Circles & rectangles

I’ve picked up my bag of granny circles to add a few more lately. I love this as it’s not a project or such with a plan in mind; it’s just crocheting an occasional circle when I want to sit and do something quietly. I’m using the remnants of Hayfield Spirit yarn which I used to crochet my two Bobble Cowls. Here’s the first cowl which I’m wearing a lot. I’m kind of hoping that one day someone says wow where did you get that cowl? And I can say “Well, actually I made it.” Still waiting!

I’ve been playing around with methods for using continuous joining, I’ve used the method before where you complete one round of the first motif and then start to join the others, but continuous joining means you do not break the yarn at all. You could stop and start adding motifs as you go over a long period of time, or plan the exact placement and do it that way. I think I’ll have to plan the placement because I don’t know what colours I’m going to end up with in the end. I also need to decide what they’re going to be. But there’s absolutely no hurry for that.

For the continuous joining method I’ve had to scratch my head and turn it to one side and then the other because most illustrating the direction of crochet (actually 99%) for the joining have been for right-handers. But I’ve saved a picture and flipped the mirror image. You have to become good at this kind of thing as a left-hander.

Anyway, it’s so far it’s an experiment to see how I liked them turned into hexagons and a try at perfecting the JAYGO. The beauty of circles is that you can crochet to enclose them within squares, triangles, rectangles or hexagons or…

I’ve decided for my Wednesday post that I’m going to try to feature printed books which I’m reading. I’ve always got Kindle books and audiobooks on the go, for a long time I have rarely read printed novels, but am enjoying the novelty of having a physical item to photograph, rather than screenshot.

I’m reading Maggie O’Farrell‘s latest for my next Bookclub meeting. We voted on half a dozen books and this came out top. I was delighted. (When I joined the BC last December the choice had already been made: Christmas Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella. I put that down after a dozen pages. Absolutely not for me!) I love O’Farrell’s writing. I read her debut in 2000 and have read everything, apart from The Distance Between us, as it’s been published. I shall definitely seek out a copy and read that too.

I’m probably only a quarter of the way into The Marriage Portrait and I’m already gripped by the revealing of the main character’s childhood and family life. It’s based upon a real life young Italian: Lucrezia, Duchess of Ferrara who died in 1561 from illness aged sixteen, but rumours abounded that it was at the hand of her husband. Lucrezia is written as an intriguing character, the story begins from her point of view as a little girl, to showing her as young married girl of fifteen experiencing a strong sense that she is soon to be murdered. The story is, so far, interwoven with flashbacks to her growing up in a busy household, the third daughter of a Grand Duke. It’s a little like Hamnet in that you know the ending before you begin. But do you? I am intrigued. I’m already recommending it to others!

Last night I joined a second book club; an online version with my friend Lucy. She used to, before having her baby, choose a recipe book every month and cook a new recipe a week from it. Then she would often decide whether to keep or pass on the cookbook. She says it floundered because she let her husband pick the alternate month’s books, but he never got round to it. So I wondered, would she like to do it again, with me?

“Oh yes, that’s genius! Plus then I get to hear all about the books you have…”

I regularly cook new recipes, but after years of aiming, and mostly achieving, to make something new every week, realise I often neglect my own bookshelves and mostly use those I’ve seen online. It’s just easier and fast, particularly when I’m doing an online grocery order. I’ve got hundreds of recipes bookmarked on my iPhone and iPad, emailed to myself, linked to on WhatsApp messages (one reason why I can’t delete years worth of threads with some foody friends) collections on Pinterest, Instagram, BBC Good Food site, Olive magazine site and probably a dozen more sources. It’s a shame as I have a mini library of my own.

So, we got on and counted our cookbooks. It took a while. I left out those only focusing on cakes, desserts, a chocolate cookbook, preserving books and bread books.

“I suppose I can’t pick a cake or desserts book, or can I?!”

“You totally could!”

But I decided it was too dangerous, and maybe too narrow a category, so left those out.

We shared our total number to be included (50+ for me and 80+ for her. I know. It’s a lot isn’t it?) Then messaged each other a random number. She chose number 42 for me and so counting left to right along my bookshelves I came up with Thomasina Miers Mexican cookbook. One of my sister-in-laws gave me this several years ago. I know I haven’t used it enough, so was really pleased that it’s my first pick. Lucy had to count along her shelves to number 27 (I didn’t make her count nearly as many she made me. Next time I’m picking somewhere in the sixties or seventies, evil laughter… ) I’m ashamed to admit that mine took three goes to get to the right number. I just wanted to check and it went from The Bean Book to a Thai recipe collection, which Someone was quite excited about (Thai, definitely not the beans!) then to Mexican.

A thought – join in if you would like to? Send me the total number of your cookbooks and I’ll pick one, or pal up with a friend. I’d love it if you’d share a photo of the cookbook on your blog, Instagram, or Facebook and tell me / us about your recipes as you go?

We’ve already decided to choose our next on or around 6th March. Now I’ve got to choose something to make this weekend. ¡Arriba, arriba! Mexican here we come!

~~~

Linking with Kat and the gang for Unravelled Wednesday again. Sharing what we’re making and reading.

17 thoughts on “Circles & rectangles

  1. I love your circles, and the idea of not having a specific project in mind for them. I often do the same thing, and oddly enough am also using scraps and crocheting granny circles with no particular plan. They are lying in a messy heap on the table next to my laptop and sometimes I pick one up and add some chain stitches for embellishment or a button in the middle. I don’t know why I do this, either.

  2. The crochet project is beautiful. It’s interesting how the cream background changes the look of them. The colors just pop. The Marriage Portrait is a good novel. I predict you will have a good discussion. There is a lot to talk about.

  3. I enjoyed the Marriage Portrait a lot. Radio 4 had it as a Book at Bedtime but I only caught the First two days. Took me ages to work out why the early chapters were so familiar and the later ones not so. I used to try out new recipes until I found myself substituting ingredients and ended up making a familiar dish . Good luck with this experiment.

    • I’ve experienced that before because often now books have the first chapter or so to tempt you into buying, particularly in a series. It’s really perplexing isn’t it?! You just can’t work out whether it’s a feeling of déjà vu, very similar to something else you’ve read or maybe you’ve already read it…

      I make new recipes to follow new food trends, eat seasonally and to keep the menu fresh and exciting. Couldn’t eat the same meals year round like some do. I always write them down in a list, so I know what I made and a record of where it was sourced. Handy if I want to recommend it to a friend or try making again. It will be good to use books I already have at home a little more. I love the element of surprise with this little plan. Must choose my first few from this one now!

  4. We discussed The Marriage Portrait last year with my online book club… it is such a discuss-able book!

    Your crocheted circles though… I love them! They are just perfect (and that white border, genius!)

  5. I love your circles — all those colors are just so happy! And I adored The Marriage Portrait. Maggie O’Farrell is one of my favorite writers, and I’ve read all her books.

  6. A lovely lot of circles. Look forward to seeing what you eventually make them into. I think I am going to have to plan a scrap blanket from all of my part balls. Trouble is I can’t decide exactly what to do. I did think of coloured hexagons.

  7. Pingback: Mustard, I’m looking at you | The Little Room of Rachell

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