Knitted Scarf/Wrap

I’ve knitted a scarf! This is news because I although I like crochet and learned to knit as a child, I’m really not a very good knitter. This pattern was hardly knitting though. Its made with silly wool (Sirdar Frizz) and knitted on broom handles! OK so actually they were 20mm knitting needles, but broom handles would have done just as well.

Each row is thirty stitches and its all “knit”. It is so quick to knit up, because the stitches are so big! Its a multipurpose garmet which can be worn as a scarf or as a wrap, I’ve tried to photograph it a few different ways but you still don’t get a real sense of how drapey and soft it is!

scarf wrap

closeup

The idea came from a pattern in the Simply Knitting magazine, although I didn’t use the suggested yarn. Mine had bigger “bits” hanging off it and as a result of that or my tension, I needed three balls of Fizz to make the scarf. The final result measures 68 inches on scarf setting and about 29 inches by 46 in wrap mode.

200 crochet blocks

I have a new crochet book! My mum had an “I saw this and thought of you” moment, and bought me this:

200 Crochet Blocks for Blankets, Throws and Afghans

Its a good book with a variety of different blocks (although some of the 200 are the same pattern but with stripes, but I suppose they had to get them from somewhere). The best thing about the book is that in the contents page where it lists the blocks with their names and page numbers, there is also a little picture of the block itself, so you can see what it looks like and easily find one you are looking for.

So far I’ve managed four blocks to make a cushion cover when they are sewn together:

dahlia framed_flower peach_rose waterlilly

All the blocks are made in double-knitting wool with a 5mm hook. Mine came out at 8 inches each but the books says 6. At least they are all the same size, but as you can see from the pictures, they’re not all wonderfully square! Still I think they’ll be OK once they are all sewn together and backed … will post a photo of the finished project when it is finished.

Crooks and Hooks

Well, just hooks actually! I’ve been wondering for a while where those photos of beautiful crochet hooks come from in the front of all the crochet books … they’re colourful and I want some.

After a bit of hunting around I discovered that these are Susan Bates hooks, and they are widely available in North America. I’m in the UK and couldn’t find anyone who would ship the hooks to Europe. To cut a long story short, ebay came up trumps and I found a store that would ship two sets of hooks to me for $7 after I emailed them and explained the situation – so thanks to Corona Quilts as I now have beautiful colourful hooks :) Here they are

photo of my colourful crochet hooks

Ringing the (password) changes

I have milestones in my working life, I mark time by them. They help me to think quantitively about how much time has passed since a particular point in time or event. Its helpful because it enables me to think clearly about whether a colleague would have been involved in a particular activity at that particular time. And the nature of the milestone? Password changes!

I am pretty consciencious about passwords. I always have different ones for different things, with uppercase, numbers, punctuation and sometimes uppercase. As a sufferer of DOuble-CApital-itis, I am not a big fan of uppercase but I make the effort sometimes. Of course there are exceptions, such as the one password I use for all random website registrations, but I’m in good company with that. Because of these password habits, changing a password that I use every day is a big event! I have to think of something that my brain can hold on to, and train myself to type the new one rather than the old. I sometimes change existing passwords for no reason, I just think its good practice. What I really hate is being forced to use a password I don’t want, or change it when I am not ready!

I have recently changed employment, no particular reason just the next step on the ladder really. At my old workplace, I typed my password every single time I opened an internet browser, or logged onto another machine. I can’t deal with too many windows on the taskbar so I was opening and closing browsers all day. I must have typed it fifty times most days. The password complexity rules were there, but they didn’t really get in my way. I was forced by the system to change my password every three months. Three months is quite short when you are subconsciously typing that same password in so often! Still, the password change would roll around, marking a change in season, and I’d spend three days swearing at having typed in the wrong password on autopilot. When my password expired with a week of my notice still left to work, my boss (I guess tired of all that swearing) extended the expiry period to save me the pain.

So here I am, bright and enthusiastic in my new job. Day one, I have to choose a new password. No problem. Four weeks later, I get prompted to change my password. OK, well that’s a pain because I find password changes difficult but hey, I’m new, and I’ll just grin and bear it – after all, I don’t have to type my password for the web proxy here, just when I log in or unlock my machine. That’s still quite a few times though as I don’t leave my desk to go anywhere without locking it. So …. you can guess what’s coming next. Eight weeks into the new job and the password change box is back. My mind is too full to manage another “good” password so I try out something insecure – all lower case characters. And it accepts.

There’s something about this “security” which bothers me immensely. Most password setup systems come with tickboxes, to turn on “features”, such as

  • require mixed case
  • require at least one number
  • require some punctuation
  • ban password recycling
  • ban similar passwords
  • force password change

The sysadmin starts to read the list, tick the top few boxes, decides this is a Good Thing and ticks them all – the system is as secure as possible – Right???

This is how security myths start, and “force password change” is not something where (more often == better). A few months from now, I’m going to be a gibbering wreck, with my plain text password post-it-ed onto my monitor, and not locking the console when I walk away.

Creating Storage

We’ve recently moved into (another) new flat, and we’re just kind of settling in and unpacking. Its a rented place so we can’t do much with it – we’ve brought shelves and sidetables and stuff and that’s about all we can do. Our bedroom is cunningly arranged such that on my side of the bed, the wardrobe doors open right across the space between the bed and the wardrobe (fitted wardrobes, before anyone makes any suggestions). So I can put things by the bed temporarily, but I can’t have anything there all the time.

Now I don’t know about anyone else but I usually have a fair stack of random stuff beside my bed – reading materials, a glass of water, a lamp, my glasses, my phone, ten abandoned hair accessories, a drawer full of toiletries, spare keys, and who knows what else. Having spent a week with my belongings in a carrier bag, I started to think I needed a better solution … and here it is:

picture of the box

from another angle you can see inside too:

inside the box

I feel like a blue peter presenter but I’m just so proud of it! Its made from the box from a laptop delivery with some leftover wrapping paper from a friend’s birthday (58p from ASDA!) I couldn’t find sellotape or glue so I went for complimentary shades of electrical insulating tape (£1 for 5 reels from the pound shop) which was lying around! The tape’s not great so I didn’t make the paper go down to the floor as the box is going to live under the bed and get slid in and out quite a lot, it might not stand up for long with flimsy paper and not-very-sticky tape.

Anyway I feel like I live here now and the box is already full of the odds and ends. All I need now is a light I can clip onto the bed frame …

Weekday Carbonara

This week we kind of ran out of food … so here’s my recipe for improvised spaghetti something.

Dice two chicken breasts and place in a frying pan over a moderate heat with some oil.

While the chicken starts to brown, chop up a few slices of bacon into little bits (I use scissors which seems to work well), and put the kettle on for the spaghetti.

Make cheese sauce, and put the bacon in with the chicken once the chicken has started to brown.

Put the spaghetti on to cook (you need to do this earlier on if its not quick-cook!), and when the chicken and bacon is cooked take it off the heat.

Put the cheese sauce in the microwave for its final minute and drain the spaghetti, returning it to the pan. Throw the chicken and bacon in on top and pour over the cheese sauce. Stir and serve.

Cheese Sauce

Here is my recipe for microwave cheese sauce.

Take one teaspoon-sized blob of margerine (the sort you can bake with), a tablespoon of plain flour and half a pint of milk. Stir together and place in the microwave on full power for 2 mins (I use my 1 pint pyrex jug for this).

Whisk well to remove any lumps, then add the grated cheese (200g or so, the quantity isn’t critical) and whisk hard again, try to dissolve the cheese as it melts. Add another half pint of milk and some black pepper, stir well and leave to stand.

Once you are ready for the cheese sauce, pop it back in the microwave for another minute on full power, then serve