Knitting, flowers, spiders

I started working on Isabella (a new knitty pattern). The major draw was all of that stockinette, plus I have hopes (we’ll see…) that it will be a perfect amount of yarn for the leaf green Jaeger Siena 4-ply that I bought on sale in New Hampshire last year. In any case, given the things to think about , and the buses (I’ve gotten back on the public transportation bandwagon), and the impending planes for the wedding and honeymoon, stockinette seems perfect. 🙂

Despite many hours and many rows, at a gauge of 7 st/inch it doesn’t really knit up all that quickly, so pictures so far are boring. The best I can do is show you it with the over-bright pansies, geraniums, and mystery pink flowers. 🙂

The interesting part of that picture though, is the little dude that you can’t see without the zoom. I discovered him a week ago when I was watering the planter and inadvertantly watered him. He was not pleased.

The best I can tell is that he’s one of the 3000 species of the family Thomisidae. The common names are Flower Spiders or Crab Spiders. Both are apt, but the second one especially rings true — when I first saw him, especially moving, he looks like something we’d discover in our tank at one in the morning.

The lavendar spots are especially cool. While I am *not* a spider fan, and he’s big, he genuinely acts more scared of me than I am of him. He’s always on or under the same bloom, and I’m getting used to him.

A wedding Present!

I’ve been spending a decent percentage of the last few weeks at my eye doctor. For the first time in many years, it’s looking like my prescription is actually *improving*! Woah! Sweet. This means that, combined with all of the next lenses that have come on the market in the last year, there are all sorts of new combinations for me to try. My doctor’s great, and he’s far less willing to throw in the towel than I am. (I’d love to be able to look up from my work at a colleague and give them a “yes?” look, instead of the stare of death. But, I work in front of a computer all day, in an air conditioned environment due to all the computers, and so I can’t wear contacts at work, so I can’t really see the people who enter my office. I wear glasses in the hall, and flip them up in front of the computer. I don’t expect this to change.)
(I’d also love to wear contacts for our whole wedding — a major increase from the 2-4 hours that have been comfortable before.)
Anyway, I more or less have a good contact to order at this point, but he wanted to try me for one more set (two weeks). As he usually does, he threw in an extra pair of samples. Since that would take me to exactly the middle of my wedding/honeymoon trip, I asked if I could buy two extra sets. It’s a small office, and when he heard that it was my wedding and honeymoon (apparently, he’s an avid Hawaii snorkeler), everyone pitched in. They gave me extra contacts, more solution, and even single-use contacts to use while I went snorkeling! Woah. Good fun. Thanks, Redmond Eye Clinic!

(For those with contacts, you will recognize the generosity. Woah!)

Everyone has been very interested in the wedding, but I think that this was my first “It’s a bride!!!” experience. 🙂 Mad cool. I left grinning.

Composition with Bridal Shoes

I finally found shoes to go with my dress! This is a huge relief. I’ve been looking with increasing urgency for the last three months.

I finally went back to DSW and found

I’ve gotten positive marks from both mothers and one bridesmaid. Even though the second bridesmaid hasn’t responded yet, I’m feeling ready to cross one more thing off the list. Yay! On to get the dress bustled. 🙂

PS. I also found a pair of backup shoes. They’re silver and sort of clash (not that anyone would notice under that much netting…), but more importantly just didn’t fit as well. I want something that I can stand in for eight hours.

*But* they’re pretty with black capris. 🙂 (Admire, if you will, the mass of crinoline behind my legs in that photo…) And better yet, they were $25 at the Nordstrom rack. Between the fun mirror picture and my deep desire not to return to that store, looks like a bargain!

Knitting progress

Two plane flights, and I have two Fetchings just in need of thumbs and a side seam!

Don’t they look festive with the sunflowers? After a weekend of clouds, the sun finally broke through this morning. Pretty!

P.S. No, your RSS feed didn’t break. I just had a backup of posts awaiting pictures, and so I figured better to load them all at once than let April 2007 fade into oblivion. 🙂 Sorry for the delay!

Once in Vegas is probably enough

I had a short, short workday on Monday, before leaving for the airport for a conference.

It was my first time in Vegas. I love how it looks like if you hopped off the plane and rolled your bag to the edge of the runway, you’d be at the casinos. I was also very impressed at the mountains — for some reason, I thought that Las Vegas was surrounded by flat desert. The major rocks pushing up everywhere as the plane descended were quite impressive, especially as they were so unexpected. There were huge red areas — some mineral? Quite pretty. (You can see the edge of the city faintly in the background before the next series of mountains.)

As we flew in closer, I found the view shockingly green. All of the palms, lawns and swimming pools were so bizarre given the brown, tan, and red we’d been flying over.

The conference was at the Venetian, and the rooms were enormous. Here’s Kris (Kevin’s roommate from intern days. So fun that he was at the conference, too!) frolicking in my bathroom.

I was up on the 19th floor, and the view was lovely: the mountains, the Wynn, and the pools.

The windows were glazed, and so it actually looked kind of overcast all of the time. It wasn’t until you looked down and saw the dark shadow of the building that you could tell how sunny it was. I managed to sneak a few hours by the pool, which barely made a dent. After two and a half years of Seattle, my body doesn’t remember how to tan. Hopefully it remembers before Hawaii.

On the whole, I thought it was a very weird, uncomfortable week. The hotel was a maze — they really don’t want you to find your way outside. I thought the casino was disturbing (my first time in one). Given how much air conditioning, and pageantry, and faux-gold finishing, and flowing water, and electricity is used, it’s hard to imagine someone looking around and thinking that they feel lucky. So much money has to be lost for it all to be profitable. Many, many people worked on convincing me to gamble (it’s odd how excited other people get about introducing you to their favourite game), but setting aside money to lose just didn’t seem compelling. The restaurants were delicious, but ridiculously expensive. The gender thing is bizarre. The conference had maybe 5% female attendees (though I suspect I’m being very generous), and most of the women at the hotel ranged from arm candy to the drink and cigarette ladies in their costumes on the casino floor. I felt totally out of my element.

I left at sunset, though, and got some spectacular views of the mountains. (None of the pictures came out — the glass just reflected all of the slot machines next to the gate. I would have included them for artistry’s sake, but they were too blurry. You’ll just have to imagine.)