I've come to the point where I have pretty much run out of yarn and need to order more. So for next week I think I will be experimenting with different border options.
I really thought it was going to be too small but I can see now, that once I add the border, it should fit nice and snug. If I ever make another one, I'd make the back part about 3 blocks or so longer. I can probably stretch it out a bit when I block it so it will work out.
Would you believe I've never actually blocked anything I've knitted before? I always mean to and end up wearing it before I get a chance. So I am not even exactly sure how to block I was told to wet whatever I was working on and safety pin it to a towel in the shape I want. Is that the best way? Is there other ways to block knitting?
Here is a knitting pattern from 1840 for a "Bosom Friend," it is similar to a sontag. Before I start knitting, I draw out a projection of how the knitted piece should look. Having a "map" helps me see any mistake I make a lot quicker. Sometimes my projections aren't perfect but they normally are close in shape if not in exact proportions.
It looks a little sailor-like to me but I can see how it would be cute over a dress from the 1840s. It would just cover the parts of the neck that was left bare at that time.
It looks like it would be a slightly easier thing to knit than a sontag. It would probably be a very cute item for a child.
I hope you are all knitting away and not at a stop in your sontags like I am. Has anyone practiced any interesting border patterns?
A blog dedicated to Early American History Lovers, Civil War Reenactors, Living Historians, and people that love the past. Lots of Historical Recipes and Patterns!
September 10, 2010
September 7, 2010
Re-embracing Simplicity
I am constantly struggling with simplifying my life. I tend
to keep the house neat and my bedroom full of “creative chaos.” I think that bedrooms shouldn’t be held to the
same standard as the rest of the house because they are very personal spaces. Your
bedroom is your cocoon from the world so most of the clean house rules just don’t
apply.
I unconsciously pile things up, books, laundry, school
things, and projects are all in piles on my desk and floor. I don’t have any
entirely empty surface space in my room which I like to have on my computer
desk so I can type while still having a few books opened on it. I am not really
fond of clutter but I know that it is necessary sometimes and that it
accumulates often. I have a theory that the thing that is so relaxing about
going on vacation is the fact that there is barely anything in your hotel room. The minute you walk in, the only thing in your hotel room is a Bible.
I tend to have to have a bunch of things out at once. I always
have some kind of sewing, knitting, drawing, writing, musical and reading
things around. If I put them away, I will never work on them. However; about
twice a year, my room becomes so cluttered that even the scatter-brained me can’t
think in there and I need to weed out the cluttering items. My big plan is to
eventually just have a place for everything and for all of the piles to be
slightly smaller.
My “Rules” on Clutter (of which I am constantly reminding
myself.)
- An object can do you no good if you cannot find it when you need it. If your books are boxed up and it would take you a few months to find the book you need, they aren’t worth keeping around, write down their titles and donate them. I always keep books I use all of the time out where I can access them easily.
- Do not keep any object that you do not think you will not use within the next three years—(I think one year is really short because one year I might be really into gardening and the next year, sewing, but I will probably cycle back to gardening in a year or two.) Exceptions to this rule are expensive items which you will likely use in the future such as computer equipment or hobby equipment (fishing rods, picnic baskets, paints.)
- It is selfish to keep an item that you have no use for when someone else can be using and enjoying it. For example: There is clothing from high school that I’d like to keep because I think it is pretty, but I don’t wear it now and it just hangs in the closet. I’d much rather see my younger sister and other people wear and enjoy it rather than keeping squirreled away. Exceptions are things that have sentimental value; I still have the skirt that I wore when I met Andy, even though I’d never wear it today.
- Is the cost of an item worth more than the stress it takes to keep and maintain it? Sometimes I find myself constantly tripping over an item or moving it back and fourth in a room because it has no place to go. I have to ask myself if those items are really that important. If I can’t find a place for them it is just extra stress to clean around those items and the clutter just adds to mental stress.
- Don’t keep anything that is beyond repair. I have very relaxed views on what beyond repair is. If something is repairable, I will repair it—Andy can attest to the various surgeries we have performed on his ipod. I need to remind myself that things that can’t be repaired or would not be cost efficient to repair need to be thrown out. Sometimes things are broken for long enough that I realize that I have found a viable substitute for it anyway.
September 5, 2010
Remember Macrame? Watch-Guard from Peterson's Magazine
"Charlotte and Sophia affectionately threw around his neck a watch guard the result of their joint industry..." - A Gift Book of Stories and Poems for Children
Watch-guards were used to keep a pocket watched securely attached to a man. Watches were expensive in the mid 1800s and a big item for pickpockets. When robbing someone, pickpockets could be sure that the victim has at least a watch from seeing a watch chain, but a watch-guard hung the watch around the neck, keeping it more discrete.
A watch guard is a good gift for a gentleman, especially if he's a "soldier." At reenactments, the men frequently have to know what time it is but don't want to lose their watches in the field when they will never find them again. Historically, this was a popular gift, it was a chance for a lady to show off her skills while giving a gentlemen something useful which also demonstrated a concern for his safety.
"Lucy had been sitting up nearly all the night finishing a watch guard for her father." - True Briton
Similar to a watch-guard chain, this "fork" or lucet makes an interesting, square-shaped cord. Those of us that are knitting sontags have the option to make their cord on a lucet or by crocheting it, both are historically accurate options. I am thinking of trying to use a lucet as not many people normally have lucet braiding on their clothing.
There is a good video on how to use a lucet here. It turns out, you don't actually need a lucet to do this, so I plan to try and make one out of cardboard and see if it works. I think I may practice by making a "neck chain" like it says in the instructions. I love hairwork so a chain that looks like hairwork will probably look very pretty.
September 3, 2010
Civil War Knitting Update
I haven't gotten much farther, it's been a busy week, lots of homework. I am finished the part where I decreased once every 4 rows, 7 times.

I can't wait to finish this. I think it will look very flattering in the fall over a long flounced skirt and a 3/4 sleeved shirt. I don't think anyone would instantly think "1860" if they looked at it. I do like shawls, but they are kind of impractical and I hardly ever wear them. They also tend to look a little too "granny," and you have to constantly hold on to them. They are very comforting in the winter to curl up in a shawl with a book.
I really would love to learn the pretty crocheting that is used to line the sontag in Piecework Magazine. It is feminine and pretty, practically lace looking. I feel that if I put this much effort in, I might as well take a bit of time to make it really pretty and not just "serviceable," to quote Marilla Cuthbert.
Here's a pretty jacket from Godey's Lady's Book that I feel could also be worn today with a little bit of alteration. The braiding is really pretty.
September 1, 2010
Night-Trip: Tons of Fun
You will never guess where Andy and I were last night! Okay, you probably never will guess because you don't know me that well. We went to go see Rush and the concert was absolutely brilliant! This won't be much of a post, just photos. I really like this top photo, you can see Venus in the sky towards the left.
They played for an insane three hours. I can't play for 30 minutes. There was even a crazy 30 minute drum solo.
I couldn't believe how many people were there. These are just the people not in the stands!
This is me being a good student, even though I was at a concert. :( Who gives homework on the first day of school? I can't complain it was for history class, I don't think I would have brought homework from any other class. I can never take a break from history!
It was tons of fun, we were so lucky to get to go with a bunch of good friends. We're all still excited. The band was great live! Some bands are terrible live, Rush is absolutely not one of them! I was especially excited that they played a mandolin during one song, it sounded really neat.
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