Eunny Knits

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

 

A first post.

When I first started blogging two years ago, I had no idea what I was getting into - I just dove right in. Now, I have a better idea of what blogging can do, the enormous community it makes you a part of, the power and reach of words on the web, and am finding the composition of this first post to be just a little intimidating. What should I write about?** Where on earth should I begin? Should I talk about the Fall issue, hitting newsstands as we speak? Or the shoot I'm in the thick of planning? What I've been knitting? What's coming up in the next few issues? There are so many things to tell you about!

I'll start, though, with the Fall issue. Today's the newsstand date, though subscribers began receiving their copies at the beginning of August. It's true that I'm enormously excited about it both professionally - it's the first issue of the magazine I've had a hand in - and as a knitter, but also true that I'm on pins and needles about what you guys will think! For me, there are several projects I'm seriously having to strain myself from casting on for right away - Pam Allen's Counterpane Pullover is calling my name, as is Carrie Hoge's Leavened Raglan. Jared Flood's Cobblestone Pullover looks like just the right thing to curl up in on a chilly day. And Norah Gaughan's brilliant Tilted Duster - the cover project - continues to boggle my mind with its elegant, puzzle-like construction. So far, I think that's been my favorite part of this job - being exposed to the incredible ideas that our contributors bring to the table. As a sometime designer myself, I'm awed and excited by the innovative constructions and shapes I see, the reimaginings of classics, the effective use of just one or two simple stitches to create something wonderful. It's humbling, of course, but it's also inspiring.


In particular, I'm especially intrigued by how effective simple, small-footprint textures can be when used over a large area or as an allover fabric. The knitting story that begins on page 48 is titled "The Minimalist Knits," and it's all about knits that make use of the play between knits and purls, slipped stitches and yarnovers. Who would have thought that reverse stockinette and 1x1 rib could look as fresh together as they do in Wenlan Chia's Belle Cardigan?



Or that the simplest slip-stitch pattern - linen stitch - would have so much impact when used in carefully controlled areas of Kate Gilbert's clean-lined Cinnibar Pullover?



And I think the, well, Minimalist's Cardigan by Ruthie Nussbaum pretty much speaks for itself.



This is a new discovery for me - I seem to always be knitting busy things (forgetting that rarely does busier mean better). But now...something about small-repeat textures - moss stitch and ribbing and linen stitch and garter and even stockinette and its reverse - something about them really tickles my knitting fancy. I think it's because with these stitches, the process and the product are so intertwined, so integral to each other - the beauty of the finished product is all about the knitting itself, the actual loops of yarn that build into a fabric. They showcase the inherent loveliness of knitted fabric in such a direct, clean, unfussy way - I'm completely enchanted.

My rambling has, I guess, gotten me to this conclusion: knitting is, in a way, an intensely intimate craft. It's wonderful to think that there's something you might discover or rediscover at any moment. A slight sideways change in perspective, a single project or technique or fiber - and suddenly, an ancient art can seem brand-new again. Have you ever had a Knitting Epiphany?

**My working plan for this new blog is to treat it like an extended editor's letter - to point out and further explore cool patterns, techniques, stitches, themes, fibers, etc. - and to talk about My Life With Interweave. Feedback is always appreciated!

Comments:
Missed you in blogland, Eunny!

I am completely in love with the fall issue. I can't wait until I have more time to actually knit! :)
 
Welcome back to blogland Eunny. We've missed you.
 
I said this already on Knitting Daily, but I want to thank you for the fantastic Fall issue. I really love the patterns and I feel like I could make and wear just about everything in it. I also love that the issue has an overall theme to explore, that the projects are almost academic studies of knitting. I look forward to learning a lot about knitting from the magazine, knowledge that will help me understand better how to create my own patterns (a step i have not yet taken).

Thank you for the empowement and Congratulations on your first issue!
 
The fall issue looks wonderful. I'm so glad that you've been involved with it, and that you're back in the blogging biz!
 
Glad to have you back to blogging. The new issue is really wonderful.
 
I just want to congratulate you on a great magazine! There are great projects in there this month (including yours, of course, that I desperately want to make, but I'm a bit inexperienced..). I'm glad to see you posting again. :)
 
Welcome back to blogland! You've been missed!

This issue looks lovely and there are so many things I want to knit. I'm so glad you're involved with IK these days. I can't wait to see what else you have up your sleeves!
 
congrats on the issue, eunny! i have yet to flip through it. i'm gonna have to flip through over at Borders during my lunch break. ;)

and welcome back. good to see you back in blogland again. :)
 
It's an incredible fall issue, packed so many beautiful knits. Welcome back to blogging.
 
In list form
1) Welcome back!
2) Thank you (and everyone at IK) for such an awe-inspiring fall issue.
3) This is where I shall be a little selfish and ask you to please, please, continue to share with us what you are knitting. I know you will have almost no free time with your new job...but you are one of my knitting inspirations and it would sadden me greatly if my exposure to your great work is limited to only four times a year.
 
All of the above.
 
I'll join the bandwagon and say I'm glad to have you back in blogland. In addition to the beautiful patterns (most of which I would love to knit), I like the small changes in the format. At first, I didn't like the pictures at the front of the magazine and the patterns all at the end. Now, with the added info on the pages regarding what technique or yarn or whatever is showcased in the pattern, not only do I feel like the magazine feels more cohesive, it helps me understand what I can get from the pattern. Usually, I just judge the pattern on how it looks and if it appeals to me but that added info gives it an added layer of interest. For example, Belle Cardigan does not appeal to my aesthetic but the idea of juxtaposing two simple stitch patterns to create shape and flow does intrigue me. Highlighting that information might be enough to make me knit it for someone else. :-)

I'm looking forward to what you've got in store for winter.
 
Welcome back!
 
Welcome back to blogland! The fall issue is just awesome! Great job! Don't be nervous or worried...be proud. :)
 
YAY!
 
Welcome back!!
 
I am fairly new to your blog but have enjoyed everything that you have shared. The magazine looks great and I am very impressed by the new look and feel.

Thank You!
 
Having been in the media, I all-too-well realize your position in this corner of blogland. I am, however, pleased to read you again and your official perspective will be intriguing. I will miss the personal blog, however.
 
I'm certainly not the first to say it, but I'm loving the fall issue. I've just finished the ribbing on your Tangled Yoke cardigan and am completely enthralled. I can't seem to put it down. It's nice to have you back blogging. You've been missed.
 
Good to see you blogging again! I thought the Fall issue was great. The cover sweater keeps calling my name, but it's going to have to wait a while. (There's a list.) Your Tangled Yoke cardi is beautiful, as are so many things. A good issue. Good job to everyone.
 
Love it! And glad to see you back in blogland too ;0)
 
So good to finally see you at the helm Eunny. This was a great issue and you make me so hopeful for the future of IK.

Allison
 
Let me start by saying that I absolutely love the Fall issue. I've already cast on for the Tilted Duster and I have yarn for at least 2 other projects! (one of which is your gorgeous cardigan!) I was so excited when bloglines alerted me that you had a new post...welcome back.
 
The Fall IK has many wonderful projects, and I really like the tweaks to the design change. It is very easy get around in the magazine. I've already cast on for the Minimalist Cardigan, and I'm looking for yarn for the Tilted Duster.
 
I love it, too! Great to have you blogging again, like everyone else, I missed your blog.
 
Welcome to your new home, Eunny! I love the Fall IK. I haven't knit much of anything in recent months, but the day that I received my IK in the mail I was inspired to pick up my needles again. Great job, and I can't wait to see more of your work.
 
I just wanted to say that I absolutely loved the Fall issue. I want to make everything in it, and I don't think that's ever happened before. Keep up the good work! Also, I missed reading your posts, so I'm also very glad that you're writing out in blogland again.
 
Welcome back to blogland. And the fall issue? Fantastic. Absolutely fantastic.
 
I'll add my congrats on the fall issue. :) I got a copy today and looking through it, I'm very awed by all the great projects - your tangled yoke cardi and the minimalist cardi are calling my name the loudest right now, but I love many other projects too. *And* I can't wait for the next issue, but for a slightly different reason as you probably know ;)
 
lovely to have you back blogging. Can't wait to pick up the new Interweave.
 
Congratulations again. I'm not sure who gets the better end of the deal..us non-publishing bloggin knitters, or you with the wonder job! I'm sure it'll be a match made in heaven.

Welcome home! I hope you won't really leave us completely. I always enjoyed your blog.
 
Welcome back! I'm really hoping I can find an issue of the magazine on a newsstand near me (I'm living in London now). I haven't re-subscribed as I may be a little mobile this year and the mag had a very hard time keeping up with my moves (three of them - something about it taking 6 weeks to process? and often I don't even know I'm moving with that much notice) last year, plus it should be easier and cheaper to find on the newsstand here.
 
I'm so glad you're back in blogland! I know we've all missed you. Can't wait to start reading your posts again.

I'm also eagerly waiting for my IK issue. It usually takes a good while for it to get here (Finland), but it's worth the wait in the end. I'm already fascinated by the previews!
 
The new issued hasn't reached the hinterlands out here, but I love what I've seen so far.
You know, we've missed your writing. All of us. And we all love IK anyway. There's no way you can lose, Eunny. You're just too good.
 
I'm not sucking up -- really. But this is the best issue I've seen since I started knitting 2-1/2 years ago. (Yep I'm a babe in the woods as far as knitting goes) I've already cast on for the Tilted Duster and half the rest of the magazine is on my To Do list.
 
Glad to have you back :-) IK Fall hasn't made it to my LYS in London yet and I am bouncing impatiently while I wait to get my hands on it!

As many have said, please do keep us up-to-date with your knitting ventures, you are so inspiring.
 
I've had two recent Knitting Epiphanies, one was Venezia, the other has been brooklyntweed's love affair with garter stitch.

Glad to have you writing again.
 
What the others said: please try to let us know what you're doing and thinking about knitting, because your work (not just IK) is so inspiring.
If/when I'm a better knitter, I will play with detail, particularly subtle shaping and the really neat things that happen when stitches flow in different directions across a garment. I want to make stuff where horizontal panels of stockinette run into vertical with some fine, fine line marking the division, or with an insert forced to an angle by judicious increases and decreases without huge holes. Subtlety. Elegance. I can see them in my head, but I need to know how to create them!
 
So glad to see you blogging again:) Your how-tos have been an inspiration, and I love reading about your latest knitting exploits.

Congratulations on the new job, and please please do let us know about what you're knitting as well as IK.
 
Eunny- Without a doubt, the Tangled Yoke Cardigan was my favorite in this month's issue. Loved the twist (no pun intended) on the classic style.
 
welcome back friend!!! Great job!
 
Glad to see you blogging again, you've been missed!
 
Yay! So happy to have you back in blogland! The fall issue is actually my first Interweave Knits experience, and I'm already in awe. Wonderful job! I can't wait to see what you have in store for us...here at your new blog and in the magazine.
 
Thanks for sharing the joy your new job is bringing to you. From these comments and feedback all over the knitting web, you are making so many people so very happy!

As for Knitting Epiphanies, I've always called them my A-ha Moments. After knitting on and off for 25 years and having owned my own yarn shop, it thrills me to no end that I learn and do something new and different with almost every project I make.

Interweave always has been and still is my favorite knitting mag. Thanks again.
 
Thank you for your lovely blog post. I will be getting my fall IK some time today. I have looked at the preview and I have queued 3 designs in Ravelry :)

I would love to see some sneak peeks, hints, tips for future issues on this blog. I love your designs so maybe even a sneak peek at a book you are working on.

Okay I am asking a lot, but what can I say I am a fan.
 
Glad to see you back in the blogosphere! You might be happy to know that the content of this issue is what got me to finally put down the money for an IK subscription instead of reading the library copies. I LOVE the Tangled Yoke cardi (and your recent Autumn Rose pullover in Simply Shetland 4!) I have yarn set aside for that and the Tilted Duster and can't wait to cast on. As far as the blog content, I'll second the comments that it's great to see what you've been working on. Your tutorials on See Eunny Knit were what made me originally bookmark the site, but it was your thoughtful, detailed notes and gorgeous pictures of your projects (from your own designs or other people's) that kept me coming back.
(orata on Ravelry/featherandfan.wordpress.com)
 
Nice to read your new blog! Here in Sweden, I am very anxious to get my subscribed copy of the fall issue... probably not too far away. The designs look beautiful on the website!
 
Eunny I'm so glad to see you blogging and as the ebb and tide of life go, I'm really into the simple feel and look of what you've got in this issue. Thanks for continuing to blog and connect with all of us on the computer side. Now if I could only squeeze past about 6000 people ahead of me in line for Ravelry!! :)
 
Welcome back! I really have missed you. I always read your blog first, every day.

Please continue to share your knitting with us. You have been a real inspiration to me.
 
Glad to see your new blog. The hiatus definitely left a void. Please do incorporate some of the old with the new, i.e. your personal knitting experiences/musings along with the IK editor's view.
 
Welcome to your new space!
 
Welcome back Eunny!! We've missed you at knit nites - come back and visit us sometime!
 
Welcome back. Am interested to see where you go next. All the best in your new post.
 
Welcome back!

i think that the designs in the current issue are quite fabulous, but i'm most intrigued by your tangled yoke cardigan! definitely along the minimalist lines, but with the lovely kick detail.

congrats!
 
Welcome back to blogging! I've missed you. I have my new issue, and have only glanced through it - I am waiting for a good chunk of time to dedicate to it. It looks fantastic - great job!
 
Uh oh...I must admit I'm gonna miss the old, nonpartisan blog.

But congratulations on your new thing - we must all move on sometime.
 
...and then there's the gorgeous Twisted Yoke Cardi... I remember seeing it in its infancy on your blog; any comments on its evolution from that to this?
Love the fall issue, by the way. Congrats!
 
I am so happy that you've returned to blogging. I loved all of your work on your previous blog and I know that IK is now in very capable hands.
 
I liked the article on cables. That said, there wasn't a single pattern I wanted to knit. Sadly, I'll have to wait for the next issue.
I'm glad you're back to blogging. I missed your posts.
 
I have missed reading your blog Eunny, but I have to say that your time has been well spent. This new issue is my favorite so far. I am enthralled by all of the things you mentioned above as well as the inclusion of some new construction (one piece construction in particular, I hate seaming.)
Well done Eunny...you are a brilliant editor!
 
This is the first issue of IK that I've bought from the newsstand (I've gotten a few as gifts, or flipped through friends' copies.) Every time I look at it I have a different favorite, but I think I'll end up making the tilted duster first. Norah's sense of knitting geometry is such an inspiration to me.


PS. Saw your Autumn Rose in Simply Shetland 4 -- it is really, really lovely.
 
I really appreciate your ability to bring focus to the small details while maintaining a "big-picture" view. Rarely do both qualities exist in the same person. With this first blog-post, I can totally see that IK is going to blossom under the application of those two gifts. Thank you for being you and sharing that so generously with us!

~ hb33, who had no idea why she's been so taken with her garter-stitch log-cabin afghan squares till now ~ ;~)
 
Congratulations on your first issue- it turned out great! I love the sweater on the cover- I can't wait to make it.

Glad you've come back to the blog!
 
Welcome back Eunny! I was practically squealing when I noticed that you'd blogged in your old spot...

I haven't got my Fall 2007 IK yet (UK subscriber), but from the previews I'm itching to get my hands on it. For me there are several items I'd love to wear as soon as autumn arrives. Problem is, I'm not that fast a knitter!
 
This is one of my favorite issues of IK so far. So many good things! Congratulations on your first issue! I am sure you will accomplish great and wonderful things.
 
Welcome back Eunny - really missed your blog.

I can't wait to get my hands on the Fall IK - I'm an Australian subscriber and it just takes FOREVER for it to get here.

I've had a really good look at the online preview though, and I just love the Twisted Yoke Cardi - I'll be casting on as soon as my issue arrives.

I really think I'll need to make the Tilted Duster too. :)
 
Yippee!
Time to subscribe to Interweave Knits.
=)
 
Great to 'hear' your voice again, you have been missed.
 
im so happy that you're back.
my bookmarks are now updated.
i cant WAIT to see the new IK.
 
congratulations on a wonderful first IK! it's the first one in a long time where i've paged through and said "i'd definitely make that" to just about everything. i'm about to start your tangled yoke cardigan - which i've been waiting for since you sneakpeek-blogged about it back on the old site. really looking forward to having you back in blogland, eunny! ~gabriella :)
 
I just received my issue of Knits today and it looks fabulous! I really like the layout with articles followed by patterns that use the same techniques. As well, this is the first time in over a year that I have received my subscription issue before most stores had the magazine on their shelves! I'm looking forward to reading about your editorial adventures, Eunny!
 
The IK fall issue preview looks and sounds interesting, and I can't wait for my copy to arrive! Unfortunately, I'm an international subscriber in Germany which means the magazine will probably take a few more weeks... happens every time ever since I've subscribed, the only big flaw of IK.
 
I'm so excited about the "new" IK with you at the helm! Will stop by the local magazine shop today and see if they've received the Fall edition (since I'm on the other side of the pond, I suppose there might be a delay). From looking at the preview i already know which projects are my favourites!
 
I'm so happy to see you blogging again! And the Fall issue is AMAZING - I don't even know how many corners I've dog-eared as future projects :)
 
I was thrilled to see the tangled yoke cardigan in this issue. I remember seeing it on your blog from March and wanting the pattern. This issue was perfect timing because I started earlier in the week working on cables and trying to figure them out and understand them better... and working on color work as well so the color work for the composed mitts and the mirepox bodice were timed just right too :D

Thanks so much!!
 
So happy to see you're back in blogland, your presence was missed. =) And I'm sure this is the beginning of a brilliant career for you.
 
You were missed...completely understand, though. Your job is the envy of all of us! Glad to know you'll be blogging again!
 
So glad to see you in place at IK. Looking forward to your direction. Ditto you comments on the Minimalist Cardi. Also, as an art director myself, I'm fine with the book's layout. Looking great you guys!
 
I missed you! Welcome home.
 
Hey Eunny. Great job on the Fall issue. It really looks incredible . . . I especially love how the patterns are presented in a far more appealing and info-packed way at the beginning of the magazine. I'm looking forward to seeing what else you bring to IK. :o)

Two thoughts: a model or two for IK that's at least more than 38" around, and please share some of your own knitting with us!

Best of luck with your work, and I'm excited that you're blogging again!
 
Welcome back to the blogosphere! We missed you. And congratulations on the Fall issue -- it's just beautiful. The cable section not only had tons of projects I wanted to knit, but gave me some ideas for things to try on my own (I wouldn't call it designing, but I'm definitely inspired to try something without -- gasp -- a pattern!). Thanks :)
 
Welcome back Eunny and yes we all missed you. I hope you will also have an opportunity to share your personal projects and designs with us here to. Or, are you saving all that for Ravelry? See you there too.
 
Welcome back! I missed reading regular posts from you, so I hope you'll post here frequently. Personally, I've always loved to see your unique take on texture and shape. I've never knitted one of your designs because I don't like knitting garments on small needles. However, seeing your opinion on a stitch pattern or a method of shaping has definitely helped shape my eye as a knitter.

So do tell us what you've been knitting and also what things have caught your eye lately!
 
Welcome back, and congratulations on your first issue :) I subscribed when I found out you would be the new editor.

Thank you for leaving your "old" blog up as an archive. It's a treasure trove. I will miss your "just Eunny" writing voice, but growth can be a good thing.
 
I've been reading your blog for almost a year and LOVE your own designs! You are very talented!
I just picked up the latest issue of Interweave magazine and have to say that it is my most favorite issue! Congratulations to you and the rest of the Interweave Team!
Tanja
 
Congratulations on your first issue, I am really enjoying it!

Just one recommendation - could the patterns go down to at least a size 32"? I wear a petite XS, and have to pretty much tweak all the patterns that I knit. Being a fairly new knitter, it take a LOT of thinking and ripping. Sometimes it's just nice to knit without having to think so much! Many thanks!

I look forward to reading your new blog.
 
Eunny, the fall issues of IK is simply exquisite. You should be proud! I am glad to read your insights about the patterns. I look forward to your future issues, that's IF I ever put this current one down!
 
Welcome back Eunny! (again!!!)
Job well done and congrats on your first issue of Interweave Knits! Yes, Jarred Flood's Pullover does look like the perfect pullover to slip into on a chilly fall day and curl up with a coffee and my needles with endless yards of wool.

Off topic, if someone wanted to submit a garmet or design to Interweave, how would that be done? I am swatching and working out bits of math for a modern Fair Isle cardigan and I am very interested in attempting design.

Keep up the good work :)
 
Welcome back Eunny, missed you so much!!

((HUGS))

Beverly
 
Eunny! I love the new issue of IK the design is beautiful and the photography greatly appreciated.

I agree with jennifer and paula; I love your knitting/designs; sleeve treatments, color work, fitted knitting....

Thank you.
 
Heya girl - nice to see you back on the blogs! :)
 
I hadn't looked at IK in over a year, but I came across a Mirepoix knitalong, and was impressed enough to check out the teaser pictures. I had to go that very evening to get the magazine -- I love it! I'm planning to knit the tangled yoke cardi, tilted duster, and cobblestone pullover. I'd knit mirepoix if I had the figure for it -- it's lovely too! Anyway, great job!
 
I became a great fan of you when I saw the Anemoi mittens, in the meantime I've made my own pair and they have been travelling all the way to Argentina with me to the most southern part of the world.
But I'm still waiting for the pattern of the argyle socks. Could you please let me know where and when I could find it?
Thanks so much

Nathalie a HUGE Belgian fan ; )
 
Hooray! I'm so glad you're back - I've missed your blogging :)
 
I just got the Fall issue here in the UK and it's packed with beautiful knits. I was so struck by the cabled yoke cardigan - and then I realised it was your design!
And more than anything, I love the lack of seams. Are we going to be seeing more seam-free designs in the future? something tells me you hate sewing ;)
best wishes, and all the best for future issues - I can't wait!
Kat
 
A knitting epiphany? I absolutely have had one, and, at risk of sounding like I am shamelessly sucking up to the new editor of Interweave, I have to say that it was the first time I stumbled onto the blog scene and found yours. I read every post in your archives in one night, stunned by a completely new, beautiful perspective on knitting and tradition. While I can't give you all the credit for inspiring me to take risks and try new things with my knitting ;), I always look to your work when I want to design something myself and need the voice in my head to be a little louder when it says, 'see? look what you could do!'. Thank you, and I wish you luck with Interweave. We all appreciate the work you are doing so much!
 
I've lurked around your (old) blog for so long and learned so much from you- I'm so glad to see you're back!

And many, many congratulations on the new gig- fantastic! I love the Fall issue- great work :)
 
I'm so glad you're back in the blogosphere, Eunny!!

The fact that you're the editor of Interweave makes me think about getting myself a subscription.

Looking forward to more blogging from you!
 
yay! you're back!
 
I LOVE the magazine, and have been a subscriber for this past year. I only wonder...Why the same models so much?? Even in the same issue... Just wondered. Would like to see different faces sometimes... Keep up the great work!!! :-)
 
I love the magazine, and your blog as well! I recently picked up knitting again, not having made anything since I was a little girl -- and I'm hooked! I'm currently trying to finish up Ruthie Nussbaum's cardigan (which constitutes a big, exciting project for this newbie, hehe) and making a heroic effort to resist casting on for anything else in the meantime. :) I look forward to reading more of your posts and seeing more of your creative genius. I love the projects in the magazines and I definitely think they appeal to newer, younger knitters, like myself, and veterans alike.
 
I am really loving the latest Interweave Knits. It's absolutely beautiful! And I've never picked up a single book or magazine that had SO MANY PATTERNS I felt I just HAD to knit... and soon. You've done a great job and I look forward to getting a subscription soon.
 
Eunny: I can't make the Bayerische socks and I believe it is because my hands are just too large. I will try it with a little bigger fingering and size 1 or 2 needles--it's a terrific pattern; have been admiring it for months.
 
Eunny, this is great. It would be even better if you wrote more than once a month... we miss you.
 
Will there be a second post? lol.
 
The fall issue was fantastic. I'm working on your tangled yoke cardigan, and I absolutely love it so far (I'm working on the second sleeve). The garter stitch ribbing is a beautiful touch. Looking forward to the next issue!
 
Great Issue and belated congrats on making editor :)
 
Hello Eunny, Can you bring us up to date on the status of your Stitch Dictionary? I thought I read it would be available Fall 2007. I've been keeping an eye out for it but haven't seen anything yet.
 
I needed to add my $0.02 here. I love all the patterns in IK. They are all beautiful and inspiring. I love the Twisted Yoke cardigan and I hope to get that one started this winter.

I only just found your other blog. I hope to see more of your designs in the future. With your entrelac socks, you inspired me to try this technique in a felted bag. When I finish it I will post it on Ravelry and at my blog.

Ravelry username: Cora
Blog: craftygal1965.blogspot.com

Cora
 
So, Eunny, I found your old blog at eunnyjang.com, and I wanted to post the comment below on a thread about blocking. After I wrote it I discovered that comments on your old page had been disabled. I couldn't let the story die, so I'm posting it here, though it has nothing at all to do with your recent post about your work at KNITS. For your entertainment and mine, I present my response to the thread "Block me, Amadeus!"


It seems that everyone posting here already understands the importance of blocking, but I surely didn't until tonight after a holiday dinner, when my grandmother told me this hilarious story about her only experience knitting a sweater. In 1972, Dorcas Faulkner signed-up to take a knitting class at a Sears in Memphis, Tennessee, the final project for which was to knit a sweater. Perhaps the instructor didn't plan or sequence the class very well, but somehow Dorcas came home after 12-weeks with a beautiful ribbed sweater and not an inkling of knowledge about blocking. Her beginner's pride swollen, she put-on the sweater the next day and stepped-out to the grocery store. In the single hour that she wore the sweater, she says it stretched down to the tops of her knees, with the sleeves covering her hands! She rushed home in dismay and tried to take the sweater in on her sewing machine!

Granny never knit again, but she admits that she has chuckled to herself more than once when a southern preacher hears her name and questions whether she is as good a seamstress as her Biblical namesake.

I don't know a thing about knitting or blocking, but I was so amused by the story that I searched for blocking information online and found this page. I conclude that knitters must be some fabulous people if they can compose a title like "Block me, Amadeus!" Between that and my granny's story, I'm in STITCHES.
 
oh, my email is
rusjm@hotmail.com
 
Dear Eunny -
Don't worry about being new to publishing. Half the battle is being creative on demand, and judging from your amazing patterns, you certainly have that skill down! And deadline week is always insane, no matter where you work or how long you've been doing it, so sounds like everything is going just fine. :)