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:: My Urban Eyes ::

All that I see, and then some.
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Learning curve, commence.
[::..quote..::]
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[::..current..::]
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:: Sunday, December 14, 2008 ::

Moving On


It was inevitable. This blog got old. The code got more and more convoluted. I love the color scheme and design to no end but sometimes you just have to move on. Not to mention that I'm moving to Japan and I want a blog to reflect that. This blog will still act as an archive but all of my new adventures will be posted at

http://japanese-me.com

Thanks for reading, and see you on the new site!

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 10:19 PM [+] ::
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:: Monday, December 08, 2008 ::

Thinking Ahead


So, this blog is old. Very old. I mean, just look at the nav bar on the left. With my move to Japan I'm going to start a new blog, running into the age old problem--what to call it? I'm asking you guys for suggestions. Guidelines:

1. It has to be something my mom, i.e. any normal person, can spell. As much as I like the name kawasakidreaming.com, I'm not sure any non-Japanese can spell that correctly on the first try. Not to mention I'll get all kind of false hits from motorcycle lovers.

2. If the name has something to do with Japan, great. If not, that's okay.

...that's it. Let me know your ideas, and if I like them one may become the name of my new blog! That's like taking your own little slice of the web and making it your own! -_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 6:16 PM [+] ::
:: ... 1 comments



Comments:
Okay,,, how about....
1. Around the World and back
2. The World through my Eyes
3. kaze-neechan
4. Looking Ahead and Sideways
 
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:: Saturday, December 06, 2008 ::

The Downward Sprial Continues


Is the bad news ever going to end? Unemployment at 6.7 percent. Many thousands are underemployed or simply gave up looking. Beyond the numbers I'm starting to see the effects at work--30 and 40 year olds are applying for part-time jobs at coffeeshops, and every last one has a look of desperation on their face. A friend in the sciences has been job searching for months with no avail. The only jobs she can find are below her degree level and she's so overqualified they don't take her seriously.

This stinks.

And here I am, willingly giving up my steady job to jump ship and head to Japan. Luckily I have a wide and deep safety net, but it's still unsettling to jump so far when the footing is so unsteady.

But if I don't do these things in my 20s when will I ever get the chance to do them?

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:: Saturday, November 29, 2008 ::

Black Friday - Convo of the Day


Customer: So, what time did you guys open this morning?
Me: Five am. But we get here at four.
Customer: Wow, extra early for Black Friday, eh?
Me: Nope, we get here at four every day.
Customer: What???
Me: ...we're a coffee shop.


Your baristas wake up at ungodly hours each and every morning to make sure that you can get your cup of joe. Show them some love.

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 12:29 AM [+] ::
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:: Thursday, November 20, 2008 ::

Suit Shopping



Why do things always have to be so difficult?

I have a job interview coming up on Saturday so I thought it would be a great chance to get my first proper suit. A trip to H&M proved fruitless, as everything was too trendy--skirts too short and necklines too plunging for conservative Japan. Macy's had a better selection, though, and a half-off sale to boot! I rooted around until I found the perfect suit--plain and black, no ruffles or sparkles, and a skirt that brushed my knee. Perfect! Ken said it was just the thing.

I love two piece outfits because I'm sized differently on top and bottom. I think a lot of women have this issue, with bust not matching hip perfectly. We're human, for goodness sake. I'm just backwards, with my hips being smaller than my bust. By two sizes. Yah. I know.

So I ask the nice lady if they happen to have the jacket in size x. Just the jacket, she asks? Yes, as I take different sizes. Oh no, these are sold as sets, with size y skirt matching size y jackets, she replies. Separates are one floor down.

We head downstairs. Separates? Where? I saw three suit jackets, and only one of those was black. Not to mention ugly. Bah.

Retailers--please understand that real women come in all sizes, and may even be "mis-matched". Let us buy nice coordinating suits, even if our sizes are little "off". I ended up with a suit jacket from H&M. It's a little cheaper than I wanted. I'm going to pin the neckline so it doesn't gape too much.

But they were willing to sell me my size.

Photo by stillburning

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 10:51 PM [+] ::
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:: Sunday, November 09, 2008 ::

Utter Happiness...


...is this. A walk to Japantown hand in hand, with the requisite stop for coffee. Sitting near the pagoda, watching kids of all ages play hide and seek in its legs. Reading books in Kinokuniya without the intention to buy (today, anyway). Discovering in horror that Safeway has already sold through its churros and buying two old fashioned donuts instead. Stocking up on juice and croquettes at the Japanese market. Walking home in twilight, rating the cuteness of each passing dog. And now, writing a blog entry in bed while my love dozes next to me. The soft sound of his breathing.

A golden moment in time.

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 9:49 PM [+] ::
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:: Tuesday, November 04, 2008 ::

I Voted


Have you?

I Voted

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:: Wednesday, October 22, 2008 ::

Describe Yourself in 600 Characters or Less


If it were just a "hey, how are ya" introduction it would have been fine, but a company in Japan I just applied to wanted my resume in 600 characters. Not words, characters. Letters. I managed to get the (insanely long, now that I look at it) name of my university, degree, titles of two jobs, and some info on my Japanese ability in there. Nothing on volunteering or any substantial details about my responsibilities. It's what they wanted so it's what they'll get, but I can't help but feel short changed.

FYI: This entire post, minus the title, has 598 characters. Imagine a resume here.

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 8:44 PM [+] ::
:: ... 1 comments



Comments:
That is extremly hard. Guess they just want to know the facts. Good luck. Aimee
 
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:: Monday, October 20, 2008 ::

Traditions


Some traditions have humble beginnings. So humble, in fact, that we don't notice they've become a tradition at all. Case in point:

Ken and I have a habit of buying three churros whenever we go to Safeway. We each eat one on the way home and save the last for a midnight snack. There's no real reason other than that we tried them one day and liked them. A sugary snack also gives the boost of energy we need to walk home with our heavy load. I usually finish mine before we're out of the (big) parking lot.

Traditions don't have to be big. It can be as simple as visiting the same Wendy's before each hockey game or a cup of herbal tea shared at the kitchen table. (Yes, I'm big on food traditions, why do you ask?)

In Japan I'm looking forward to setting up new traditions that I can't do anywhere else. Maybe going to see the fireworks in Yokohama or wearing a yukata to a summer festival. Stopping by the supermarket after work to pick up ingredients for that night's dinner (again with the food). Maybe we'll be lucky enough to make a summer vacation or weekend getaway a regular occurrence. I'm sure whatever the traditions end up being they'll emerge before I even realize they're there. In a good way.


Photo by framboise

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 5:06 PM [+] ::
:: ... 1 comments



Comments:
I REMEMBER THAT WENDY'S!

I remember Chinese Food and Anime nights.
::giggle:: yeah... food traditions are big.
 
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:: Friday, October 10, 2008 ::

Ah, the Downward Slide



Photo by Duo de Hale

Whenever I have a printer problem I think of the movie Office Space. ("PC Load Letter? What the f$*k is that?") The last few weeks have brought the film to mind for different reasons.

Peter Gibbons: So I was sitting in my cubicle today, and I realized, ever since I started working, every single day of my life has been worse than the day before it. So that means that every single day that you see me, that's on the worst day of my life.
Dr. Swanson: What about today? Is today the worst day of your life?
Peter Gibbons: Yeah.
Dr. Swanson: Wow, that's messed up.


For the last two weeks I've thought, "Well, it can't possibly be worse than last week." A bank going under, massive drops in the stock market, things that can't possibly be matched. And every week the headlines in the New York Times indeed get worse and worse. (Have you seen the increase of boring graphs on the front page? This stuff is so important aesthetics have been thrown out the window.)

Being on the West Coast has been odd time-wise. The New York Stock Exchange's closing bell usually rings while I'm at work, locking in the day's loss just after lunch. I have a front seat watching Japan's market, catching the first few hours of trading on the Nikkei. My schedule goes something like this: arrive home at two, click on npr.com. Jaw drop. Go to Japanese news website. Jaw drop. Look at the current USD/Yen exchange rate... lather, rinse, repeat.

I think the most frustrating thing is that I'm helpless. There's nothing I can do to fix the problem. It's not a size issue--presidential elections are huge and I'm calling swing states to do my part (go Obama!). It's not that the problem doesn't affect me--I'm paying higher prices for groceries than ever before. Who would have thought that milk would become a luxury, to be bought in small quantities and stretched into as many cups of tea as possible? Good thing I'm not looking for an apartment, as rents in my part of San Francisco have gone up by more than 25% in the last two years. If I had to get a studio today I would be in an outer neighborhood like the Richmond or the Sunset, a half an hour or more from downtown.

Things are getting worse and I can see it. I don't have anyone I can blame. I don't even have a victory garden to plant. All that's left is to watch and wonder just how far we can fall.

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 7:33 PM [+] ::
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:: Monday, September 29, 2008 ::

Japan-bound



This may seem sudden... but that's because it sorta is.

I'm moving to Japan.

The whole story:

My boyfriend, Ken, is Japanese. He'll be finishing up school this December, giving us the opportunity to move someplace neat to start the whole adult/life thing. And where better than Japan? The chips really fell into place--his dad dabbled in real estate during the Bubble and bought an apartment, hoping to make money on it. He picked an awesome location--a five minute walk from two different train stations, a half hour from Shinjuku, Tokyo, on the 21st floor of a modern apartment building with views of Mt. Fuji on a clear day... the works.

Well, the Bubble crashed and now the apartment is worth half of what it was in the early 90's. The mortgage was finally paid off and the last renters left long ago, leaving a nice, furnished crash pad for Ken's flight attendant sister and business-tripping dad.

When Ken's family heard that we were interested in moving they said, "Why don't you stay in the apartment?" Rent free. O_O

So, we have a place to live, he's searching for a gaming company to work at (he's an illustrator), I'm doing the whole job search thing to find a nice English language school to teach at... and my life will be changing significantly come 2009. I can't wait. ^_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 6:23 PM [+] ::
:: ... 2 comments



Comments:
Will I ever see you again???? First you move across the country now across the world. Well it will give me an excuse to visit Japan :-)
 
How exciting!!. Of course you can blog from anywhere in the world. So it will be nice to hear more from Japan.:D
 
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:: Friday, September 19, 2008 ::

Pastel by Ken


Ken wasn't very happy with the last drawing of his I put up, ("You picked that one??"), so he offers this hand picked piece. ^_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 10:14 PM [+] ::
:: ... 1 comments



Comments:
i liked it, found it quite amazing actually.
 
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:: Saturday, September 13, 2008 ::

Instant Natsukashii




All of my "Japan" friends, listen to this--it will bring everything right back. I'm doing a little dance and dreaming of cheap pineapples even as I write this. ^_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 2:04 PM [+] ::
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:: Thursday, August 28, 2008 ::

One Step Closer


Thanks for Applying

Test date: December 7th. Mad studying has been going on for a while and will only continue. Wish me luck!

PS - Even though the Japan Foundation is in LA, the test will be in good ol' SF. ^_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 2:57 PM [+] ::
:: ... 3 comments



Comments:
congulations, yeaaaa
 
Good Luck!!:D
 
good luck!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I know you can do it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Love, Love, Love Aunt Pat
 
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:: Friday, August 22, 2008 ::

The Bridge


Ta-da

Today Ken and I finally went to the Golden Gate Bridge.

Part I: Signs

Fatal and Tragic

Info Sign

Ken: "You want to take a picture of this sign? Really??" Yup.

Object or Missile

Issues with this sign:
1) Is a missile not an object?
2) Were they having so many missile problems that it deserved its own listing?

Part II: The View

Fog City

Foggy in SF... go fig.

Ken's View

Part III: The Bridge

Karla Standing

GGB - Ken's Wave

International Orange

In case you ever wanted to know, the bridge is painted in International Orange. It's a color that goes well with the surroundings while remaining (more) visible in fog.

We had a great day, topped off with Ken's first In-N-Out burger. I got fries "animal style" for the first time--they add cheese, spread (kinda like thousand island dressing), and grilled onions... there's a reason they give you a fork with it. Really good.

The last shot is always the best.

Karla and the Tower

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:: Monday, August 18, 2008 ::

The Real Deal


Dim Sum on Clement--yum.

Spread - In Part

You know the place has got to be good when it's packed with Chinese people and you hear Mandarin every where you turn. I tried a bunch of stuff where I didn't even know what it was... and it didn't matter. It was all delicious.

Yan, the Master

Yan here was a tour guide of sorts, telling us what was in each dish. "Who wants chicken feet??"

"Um... we'll pass."

Dim Sum Friends

Leslie, Susan, and Cathy. Totally going to eat here again.

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 11:43 AM [+] ::
:: ... 1 comments



Comments:
Awesome--great pictures! I will never forget "And that's how mommy met daddy". Good friends, good food---what a great way to spend a Sunday morning!
 
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:: Sunday, August 17, 2008 ::

A Golden Week


On Monday I never go to work
On Tuesday I stay at home
On Wednesday I never feel inclined
Work is the last thing on my mind...

- They Might Be Giants


Re-injuring your wrist sucks. But taking off a week with pay to heal it? I can do that. I'll be singing that song to myself all day Monday... yea San Francisco Sick Pay!

I do plan to do some non-wrist things during the week (along with my occupational therapy, natch). Ken and I would like to walk the Golden Gate Bridge (two years and I still have only driven over it... sad) and there are some walking tours I'd like to check out. What I'm looking forward to most, though, is getting enough sleep and keeping a more human-like schedule. No alarms at 3:30 am, no coming home at noon after eight hours of work, exhausted. I get to sleep in until 8, woo! -_^

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:: Saturday, August 16, 2008 ::

Have I Ever Mentioned...


...that my boyfriend is an artist?



I'm a bit biased, but I think he's pretty good. ^_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 12:07 AM [+] ::
:: ... 3 comments



Comments:
I think it is excellent! Would love to see more.:D
 
I think the picture is great & I like the smile on the guy's face.
 
i'm not an art critic, but that is pretty damned amazing. -karri
 
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:: Friday, July 25, 2008 ::

Karla Meets the Pacific Ocean








Pics courtesy of Susan.

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 7:11 PM [+] ::
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:: Sunday, July 20, 2008 ::

And the Winner is...


...Japanese. At least for now. A radio internship application is off in the mail and what is done is done. Time to get cracking on the second language.

Kanji - pages

Pages and pages, solid with characters, or 漢字 - kanji.

Kanji - en to ki

To be considered fluent in Japanese you need to be able to read and write roughly 2,000 kanji. To be prepared for the JLPT level 2 I need to know 1,000. Over 700 of them are on these four pages. I've been working on it, but I'm not there yet. Thank goodness the test is in December. ^_^

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:: Saturday, May 31, 2008 ::

When Chasing Rabbits...


Learning a second language is hard. It makes you realize how much common knowledge, common sense stuff is assumed in everyday speech. For example,

When in Rome...


If you're a native speaker of English those three words alone convey a lot of meaning. You already know what the second half is. Now step into the shoes of someone learning English, someone who is decent in grammar and vocabulary and pieces things together as they go. "When in Rome" carries no meaning for him. Maybe the phrase continues "beware of pickpockets" or "don't forget to wear sunscreen". And when you explain the entire phrase to him he asks, why is it Rome? Why not Paris or London or Moscow? You have no answer. He gets frustrated.

Learning a second language can be like that. But for every frustrating idiom an enlightening one comes along.

二兎を追う者は、一兎も得ず。
If you chase two rabbits you will catch neither.


Right now I'm trying to figure out what kind of job I want to pursue. Would I rather work in radio or in something Japanese? How do I want to spend my life?

Obviously this isn't a question you can answer in one night, or day or week or even month. I'm working through it. In the meantime, though, I'm spending half of my energy on radio pieces and the other half on Japanese study. At this rate I'll neither get an internship nor pass the JLPT Level 2 exam in December. It's not like I have a deadline, but the sooner I sort this out, the better. Which rabbit shall I chase?

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 10:21 PM [+] ::
:: ... 4 comments



Comments:
Very insightful, I am learing that about you. I don't think it matters which rabbit you chase, eventually you will catch up with one, ot it will slow allow you to catch it....but was it the rabbit you wanted? -Karri
 
..sorry, can't type worth a shit. hopefully you get my point.
 
This is so true. It is amazing how much cultural knowledge we carry without ever thinking about it. It becomes even more apparent when actually spending time in another country...I have always been extremely interested in what it means to be a cultural outsider (especially exiles and expatriates). But there is so much in just language alone.

Also, lately I have been thinking about taking Japanese and I've read about the Soku Gakuen school...I was wondering if that's where you study?
 
Oh, and good luck deciding between rabbits...just remember that choosing one doesn't necessarily mean forgoing the other. Life can take you in funny directions and finding what you want may be more roundabout that you can imagine.
 
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:: Saturday, May 24, 2008 ::

Moving - Thing - Park


Ken and I went to the 動物園 (literally to move - thing - park in Japanese) or zoo on Thursday. Some animals made fun of us:

Zoo - Giraffe

While others posed for us:

Zoo - Flamingo

And still others swam:

Zoo - Penguin

...and then there was just plain ol' cute.

Zoo - Polar Bear

The zoo was big and good enough, with lots of variety in animals. There weren't very many of any one thing, though. No monkey house teeming with monkeys. No groups of anything. Just a few gorillas over here, an ostrich over there, and a couple of lemurs hanging in that tree. That and we seemed to only hit the icky food stands/cafes. Even so Ken got some great pictures to use for drawing references and we both had a lot of fun on our "date", so it was totally a success.

Afterwards we thought we'd go and see the Pacific Ocean, a mere two blocks away. We should have known when we saw the drifting sand piling up on the sidewalk (we had to walk in the road for 15 feet, it was so messy and deep) that it would be a bad idea. The wind was howling right in our faces, blowing sand into our eyes, our teeth as we talked, and found its way into our shoes. It stuck to my face, which I had put sunscreen on four hours earlier. We crossed over the Great Highway, went yup, the ocean is there alright, and turned back to tamer land. I would have taken a picture but I was really afraid that the fast-as-a-bullet sand would scratch up my lens. Another day.

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:: Tuesday, May 13, 2008 ::

Woot


I finished a pair of socks in a week!

Pair a Week

Who said they have to match?

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 2:30 PM [+] ::
:: ... 1 comments



Comments:
I like 'em both, especially the blue one. Who cares if they don't match, lol. They look like they fit well; that's all that matters.
 
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:: Thursday, May 08, 2008 ::

If It's Free, It Fits


Tuesday was a great day--free museum day! Two friends and I went out for some free culture. We started the day at the Conservatory of Flowers, which is like a greenhouse on steroids. They have different rooms for different climates--tropical, mountain highlands--that are brimming with flowers.

Downside Up Flowers

Their special exhibit was about butterflies, which is a yearly thing, apparently. The coolest thing is that they're not in cages--they just flutter around the room as they please. You can watch them feed from pretty flowers and feeders or just plain ol' hang out.

Proud Butterfly

This guy might have been my favorite.

Then we went to the de Young Museum and went up it's observation tower to get a look at the city and the bay. Didn't go through the exhibits, though. We took our time walking about of the park, and found this lake while we were at it:

Golden Gate Park - Hidden Lake

It was huge. There were people in rowboats and peddleboats enjoying the weather. Really neat. Then it was off to the Legion of Honor. We arrived about an hour before close and realized that the Annie Leibovitz exhibit was there. We only had to pay five dollars to get into the special exhibit and man, it was amazing. We spent most of that hour in awe. So cool. We bought our postcards in the museum shop and were greeted by this happy sculpture on our way out:

Legion of Honor - Glass Tree

First of all, San Francisco is one of the few places you could have this thing outside. (There was another one inside.) Number two... how cool is that?

Legion of Honor - Glass Tree close

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 7:48 PM [+] ::
:: ... 2 comments



Comments:
Free Museum Day rocks my socks so hard! I wasn't able to get out and enjoy it (stupid finals...), but I'm glad you did! Beautiful pictures, too. I love that Chihuley sculpture in front of the De Young museum, too!
 
Your photos are fabulous !! (I arrived at your blog through random clicking on the internet.)

:)
 
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:: Monday, April 28, 2008 ::

Whirlwind, Calmly


So, a lot's been going on. Something I couldn't mention in my last post--I'm transferring to a different Starbucks. There's a new store opening a block from my old store (I know, I know) and I'm going to help them open it smoothly. The location is wonderful, the manager is awesome, and I'm going to love the challenge. We open next week, and this week is setup. I also took four days off for myself, which has been really really nice. There's actually seven days here where I don't have to wake up before 4 am. It's wonderful. ^_^

Before I forget, here's my latest FO:

Comfort Socks - FO

Comfort Socks
Pattern: My usual Plain Jane over 60 sts
Yarn: Trekking in color 62
Needles: US 1s/2.25mm
Cast on 4.13.08, cast off 4.26.08.

A fairly quick turnaround on these, and it would have been even faster if another project didn't distract me between the first and second socks. Trekking is my go to yarn and my current favorite. This isn't one of my favorite colorways, though--I like something with a little more punch and variation. I'll still wear them lovingly, of course. ^_^

And on a completely unrelated note, the other day I wrote a beautiful Japanese character, and I was so proud.

Pretty Ji - Far

Can you see it? In the middle of all those hastily written, lopsided, still being learnt kanji there's a glimmering textbook example of penmanship, shining like the star it is. ...no? Can't see it? Okay, let me highlight it for you:

Pretty Ji - Near

There. That is a, dare I say it, a perfect ki. The two horizontal lines are at exactly the same angle, the bottom swish is just as swishy as it ought to be. As soon as I wrote it I looked back and wondered how it even came from my hand. I mean, look at the rest of the page. I wasn't trying to write neatly, and yet still I am graced with this ki. My heart is still aflutter. ^_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 6:59 PM [+] ::
:: ... 2 comments



Comments:
Congratulations on the writing...I just came back from Japan and boy it would have been nice to be able read/write/speak/understand ANYthing. I know learning the language is quite a challenge, but I think I may begin to tackle it. It is possible to get around without a whip of Japanese...just not quite as much fun!
 
I'm so jealous. My letters are horrible but I guess they're better than my kids' of course they are just learning how to write English as well ;)
 
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:: Thursday, March 13, 2008 ::

Once a Month, Maybe?


Not ideal, but better than nothing, ne? A lot of knitting to show you. First of all, the Hemlock Ring is done.

Hemlock Ring - FO

Hemlock Ring Blanket
Pattern: Adapted by Jared Flood over at Brooklyn Tweed
Yarn: Cascade Eco Wool, color 8049, 2 skeins
Needles: Size US 9 Knit Picks Options
Cast on 1.17.08, knitting completed 2.4.08, blocked 3.7.08

I love this blanket. It was soooo much fun to knit. The Eco Wool was really nice to work with. The color is straight off the sheep and the entire thing is minimally processed, so I can feel good about it. It also smells like sheep, in a really good way. In a "yes, this really did come from an animal" way, not a "hey, I rolled around in poo just before I was shorn" way. The knitting was addictive and went quickly. The bind off was nothing more than fake crochet... so I crocheted it. Love the way it came out.

Hemlock Ring - Block Close

I ended up blocking the thing on a sheet on a rug on the floor (on the bottom of the sea). It stretched nicely, but because I made the blanket larger than the original it's not perfectly flat. Oh, well. It took a day and a half to dry. Also on the pinning front:

Kiri - Pinned

霧(きり)「Kiri」
Pattern: Kiri by Polly Outhwaite of All Tangled Up
Yarn: Misti Laceweight Alpaca. I think the color is tomato, but I'm not sure. 1.5 skeins, around 650 yds.
Needles: US 4 Knitpicks Options
Cast on 12.9.07, cast off 1.24.08, blocked 3.1.08

It looks great with my jacket, it feels great on my shoulders, and it even looks great over the back of my chair. I'm in love.

Kiri - Worn

The pattern is easy once you get the hang of it. The last few rows took forever (especially purling back!), but it was all worth it. I'm kind of surprised I don't have another shawl on the needles right now.

Kiri - Patterned Out

...I'm not done.

Hedera-esque - FO

Hedera-esque
Pattern: Hedera by Cookie A, found in Knitty
Yarn: Dream in Color Smooshy in Some Summer Sky
Needles: set of 5 US 1 (2.25mm) dpns
Cast on 2.1.08, cast off 2.29.08

I like the way these came out--they just look cool.

Hedera-esque - Toes

Smooshy is a great yarn, but I don't know if it's a "Karla Yarn". I like my sock yarn a little thinner, maybe even a touch shiny. Think Louet Gems, Lorna's Laces. They do feel great on my feet though, and there's so much yardage I have enough left to do something interesting with.

Okay, I'm tired now... I'll leave the rest for later. ^_^

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 4:42 PM [+] ::
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:: Saturday, February 09, 2008 ::

So Maybe I Went a Little Crazy


With the Ecowool, that is.

Hemlock Ring - Blob Stage

This thing knit up so fast (and mostly at night) that this is my only in-progress shot. And here it is as a semi-FO:

Hemlock Pose

I need pins (and a nap-less day) to block this thing out on my bed, so it's sitting in the corner now, lonely. Well, these socks have joined it now.

Berry Marigolds FO

Berry Marigolds
Pattern: Marigold Socks by Pamela Wayne [ravelry]
Yarn: Lorna's Laces Shephard Sock in Mixed Berries
Needles: Set of five US 0 dpns
Cast on 7.?.07 and 12.27.07, cast off 1.31.08

How can there be two cast on dates, you ask? Well, the first go round wasn't very... successful. It was my second lace project ever (after these doomed snowflake socks) and I didn't have the chops to keep track of all those yos and k2togs in such a dark variegated yarn. So I ripped it out. Fast forward five months and many projects later and it was a piece of cake. I think the biggest difference was that I learned how to read my knitting and did away with the stitch markers. One at the beginning of the round is fine, but otherwise what a pain.

Shephard Sock is known to pool like mad, but the straight knitting interspersed with lace rows prevented a disaster. I got a major case of second sock syndrome with this pair, but Sockdown over at Ravelry cured that.

The knitting goes on. Here's a taste of what I've started:

Chewy Spaghetti - Serendipity Cake

Yum.

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:: Kazen @ Always Doing 1:32 PM [+] ::
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Comments:
The Hemlock Ring looks SO GOOD!!

I've got a spare bedroom and blocking wires, if you need a little help from a friend. Of course, we would "have" to work out a custody arrangement... Maybe one movie on my lap each year? ;)
 
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