Recent Posts

Categories

Archives

Search

Your Blogger

Librarian by day, heavy metal cross stitcher and English literature graduate student by night, blonde all the time!

Today I am...
The current mood of blondelibrarian at www.imood.com

Syndicate

Stitching
Non-Stitching

March 2007
S M T W T F S
« Feb   Apr »
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Get your own free Blogoversary button!

The WeatherPixie

CURRENT MOON

Nov NaBloPoMo Participant

Tag Cloud

bird SBQ: Rip, Rip!
7 March 2007

Today’s SBQ is:

Do you use your needle, a seam ripper, or something else when you have to frog stitches? Why do you use the method that you do?

I have a seam ripper that I have used on occasion, but typically I use my needle. I use my needle because I think it works better than a seam ripper to pull out those little stitches… especially on linen. :)

bird Needlework Smalls March Challenge
2 March 2007

I would like to draw attention to the Friends Gather Needlework Smalls March Challenge. I am moderating this forum on the Friends Gather BB, but since I plan to discuss my NWSC here, anyone that is interested may participate with me. For those of you who are not members of FG, you may discuss your challenge piece here in the comments.

Anyway, the NWSC is a monthly challenge and though the stitching will be important we are focusing on finishing because I think it will be a great way for us to polish our finishing skills!

Beginning in March, each month I will post a theme (I use this term loosely) and then we will work all month to meet the challenge. For example, we might say that our challenge for March will be to make a pinkeep. So, you will need to choose a pattern, stitch it, and then do the finishing. It’s that simple.

The rules are pretty loose and you don’t always have to begin a new project every month. It is OK to pull some of those WTF (waiting to be finished) pieces out of the drawer and finish them off in this challenge too!

There you have it and now, without further delay… March’s Challenge will be to stitch and finish a pinkeep.

bird That Book by Nabakov

It has come to my attention that one might mistake my 50 Books in 1001 Days as the only books that I intend to read during my 1001 days. On the contrary: I intend to read the books on that list in conjunction with whatever else I might feel like reading. As a result, I have read a great deal of books in the past few months that were not on my list.

However, I was inspired to head to the library a few days ago and pick up one of the books on my list because of The Police. I was never a big fan of the group, but since they are supposedly back together now I find my radio station playing their music more often and the other morning they played my favorite song that refers to “that book by Nabakov.”

If you don’t already know, that book by Nabakov is Lolita and it is on my list of 50 books to read in 1001 days.

There are many preconceived notions about the book Lolita, but let me clarify a couple of things: There is not one four-letter word, nor one obvious sex scene. While it is true the narrator is what today we call a pedophile, I believe the overlying theme of the book has nothing to do with the difference in age between the characters or pedophilia, but about Humbert Humbert’s love for Lolita. Whether we find his actions “normal” or not, this man is in love with that girl to the point of obsession.

And though she is a child when the books begins, Lolita’s actions throughout the story made it easy to forget her age. She deliberately plays with Humbert and despite the fact that she is merely twelve years old at the beginning of their relationship, I believe she has a very good idea of what she is doing.

By the time the book finishes Lolita is a young woman; married and pregnant with another man’s child and Humbert’s obsession with her has driven him mad.

If one digs deeply, perhaps they can claim the tragic result of the story serves as a type of morality tale, but according to Nabakov himself, he didn’t “intend” anything when he wrote the book: The story is just a story and it doesn’t “mean” anything at all… and that is just fine with me.

bird February and March Goals
1 March 2007

It’s the time again already. Let’s see how I did for February, shall we?

February’s goals were to:

  1. Finish and mail my Biscornu Exchange Piece. (Post date February 28) – Yep! Mailed February 26.
  2. Participate in the Robin’s Nest February Stitch-A-Thon. - Yes!
  3. Continue working through my rotation with a focus on “Celtic Spring.” – Not exactly… I just focused on “Celtic Spring” and to heck with all my other pieces! ;)
  4. Start “Romantic Stitcher” (my SAT with Cathy) and “Poet’s Heart” by Lavender Wings. – Yes and Yes!

Yeah Me!

Now for March, I plan to:

  1. Finish “Celtic Spring” by March 11, 2007.
  2. Participate in The Robin’s Nest March SAT.
  3. Participate in Friends Gather Needlework Smalls March Challenge.
  4. Pick out my pattern for The Robin’s Nest’s Mystery Exchange.
  5. Start a new rotation.