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This is Dani Smith

 

I am Dani Smith, sometimes known around the web as Eglentyne. I am a writer in Texas. I like my beer and my chocolate bitter and my pens pointy.

This blog is one of my hobbies. I also knit, sew, run, parent, cook, eat, read, and procrastinate. I have too many hobbies and don’t sleep enough. Around here I talk about whatever is on my mind, mostly reading and writing, but if you hang out long enough, some knitting is bound to show up.

Thank you for respecting my intellectual property and for promoting the free-flow of information and ideas. If you’re not respecting intellectual property, then you’re stealing. Don’t be a stealer. Steelers are ok sometimes (not all of them), but don’t be a thief.

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    Entries from October 1, 2009 - October 31, 2009

    Thursday
    Oct292009

    Halloween, Beta-test edition

    Last weekend our town had a Halloween party in the park.  Snow cones, bouncing things, costume contests, trick-or-treating.  It was fun.  And it gave us a chance to test-drive this year’s Halloween costume.  Which is good, because we definitely want to do some small tweaks and one big revision.  I love love love Halloween!

    Sonar X4: An Entling

    Sonar X4 impersonating a treeCan you tell that we’ve been reading Tolkien for several months?  The brown clothes (made from a big t-shirt) worked great.  But the many-colored felt leaves looked more like sleeve-ruffles.  The floppy hat was a last-minute improvisation because I had nothing else ready.  I’m going to add some purchased leaf-garland to the sleeves and make a crown of leaves.  He does not want me to remove the felt leaves though.  He likes those.  

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Sonar X6: Artemis Fowl

    Sonar X6 as Artemis FowlOn our edition of Artemis Fowl, Artemis is wearing a suit and sunglasses and holding a small, glowing book.  From the back cover: “Twelve-year-old Artemis Fowl is a millionaire, a genius, and, above all, a criminal mastermind.”  I found the shirt and jacket for a few dollars at a thrift store, and made the tie.  I bought the pants new, figuring that we could get some good wear out of a nice pair of black pants.  Yes, I’m going to hem them.  For the fairy book, we covered some tiny notebooks with paper from a glittery, golden gift bag.  He’ll have a fresh haircut on Saturday, I think, so his slick look will be even sharper.  

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Sonar X9: The Mad Hatter (Tim Burton/Johnny Depp version)

    Sonar X9 as Tim Burton’s Mad HatterThis costume was fun to put together.  He’s wearing another thrift-store jacket.  This one a ladies jacket with flared sleeves.  The striped pants are pajama pants that belong to Sonar X6.  He has orange-striped fingerless gloves and a Burger Kitchen tea cup.  I made the hat and neck bow out of stuff I found around the house (fabric, foam, plastic cardboard, a wire hanger, and a lot of glue).  I used the Threadbanger How-to for that one.  Threadbanger does a wig, but he preferred to paint his own hair orange (he thought that part was really really cool).  We may swap the Burger Time cup for a slightly more Mad cup, and I’m going to add some embellishments like a hat pin and size tag.  We’re going to skip the spool-bandolero.  

    Thursday
    Oct222009

    Knitting Update: The Baktus, Three Socks, and a Gauntlet in Progress

    A quick laundry list of recent knitting.  I accidentally sat in a rain puddle taking this picture, but I’m not bitter (click to embiggen).

    A Blue Baktus Scarf, a pair of koolade-dyed yarn balls with koolade-socks and bootie, and a grey gauntlet in progress 1. My finished Baktus scarf, designed by Strikkelise.  Actually that’s the Lacy Baktus version, modified by Mustaavillaa. I used 46 grams of Fortissima Socka 1016 left-over from a pair of socks I made a few years ago.  My Baktus has no center point.  I began with the left point, increasing until I’d used one-third of my yarn, then knit even for one-third, then decreased to the left point for my final third.  I was worried that I didn’t have enough yarn to creat a scarf that would tie comfortably around the neck, so I opted-out of the center point to extend the length of the scarf.  It will fill the gap at the edge of my coat when the wind gets chilly around here without adding bulk. 

    2.  The Bomb-Pop Yarn blanks and Cherry-flavored socks.  Those wee balls of yarn in the picture are what’s left of the Bomb-Pop yarn I dyed with Cherry and Blue-Raspberry Koolade a while back.  Sonar X6 wanted ankle socks, which used up all of the solid red portion of the yarn and just a flare of blue and white at each toe.  The tiny sock there is a bootie for a baby expected by a teacher/friend.  The companion bootie is forthcoming.  I might actually be able to get two pairs of matching booties out of the remaining yarn.  

    3. The Grey Gauntlet.  The bit on the needles at the left side is a grey gauntlet destined to be a birthday gift for a neighbor.  She loves to wear a purple pair that I made for Sonar X9 many years ago, so she clearly needs her own pair.  I cast on 36 stitches in k2p2 rib and will knit for a few inches, make a buttonhole (for the thumb), knit another inch and bind off.  A quick knit, which is a good thing since said birthday is Monday.  

    Coming soon: Halloween costumes, The Sheriff of Yrnameer, and my NaNoWriMo panic.  

    Thursday
    Oct082009

    Before I Forget: a mish-mash of book comments

    I’ve read a few books lately that I haven’t had time to blogify.  Here are some brief reactions to the most interesting of the recent list, divided into books for kids and not so much for kids.  

    Kid Books

    Where I Live by Eileen Spinelli

    This gentle set of poems tells the story of Diana and why her family had to move.  All of the poems (except one) is told from Diana’s perspective.  Diana wins a contest and likes constellations, her friend Rose, her grandpa, and sometimes even her sister Twink.  I really liked this book.  Several poems could stand alone, but the collection offers an interesting departure from a typical early-chapter-book-prose structure.  It might be a great jumping-off point to encourage a child to try to write a poem, or for a kiddo who is already cantoically inclined (to sort of steal a word from another recent read, Stagecoach Sal by Deborah Hopkinson).  It has been nominated for a Texas Bluebonnet Award this year. 

    Strega Nona’s Harvest by Tomie dePaola

    I love Strega Nona.  I think I want to be Strega Nona when I grow up.  Tomie dePaola has written several books featuring this grandma witch and her friends.  Apparently Big Anthony never learns.  This time his shenanigans highlight once more the importance of generosity and community (and giant vegetables!). 

    And Tango Makes Three by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell

    I’ve read this book before and was inspired to return to it during Banned Books Week.  This book is based on the bonding relationship of two male chinstrap penguins at the Central Park Zoo.  It is among the most challenged books of the past four years.  I didn’t talk about banned books with the kids before we read it, but when we finished reading it the other night, Sonar X6 said, “I bet this is a banned book somewhere.”  I asked why he thought that and he said, “Because some people don’t think families should have two dads like that, or that kids should read about families like that.”  We all had a lovely talk then about how all families are different, but one thing they share is love.  That conversation grew to include comments on problems with stereotypes in general, and the kids were more open about the kinds of behavior that is tolerated in their social set and what sorts of things might lead to teasing and judgment.  Any book that gives me a chance to talk understanding and tolerance with my kids, and leads them to think and talk to me about their own experiences with intolerance is a winner.

    The Dunderheads by Paul Fleischman 
    This one is just cheeky fun in which a group of oddly-talented kids, labelled ‘dunderheads’ by a mean teacher, get the upper-hand.  Incites giggles in children ages 4 through 9.  

    Not-Kid Books

    The Bookseller of Kabul by Asne Seierstad

    Unlike many of the books on today’s list, this one was not fun for me.  I found it very difficult to read because the descriptions of women’s treatment just kept making me angry and unhappy.  The bookseller of the title is Sultan Khan (not a real name), an Afghani businessman, but the book is about more than just Khan.  It is about his family and business interactions and is a cultural/social snapshot of post-9/11 Afghan life.  Seierstad lived with the family for a time in order to write this profile.  Perhaps because she spent more time with the women, perhaps because she was troubled by the lives of the women, Seierstad spends much more time describing the negotiations of life for Khan’s two wives and the other women of his family.  The book also touches on life before and during the Taliban regime, suggests the complexity of tribal negotiations and of gender hierarchy.  What is weirdly absent from the book is western military.  There is hardly an American or European soldier to be seen in this book even when the aftermath of decades of war is highlighted in the bleak landscape.  I follow news and events fairly well most of the time, and didn’t learn anything new about the socio-political situation of Afghanistan per se, but I understand better how little I know and understand about Afghanistan and its culture.  The book is not without controversy for Seierstad and the family she depicted.  

    The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe

    This was a smart book.  This is the kind of paranormal book I’d like to write.  Smart, independent female characters, practical magic that’s just ambiguous enough that you might call it science, and a steeplejack (everyone needs a hot, educated steeplejack).  The academic setting reminds me of A. S. Byatt’s Possession (loved that one too).  Written by a Harvard grad student who can trace her lineage to the Salem witches, there’s a hint of autobiography amped up with paranormal fantasy.  I learned a great deal about the Salem witches and their historical milieu, but the lessons are neatly disguised and didn’t drag the story down.  I have one more thing to say about this book, but it’s a bit of a spoiler, so I’ll keep it to myself for now.  Let me know if you’ve read it and we can dish together about the nemesis (what? that doesn’t reveal anything).   

    Finger Lickin’ Fifteen by Janet Evanovich

    I love the Stephanie Plum novels.  For me, they’re like potato chips.  I don’t eat potato chips very often, but when they’re in the house, I tend to eat the whole bag at once, by myself, after the kids go to bed.  Something about these books makes me stay up late even when I know I shouldn’t.  If there’s one in the house that I haven’t read, I have to read them straight through.  Fifteen was no exception.  My favorites in the series are the first four and number seven, and those ones bear rereading for me.  As the series has gone on, they’ve taken on their own conventions.  Like a particular brand of sweat pants, you know what you’re going to get.  That said, I was a bit disappointed in Fifteen.  For all the talk of barbecue sauce, this one was a little less tangy and zingy than some.  There are hints that Stephanie feels like she’s stuck in a rut, and maybe the routine of this one emphasizes that better than anything.  I’m hoping for some surprises in Sixteen. 

    Anticraft: Knitting, Beading, and Stitching for the Slightly Sinister by Renee Rigdon and Zabet Stewart

    Like the deliciously wicked, irreverent, and occasionally obscene webzine of the same name, this book is packed with craft projects that don’t evoke stereotypical mid-century granny-craft.  From knitted bondage gear to liquor bottle cozies and creaturific menstrual cup cozies, this book delivers sinister/sexy craft goodies with humor and saracsm.  

    Monday
    Oct052009

    A Quarter-Peck of Peppers, Not Pickled

    Two quarts of fresh-picked Poblano Peppers from the back yard. Yes, that is a frisbee.Chili relleno casserole, spicy good and partially consumed.

    Friday
    Oct022009

    Easy felted house slippers x 3

    I came across the pattern for the Felted Norwegian House Slippers at Craft Magazine a few weeks ago.  They charmed me, especially when I saw how easy they are to knit.  I poured out the wool bag and the Sonars chose colors.  Garter stitch bits dripped from the needles. 

    Pre-slippers for Sonar X9

    Pre-slippers for Sonar X4 and Sonar X6, plus Kate DiCamillo’s The Magician’s Elephant

    The knitting here is easy.  Each slipper is an L made of 8 squares of garter stitch.  The number of stitches and rows are increased or decreased to change the size.  The folding of the L’s into the slippers is a little tricky at first, but there’s a video in the tutorial to help.  

    Pre-slippers for Sonar X4, plus The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane by Katherine Howe

    Once I finished the magic folding and some simple sewing-up, I felted them in pillowcases in the washing machine.  We did final shaping on the feet of the intended Sonars.  

    Finished Sonar slippers, plus The Bookseller of Kabul, and a Baktus scarf in progress (in the lovely pot)These slippers were very quick to knit and were a great use of leftover wool.  The Sonars think they’re great for sliding down the hall.  Now I need some to put on my feet while I read a good book.