August 2008
Monthly Archive
Pi-Con (only slightly lagged)
Some photos (all yoinked from Dan) and notes. I was Events Head for this con, which was a new and interesting piece of responsibility. Usually I work tech, which is mostly a question of showing up and doing as I’m told. I like this more responsibility thing, I think. (As I told Dan a few weeks ago, I mostly just like knowing what’s going on. Being in charge of it is just the best way to know what’s happening.)
Anyway. Friday morning, Dan went up to my folks to borrow the whale big van, and to pick up Nathan. They returned with the van full of Nathan’s videogame gear, and we proceeded to add tech gear (borrowed from MCFI) and camera gear and various con paraphernalia. Left about 12:30, hit traffic on the Pike, but nothing like last year (thank goodness).
Friday was pretty low-key - brought our gear in, the folks handling tech started setting up. I ended up hanging out at the One Desk helping run registration, as I didn’t have anything to run until late in the evening.

First event bring run by Events (aka me) was the White Elephant Burlesque Society performance. These are folks that Jeff Mach knows, and invited to come, and they were amazing. Very very good at what they do.

Lessons learned: Performers need dressing-room space before and after performing. Shoulda been obvious to us. Will be next year.
After White Elephant was the local Rocky Horror cast, the Come Again Players, who are a Pi-Con fixture by now. Many of them are involved in other aspects of the con, and they’ve performed every year. I didn’t see their show, sadly - once I made sure they were good to go I went to hang out with some friends.

LED plus coin battery plus small magnet plus electrical tape = LEDs that stick to metal things. (The MIT Ubuntu Evangelization guys brought them.) Like the screws of the speaker grate in the ceiling. Randall got them up there, being Very Talented and far more coordinated than I am, and the rest of us cheered him on.
Saturday I was up bright and early to go across Springfield to pick up dry ice for what I was told was the “best 10am panel ever” (thanks Shadesong and Elayna!).

Again, spent a lot of time when I wasn’t officially “on” at the One Desk, as a clueful staff member who knows lots of different answers. I hung out in the videogame room a bit, played MarioKart on the Wii (fun!), and grabbed snacks in the Con Suite. Saturday afternoon was the Belly Dance Cabaret (coordinated by Tegan, who did a great job), followed by a beginners’ lesson.

There were two different boffing groups holding events. Some Realms members were doing their thing. (I am not a LARPer. I do not know their details.)
And the Historical Boffing Association (which is mostly my friend Mercutio) hosted a tournament.

Saturday night we had a Masquerade Ball, which was a small success. Mark and Stacey from the UMass Lowell Ballroom Dance Team taught dances.

And Sara Harvey gave costume prizes (and a spontaneous costuming class, which was one of the highlights of my con).


There was some staying up Way Too Gosh Darned Late, due to helping a friend, and then a hotel screw-up of epic proportions.
Sunday morning there was an emergency pants run, thanks to Sylvari, and a truly excellent panel with Cory and Randall that everyone seems to’ve already discussed in great detail.

I hosted a showing of some short films made by various folk in the community - two by Hugh Casey (that’s a link to his youtube page, in case you want to see them), and one from someone I don’t actually know (whoops). And then my responsibilities to the con were over and I skipped up and down the hallway several times. That adrenaline rush of having pulled off something difficult and stressful? It’s the best. It’s the adrenaline rush as the curtain comes down on opening night of a show. I loves it.
travel and arts and place12 Aug 2008 10:58 pm
Wanderlust

Wanderlust shows the routes of twenty-three historic journeys, with info and photos for each. I’d love to see more depth for each, but nifty nonetheless (via What I Learned Today).
arts and science11 Aug 2008 12:47 pm
CERN Rap
general and science06 Aug 2008 11:12 am
…whatever that is.
Sayeth Ajay, in a thread on Making Light:
A euro is a nocturnal marsupial of the kangaroo family, just over a metre long and weighing up to 35 kg (80lb). It is highly adapted to desert living and requires little food or water to survive. It makes a loud hissing noise.
Yes, it is. Really.
life and travel and knitting and place03 Aug 2008 01:59 pm
North Conway
Last weekend, Dan and I went up to North Conway, for our first anniversary. (Well, close enough - the day itself was Monday, and I had to teach that night.) We stayed at Stonehurst Manor, did some hiking, and swam in the pool. Our plan had been to get going early-ish on Friday, so that we could maybe go swimming/hiking/something along the Kanc. The early thing didn’t happen, and then I’m pretty sure that everyone in Boston was trying to go to NH for the weekend. Traffic was gross, both along 128 and on I-93.

Saturday we climbed Mt. Avalon, and watched the Conway Scenic at the crossing in Bartlett, and swam in the pool at the hotel. I need to go swimming more.

Sunday we climbed up to Champney Falls (have I been there before? Mom? It felt vaguely familiar… but falls all look alike), which was gorgeous. Stunning. Wow. Totally will do that again if I’m there after a rain (instead of late in the summer when everything is dry).

Also on Sunday, I got Dan and his mad photography skillz to document some knitting.
First, socks!

These are the Spring Forward socks, in Auracania Ranco Multi. I like this colorway a lot - it’s the “rainbow” colorway, but the colors are all very muted and low-saturation. I also like this pattern a lot - the squiggles are a lot of fun and the stitch pattern is easy to memorize. The pattern also shows up well even in the multicolored yarn, which is always a plus. I might do more repeats on the leg if I were to do these over - there’s plenty of yarn left and I really prefer my socks a little longer than these.
And then, a sweater!

This is Cece, by Bonnie Marie Burns (from ChicKnits, who have all sorts of lovely stuff), in Gedifra Merino Cotton. The yarn is from Mom’s and my trip to WEBS in the spring, in which there was serious stash enabling going on. But, eight balls of the Merino Cotton has turned into this lovely sweater, which is a pretty substantial inroad on the pile.
Notes: I made the body two inches longer than called for (cause I’m tall!), and still got a cropped silhouette. If I wanted this to feel like a more traditional-length cardi I’d have to add at least two or three inches more, and then the shaping would all change. (The shaping starts at the waist and goes up, so you only ever increase - this works because of the cropped length but wouldn’t in a longer sweater.) I made the three-quarters length sleeves, which are still a little on the short side, but I was afraid of running out of yarn. They’re also a little snug at the cast-on edge.
I wasn’t nuts about the lace pattern until I finished it. I’m still not wild about it up close, but the overall effect I like better than I expected. Yay! And the yarn is a beautiful color. It’s a bit splitty to work with, but not too bad. I machine washed the finished sweater(cold water, delicates setting), and the yarn bloomed… and shrank (my swatch only did the first of those). The fabric ended up feeling much sturdier (which was a goal), and the sweater was a bit more fitted than I’d anticipated. It’s stretched out a bit, and right now seems to fit just right, but I don’t think I’ll toss it in the washer again.
life and knitting02 Aug 2008 05:03 pm
Knitting (in pictures)
What has Abby made in the last five months? All sorts of stuff!
A baby sweater:

Boy Oh Boy, by Carol Scott, in Dream in Color Classy. This is the In Vino Veritas colorway, leftover from my Central Park Hoodie. The pattern calls for one skein of Classy, and when I weighed my FO, it was exactly 114 grams. Be careful if you decide to size it up any. Wooden buttons from Jo-Ann’s Fabric, cheap but they look good.
Socks for Dan:

Lonnie’s Sports Socks, by Rebecca Mercier, in TOFUtsies. This yarn wears like iron, but I really don’t enjoy working with it. (I have another pair of socks for D languishing due to this factor…) The pattern is great, makes sorta a waffle-weave texture, but the colors were perhaps a bit much for it.
Socks for me:

Jaywalkers, by Grumperina, in Socks That Rock Mediumweight. This Monsoon colorway was the first sock club colorway of 2007. It didn’t want to be the club pattern, nor at least one other thing that I tried. It finally decided to just follow the crowd and be jaywalkers. Love the way it striped on the legs, less the way it striped on the foot, but hey, handpaints, that’s what happens.
Baby booties:

Stay-On Baby Booties, by Kristen Nicholas and Melanie Falick, in Lisa Souza Sock!. Leftovers from the first socks I ever made for Dan. For baby Liam (who was nameless at the time).
A mesh bag:

Elisa’s Nest Tote, in a mysterious blue-and-white tweedy cotton yarn that I think I got as a Christmas present from Dan’s parents a few years ago. This pattern is (as many people have noted) very, very, very stretchy. Make with care.
A lace scarf:

Lace Ribbon Scarf, by Veronik Avery, in Knitting Notions Merino Laceweight, a lovely heavy-laceweight kettle-dyed yarn. Love this scarf, love this pattern, love this yarn. Love.
Fingerless mitts:

Pulsewarmers with Falling Leaves, by Alexandra Brinck, in Berocco Ultra Alpaca. I went back and forth for a while on whether this yarn wanted to be this pattern or not. I was concerned about the fluff factor of the alpaca covering up the pattern too much. Final verdict was that it was a good pair, and since they’re knit to a tighter gauge than recommended for the alpaca, they’re warm warm warm.
A squooshy hat:

I more-or-less improvised this pattern. It’s a simple cable rib, done in squooshy pink yarn. Auracania Limari is way too warm to photograph in July (in case you were wondering). I have plans to make a matching set of wristwarmers with the other skein of this that I have (part of the great WEBS excursion of April 2008).
Rustic-feeling mittens:


The mittens from Chunky Winter Set, by Amy King. Made in handpsun wool/silk/alpaca that I got at NH Sheep and Wool. I adore the texture of these, and this is a really functional basic mitten pattern.