Not quite up to cuff
My first year at college, my sister and I wrote letters to each other. A lot. We had to keep each other up on stuff, and it was just nice to get letters. Then I moved back home for a while, and we didn't have to write to each other. Through various moves, we wrote, or called, and during one particularly fruitful period, we wrote and called. I have boxes of letters from her just sitting around. Now that we get to see each other in person, we don't write much more than the occasional card. I'd rather have the face to face memories, really. However, I still am fortunate to have a couple of friends to whom (and one from whom) letters go pretty regularly.
My kids may not have this, so much.
Hours on the phone, hours IMing, but scented bundles tied up with ribbons? Let's hope they do, at least some. Besides, we love our postal carrier. I'm sure he would appreciate some good handwritten mail to deliver.
He would not, however, appreciate this mitten, cast on to have something simpler to knit out and about, so much.
The cuff is a little short on Eric, who doesn't have unusually long hands. So far, it's a woman's mitten. I like the way the darker handspun looks as though it has black stripes in it, and how the thumb cap-stripe matches up with the body. Completely unplanned.
On the checkerboardy side, the singles effect really shows up -- the stitches have a straight line marching up the mitten.
I've cast on, at least, for the second mitten and its green stripe on the cuff is moving along. I'm tempted to knit it longer, but I think these are going to have to be a shorter pair, in the interest of getting back to finishing the snail mitten
4 Comments:
Good thing the postal carrier wouldn't appreciate those. If I'd knit those up, I wouldn't want to give them away.
Delana, maybe knitting mittens sized just for me isn't all accidental. . .
No sent, no ribbons. However, I have letters. And I draw in the margins (mainly dragons).
Lucky you.
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