I'm joining Kat and fellow Unravelers on this first day of November. I'm still plugging away on my Woolly Waffle Shawl but I got a little distracted by something new and shiny over the weekend. I saw this yarn being knit into a hat on Instagram, said, "Ooh, shiny!" and set about looking for some. I couldn't find it at Joann's or Michael's online, but Amazon was happy to send me three skeins. I received it within about 12 hours of ordering it, so I took that as a sign that I should cast on immediately. 

I had Jess (Justin's girlfriend) in mind for this yarn but I've knit her two hats as Christmas gifts that I've never seen her wear, so I thought maybe she would like something else better. I perused ravelry and settled on the Gap-tastic cowl. I didn't knit one several years ago when the pattern was so popular because of the endless seed stitch. While I still don't like seed stitch (especially on size 13 needles), I do like sparkly yarn and Jess, so here is my sparkly cowl so far. 

I hurt my left hand over the weekend because I used it to push a big knife through two butternut squash. I roasted the squash in the oven with some blood orange olive oil and cinnamon, and it was quite good, but there may be a lesson here. I've never injured myself while opening fun-size Snickers, so be careful while cutting vegetables. My squash-related injury has limited my knitting time, but hopefully, it will feel better in a couple of days and I can get back to seed stitch, sparkly yarn, and size 13 needles. 

When I was much younger I was an avid reader of Stephen King; the scarier the better.  'Salem's Lot scared me so much that I imagined vampires outside of my second-floor apartment windows, put the book in the freezer, and called my sister at 2:00 am so she could reassure me that vampires weren't real (despite what I was seeing). I remembered Cujo and  Pet Sematary as being equally frightening books.

Now that I'm much older and real life can often be quite scary in itself, I thought it was time to reread some of my Stephen King favorites. Pet Sematary was as horror-filled as I remembered it, and maybe even more so than when I read it in my 20s. Now that four decades have passed, I've had two children and also experienced the loss of my parents and many other family members and friends. I understand the idea of wanting to do anything to keep your children safe, imagining losing them as the worst thing possible, along with how deep and terrifying grief can be. I have a new appreciation for Stephen King's ability to write horror in more ways than just what will scare you when something goes bump in the dark. The details he seems to effortlessly include make what seems like an illogical premise much easier to understand.

After finishing Pet Sematary last week and finding it quite disturbing, I decided I didn't need to reread the other two. Now I'm going back to my normal non-horror reading.

What are you making and reading this week?

14 comments:

  1. Ha! I used to read Stephen King too, but not now (and I don't think I will re-read). I like your sparkly cowl - very pretty. It should go fast being big yarn and big needles, right?? I need to start knitting something so that I have something to bring on Saturday when you and I and Dee get together!!

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  2. I am loving that Gaptastic Cowl! Sparkles FTW! :)

    It must be the week for Kitchen Injuries... I had a run in with the grater while grating cheese. The resulting "scrape" catches on yarn.

    And I tried to read Stephen King when I was younger... it was just too scary for me!

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  3. I hope she enjoys that cowl -- the sparkle makes it so fun! Something weird about me as a knitter is that I can deal with ribbing but hate knitting seed stitch, even though it's essentially the same thing.

    I hope your hand is feeling better soon. So that you don't re-injure yourself, I heard a tip once to microwave a squash for a bit first before cutting into it if it's especially hard.

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  4. That is going to be a great cowl, Bonny. And seed stitch (which is my favorite knit stitch to LOOK at, but not so much to knit) is a true labor of love. I consider Stephen King one of my guilty-pleasure authors. But I don't know if I'd like to re-read some of those earlier titles now. I was so scared when I read Salem's Lot that I made a special bookmark with a crucifix to mark my place as I read it! (And watch out for those vegetables!!!)

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  5. I read somewhere to microwave the squash for one minute then cut. It works for me but proceed at great caution and risk. Hope you heal soon!! Love the project.

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  6. I was reading The Shining late one night in bed and had to go down to my husband's basement workshop, where he was puttering around, to finish it. Too scary to read alone late at night.

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  7. Oh, Salem's Lot! I read tons of Stephen King back in high school but somehow missed that one. I finally read it a few year's ago and wore a crucifix around my neck when I went to bed one night while Dale was away camping with the Boy Scouts! The cowl is going to be great and stay safe with those vegetables - this is why I always have Dale cut those big things like squashes!

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  8. I knit that cowl for my niece several years ago and she still wears it! I hope your hand heals soon!

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    1. I was thinking about trying the cowl on when I finish to see if I might need one myself. But not with yarn this bulky; it's hard on the hands!

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  9. Oh those squash can be so hard to peel and cut. Take care of your hand and I hope it feels better. I hope Jess likes this cowl. It looks like it will be quite cozy. My dear DIL requested a plain black hat for Christmas. While I don't like to knit black yarn, like never, I do love her so I am working on it a little at a time. I just picked up Horse by Geraldine Brooks.

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  10. Oh gosh you made me laugh. I hurt my hand pruning overhanging shrubs that crept over the fence from my neighbours garden, I too never hurt myself opening a snickers bar, loved it. I gave up on Stephen King after I read Pet Semetery..just too much for me.

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    1. A friend told me that opening KitKats (do you have those in the UK?) was also safe. I think I'm done reading Stephen King for a long, long time.

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  11. I've never read a scary Stephen King novel, and don't think I ever will!! I remember reading Phantom Of The Opera when I was in sixth grade and found that to be scary enough for a lifetime. (Though I did read a horror novel by my favorite local librarian not long ago.)

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  12. wow, Bonny! I had no idea you were a Stephen King fan ... especially of the horror books! I've only read 11/23/63, which was brilliant, and scary, but not in the Pet Sematary way, right? and the Gaptastic Cowl looks like the perfect pattern for that yarn and I think Jess will love (and hopefully wear) it!

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