Tag: A. Catherine Noon

  • It\’s Coming…

    We are gearing up to do another Blog Hop!  I\’m very excited.  This time, we\’re doing a Summer Solstice hop and giving away another e-reader!  Wowsers.  Plus, individual authors will give away stuff too.  It\’s a lot of fun.

    The focus of this blog hop is to either post an excerpt or short story, or to use a scene generator and write a flash story specifically for the hop.  I think I might try that.  o.O…  Stay tuned, the festivities start Wednesday and run through the weekend.

    If you haven\’t participated before, the way it works is that the hop will go live on Wednesday, 06/21/2012.  Readers go through the hop, visiting each blog and leaving a comment.  Everyone who comments on each blog is entered in the grand prize drawing, and one lucky someone will win their very own e-reader.  Plus, you get to read some new material from favorite authors, and meet some new authors you haven\’t read before.  It\’s a lot of fun and a good way to find out what\’s available to you as a reader.

    Stay tuned!

  • Into the Field for Father\’s Day

    Happy Father\’s Day to all you dads out there!  We\’re going to the Field Museum today.  I want to see their exhibit on rubies from Myanmar (Burma).

    What about you?  What\’s up for your Sunday?

  • Bookshelf – Recommended Reading

    I\’ve recommended this before, but since I\’m using it to design the Bryce Canyon Shawl, it deserves another mention:  Barbara Walker, A Fourth Treasury of Knitting Patterns.  This time, Ms. Walker gives us mosaic knitting, cable and lace samplers, and her usual dry wit and sage advice.  I love her books, and this one is particularly fun to use because the leap to designing your own projects is an easy one to make.

  • Thursday 13: Thirteen Images from Lunch

    Not actually images of food, but images from my walks during my lunch break.  I\’m fortunate to be working along the Chicago River and the weather has been absolutely fabulous lately!  Take a look:

    This is the medallion in my elevator, actually.  I\’m fond of it.

    I love flowers.  Never know what they\’re called, but I love \’em.

    This is actually a shot of the train platform in the morning before work; this is one of the stations that\’s at street level (they\’re in the more residential areas as opposed to downtown, where it\’s either the elevated \”L\” or a subway).  (We still call the subway the \”L\”, go figure.)

    I love this view in the morning!  We zoom over it pretty fast, but I would love to have one of the houses on the bank and a little dock so I could take my boat up and down.

    The parking structure is almost all gone.  Looks like a scene from some big space exploration, like a robot lost a bucket or something.

    Trump tower is in the center.  You can\’t really see it very well (my camera on my phone doesn\’t have a zoom), but the metal superstructure at the top is a crane for the window washing crew.  !!!!  D00d.  I will never complain about my day job again!  Sheesh!
    I love this one.  It isn\’t great from a composition standpoint, but it captures everything I like about my lunch walks:  the flowers (these weird cabbage rose things that look like colored Brussels sprouts, huh?) and the water with the boats.

    This is a prior shot of the demolition, where you can still see the building, parts of it.  This was just 2 weeks ago.  It\’s startling how fast a brick structure can just disappear.

    Purdy!

    I love they have mint planted along the river!

    More greenery.  This is right in the midst of downtown, too!  (See the next shot for context.)

    This is the bridge by my office, and you can see the river and flower edging.  Cool, no?

    I love reading signs about things; it makes me feel more like I know what\’s going on.
    MINT!  It has lovely purple flowers, too.  I just love how exuberant this plant is.  ROWR!

  • Humpday Update: Designing the Bryce Canyon Shawl

    The design of the Bryce Canyon Shawl is coming together.  I selected two more lace diamonds to incorporate; they\’ll start at the midpoint of the center medallion.  I\’m estimating the shape on the fly, rather than working it out mathematically; I decided I didn\’t want to draw it out but am trusting my gut.  We shall see.

    I\’m loving the colors and the way the yarn looks in the pattern.  Lion Brand did a nice job with this fiber.

    As an aside, my birthday present arrived from KnitPicks and now I\’m all excited.  I want to play with it (16 balls of electric dark blue and 16 balls of maple syrup brown), but I\’m staying focused on the shawl at the moment.  I don\’t know if I want to make one blue sweater and one brown, or do two mosaics with both colors.  We shall see.

    But for now, here are some pictures of the Bryce Canyon Shawl so you can see how the design progresses:

    This is a picture from last week, and you can see the start of the center medallion.  It will be a diamond and has a 3 stitch border in plain stockinette stitch on either side, with a yarn over (i.e. a hole) just inside that.

    The two small clear crystals aren\’t beads, those are stitch markers and they sit on either side of the medallion (this is one way you can keep track of knitting pattern changes).  They don\’t have to be fancy, and in fact I have several plain steel rings on the needles but I wanted to use my fancy rings for the medallion since I have them and they\’re pretty.

    They\’re actually a little annoying to work with, to be honest.  There\’s a bar that hangs down from the ring, and it\’s twisted metal.  That\’s what is used to attach the crystal.  The problem is that a) it attaches to the stitches sometimes, and b) it gets in the way of the needles when I\’m knitting.  I make it work, because I like the way they look as I\’m working, but they\’re not the most practical of beasts.  I prefer the plain steel rings my husband made for me from heavy-gauge steel wire.

    Here is how it looks today. The faux cable look of the center \”V\” is deceptive; that\’s just because the needle isn\’t long enough to let the pattern lay flat.  But in this view, you can see the center medallion progressing up to its middle panel (a helix laying sideways that mimics the vertical one you can see).

    The little white bit that looks like a scrap of paper on the left is a scrap of paper.  🙂  I was knitting outside yesterday, sitting on the grass by the river, and dropped one of my rings.  The grass ate it.  I spent quit a while looking for it, too, but no luck.

    I decided to stop increasing the lace lattice that is on the outside.  Since I\’m adding two medallions and they have their own increases/decreases, I stopped adding stitches at the sides and will let it grow from the stitches within the medallions.  I may change my mind once it grows some more, but we\’ll see.  (That\’s the geometry I mentioned earlier.)

    This final image shows the right-hand medallion just beginning.  There are only about 6 rows so far, so it\’s not easy to see in this image, but you can at least get an idea of where it will go.  The lattice will continue between the medallions on the sides and the center panel, to keep the overall feel of the shawl consistent.

    That\’s our Wednesday update.  Happy knitting!

  • Walking In This World – Promptly

    The 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of the month are the Prompt Group meetings for the Evanston Writers Workshop.  It\’s funny, but I find that on prompt days, I don\’t usually do my morning pages in the morning.  Today is no exception; I wrote this morning instead of doing the pages (by that, I mean I worked on a WIP and not my journal).  I think that says less about the pages or Prompt Group than it does about me and my feelings around having lots or too much to do, but there you go.

    What do you do on your lunch break?  Do you take a break at lunch?  I learned many years ago that for my own sanity, I have to have a break in the middle of the day.  Today I took care of some housekeeping tasks and then went outside to knit for a half hour.  Having to deal with the odd man babbling loudly on the sidewalk, while annoying, kept me in the moment.  What was he doing?  Why was he babbling?  Did he know I sat on the park bench above him?  Did he know the stairs led around a switchback and he\’d be practically in my lap?  Was I safe?  Was I being judgmental?

    I find those kinds of monkey-mind questions happen more on days when I skip my morning pages than on days I do them.  That\’s not to say I float through my morning page days all serene, like a yogi; I\’m just more aware of them when I don\’t put them on the page.  It\’s as though my thoughts, expecting to have been put down on paper, are waiting for the attention I normally give to them.  Meanwhile, I knit.  I got a row done on a shawl I\’m designing. 

    There\’s some kind of universal lesson there, I think.

  • Hair Tea – Emerald Fire and Herbs

    In writing, we get to use what we know.  This used to intimidate me (what if I don\’t know anything??) until I realized that\’s my inner critic talking.  I do too know stuff.

    So.  What do I know?

    The airspeed veloc…  Nevermind.  Hair tea!  I know how to make hair tea.  Not tea you drink, though I do know how to make that too, but tea you put on the hair to make it healthy and shiny – and augment the color.  In writing Emerald Fire, Rachel and I got to put that knowledge to use and give it to the Keepers.

    I figured I\’d share some of the secrets today at Torquere Press:

    \”Research and World Building – Teeka’s Special Hair Tea Blend\”

    I hope you have a moment to stop on by!

  • Worldbuilding with Emerald Fire

    Join me today on the Writer\’s Retreat Blog where I talk about the process of worldbuilding as it applied to our experience of writing Emerald Fire, as well as some tools you can use in your own writing.

  • Win An Ebook!

    Watch for posts on Facebook and Twitter about my book. Then comment on it and share with friends. Your comment will enter you to win a free copy of the ebook. Everyone participating and commenting will also receive a coupon code for discounted shopping.

  • I\’m Blogging at Samhain Publishing and the Writer\’s Retreat Today

    I have two articles for you today.  The first is at Samhain Publishing, Who To Write About (When You Can’t Write About Your Friends and Family).  Rachel and I use pictures to inspire us in our stories, and I share some of what works for us.

    The second is Why Big Goals Don’t Work – Baby Step Your Way To Success.  I\’m forever hearing from people who want to make some gigantic goal their sole purpose in life (lose a hundred pounds, write a book, etc.).  I\’ve been told \”I\’ll just do P-90X,\” \”I\’m not in this to play, I\’m in this for a New York contract,\” \”Little goals are a waste of my time,\” etc.  Those people, the ones who said those things to me, aren\’t around doing their work anymore.  P-90X was designed by a triathlete who found to his shock that yoga challenged him.  But the part about him already being a triathlete meant that he understood how to accomplish things.  The one who told me they wanted the New York contract isn\’t even writing anymore.  See how dangerous such large goals can be, when they\’re not tempered by small, achievable steps?

    I hope you\’re having an enjoyable and productive Wednesday.  Remember, today is in your hands.  What do you want to do with it?

  • My Tue Cents for Twosday

    I think it\’s easy to get sidetracked.  I talk to authors who complain, \”I don\’t have time to write.\”  While I don\’t think they\’re lying, I do think they\’re not speaking completely honestly – to themselves, at least – about what their time is like.

    When we settle down and are honest with ourselves, the reasons for not writing aren\’t, usually, about time.  They\’re about fear, or block, or the inner critic saying that we have nothing worth writing.  But they\’re not about not having any minutes in the day to set fingers to keyboard or pen to paper.

    So today, ask yourself this:  What would it take for me to get onto the page today?