The first photo shows the two completed pieces (of five) of the Alone Together Sweater I began in 2021 when I was in Covid Quarantine. I completed it about a month ago, and unraveled it because the sizing was way off. The second attempt (ATS 2.0) is less wildly wonky, but still wacky, but in a satisfying way.
Today I cast on the 35 stitches for the third piece, and knitted 11 rows.
Then I sewed in the loose threads on several flowers for Pride. I have 53 ready to go. I think I’ll want to increase my goal number from 200 to 400.
This afternoon on a Zoom call, I am going to do some mending. I won’t keep up this pace for 100 Days, but today is a Sunday and rainy.
I have finally managed to get my brain-squirrels at least running in the same direction. I think.
I had a wild and unmanageable list of exciting and interesting possibilities for #The100DayProject, lots of potential for daily dopamine sparkles, but a couple days ago as I was vacuuming the rugs (I do that occasionally), I had a brainstorm: What if this year’s 100 Day Project would be about tying up loose ends? What if I made a list of all my Unfinished Projects, and pledged to work on one of them every day for 100 days? The daily dopamine hit would be less sparkly, perhaps, but the satisfaction in the end could be immeasurable.
So here’s the plan: 1. Spend 10-15 minutes every day on an Unfinished Project. If I have an occasional crazy busy day in which I am simply running all day from thing to thing, I can give myself a short break and do five minutes. 2. I must work on a project from my project list, and not create a new project mid-stream. I can still work on things off the list, just not as a fulfillment of this project. 3. I will take a picture of my progress on whichever project every day to log on my social media for accountability’s sake. 4. I do not have to finish one project on the list before picking up another–it’s about making progress on the things I begin but haven’t finished.
Here’s the List (for now–I may tweak it in the next two couple days before the project begins on Sunday, February 22): 1. The crochet shrug 2. The Alone Together Sweater (second attempt) 3. The Granny Square Yard Sale Cardigan 4. My Tanzania 2024 Book 5. The Rosary Zines 6. The Words Collection 7. The black Granny Squares–whatever was I doing with them? 8. 100 Hearts and Flowers for Pride 9. 20 more Little Protector Dolls for Radiance 10. Nisselue–the knitted and/or crocheted Norwegian Resistance Hat 11. Mending 12. The Red Thread Embroidery 13+ I feel like there are some more that I listed in my journal the other day, so I might add a couple from there.
I have a little cheaty thing going on in my brain right now. I have been inspired by a crocheter who makes elaborate neckpieces of different yarns and stitches, mixing knitting and crochet and different sizes of hooks and needles. If I were to begin one before Sunday, then it would be an Unfinished Project. . . Hmmmm.
I chose the name Tying Up Loose Ends for the project because I am trying to free up my mind for other projects. The image I am using is a crochet circle I am making. As I cut off ends of yarn from projects, I knot those that are longer than five or six inches to a ball of loose ends, and then I crochet them onto my circle. When it’s large enough, I will use it as the top for a beret. I’ll keep adding to the Ball of Loose Ends throughout the project.
The project begins on Sunday, and lasts until June 1. Go to #The100DayProject web page, if you are intrigued and want to join. My process is to: 1. Do the Project every day 2. Photograph or video it 3. Post on Social Media
At school, we are encouraging our middle and high schoolers to join us if they want, for the sake of creativity, mindfulness, or focus.
You can be very creative about your project choice: Try a new dance every day, give a compliment every day, do a watercolor a day, a Zentangle a day, doodle a face every day, do a breathing exercise every day, write a haiku a day, research a different animal every day, sing a song a day. . .