Guys, I have been really negligent with this blog -- not because I don't enjoy it (I DO!) but because I am in the throes, the final, awful throes, of book completion. The book contract is signed and sent back to Cambridge U Press, and now I have to really finish it (AGGGGHHH), which means getting the last 50 pages in order, consolidating 2,000+ footnotes (I'm not kidding), and drafting a decent conclusion to replace the dribs and drabs now in the file. So. I'm SO sorry, I WILL get back to it, and not too long from now. I should have been finished last week.
In the meantime, we have the gorgeous Prism trunk show in the shop for a few more days only (until the 4th or 5th), and the final final final days of our what-fun-it-is Summer Treasure Hunt -- we need to GET RID of yarn that has been in the shop for too long. The space is full, if you can believe it, and we need to buy some new stock. So we are inviting you to SEARCH for inventory numbers between 0 and 600 (half off!) and 600 to 999 (30% off).
The inventory numbers can be found on each skein -- 10-00599, for instance. (In this case, the inventory number is 599). There are lots of these older skeins, some of them handcrafted.
Come help us out. I'd really like to get rid of some of those gorgeous hand-painted sock skeins, just as you come in the shop on the left -- maybe Naomi Frankel's students (on the 9th, there is sock class!) should snap them up. I can't justify buying more of those wonderful onesies at fiber festivals until the ones we have walk out the door.
Adios! svb
Monday, June 30, 2014
Friday, June 13, 2014
Join us at Artisan Knitworks on June 19 and 26 (Thursdays) at about 6:30 until 8:30 for the first of several crochet-alongs. The object of our attention will be Sandra's "Madrid Shawl." This is an easy garment -- yarn is a variegated wool-silk blend by Noro, though you can use any DK or sport-weight yarn. We ask only that you buy it from us. You get a pattern pamphlet too! We can adjust the width and length to suit your body size and height.
Do call the shop and reserve a spot (248-427-0804) or register on-line at www.artisanknitworks.com. If your crochet is rusty, stop by early -- we can run you through chaining and single crochet. I will teach you the double crochet if you don't know how -- and I'll help you with the little puffs along the edge as well. FUN! svb
Do call the shop and reserve a spot (248-427-0804) or register on-line at www.artisanknitworks.com. If your crochet is rusty, stop by early -- we can run you through chaining and single crochet. I will teach you the double crochet if you don't know how -- and I'll help you with the little puffs along the edge as well. FUN! svb
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Cat Puzzle
OK, so here is Sheba, otherwise known as Fat Cat. How do you suppose she managed to get between the two pillows, as if to cover herself up??? svb
Saturday, May 31, 2014
BIG SALE....It's Larry's Birthday Week!
Get into the shop quickly -- Larry's birthday is on the 6th, and for the whole week, we are having a 20%-off-everything-that's-full-price-in-the-shop sale, plus 30% off on some special items that we have marked with little signs (e.g., all sweaters in the Yarn Cellar; all vintage jewelry and buttons; all shaped felted hats and shaped felt purses; and selected cotton yarns, including some Brown Sheep mostly-cotton yarns. HURRY. There was quite a swarm in there today. svb
Thursday, May 15, 2014
Tuesday, May 13, 2014
Sadness
You know, it's a source of immense sadness to me that the very foundations of western civilization are being weakened, doubted, and in some cases ignored in the rush to maintain short-term standards of prosperity and private ease. So much could be said here. I woke up this morning to a new story about Antarctica, the all-important glaciers, the fact that the main ice mass is not only melting rapidly, but melting faster than anyone had predicted. A week or so ago, a major NON-PARTISAN report came out that made clear how much of our present weather instability has to do with climactic change -- not just in the future, but now. We have done so much damage with fossil fuels and plain greed that a large part of it is irreversible. Even if we stopped using fossil fuels tomorrow, the situation will get worse before it gets better, and never again be what it has been in the past. It's just plain too late to reverse the process.
Here is what saddens me. Bad enough that people all over the world will die as a result of partisan bickering, greed, and plain ignorance (some of it cultivated by bought-and-paid-for media). But the real issue is fact-based science. Since at least the 16th century, civilizations have risen and flourished on foundations of fact -- the search for fact, applications of the scientific method, and the growth of knowledge by means of that method. It's how we claim to know things for certain. All knowledge carries with it the possibility of degrees of error. We say that evidence preponderates -- is in one direction and not another -- and then we build on what we have learned, refine experiments, keep looking at evidence, testing our propositions, and so on. That's how things change. That's how we got the internet, satellites, increased crop yields, vaccinations, modern medicine, all of modern mathematics and physics and astronomy, all plastics, every hybridized tomato. The laptop I'm using right now. The paint on the wall -- and the fact that the paint is no longer toxic.
But now, we learn from the political right wing that all "facts" are really fictions, cooked up by liberals to win arguments. People actually stand up in public and lie about plain evidence and plain fact. They tell their constituents that it's all a liberal fantasy or maybe a liberal lie. That scientists merely "portray" things -- that's Rubio's idiotic word. That we can run a huge pipeline down the middle of the nation, smack over a major aquifer, adding yet more carbon to a saturated atmosphere, heedless of the need to put all of our resources into research and analysis so that we can SURVIVE as a race into the next century. That we can stand up in the United States Senate, as the chameleon Marco Rubio has just done, and call the whole thing a hoax. His line was: "I don't believe the science."
Now what does that mean? Is he a scientist? Does he have reasons for not "believing"? Does he have alternative explanations that are equally fact-based? Are we thrown back on theological explanations for the world of nature, as if the Age of Reason didn't happen? Do we have to put up with cholera epidemics too?
Suppose I were to say, "I don't believe that molecules are made from atoms." Suppose I said that in public. Suppose, too, that somebody said, "What do you think they're made of?" I could say nothing (Rubio's choice). I could imagine that opinion was a substitute for fact. Or I could try something like this: "In my observations, molecules were made of sand, droplets of water, and peanut butter." I then would be obliged to show evidence from experiments. If I couldn't do that, who would you believe?
We are literally thrown back into the Middle Ages. We sent people to the moon based, not on "opinion" or "belief," not even on absolutely perfect evidence, but on evidence that carried a very small possibility of error. That's what we do. That's what we always have done, and it has worked out just fine. I am typing on a computer, which was not conjured up out of someone's "belief."
And then there are the people who want us to think it's really a "natural" shift in global weather. The scientific community can show them that this is untrue. ALL of the natural cycles follow very different cycles than this one. But, again, you have to believe that learning is not some kind of plot.
I usually avoid saying this kind of thing. But it's time to call it for what it is. A handful of grossly selfish billionaires are holding the United States government hostage. They have also bought off the Congress of the United States. There is also evidence of this. Americans just stay home. We have been told by lots of people that we don't really have to pay attention, that it won't affect us in our lifetimes, that we don't REALLY have to top buying SUVs and the fuel that goes into them, that we can penalize people (as Oklahoma just did) for putting solar panels on their rooftops because the oil industry might lose some money. Why is it okay for oil companies to kill us all?
This is not hyperbole. We can doubt the interpretation of facts. But we cannot begin to doubt the merits of the scientific method, of facticity. And we cannot misunderstand how RIGHTS work in American law. In western political thought, and certainly in legal thought, people can claim rights for as long as those claims do not impinge upon other people's equally valid rights. We are now in this position. The Koch Brothers and all of the others allied with them are exercising rights (and getting conservative courts to say they have First Amendment rights, for god's sake -- a result that would make Thomas Jefferson and George Mason and James Madison spin in their graves) that will end up compromising the health and welfare of all of us, and eventually of the human race.
But why bother. People won't even vote the bastards out of office. It is more than high time for people who call themselves "leaders" to stand in the wind, to tell the truth, to tell the Koch Brothers that they should stand down. They have earned enough money. Right now, we need COURAGE and a public prepared to stand in the wind as well.
svb
Here is what saddens me. Bad enough that people all over the world will die as a result of partisan bickering, greed, and plain ignorance (some of it cultivated by bought-and-paid-for media). But the real issue is fact-based science. Since at least the 16th century, civilizations have risen and flourished on foundations of fact -- the search for fact, applications of the scientific method, and the growth of knowledge by means of that method. It's how we claim to know things for certain. All knowledge carries with it the possibility of degrees of error. We say that evidence preponderates -- is in one direction and not another -- and then we build on what we have learned, refine experiments, keep looking at evidence, testing our propositions, and so on. That's how things change. That's how we got the internet, satellites, increased crop yields, vaccinations, modern medicine, all of modern mathematics and physics and astronomy, all plastics, every hybridized tomato. The laptop I'm using right now. The paint on the wall -- and the fact that the paint is no longer toxic.
But now, we learn from the political right wing that all "facts" are really fictions, cooked up by liberals to win arguments. People actually stand up in public and lie about plain evidence and plain fact. They tell their constituents that it's all a liberal fantasy or maybe a liberal lie. That scientists merely "portray" things -- that's Rubio's idiotic word. That we can run a huge pipeline down the middle of the nation, smack over a major aquifer, adding yet more carbon to a saturated atmosphere, heedless of the need to put all of our resources into research and analysis so that we can SURVIVE as a race into the next century. That we can stand up in the United States Senate, as the chameleon Marco Rubio has just done, and call the whole thing a hoax. His line was: "I don't believe the science."
Now what does that mean? Is he a scientist? Does he have reasons for not "believing"? Does he have alternative explanations that are equally fact-based? Are we thrown back on theological explanations for the world of nature, as if the Age of Reason didn't happen? Do we have to put up with cholera epidemics too?
Suppose I were to say, "I don't believe that molecules are made from atoms." Suppose I said that in public. Suppose, too, that somebody said, "What do you think they're made of?" I could say nothing (Rubio's choice). I could imagine that opinion was a substitute for fact. Or I could try something like this: "In my observations, molecules were made of sand, droplets of water, and peanut butter." I then would be obliged to show evidence from experiments. If I couldn't do that, who would you believe?
We are literally thrown back into the Middle Ages. We sent people to the moon based, not on "opinion" or "belief," not even on absolutely perfect evidence, but on evidence that carried a very small possibility of error. That's what we do. That's what we always have done, and it has worked out just fine. I am typing on a computer, which was not conjured up out of someone's "belief."
And then there are the people who want us to think it's really a "natural" shift in global weather. The scientific community can show them that this is untrue. ALL of the natural cycles follow very different cycles than this one. But, again, you have to believe that learning is not some kind of plot.
I usually avoid saying this kind of thing. But it's time to call it for what it is. A handful of grossly selfish billionaires are holding the United States government hostage. They have also bought off the Congress of the United States. There is also evidence of this. Americans just stay home. We have been told by lots of people that we don't really have to pay attention, that it won't affect us in our lifetimes, that we don't REALLY have to top buying SUVs and the fuel that goes into them, that we can penalize people (as Oklahoma just did) for putting solar panels on their rooftops because the oil industry might lose some money. Why is it okay for oil companies to kill us all?
This is not hyperbole. We can doubt the interpretation of facts. But we cannot begin to doubt the merits of the scientific method, of facticity. And we cannot misunderstand how RIGHTS work in American law. In western political thought, and certainly in legal thought, people can claim rights for as long as those claims do not impinge upon other people's equally valid rights. We are now in this position. The Koch Brothers and all of the others allied with them are exercising rights (and getting conservative courts to say they have First Amendment rights, for god's sake -- a result that would make Thomas Jefferson and George Mason and James Madison spin in their graves) that will end up compromising the health and welfare of all of us, and eventually of the human race.
But why bother. People won't even vote the bastards out of office. It is more than high time for people who call themselves "leaders" to stand in the wind, to tell the truth, to tell the Koch Brothers that they should stand down. They have earned enough money. Right now, we need COURAGE and a public prepared to stand in the wind as well.
svb
Friday, May 9, 2014
Mom's Day!!!!!!!!!
Hey, here's an idea. If you have a mom who knits or crochets or dyes or spins, or might want to learn how to do any of these things, why not march into your favorite local yarn shop and buy a nice gift certificate for Mother's Day? (Indeed, if you have a creative dad, do the same thing for Father's Day). You'll have a very happy mom (or dad). And you will help your local yarn shops stay in the business of selling all of the things you need to continue your favorite craft. Summer is a tough time for small businesses that deal in wool -- it's true every year. There is almost always a big, almost audible crash by May 1. So go to your fave and buy a certificate for you-know-who!!!!!!!!!!!!! You can even buy a certificate for classes at most shops, including at Artisan Knitworks. Happy rainy days -- let's hope that someday soon, we will have two days in a row that are not wet or cold!!!!! svb
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