Trailed by voices

My second time at the craft group in a very relaxed café, lots of chat and a few hours that flew. Very good mocha too!

I paused and took a progress pic of the five circles I’d crocheted and thought I probably had better stop. I was surrounded by mostly crocheters, I think only one at the other end was knitting. I was so enjoying chatting and hooking that my hands found themselves getting busy again. In a way it’s good, because I’m seeing my hand therapist on Friday and can report how sore it now feels. This once would not have counted as a lot of crochet…

Describing my book group and this new craft group to a friend this morning, when we were driving along, I realise that I’ve now met two women who own and ride horses in the last couple of weeks. Maybe it’s not that interesting, but as they are from completely different groups and locations it’s tickled me.

The other day I was rather horrified that my new ball of Hayfield Spirit DK came vacuum packed flat in the post. I had noticed the generously cheap postage but didn’t realise some yarn sellers are now vacuum packing orders. I thought the wool content would be completely ruined, the fibres squashed into submission. Well, actually after springing out of the pack, the ball plumped up quite nicely and doesn’t feel any thinner at all than the previously non-vacuum packed. Have you had any yarn arrive packaged like this? Do you feel it made any difference to the quality of the wool?

This week I’m reading and also listening to Weyward by Emilia Hart and enjoying it very much.

‘Wearing together the stories of three extraordinary women across five centuries, Emilia Hart’s Weyward is an enthralling novel of female resilience and the transformative power of the natural world.’ From GoodReads.

I’m also listening to Robert Webb’s How Not to be a Boy which ties into Caitlin Moran’s What about Men? And also part of Elizabeth Day’s Friendholic, both of which I mentioned last week. Robert’s writing is excellent. I really like the way he portrays himself and his family, making conscious choices to be fair and empathic about all (barring the dull grammar school science teacher!) Robert has a great voice for narrating audio (he’s known for being an actor and comedian, part of the Mitchell and Webb duo, in case his name is unfamiliar.)

I’ve realised that recently where audiobooks are concerned I’m doing the thing that lots of crafters do, only I’m doing it with audiobooks. I’ve started many, listening to some of it, then moving on to try a next, listening to more of the first and then bouncing back to the next, and then starting another, and then…. I used to have to commit to one book using a credit from Audible. I’d listen to the book, then wait until the next month brought a new credit to spend. With the Audible plus catalogue (3 months membership for 99p offer I could not refuse the other day) and Spotify premium including 15 hours a month of audiobooks or podcasts, I am now absolutely spoilt for choice. I have given up book monogamy for hopping around like a wild thing!

Instagram seems to be full of people at the moment unravelling, or frogging, crochet and knitting like billio! (iPhone does not like this antiquated slang.) I don’t really know whether it’s a chain reaction to someone prominent doing it, or spring cleaning approaching, but my feed is full of people posting photos of unfinished items, then either filming something being unravelled, or agonising over whether they should unravel it, or carry on. They say it’s not very fun to crochet / knit and maybe they could use the yarn for something else, but they’ve got so far in the making that it seems a shame. What do we think? Can we advise? Impossible to answer! But I’ve tried. I generally take the middle line and say surely it’s got to be fun? It’s a hobby, not work. And do you want / need to use whatever it is at the end? If you don’t think you will, then unravel it by all means. But then often find myself adding a caveat: it’s such a lovely piece of work, can you add a border and turn it into a baby blanket?! Anyway, what I suppose I’m thinking as I dictate this to my iPhone is that I will stop starting anymore new audiobooks and finish a few in the next week.

Spring has suddenly sprung here in my part of England: daffodils, pink blossom, white blossom, forsythia everywhere, beautiful magnolia trees in bloom and an array of spring flowers. It suddenly arrived and gosh it’s welcome!

~~~

Linking with Kat and the gang for Unraveled Wednesday, sharing what we’re making and reading this week. What are you making and reading at the mo?

12 thoughts on “Trailed by voices

  1. finishing my latest art journal, crocheting dishcloths as I’ve just finished a Radiate shawl, chain plying my handspun and reading Charles de Lint Someplace to be Flying. Happy Equinox

    • Thank you.
      They will be at some point, but not sure quite what. They’re a little thing to make here and there. Perfect for social crafting as not too complicated! The yarn is doing all the lovely colour work itself, it’s Hayfield Spirit autumn colourway.

  2. Never come across vacuum packed yarn before. I suppose it fits through a letterbox too, and uses letter rates not parcel rates? I too would have been alarmed to see squashed wool. Looks like a nice cafe/coffee/craft group.

  3. The only people I’ve heard speak about vacuum packed yarn have been like you from the UK. Our mail is costed by weight apart from letters so it wouldn’t have been cheaper postage. I’d have had a fit as well seeing it like that as well.

    • Seems that some USA companies are doing it too. I imagine it won’t be long before some other countries follow suit.

      I would prefer it not to be vacuum packed but sometimes am not near a good wool shop, so I do order online. Hopefully Wool Warehouse won’t follow the trend.

  4. I have gotten spinning fiber vacuum packed, but never yarn! I did not note any detriment to the fiber from being so squashed, but it did shock me when I opened the package! 

    That does look like a delightful group! 

  5. I love Knit & Natter type groups, in my previous village people wanted one but nobody wanted to run it. The bookclub was already running from the village pub, so I asked if they’d host us too. Now I’ve moved to the next village but try to go most weeks. It’s a lovely group, meeting in the conservatory we’re often on our own. Sometimes we do challenges, Mar/Apr we are knitting socks as the April WI competition is knitted socks. There is plenty of crochet happening there, sometimes sewing. People bring whatever they’re working on. It’s nice if you need help with the pattern instructions.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.