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Thursday, January 19, 2012

Teacher-in-training

Happy new year, friends!

So much goes on in everyone's lives, it's always amazing to me. Since the new year, I've lost my full-time job, finished an album, and signed up to become a certified knitting teacher, for which I'll be traveling to the Fashion Institute in NYC at the end of February. A lot for just under three weeks, eh? Even though I'm sad that the place I work for is going out of business tomorrow, it's a kind of bittersweet feeling that one thing has ended to make way for something new and exciting.

Anyway, I'm determined to keep this little chronicle going. Got lots of projects on the needles, and as soon as I find my camera, it'll be all show and tell. One barrier to my blogging fun has been that my trusty little mac is in pieces on my husband's work bench, and with it, my ability to upload photos from my phone via Bluetooth. Can I do the same with a PC? No idea. Technology is my friend, but I'm lazy about getting in touch. I'm the bad friend to technology.

Since I have nothing current photographed, I want to share with you this really special thing. My father's mother, Georgia, was a knitter. She knit a sweater for my dad, which I promptly stole when I was old enough to wear it. I've had this sweater now for a good 18 years, if not longer, and I still wear it, though I've worn a hole in the elbow. I have always wanted to re-create it, not only because it's falling apart and also too big on me, but because I love the cable pattern and thought it would be fun to do myself. I never had the time/skills to figure it out until I got serious with knitting a few years ago, and even then, other projects have always been more pressing. I wished I just had the pattern, so that I could use the pattern my grandmother used. I imagined it had her handwriting in it (she died in 1996). None of my aunts or my dad seemed to know where the pattern was. I went to my aunt's house when my mother's mother passed away in late 2010, and she let me paw through all of her old patterns. And lookie what we found:
Hurray! And yes, it does have her handwriting in it. I'm so grateful that my aunt let me have this.

Hey for those folks in the Portland area...it's free to go into the Portland Museum of Art on Fridays after 5pm. Perhaps you already knew that. Well this Friday as in tomorrow, if you go into the Museum between 5 and 7, you will see local artists at work all over the place, as if they are working in their studios. Go into the Maine Contemporary artists' room on the 3rd floor, and you'll hear beautiful music from Plains and Hersey State, for free, surrounded by gorgeous art. Holy cow. For a list of participating artists, go here.

AND...Drab Pony strikes again, this Sunday at the Oak and Ax in Biddeford.
http://somewheretwoanimalsarehiding.blogspot.com/

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Has it really been that long?

Three months have past since my last post! Feels like I've been busier than ever before in my life, but I'm sure that is not quite true. Before I really lay into what all has happened in the last few months (will have to wait for another day, I'm afraid), I wanted to post this lovely post card for an event I'm helping with this weekend:
If you can, check out the Designing Women website, which provides a list of the vendors. It's such a great idea, to have a group of artists and crafters put on shows and invite a non-profit they care about to come and raise awareness and funds. Women, Work, and Community is an organization that helps folks with new businesses, public speaking, financial awareness, and exploring career options, free of charge. This Saturday you'll find me in the kitchen serving up goodies donated by individuals and businesses around Maine.

Well that's my spiel for today. Coming up next...home decor disguised as de-stashing...
Plus, check out the calendar page. A few sweet shows coming up.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Weekend Update

Updated to add: Just added a new show to the calendar page, where Jeremy and I and many sweet friends will be backing up our friend Emily Thomas at the Oak and the Ax this coming Thursday.

Who here has been to the Frontier Cafe in Brunswick? Such a gorgeous spot, right on the water, with huge windows, and a sweet little menu. We (Plains) played an early show with Arborea, in a little theater with long tables off of the main room, to a wonderful crowd. I get chills whenever I see Arborea. They are about to go on tour for three months, all they way across the country, so please, if they come through your area, GO SEE THEM. They are enchanting folks. Such a great evening. If you get the chance to see a movie or some live music, or just want to go and have a meal, GO. Brunswick also has a pretty great downtown, which I had never noticed before--the only place I've really been to in Brunswick is the massive flea market in the same mill building as the Frontier. Check this place out! I can't wait to spend some more time up there.

On Friday, Jeremy played (and was joined by our friend and Plains band mate Pat Corrigan) a solo show as Drab Pony. The evening also featured wonderful sets by Manners, Aleric Nez, and Nuda Veritas (all the way from Burlington, VT). The set that Jeremy and Pat played was largely improvised, and instrumentation included drums, a grand piano, and a metal detector, on top of Jeremy's normal set-up of various loop pedals, SK-1 Casio keyboard, and guitar. He inserted a small mic into the piano and was able to loop it, which sounded incredible. In a particularly intense moment, Jeremy actually struck the keys with various body parts, such as a knee or his rear end. We in the audience lovingly referred to this maneuver as "Butt Piano". Drab Pony was called back twice for encores, and we are all hoping that they play together more often.
Pat waves the metal detector over various objects to make a lovely electronic pulse.
If you look closely, you can see the microphone coming out of the piano.
Rebecca setting up
Nuda Veritas, otherwise known as Rebecca Kopycinski, is touring on a new album. Go here to read an interview with her before the show. She used pre-recorded and live loops to create rhythms and gorgeous layered harmonies, just with her voice. Her instrumentation included a small harp, guitar, and a keyboard.
One of my favorite graphics at the Apohadion. Drawing by Pat Corrigan. (Sorry it was dark in there!)

In other news, I present to you...Bayarri:


The seaming of the sleeves went better than I expected, as it was my first time seaming the sleeve first, then sewing the sleeve into the body of the sweater. As time goes on (this is the third sweater for me this year, which is the most I've ever made for myself, ever, after deciding I needed to spice up my wardrobe), I've become more and more intrigued and delighted in the process of finishing a sweater, and not just loving the knitting part and dreading the making up part. Sample knitting and working through the Master Hand Knitting course (more about that later) has really ramped up the quality of my knitting, though I've now been a knitter for 15 years. It's a slow and amazing journey. Sometimes I wish I had a machine.

Anyway, I seem to get an awful lot done when I have two days off in a row. Yesterday was one of the laziest days of the whole summer, where I spent many hours watching movies and knitting up swatches of one of the new yarns that have yet to be released by Knit One, Crochet Too. Well I guess that was pretty productive. Perhaps a crafter who can do things while watching Netflix can never be unproductive. (Unless wine is included in the mix, in which case that is possible, for sure.)

Monday, August 8, 2011

'Tis the week of shows.

Well last night we played what we believe to be our last South China show until we can write and release something new. It was a beautiful show, and if Cross Record is coming your way, please check them out. Tonight they play at the Whitehaus in Jamaica Plain, then it's off to Cake Shop in Manhattan. Aleric Nez nailed an interpretation of "Tell Ol' Bill", one of my favorite old time-y songs. The things that man does with his voice are a marvel. Every few months you can catch him at Blue on Congress St. in Portland, backed by a small and mighty string section and other special guests.

So the week is young, and the coming days are filled with more opportunities for us to play for folks:

This Thursday, we'll be playing a Plains show up in Brunswick at the Frontier Cafe, sharing the bill with our friends Arborea oh my wow is that going to be a gorgeous show. If you've not hear Arborea, think traditional English folks songs and drones that are at once soothing and intense. Go here to listen to them and think of how happy you'll be when you're sitting right in front of them while they make this music. And? They live in our great state, right up the road in Lewiston. If you buy tickets for this show ahead of time, you can save two dollars.

On Friday, Jeremy will be playing in Portland as Drab Pony, hosting a show with our friend Rebecca of Nuda Veritas all the way from Burlington, VT. Experimental loops aplenty, with very different results. Rebecca can sound like a church choir all by her lonesome, and Jeremy can sound like an encroaching hurricane, and both also create achingly beautiful melodies.

The details of these two shows can be found on my calendar page...

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Still life with concert

Blocked sleeves before they were seamed, plus unblocked body.
Body, spritzed into submission.





 So close to being able to wear this...at one point I actually ripped back about 15 inches due to a tension issue. It was a sad moment that I'm trying to block out. (Oh, the puns, the puns!)

This morning, after being released early from a slow day at work, I was able to participate in brunch at the Oak and Ax. Jeremy and I will be back there tonight as South China, sharing a bill with Aleric Nez and Cross Record (from Chicago). Here's a link to the event on Facebook.

The details:
The Oak and the Ax
140 Main St, Back Alley (park on Main St. and follow the signs)
Doors at 8pm, music shortly thereafter.

We've been working on new arrangements of older songs, and realized recently that this will be our last show for an extended period of time, as we turn our focus to other projects. Some of them are South China related but won't be ready for quite a while, and others are solo projects and collaborations and as soon as I can let the cats out of the bag, I will.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Dear blog. (An apology.)

Dear blog,

I'm sorry I abandoned you for so long. I kept thinking about posting, but my life has been moving at a pace that I haven't really been able to keep up with. My excuses for not writing since May are many, and perhaps you would deem them meager, but hear me out:

1. In early June, I changed jobs, and am now doing prep work in one very tiny kitchen in Willard Square, and it is a fountain of delicious marvels and happy folk. I work there full-time.

2. In mid-June, Jeremy and I packed up our belongings and moved them into an 1880s farm house in Biddeford, for a super sweet house and pet sitting gig. Our friends went on a long road trip across the country, and if you are interested in reading about it, go here.

3. In late June, before moving into said super-sweet house, we went on a little tour with some friends.

4. In early July, I began a freelance knitting pattern editing gig.

5. In mid-July, we celebrated both Jeremy's birthday and the wedding of my sister and new brother in-law! (Another sister, remember how many I have?)

6. I finished Estelle in mid-May, wrapped up some projects for Tess Yarns, suffered an attack of Startitis, and now am blocking and finishing Bayarri.

7. Jeremy and I have been busy working on some secret recording projects. So there.

Other, more lame excuses:
8. Guitar Hero World Tour (Hey Corrals...there will be way more songs for y'all to play when you get back...xoxoxoxo)
9. Netflix (goes dangerously well with knitting! Good thing I have a job that gets me out of the house)
10. The commute from Biddeford to SoPo and back makes me super tired.

My plan this summer was to embark on a day-to-day account of life in an old house taking care of three turtles, a lop-eared bunny, and a huge lawn, and the creative pursuits we've undertaken while being spoiled with so much space. However, we are now halfway through our stay here, and I have not written a word. Here are some of my favorite photos from the summer so far:
Chopping baby red peppers for roasting at work. They look like strawberries! (I don't think my phone did the colors justice...)
Estelle on the Lee River in Swansea, MA
On tour: Jeremy and I went to Richmond, VA, a night early so we could visit one of our favorite haunts (pardon the pun), the Hollywood Cemetery.
Here are some hilarious and ridiculously spoiled turtles.
 Dearest blog, I am hereby renewing my promise to post regularly. My life does move at a whirlwind pace, but writing and taking photos of what's going on inspires me to keep being creative.

Oh and...here's a brand new blog to keep an eye on...

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Plains on the Radio and Bayarri on the Needles

Estelle is currently getting her front border put on. Completed sweater photos will be forthcoming in a couple of days.

As far as mail goes, there is no greater feeling than receiving a box of yarn or books in my PO Box:


What's that you say? Where are my other projects I was working on? Irmo? Morganeve's Mitts? The master hand knitting swatches? All got packed up in the move, and ended up E V E R Y W H E R E. Who here knows the reality of being diligent in well-organized packing for about two days and then saying "Meh!" and throwing it all together in a random location and not labeling anything and figuring well we don't have THAT much stuff and we'll be moving soon again anyway, etc? Anyone? Other professional subletters out there? While it's true that the four pieces of furniture we own makes it seem that we don't have a lot of stuff, our books, music, instruments, crafting supplies, and kitchen gadgets say otherwise.

Well I did eventually find these things, so they will be moving forward as soon as I finish Bayarri and some secret items. I've actually never made myself a summer jacket before, and this will also be my first real-live Intarsia project. Thus far I've only tackled stripes (jogless jog jedi, right here!) and any attempts on Intarsia have not made it past the swatch stage. So far it looks passable, though I might have to jostle some weird-looking stitches...
It seems a bit crazy to be knitting with 8 different balls of yarn at the same time, but it looks pretty darned cool...

Tonight, Plains will be heading down to MIT to play on WMBR during Pipeline! with Aleric Nez. If you are in the Boston area, tune in to 88.1 FM--if not, you can stream live at wmbr.org. The show runs from 8-10pm. Always a blast. Jeremy and I have played on Pipeline! as Brown Bird, Plains, and South China. This trip will include Plains' traditional post-show trip to Gilley's in Portsmouth, NH, for our midnight sliders and fries. Imperative.