Fiber Snob.

As I have mentioned previously, I make things. I make photographs, books, crafty things. I also make works with fiber–I knit and crochet. By no means am I an expert. Most of my works are constructed out of plain, basic stitched rectangles and tubes usually containing cheap acrylic yarns, and as fast as possible. As I learned these skills as a child, when extra change for yarn was scarce and patience even scarcer, a trip to Michaels with ten precious dollars meant several skeins and numerous possibilities. It’s a mindset that I held to until a few years ago, during a visit to my parents’ over holiday break.

At Christmas, my mom always built up many little gifts throughout the year when there were sales; so cute little lotions, candies, gloves, and some other piece of clothing were somewhat standard, all wrapped separately of course, as to have the maximum excitement of opening packages. Then we might have one special gift that stood out, that we had been waiting for. Dad was opposite. He braved the seas of frantic shoppers the week (or day) before, wildly searching for anything the receiver may appreciate.

This year was the same, but with every little thing I opened came a skein of yarn. Not any kind of thing you could find at the big box craft stores; this was Peruvian yarn made from Alpaca wool that Dad brought home from his most recent trip to Peru. See he works for a gold mining company that has mines all over the world…but more on that another time.

Anyways, I would open a box with a bunch of tissue paper and stuffed in the bottom was a skein. Later I would open a giftbag with a pile of candy…and below a layer of skeins. As you may have guessed, more easily than I did at the time, the final gift was in another room, a box filled with a couple dozen more skeins. That’s right. I laid them all on my bed and there were more than 60 skeins of this lovely, soft, precious material.

 

[Puchka pile, safe from Gus.]

 

 

 

Needless to say, I went nuts.

It took years to carve away at this stash, and even then there were so many I could not take back to school with me, so Mom dropped a couple of bags off to the knitting ladies at church. Even now, there are a few last skeins that I had trouble allowing myself to use, because they were part of this happy occasion. To use them, there had to be a special project, where they would be appreciated and valued. This and a flash of inspiration on Pinterest I am working on something that will do these things. But I needed more yarn that had the same value, lush color and softness.

 

 

 

 

 

One of the great things about yarn shops is that they have handcrafted products. This skein is from a fair trade company that gives economic and social opportunities to local artisans. And the yarn is so soft, extra fine marino wool, kettle dyed so the color shifts across rows, and of course I have a soft spot for this rich teal hue. I could not let myself pass it up.

Try not to misunderstand me, I do love a good sale and some projects work just fine with acrylic yarns. But if I will be spending many hours working with a material and I intend for the final product to be something precious, big box store brands just don’t cut it anymore.

New Bun.

For quite some time I have know that our house rabbit, Tootsie, needed a friend. Many of her days are spent mostly alone, which can cause her time and again to be destructive and moody. She is often bored. She rarely plays, even with most of the house under her domain. So, I thought, another rabbit to socialize with might make her happy.

Scouring craigslist and searching shelter listings every day, we came up empty. Then, during a vet visit, we were connected with a little bun whose parents were rescued strays. Instead of paying up to $65 from a breeder for a bunny eight weeks or more, we adopted this little four-week-old fella for free.

 

 

 

Now bonding Tootsie and–the one for whom we have yet to find the perfect name–may take weeks. So far Tootsie has been territorial and somewhat paranoid, but I have a feeling she will warm up to him in time.

Piestewa Peak: 6.16.13

Only went a mile and a half because it was too hot and I was running low on water, at 8 am. Took me twenty minutes to find a parking spot because there was such a crowd at the trailhead. I finally caught someone leaving and snagged a spot, filled up on water and granola bars before venturing out. Luckily the rest of the morning went quite smoothly.

(detail)

Locust Landing

This is by far the largest insect I have seen in my small back yard, measuring at least 3 inches in length. I found him while pruning one of my plants, hiding away from the Arizona sun, and flew to the perfect spot in the tree for photographing–and he even waited for me to run inside to grab my camera. However, he became too threatened by my invasive lens and flew at me. I may have squealed and run away.

Instagrammer

Hey, if you want to see tons of pictures from the past year, follow me on Instagram! Though many photographers are disgusted by low quality cell phone pictures, I actually find them to be incredibly useful and the aesthetic can be surprisingly attractive. I have a phone with a decent camera (chosen entirely for it’s imaging capabilities) and love to document the little oddities throughout my day, things I see, things I make.

Check out my recent hiking adventure in Phoenix @lemonslice23

Papago Park Hike

For the Love of Books

The other day I nearly passed by a Half Priced Books store. Nearly. For my great delight in books it has been far too long since I have properly visited a bookstore. Spent almost an hour in the $3 or less section alone, and I scoured it thoroughly for keepers. Here’s to spending ten dollars on three gems!

Little People in the City, Slinkachu

Queens, Michael Cunningham & George Alexander

Between Nature and Culture, Joe Deal

Stalker

I woke up early this morning, intending to go out with my camera to some place I had yet to explore in this city. As I packed up my equipment, phone and keys, I realized someone had followed me downstairs. What an adorable distraction! Unexpectedly, I spent an hour laying on the floor, photographing my lil friend. Looks like I will have to wander about some other day.

bun1