SOCK HEEL KNITTED MOTHERFUCKERS

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SOCK HEEL KNITTED MOTHERFUCKERS
These knitting badges are heading out to a Stitch & Bitch club in Scotland https://buff.ly/2L4vSUr ☮️
Episode 74: Crafting In-FLU-ence
All links to Ravelry are labelled as such. I try to include links to outside websites as much as possible. At this time, I am not including links for purchasing yarns, needles, etc. If I do, they will also be appropriately labelled. As a quick reminder: I am not affiliated with any businesses. If you’d like to show your support of the podcast, please rate and review on your listening device,…
You have the right to mind your business
Source: Knitting Rules by StephaniePearl-McPhee
Unsure if knitting advice or philosophy.
Covering the Surface
So... it doesn't have the best camera especially in low light, but it still deserves a cover! This is what I'm going to make a simple sock sleeve from. This yarn is from my new favorite yarn store Serial Knitters in Kirkland, WA. Its called Ripple by Stacy Charles, INC. Very pretty stuff, it thins and thickens but its flat like tape floss (lol). They have a sample sweater made from it in this exact color and its so beautiful in stockinet stitch. I better get a stitchin' or I'll be bitchin' cause I leave in two days for Santa Maria and want to protect the outer surface of my surface!
Semantics
A few years back I worked as an editor of classroom textbooks for a culinary school. Many chef instructors who worked on the books didn't like to call recipes recipes. They are formulas, especially in baking. Their theory was that recipes are too exact: a formula gives proportions but better allows for variation in quantity and ingredients. I recently read Knitting Rules, in which Stephanie Pearl-McPhee uses the wordrecipe instead of pattern apparently because a recipe in knitting allows for variation in the details.
Don't you just love words?
I also loved the book: read it cover to cover, including the glossary.