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more socks

May 19th, 2007 — 9:27pm

“Child’s First Sock in Shell Pattern” from Knitting Vintage Socks, by Nancy Bush. Jawoll sock yarn, skinny little needles (maybe 1.25mm?), 64st around, my size. I’m going to enter these in the Fair this summer. I finished the knitting months ago and hid them away in my drawer so they’d still be in good condition for the Fair. Finally blocked them yesterday :) When the Fair is over (July 5) I’ll finally get to wear them.

socks

socks

5 comments » | Blog, Handmade

reader.google.com

May 19th, 2007 — 10:28am

Yes, I know google is taking over the world, but their stuff is just so nice and easy to use… I’ve tried many an rss reader and always give up pretty quickly. But reader.google.com just WORKS.

Also, I’ve added Favorite Socks: 25 Timeless Designs from Interweave to my wishlist, in case anyone wants to know :)

4 comments » | Blog, Books, Tech

Tooth prize

May 18th, 2007 — 8:26pm

Henry had a dental check-up/cleaning today — no cavities! So we made a little trip to the bookstore for a treat, and I bought him the Dragonriders of Pern trilogy, all in one volume.

Then we came home, worked on subtracting decimals for a while, did chores, and then played WoW for a while. And then I drove him to his dad’s house in San Diego — 2.5 hour round trip, bleah.

Tonight Dan and I watched the new Northanger Abbey, which was just delightful. Great cast, great screenplay, great costuming. I wish it had been longer, though :) I can hardly wait until it’s released on DVD! I hope they have some interviews with the cast and everything.

And then we watched Quiz Show, another great movie!

2 comments » | Blog

Happy Birthday!

May 16th, 2007 — 8:11pm

Happy Birthday, dear Dan :)

I made a peanut-butter/chocolate pie for The Birthday Treat — peanut-butter/cream-cheese on the bottom, chocolate pudding on the top. It’s pretty good, though I’m not a pudding fan. I think it could be improved by substituting some other form of chocolate for the top layer, preferably DARK. Oooo… maybe I could pour a layer of melted dark chocolate into the crust, then put the pb/cc layer on top of that, the swirl come chocolate syrup on top…

Also made chicken parm this morning, so all I had to do was heat it up and make pasta after karate. This afternoon, H and I quested in the Un’Goro crater and had a lot of fun — it’s a great zone, tons of fun quests in a not-too-huge area.

Comment » | Blog

three more audio books

May 15th, 2007 — 8:41pm

Busy morning — karate, then many many errands (groceries, shipping packages, etc). Henry and I got home around noon, did the morning chores, and then played WoW together for a couple of hours. He helped me with the Heart of Mok quest and we did Mai’Zoth together, then took a break so he could do some math and I could do some librivox work. Cataloged three new audio books today:

Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson, selected and read by Becky

The Advance of Science in the Last Half-Century, by T.H. Huxley, a solo by Jo

The Handy Cyclopedia of Things Worth Knowing, by Joseph Trienens
, a delightfully dated collaborative work read by many fine readers

That makes 21 new works so far in May! Haven’t done any recording myself in the last few days but I’ill probably manage to get some recording done tomorrow or Thursday. More than halfway through with A Room with a View, and only, I think, 12 more of the ghastly Letters :)

6 comments » | Audiobooks, Blog

North & South

May 13th, 2007 — 5:52pm

We recently began a collaborative recording of Elizabeth Gaskell’s North & South. I recorded the first chapter, went looking to see if there was a good movie version of the book, and discovered that the BBC did a four-part miniseries in 2004. Dan and I just finished watching it. It was truly excellent. As in Wives & Daughters, Gaskell creates three-dimensional, believable characters — not a villain or one-dimensional hero to be found, just people, ordinary people. The screen play is excellent, the costuming beautiful, every detail accurate and vivid. Superb acting from the entire cast. Bravo, BBC!

If you’re a fan of the BBC’s Pride and Prejudice or Wives & Daughters, you’ll love this one. Here’s a link to the DVDs on Amazon:
North & South

Find the reviews and scroll down to the one titled “Top Twelve Reasons N&S Is a Ten”. It’s all true.

Comment » | Blog

Catch-up

May 9th, 2007 — 11:53pm

Been feeling horrible the last few days, so haven’t done much of interest. Last weekend we built a little recording booth in the bedroom, on this funky little built-in shelf. I never record in the bedroom because of the server noise, but I put padding all around the walls of the little shelf thing and use my 10-band eq to get rid of the low-frequency server rumble, and it sounds really good. When I feel better I’ll be able to get lots of recording done.

Today finally felt well enough to DO something, so I took H to the aerospace museum and we had a great time. Exhausting but worth it, to look at planes and space stuff with Henry. I really love that museum.

Watched House tonight — Wilson on speed was MOST entertaining.

2 comments » | Blog

Brides and Tudors

May 4th, 2007 — 6:31pm

I recorded two more of the horrid Letters of Two Brides today – Louise’s letters 21 and 22. I hate her so. She’s a repulsive twit. I seriously considered begging some LibriVox Balzac fan to take over Louise’s letters for me, even if it meant discarding all my recordings… but then I counted up the remaining letters and, since I did the last few already (hoping Louise would come to a bad end and she did!) there are only 14 more that I’ll have to read. I guess I can put up with Louise 14 more times.

After I was done with Horrid Louise, I rewarded myself with Chapter 9 of A Room with a View :)

There’s a nice beef stew on the stove with a rosemary ciabatta to go with it, and grapes and cheese for after — smoked jack and a double-cream gouda I found at Trader Joe’s today. Dan and I are both very tired so we’re going to watch Bad TV tonight and laze around. We’ve got last night’s Survivor, and maybe a new Office in the tivo, and two more episodes of The Tudors to go through. We started The Tudors last night and, well, frankly, it’s pretty bad. Tacky. Dan says it’s exactly what you’d expect of Showtime. But, y’know, once you get hooked in a soap opera miniseries you might as well keep going… There are a lot of cringeworthy historical inaccuracies, but then some fun and relatively accurate bits, like the dancing. They must have hired a good dancing coach — looks like proper early English Renaissance dancing to my eye. And Tomas Tallis is in it. Not sure why they gave him a rats-nest hair-don’t (maybe to make him look like a musician??) and of course he conducts by waving his hands around vaguely and making soulful faces, but at least some of the time they use actual period music for the soundtrack and show the musicians playing on proper period instruments. I nearly turned the show off when the Renn Faire groupies appeared, but I gritted my teeth and got over it.

It’s nice to see Henry and his court and family portrayed as real humans. The Henry actor (can’t think of the name, but he played the soccer coach in Bend it like Beckham) is pretty good, though once in a while he reminds us of Ben Stiller (How dare you make me bleed my own blood!). Catharine of Aragon is quite good, as is Anne Boleyn.

There are far too many obnoxious sex scenes. Don’t let your kids watch. Bleah.

2 comments » | Blog

Bill and Jon

May 4th, 2007 — 3:17pm

Bill Moyers and Jon Stewart have a fascinating chat:
Part 1
Part 2

Thanks, Hugh!

Comment » | Blog

A Can of Worms

May 3rd, 2007 — 9:07am

Can of Worms

Found this on Wired via Boingboing. Hilarious.

3 comments » | Blog, Tech

knitted things

May 2nd, 2007 — 9:52am

Two pairs of socks and an almost done Tubey!

Henry’s bamboo socks:
henrysocks
Yarn: Regia 45% bamboo, 40% wool, 15% nylon
Needles: 2.0mm brittany birch
Worked on 56 st in k4,p4 ribbing
Toe-up, starting with Judy’s Cast-on
Henry LOVES his bamboo socks. They’re light and comfy, and he can tell everyone that his socks are made of bamboo. I would choose this yarn again in an instant if anyone around here carried it!

My Marra socks:
karasocks
Marra 70% merino 30% baby alpaca — very felty, wash by hand only!
Needles: 2.75mm brittany birch
Worked on 36 stitches (really — I have very thin feet and I hate baggy socks)
Toe-up, starting with Judy’s Cast-on. Near the top of the leg I increased 4 stitches evenly around one round. I like this method of leg increasing (rather than doing increases up the back of the leg over several rounds). Also used a nice jogless join up the back of the leg.

Tubey progress:
tubey
Nearly done! Just need to decide on sleeve length and stripes (or not).

3 comments » | Blog, Handmade

Lileks

May 1st, 2007 — 8:08pm

I just wrote an email to James Lileks. I’m reading Something from the Oven, by Laura Shapiro, and it seems like a book he’d enjoy — so I wrote and recommended it to him! It feels like I wrote to, um, Jimmy Stewart or someone equally famous and unreachable. Well, Jimmy Stewart is dead, so maybe that’s not a good comparison… Anway, if Lileks writes back I will print out his email and frame it :)

I don’t think I ever mentioned my Lileks dream. One night I dreamed that Lileks and I were watching our kids play in the park and discussing housework. How fascinating is that? Well, at least if he reads this he’ll know I’m not the stalker type. Heheh.

1 comment » | Blog

Men Like Meat

April 30th, 2007 — 9:04pm

Yesterday I recorded chapter 26 of Etiquette AND chapter 3 of More William. Today I edited/proofed/uploaded those chapters and also did some cataloging. We can now offer you free audio books of Gulliver’s Travels and Stalky & Co. :) Enjoy!

Also fixed Daneesha’s 8th grade graduation dress in the morning, taught two piano students, finished my green and orange socks (photos soon) and made scalloped potatoes for dinner, plus burgers for the guys. Men Like Meat.

4 comments » | Blog

Saturday

April 28th, 2007 — 9:39pm

I slept well last night! Had enough energy to bake banana bread and vacuum and mop the upstairs part of the house. And I did a little cataloging job for Cori (The Philosophy of Style by Herbert Spencer) Also played WoW with Henry, also made chicken parm for dinner — a Dan and Henry favorite. Dan brought me a wireless mouse which is very convenient for gaming on my macbook.

Oh, forgot to say – yesterday I recorded/edited/proofed all the rest of chapter 27 of Etiquette, which was so long we divided it into 5 sections. Go team kayray!

Reading Book Two of The Fellowship to Henry for bedtime, so he’ll have both halves in mp3. I read the entire book to him on tape several years ago, and then, when the tapes started to go bad, read the first half again into my computer, but then we went on to other things and never finished the second round.

5 comments » | Blog

QUIET!

April 27th, 2007 — 10:59am

Today, Friday, I have big plans to get lots and lots of recording done. Mom’s not home, Henry’s going to Legoland with friends, Dan’s at work.

So this morning, first thing, a woodchipper started up down the street. GAH. But it’s 11 now and they’re stopped for a while, so I think they might be done for the day. Henry’s friends just came to pick him up. I moved the birds outside. Unplugged the turtle tank filter. Turned off my ringer. Waited for the recycling truck to pass. The garbage truck hasn’t come yet, so I’ll just have to pause for a few minutes when it arrives in our neighborhood.

Ok, time for Etiquette, chapter 27, part 2!

1 comment » | Blog

Henry blogged!

April 26th, 2007 — 8:18pm

Henry made a blog post, YAY!
http://spaceman3000.blogspot.com/2007/04/my-fable.html

Comment » | Blog, Homeschooling

Wordplay

April 24th, 2007 — 11:41pm

On Christine’s recommendation, we watched Wordplay, a documentary about the American Crossword Puzzle Tournament. It was wonderful. Will Shortz, editor of the NY Times Crossword and originator of the Tournament, was featured quite a lot, which was a treat for me — I know his name and voice very well, having been a GAMES magazine subscriber while he was editor and being an NPR Weekend Edition Sunday Puzzle fan. I knew Trip Payne’s name too — he’s contributed many a puzzle to the GAMES “Pencilwise” section. I wished the nice pessimistic grey-haired man, Al, had won the tournament.

Watching this movie got us all interested in crosswords. Dan and I worked one in my current issue of GAMES the other night and had the best time together. Today I had to go to the Escondido Barnes and Noble for a new Moleskine for Dan, and browsed through the crossword section, looking for a good book. I wanted NY Times puzzles, of course! Dan’s new at crosswords and I could use a refresher so I didn’t want to start with the Sunday puzzles, but a whole book of Mondays would probably get dull. I found the perfect book:

The New York Times Little Black (and White) Book of Crosswords, edited by Will Shortz

It’s a smallish (7″x6″) spiral-bound hardcover with puzzles ranging from Monday to Saturday, and rated 1-6 “top hats” so it’s easy to pick the proper difficulty. The paper is not the usual puzzle book newsprint, but high-quality, smooth and white. Dan and I worked the first Monday puzzle together tonight and had a ball :) It was hard to stop at just one!

2 comments » | Blog

Bach

April 22nd, 2007 — 9:29pm

If there’s a piece of music more perfect than the third movement of J.S. Bach’s Italian Concerto, I’d like to know what it is.

19 comments » | Blog

Dorothy Sayers

April 22nd, 2007 — 8:41pm

Horribly tired. Going to bed with Busman’s Honeymoon. Finished Gaudy Night a couple of days ago. It is impossible to read Gaudy Night without immediately reading Busman’s Honeymoon.

cool thing:
http://twittervision.com/
What will happen as twitter becomes more and more popular? Better be able to read fast.

Comment » | Blog, Books, Tech

Jon Udell and Hugh discuss LibriVox

April 20th, 2007 — 9:37pm

Jon Udell recently interviewed our own Hugh McGuire for the IT Conversations podcast. We’ve been interviewed quite a lot, but this I believe that this is one of the best interviews ever. I certainly enjoyed listening. Hugh and Jon discuss many interesting aspects of LibriVox that are not apparent to the average volunteer or listener. The interview is here:

Jon Udell Interviews Hugh McGuire

You listen now! (If it wants you to register, tell it “later”)

3 comments » | Blog, Tech

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